Mae Pruett lives
in Los Angeles and does “black-bag” publicity jobs for a crisis management firm
in Everybody Knows: A Novel by Jordan Harper. Her job is to keep bad news out
of the press at all costs or, at the very least, spin the event or incident
into more positive news coverage. Her firm shapes the news we see for
celebrities. The real facts of the situations, the dirt and what Hollywood does
to all involved, especially the kid stars, stays hidden from view.
That is until
her boss at Mitnick & Associates is killed in the street in front of the Beverly
Hills Hotel. Mae Pruett was supposed to be meeting him for a drink and to talk.
Lucky for her, she was running a few minutes late. So, she missed the shooting
in what is now being billed as an attempted carjacking gone wrong. Mae can read
between the lines and knows the media story being pushed hard is utter
nonsense. She knows because what to look for and who is reporting the stuff.
She also knows because Dan was being weird just before he was killed and had
some sort of plan to make him and her rich.
She owed Dan for
bringing her into the biggest PR firm in the city. She wonders why the machine
is working so hard to spin the story. She wonders what he was planning that got
him killed. What was he planning? What did he know? She has a couple of ideas
and begins to dig. What she finds is the kind of stuff that gives one a waking
nightmare if they are not murdered first.
A lot of people
will be as Mae uncovers secrets and desperately tries to stay alive.
Everybody Knows
is a darkly cynical read and a commentary on pop culture and the entertainment
industry. It is a complex and noir style mystery tale where evil almost always wins
out in the end simply because so many are employed to make sure that happens.
It is also one of those books that one wonders how many names have been changed
to protect the scumbags among us?
It is also one heck of a complicated read that is well worth your time. Everybody Knows: A Novel easily makes my top five book list of reads so far this year. It packs quite a punch from from beginning to end. It might also make you think twice the next time you see a story on a celebrity.
My reading copy
came from the Central or Downtown Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2023
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