Authors: Lauren Weisberger
Perhaps it's a sign of true addiction that I actually showed up at a stranger's apartment a week later. I soon learned that Courtney had been right. Each of the other girls was smart and cool and interesting in her own way, and each loved romances. Except for one set of twin sisters, none of the women were friends or colleagues from the outside; all had stumbled upon the group in much the same way I had. I was surprised and somewhat delighted to see that I was the only one who was out about my habit: not one of the other girls had yet revealed to husbands or girlfriends or parents the real content of their book club. In the two years since I'd joined, only one had admitted her reading preferences to her boyfriend. The ridicule she endured from him was life-changing; she eventually broke up with him after realizing that no man who truly loved her (like a hero in a romance novel, it was implied) could ever mock her so mercilessly for something she enjoyed. We'd seen each other through new jobs and weddings and even one lawsuit, yet if we'd run into one another on the street or at a party, there'd be nothing more than a curt hello and a knowing look. After missing last week's meeting, I'd been looking forward to tonight's session all week, and I was not about to let Will ruin it for me.
Simon, Will, and I piled immediately into a car, but when we pulled up to the restaurant at Eighty-eighth and Second, we were clearly not the first to arrive.
âBrace yourselves!' Simon managed to hiss just before Elaine waddled over.
âYou're late!' she barked, pointing to the back room, where a few people had gathered. âGo deal with your people, I'll bring you back your drinks.'
I followed them to the back room of the casual but legendary restaurant and looked around. Books covered every square patch of wall space and competed only with framed and autographed photographs of what seemed like every author who'd published in the twentieth century. The woody and familiar ambience might just feel like a regular neighborhood joint had I not been able to recognize the handful of people who'd already clustered around the table set for twenty: Alan Dershowitz, Tina Brown, Tucker Carlson, Dominick Dunne, and Barbara Walters. A waitress handed me a premixed dirty martini and I began slurping at it immediately, downing the last drop just as the table filled completely with an eclectic group culled primarily from the media and politics.
Will was offering a toast for Charlie Rose, whose new book we were all gathered to celebrate, when the only other woman under forty leaned over and said, âHow'd you get roped into this one?'
âNiece of Will, given no choice.'
She laughed softly and placed her hand on my lap, which made me very nervous until I realized she was trying to discreetly shake my hand. âI'm Kelly. I put together this little dinner party for your uncle, so I guess I'm sort of obligated to be here, too.'
âNice to meet you,' I whispered back. âI'm Bette. I was just sitting at their apartment earlier and somehow ended up here. It seems like a very nice dinner, though.'
âHonestly? Not really my scene, either, but I think it works for your uncle's purpose. Good group of people, everyone who RSVP'd actually showed â which never happens â and Elaine held up everything on her end, as usual. All in all, I'm pretty happy with the outcome. Now if we can just keep them all from getting too drunk, I'll say the evening was perfection.'
The group quickly polished off the first round of cocktails and was now tucking in to the salads that had appeared before them. âWhen you say you “put this on,” what does that mean, exactly?' I asked more out of an effort to just say something rather than any genuine interest, but Kelly didn't seem to notice.
âI own a PR company,' she said, sipping a glass of white wine. âWe represent all sorts of clients â restaurants, hotels, boutiques, record labels, movie studios, individual celebrities â and we do what we can to increase their profile through media placements, product launches, stuff like that.'
âAnd tonight? Who do you represent here? Will? I didn't know he had a PR person.'
âNo, tonight I was hired by Charlie's publisher to put together a dinner of media elites, those journalists who are recognizable in their own right. The publisher has internal PR people, of course, but they don't always have the connections to put on something this specialized. That's where I come in.'
âGot it. So how do you know all these people?'
She just laughed. âI have an office full of people whose job it is to know
everyone
worth knowing. Thirty-five thousand names, actually, and we can get in touch with any one of them at any time. It's what we do. Speaking of which, what do you do?'
Thankfully, before I could piece together some appropriate white lie, Elaine discreetly beckoned for Kelly from the doorway, and she scooted out of her chair and strolled to the front room. I turned my attention to Simon, who was seated on my left, before noticing that a photographer was subtly snapping photos without a flash from a crouching position in the corner.
I remembered the first media dinner Will had dragged me to, when I was fourteen and visiting from Poughkeepsie. We'd been at Elaine's that night, too, also for a book party, and I'd asked Simon, âIs it weird that there's someone taking pictures of us eating dinner?'
He'd chuckled. âOf course not, dear, that's precisely why we're all here. If there's no photo in the party pages, did the party really happen? You can't
pay
to get the kind of press he and his book will receive from tonight. That photographer is from
New York
magazine, if I remember correctly, and as soon as he leaves, another one will slip right in. At least, everyone hopes so.'
Will had begun teaching me that night how to talk to people. The key was to remember that no one cares what you do or think, so sit down and immediately begin asking questions to the person on your right. Ask anything, feign some sort of interest, and follow up any awkward silences with more questions about them. After years of instruction and practice I could manage a conversation with just about anyone, but I didn't enjoy it that night any more than I had as a teenager, so I said my good-byes and ducked out after the salad course.
The book club meeting was at Alex's apartment in the East Village. I jumped on the 6 train and scrolled through my iPod playlist until settling on âIn My Dreams' by REO Speedwagon. When I got off the train at Astor Place a very petite woman who resembled a school librarian literally body-checked me. I apologized for my role in the incident (being there) with a sincere âExcuse me,' at which point she whipped around with the most contorted, demon-like face and screamed, âEXCUSE ME? MAYBE THAT WOULDN'T HAVE HAPPENED IF YOU WALKED ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE SIDEWALK!' and then walked away muttering profanities. Obviously she could use a few hours with
The Very Bad Boy,
I thought.
When I had walked the long six avenues east, I rang the bell at Alex's building on Avenue C and began the dreadful climb. She claimed her studio was a sixth-floor walk-up, but considering a Chinese laundry occupied the ground floor and the numbers didn't begin for one full flight up, it was technically seven floors off the ground. She was your stereotypical East Village artiste, with head-to-toe black clothes, ever-changing hair color, and a small facial piercing that appeared to rotate regularly from lip to nose to brow. An East Village artiste with a passionate dedication to romantic fiction for women. She obviously had the most to lose if any of her peers found out â a sort of artistic street cred, if you will â and so we all agreed to tell her neighbors, if asked, that we were there for a Sex Addicts Anonymous meeting. âYou're more comfortable telling them you're a sex addict than a romance reader?' I'd asked when she'd given us the instructions. âClearly!' she'd answered without a moment's hesitation. âAddiction is cool. All creative people are addicted to something.' And so we did as she wished.
She looked more punk than usual in a pair of rocker-chic leather pants and a classic faded CBGB T-shirt. She handed me a rum and Coke and I sat on her bed and watched her apply another six or so coats of mascara while we waited for the others. Janie and Jill were the first to arrive. They were fraternal twins in their early thirties; Jill was still in school, getting some sort of advanced degree in architecture, and Janie worked for an advertising agency. They'd fallen in love with Harlequins as little girls, when they would sneak-read their mom's copies under the covers at night. Following closely behind them was Courtney, my original link to the group and an associate editor at
Teen People
who not only read every romance novel ever written but who just so happened to enjoy
writing
them as well; and finally, Vika, a half-Swedish, half-French import with an adorable accent and a coveted job as a kindergarten teacher at an Upper East Side private school. We were clearly a motley crew.
âAnyone have any news before we dive in?' Jill asked as the rest of us slurped down our drinks as swiftly as the syrupy-sweet liquid would allow. She always took charge and tried to keep us on track, an utterly useless gesture considering our meetings more closely resembled group therapy than any sort of literary exploration.
âI quit my job,' I announced merrily, holding up my red plastic Solo cup.
âCheers!' they all called while clinking cups.
âIt's about time you left that nightmare,' Janie said.
Vika agreed. âYes, yes, your boss will not be missed, of this I am sure?' she asked in her sweet but odd accent.
âNo, that's for sure, I won't be missing Aaron.'
Courtney poured her second drink in ten minutes and said, âYeah, but what are we going to do for a quote of the day now? Can someone forward them to you?'
At the second meeting I'd attended, I'd begun sharing the joy and wisdom of Aaron's inspirational quotes with the entire group. After introductory remarks, I'd read the best one from the previous few weeks and we'd all crack up. Lately, the girls had begun coming prepared with their own anti-quotes, nasty or sarcastic or mean-spirited little epigrams that I might take back to the office and share with Aaron, if I were so inclined.
âWhich reminds me,' I announced grandly, pulling a printout from my bag, âI received this one a mere three days before I left, and it's one of my all-time favorites. It says, “Teamwork: Simply stated, it is less me and more we.” That, my friends, is insightful.'
âWow.' Janie sighed. âThanks for sharing. I'm definitely going to try to figure out how to have less me and more we in my life.'
âMe, too,' said Alex. âThat goes nicely with a little quote I recently stumbled upon. It's from our friend Gore Vidal. “Whenever a friend succeeds, a little something in me dies.”'
We all laughed until Janie interrupted with a rather shocking announcement. âSpeaking of bosses ⦠I, uh, I had an incident with mine.'
âAn incident?' Jill asked. âYou didn't tell me anything!'
âWell, it just happened last night. You were asleep when I got home, and I'm only seeing you for the first time now.'
âI'd like you to explain the “incident,” please,' Vika said with raised eyebrows.
âWe, uh, sort of hooked up,' she said with a coy smile.
âWhat?' Jill was shrieking at this point, staring at her sister with a combination of horror and delight. âWhat happened?'
âWell, he asked if I wanted to grab dinner after we pitched a new potential client. We went for sushi and then drinks. â¦'
âAnd then?' I prompted.
âAnd then more drinks, and then the next thing I know, I'm naked on his couch.'
âOh, my God.' Jill began to rock back and forth.
Janie looked at her. âWhy are you so upset? It's not such a big deal.'
âWell, I just don't think it's going to do great things for your career,' she replied.
âWell then, you obviously don't know how talented I can be in some areas, do you?' Janie smiled wickedly.
âDid you sleep with him?' Alex asked. âPlease say yes. That would really make my whole night. Investment banker Bette up and quits her job with no backup plan and you screw your boss? I'd feel like I was finally starting to have some influence around here.'
âWell, I don't know if I'd say we actually had sex,' Janie said.
âWhat the hell is that supposed to mean?' Alex asked. âYou either did or you didn't.'
âWell, if he weren't my boss, I probably wouldn't have even counted it. Just in and out a few times â nothing major.'
âThat's more than I've done in two years,' I said.
â
Interesting.
What I'm wondering is just how many other guys fall into the not-major-enough-to-count category. Janie? Wanna fill us in?' Courtney asked. Alex returned from her fridge-and-hot-plate kitchen with a tray of shot glasses, each filled to the brim.
âWhy even bother to talk about
The Very Bad Boy
when we have our own very bad girl right here?' she said and passed the glasses around the room.
We were off and running.
Another three weeks slipped by in much the same manner as my first month of unemployment, made only slightly less pleasurable by the daily phone calls from Will and my parents, who claimed to just be âchecking in.' Here's how it usually went:
Mom: Hi, honey. Any new leads today?
Me: Hi, Mom. I'm pounding the pavement. There's a lot that sounds promising, but I haven't picked the perfect thing yet. How are you and Dad?
Mom: We're fine, dear, just worried about you. You remember Mrs Adelman, right? Her daughter is the head of fund-raising for Earth Watch and she said you're welcome to call her, that they could always use more dedicated, qualified people.
Me: Mmm, that's great. I'll look into that. [Channel flip to ABC as
Oprah
begins.] I better get moving. I have some more cover letters to write.