Member Reviews
I did enjoy reading this and I loved the hot mess that is El, our MC. I loved seeing through her eyes in this book and catching myself relating to her perspective of situations and having to step back and take a second to think through -- how reliable is this? Is this really what's happening? I liked the writing and would be interested in reading something else by this author but it didn't stand out as a must-read for me personally. I think I raced to the ending hoping for something major to occur that caught me off guard but I did predict some of the ending, so it didn't pay off in a big way as I thought it might, but I still had a fun time getting there.
I think the connection to the dog subplot is tenuous, definitely not direct. *SPOILERS* It was mainly foreshadowing for this theme of turning the pet/owner relationship on its head. I also so badly wanted a better character arc for El but also respect the decision the author chose for her, it does still make for an interesting ending, albeit a little anti-climatic.
Overall I did enjoy reading it but may not recommend for big thriller readers, as it may not be compelling enough for you.
i REALLY wanted to love this; i think the title was great and the blurb was very interesting. i think maybe i expected too much (the nightbitch comparisons had me excited), and i think this maybe fell a bit short for me. some of the writing felt clunky and forced to me, but i think the main character was interesting! i'd definitely check out other works by this author, i think this just wasn't for ME personally.
El always feels like an outcast, growing up amongst the NY rich, and elite, she came from a working household that was anything but well to do. So when her goals of becoming an actress fall through, she is left yet again floundering through the city. Then she goes to the Hamptons hoping to reconnect with some old friends. While there she meets a guy, and they begin a relationship in the city. There is something "off" about him, but El realizes that he could provide her with the life she has always admired from the outside.
This was an odd read for me. really, I could not figure out what the goal of the novel was for the author. The FMC being different in that she did not just want the stereotypical happy life, was interesting, but that's really the extent of my interest. The other aspect that I really don't comprehend is the whole crazy dog dilemma. I really have no idea how that fits in... maybe I'm dense though...
A failed actress, El, with rich friends meets a guy who, surprise, is quite rich. She sees him as a way into the privileged life she has only glimpsed through her friends and their pity invites to their events. Unfortunately, he is not really what he seems, and El must decide if she is alright with that. This book was a real page turner for me because I wanted El to triumph, whatever that was going to be for her, in the end. Thank you NetGalley for providing the ARC.
I couldn't really connect with this book and just found it hard to get into. It felt like it was kind of all over the place and just really wasn't for me.
3/5 stars
𝟮.𝟱 𝗦𝗧𝗔𝗥𝗦 𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗡𝗗𝗘𝗗 𝗗𝗢𝗪𝗡
I am all-in for a messy main character, but El was just not the one for me. THAT BEING SAID, there was something that about the plot that held me in its clutches and made me want to keep reading.
I was fairly intrigued by the beginning of this book, ESPECIALLY when it came to that vague opening chapter. However, the pacing was just so incredibly slow and drawn-out. As soon as we add in the rich "friends" from her past and a run-in with a pretty odd man, I was hoping things would go haywire. Things went a tad off the rails for sure, but there was always a destination point I wanted things to get to and they just never quite got there.
It was pretty clear where the ending would go from about the midway point, so I wasn't the least bit shocked. But, *spoiler alert* we never get answers on what the opening chapter alludes to, and that frustrates me more than words can express.
I tried really hard to get into this one, but I just wasn't able to. I am still really thankful to the publisher, author, and netgalley for granting me advanced access to this digital collection before publication day.
I did not care for this book. The main character, El is a boring person. I never liked her and found her very selfish. Only wanting the rich around her and what they could do for her. The friends she did have she only saw them when she felt like it.
El meets Bryce. He is smitten with her and pretty much will do anything for her. But things don't add up and before we know it she isn't quite the person I thought either but then again maybe she is.
I had a hard time liking the book, the characters and the storyline.
Thank you to NetGalley and Putnam for the ebook to review,
This was a bit of a slow burn and, as others, the dog component is a bit confusing. El is a very unlikeable, selfish character and she happens to meet an equally unlikeable, selfish love interest. Just when she thinks she will be living the life she's always dreamed, she finds out what seems to good to be true might be just that. Overall, this was a decent thriller.
Man’s Best Friend began with the perspective of a dog. It was pretty intense, but I wasn’t thrilled to be reading from that perspective the whole book. Fortunately, once the “story” begins, we get to read as humans 😉
El’s dream was to be an actress, but she’s not had much luck. El has found that she can live the glamorous lifestyle she wants, and basically act in the biggest roll of her life.
We get a few references to a dog throughout. But I honesty didn’t get the connection; I kept waiting for it to make sense. I thought Bryce was doing experiments to brain wash dogs - hell, that would have been more interesting than what actually happened. It was supposed to be an “owner vs pet” metaphor… but there was such an abrupt switch, and the storylines didn’t mirror each other, or really make much sense. The result was a disconnect that left a confused reader.
This was also a long story… and really nothing happened. Even the “climax” was wildly anticlimactic.
I received an ARC via #NetGalley for review
Allow me a minute to catch my breath...
Alana B. Lytle, who are you and where have you been hiding my whole life.
Man's Best Friend.
Whatever you think you know about this book, you will be DEAD wrong.
This book right here, exceeds all expectations.
Check out this teaser :
A failed actress must decide how much she will give up—and what lies she will overlook—in order to live a life of luxury, in this irresistibly suspenseful and slightly surreal debut that is The Talented Mr. Ripley meets Nightbitch.
Ever since her year as a scholarship student among the ultra-wealthy at a Manhattan private school, El knows what it is like to feel rich—to feel chosen. And being not chosen is her current living nightmare: at age thirty, she has given up her dream of becoming a famous actress, she has no passions, no great love, nothing to look forward to.
Then El meets a mysterious trust-fund Cambridge grad who holds the keys to the world she has long dreamed of. Bryce may not be particularly good-looking, charming, or interesting, but he has chosen her. El allows herself to be lulled by the ease and safety that his wealth provides, becoming Bryce’s little pet, and giving up her job, friends, and apartment in short order. But when a series of disturbing and slightly surreal events reveal that Bryce is not quite what he seems, but something entirely more sinister, El must face the consequences when his darkness—and her own—are unleashed.
This is not what I thought it was going to be. Awful book. Cannot recomend.
THanks to Allana Be Lytle, Netgalley and Penguin Group GP Putnam and Sons for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Already avaiable
Hard time reviewing this one. It was entertaining and went by fast. That being said, it wasn't very relatable, and the side plot involving dogs was never truly connected to the main story. There were also a few disconnects, but maybe that will get fixed in editing. El is a failing actress/waitress who for some reason is obsessed with some wealthy friends she made in her one year at a private middle school, despite none of them really being close. Sort of through them, she meets a wealthy man and they quickly become involved, even though she doesn't seem particularly attracted to him, although sometimes she enjoys his company. This was not my favorite, sorry.
This was fantastic and reminded me a lot of Anna Pitoniak’s Necessary People while still being its own unique story.
I love books that take place mostly via the protagonist’s inner monologue, provided that the inside of their head is an interesting place to be. It most definitely is in El’s case, and I loved the way she moved through the story and evolved from a person who things happen to into a person who makes things happen.
I liked the mystery element to this as well. It’s not hard to tell where it’s going, but it fits beautifully with the rest of the narrative. The writing is sharp and well-crafted, and the whole piece has both a grim realism and and dreamlike quality that play surprisingly well together.
The dog metaphor (or whatever we’re going to call it) that bookends the story didn’t work and felt contrived, but it didn’t lessen my enjoyment of an otherwise supremely smart and satisfying read.
MAN’S BEST FRIEND by Alana B. Lytle is a great debut and (hopefully) the start of a new author to watch.
El only spends a year as a scholarship student at an elite Manhattan private school, forging friendships she hopes will last a lifetime. It also affords her the chance to see the major differences between the haves and the have-nots. A failed actress, El is drifting through life with a ho-hum job at a bakery and a roommate she doesn’t particularly like. When she attends a party thrown by one of her posh friends she meets the man who will change her life.
Bryce is everything a girl could hope for, right? He is kind, caring, loving and attentive. Creepily so. Always attentive. In no time, El gives up all of the things that make her who she is and becomes Bryce’s best friend and roommate. When he proposes, she accepts knowing that she doesn’t really love him, but he’s putting her back in the position of being one of the “haves”. When red flags begin waving El begins to look into Bryce‘s past and learns some startling things that make her rethink her position. Is affluence worth putting yourself at risk.
I really enjoyed the author’s writing style. Clear and concise, it led to an enjoyable read. My pulse was pounding as El began to learn more about her fiancé. I was surprised to learn that this was a debut and will certainly be keeping an eye out for future Alana B. Lytle novels.
Thank you to NetGalley and G P. Putnam & Sons for this ARC opportunity. All opinions are my own and given voluntarily.
This read like two different ideas that should have been two different books all smashed together in one book.
You start from a dog's POV and end that way, but the rest is human is just bad relationship drama. I was so annoyed by this. More dog less humans please.
ARC provided in exchange for an honest review.
This book was definitely not what I was expecting! There were some twists that I didn’t see coming but others that felt pretty obvious. Unfortunately, Bryce reminded me a lot of my fiancée with his sweetness and caring nature, I pray it doesn’t go any further! The characters are well developed and the story is interesting and kept me reading late into the night. I would recommend to anyone who likes psychological thrillers with a touch of romance!
4.5 stars
When I pick up a book based on the fact that it's about rich people behaving badly, this is exactly what I want it to be. I am guessing this isn't getting better ratings because of the unlikable characters, but I devoured it. Every person in this book is a piece of shit, and I LOVED that.
This book follows El, a late-twenties woman living in NYC and trying to find herself. She's just given up on her dream of becoming an actress, and isn't sure what to do next. She's spent her whole life seeking love and validation, first from her absent father, then from the cool girls at her private school, and later from investment banker boyfriends and casting agents. El has never been rich, but has always lived just close enough to the wealthy to know what she's missing.
Then El meets Bryce, and while he's not the man of her dreams, he invites her into the world of her dreams. Before long, El has left behind her job, her apartment, and friends to fit into Bryce's life. But as El gets comfortable in the world of wealth she's always craved, she has to wonder if everything is as it seems with Bryce, and if not, if her suspicions are worth giving up the life she's always wanted.
El is THE WORST and yet I love her for it. She was giving me adult Jenny Humphrey vibes (TV show Jenny, not book) but less ambitious and more narcissistic. If you only enjoy reading likable characters, this book will not be for you, but if you can root for actual villains (not just pouty fantasy men with misunderstood reputations) give it a shot. The dog subplot was a little weird but unobtrusive, and I got the symbolism, so by the end I was good with it. I'll definitely check out more from this author. Thanks to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for the advance copy in exchange for my honest review.
I think this could be a fantastic read for some, but it was a miss for me.
Ultimately, it centers too much on wealth without critical commentary, and that's hardly something I can be for. The protagonist, El, is a struggling mess, which I am totally here for and saw myself in especially a younger me, but instead of rooting for her, I pitied her and was frustrated with her decisions. After climbing back into the social graces and friendship of wealthy friends, El ends up spiraling deeper into misery and envy. El's friends and especially Bryce made me nauseous, and I hated every page with his name on it. What I thought was going to be a gripping thriller filled with female rage turned the focus instead on the insufferable rich people and El's futile attempts to climb the social ladder.
What compromises are you willing to make to secure the life you’ve always wanted?
El is not living the life of which she has always dreamed. Abandoned as a girl by her father, raised by a single mother who had to struggle to support them, El had the best year of her life in eighth grade when she spent a year at an exclusive private school. There, she was only too aware of being a scholarship student in second hand clothes amongst the children of the very wealthy, until the day that Julia and Anna made her their friend. Instant acceptance followed, as did summer days at Julia’s house in the Hamptons and other experiences of the very privileged. She wasn’t one of them, but she was allowed into their world. The girls’ paths diverged in high school but their friendship continued, although it became more sporadic as the years have passed. El is now in her late twenties, has finally given up pursuing an acting career due to her lack of any appreciable success, and shares a dingy apartment while working at a high end bakery. When Julia contacts her out of the blue to invite El to her birthday party, El jumps at the chance and heads out for the Hamptons beach house she has missed. There she meets Bryce, a rather morose but very wealthy man who soon makes his interest in her very clear. She doesn’t find him interesting, attractive, or even terribly likeable…..but finds it hard to resist the life he can offer her. Is this her happily-ever-after? Or is this a gift horse into whose mouth she definitely needs to look, and look hard?
I was intrigued by the premise of the book….who amongst us hasn’t been tempted to take the easy way out of life’s rough spots, after all? I didn't find El to be a very appealing character, though; in fact, I really didn’t like her much at all. She certainly didn't have it easy growing up, but she tends to use those difficulties as an excuse for her choices and behavior in the present. When her best friend from college Navya loses patience with her, I could only wonder why it took her so long to give up on the friendship. El also takes a lot of iffy behavior from Bryce in stride, even as friends and families point out the red flags. There is a theme that floats alongside El’s story arc, that of dogs running away from their owners, which never really connected for me. The basic thriller plot line was entertaining enough, but not particularly novel in concept. In the end, I would call it an average read that would appeal to readers of Carola Lovering, Ruth Ware and Liv Constantine. My thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Group Putnam/G. P. Putnam’s Sons for allowing me early access to Man’s Best Friend.