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Megan Abbott Reveals the ‘Deranged' Book That Nevertheless ‘Changed My Life'

Megan Abbott Reveals the ‘Deranged' Book That Nevertheless ‘Changed My Life'

Elle5 days ago
Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com's books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you're on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you're here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.
Megan Abbott's 13th and latest novel, El Dorado Drive , is a riveting thriller centering suburban women and their pyramid schemes—so perhaps it should come as no surprise that the book's already been optioned for an A24 television series. 'Like Tupperware or Mary Kay in the past, [modern pyramid schemes] promise so much, the American Dream within reach,' Abbott says. 'I began imagining how a trio of sisters could get drawn into it and how dangerous it could become. Do these women know when they've crossed a line into criminal activity, and what are they willing to do to keep going?' With El Dorado Drive , 'I wanted to write about women and money,' she says. 'So much of our life is ruled by money and, often, anxieties over money—it reveals so much about ourselves, our dreams and fears, pressures and fantasies.'
The El Dorado Drive adaptation will be far from Abbott's first time translating books to the screen. Abbott co-developed the USA Network series Dare Me , based on her mystery set in the cutthroat world of cheerleading; is currently writing and executive producing (along with Taffy Brodesser-Akner) the Lionsgate psychological thriller series Here in the Dark , based on Alexis Soloski's book of the same name ; is co-writing, with author Laura Lippman, Lippman's P.I. Tess Monaghan series; and is also working on adapting Dashiell Hammett's Red Harvest for A24/Netflix.
The Detroit-born, New York-based bestselling and Edgar-award-winning author was named 'Most Likely to Succeed' in high school; went to the University of Michigan before earning her Ph.D. in English and American literature from New York University; turned her dissertation into her first book, The Street Was Mine: White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir ); edited the female noir anthology A Hell of a Woman ; worked as a grant writer for the East Harlem nonprofit Union Settlement; is superstitious; is inspired by photographers, including Sally Mann, William Eggleston, and Gordon Parks, among many others; and lives in an apartment overlooking the Long Island Rail Road.
'It's a cliché, but I do believe books are an empathy machine, and I want to write (and read) about women who may, from the outside, appear troubled, unlikeable, and difficult,' she says. 'I want to be the defense attorney for all my characters, to try to show why they do what they do, what made them who they are.'
Good at: writing about female friendship dynamics; owning tchotchkes and multitasking ; hula hooping.
Bad at: ballet; all sports; understanding crystals; sleeping.
Likes: movies, including Blue Velvet , Dressed to Kill , Some Like It Hot , and Double Indemnity ; mid-century modern design; Film Forum; pulp fiction; Forest Hills Station House and Natural Market in her neighborhood; Nick Cave's music and newsletter, 'The Red Hand Files'; 'Gen X queens' Kim Deal and Kim Gordon; Real Housewives of New York .
Writing essentials: sunlight; Orbit peppermint gum; music.
Collects: chalkware; first editions; vintage carnival prizes.
Peruse her book recommendations below. The book that…: …made me weep uncontrollably:
Denis Johnson's Angels , which starts as a wild road trip tale and turns into something heartbreaking, with some deep truths about the American Dream and those left behind: the desperate and dispossessed. ...shaped my worldview:
Joan Didion's Slouching Towards Bethlehem , which seemed to reveal dark, haunting truths about America that, as a 20-year-old, I'd only guessed at before. ...I swear I'll finish one day:
George Eliot's Middlemarch . But will I? ...I read in one sitting; it was that good:
James M. Cain's Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice , both first-personal confessional crime novels that seem to leap from the page. …made me laugh out loud:
Charles Portis's The Dog of the South , or any Charles Portis novel. One of the most idiosyncratic and thrilling voices in American literature. …should be on every college syllabus:
Nella Larsen's Harlem Renaissance novel, Passing , a sly, seductive tale that tackles far larger issues. ...I've re-read the most:
Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon . I can't help myself. ...has the best opening line:
Ford Madox Ford's The Good Soldier : 'This is the saddest story I have ever heard.' …changed my life:
Vincent Bugliosi with Curt Gentry's Helter Skelter , which sounds deranged, but I firmly believe that it and Joe McGinniss's Fatal Vision —both extremely flawed books—inspired at least two generations of crime novelists to find their craft. …has a sex scene that will make you blush:
Susanna Moore's In the Cut , which left first-degree burns on my fingertips (or so it felt). …sealed a friendship:
Jack Pendarvis's Your Body is Changing , which led to a mutual correspondence and now 20 years of friendship and a longstanding two-person book club. …is a master class on dialogue:
Dashiell Hammett's Red Harvest, where every line sings. …broke my heart:
Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence , which gains power as we accumulate experience and heartbreaks. …everyone should read:
Lucy Sante's exquisite memoir, I Heard Her Call My Name: A Memoir of Transition . …currently sits on my nightstand:
Patricia Highsmith's Ripley Under Water . I've been re-reading all the Ripley novels in sequence and continue to marvel at her creation. Bonus question: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be:
John K. King Used & Rare Books in Detroit, Michigan—more than a million books in an abandoned glove factory—what more could you want?
Now 32% Off Credit: Harper Perennial
Now 41% Off Credit: Picador Modern Classics
Now 41% Off Credit: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Now 24% Off Credit: Vintage
Now 35% Off Credit: The Overlook Press
Now 18% Off Credit: Dover Publications Credit: Straight Arrow Books Credit: Wordsworth Editions Ltd
Now 36% Off Credit: W. W. Norton & Company
Now 31% Off Credit: Berkley
Now 23% Off Credit: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Now 53% Off Credit: Penguin Press Credit: W. W. Norton & Company
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Megan Abbott Reveals the ‘Deranged' Book That Nevertheless ‘Changed My Life'
Megan Abbott Reveals the ‘Deranged' Book That Nevertheless ‘Changed My Life'

Elle

time5 days ago

  • Elle

Megan Abbott Reveals the ‘Deranged' Book That Nevertheless ‘Changed My Life'

Welcome to Shelf Life, books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you're on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you're here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too. Megan Abbott's 13th and latest novel, El Dorado Drive , is a riveting thriller centering suburban women and their pyramid schemes—so perhaps it should come as no surprise that the book's already been optioned for an A24 television series. 'Like Tupperware or Mary Kay in the past, [modern pyramid schemes] promise so much, the American Dream within reach,' Abbott says. 'I began imagining how a trio of sisters could get drawn into it and how dangerous it could become. Do these women know when they've crossed a line into criminal activity, and what are they willing to do to keep going?' With El Dorado Drive , 'I wanted to write about women and money,' she says. 'So much of our life is ruled by money and, often, anxieties over money—it reveals so much about ourselves, our dreams and fears, pressures and fantasies.' The El Dorado Drive adaptation will be far from Abbott's first time translating books to the screen. Abbott co-developed the USA Network series Dare Me , based on her mystery set in the cutthroat world of cheerleading; is currently writing and executive producing (along with Taffy Brodesser-Akner) the Lionsgate psychological thriller series Here in the Dark , based on Alexis Soloski's book of the same name ; is co-writing, with author Laura Lippman, Lippman's P.I. Tess Monaghan series; and is also working on adapting Dashiell Hammett's Red Harvest for A24/Netflix. The Detroit-born, New York-based bestselling and Edgar-award-winning author was named 'Most Likely to Succeed' in high school; went to the University of Michigan before earning her Ph.D. in English and American literature from New York University; turned her dissertation into her first book, The Street Was Mine: White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir ); edited the female noir anthology A Hell of a Woman ; worked as a grant writer for the East Harlem nonprofit Union Settlement; is superstitious; is inspired by photographers, including Sally Mann, William Eggleston, and Gordon Parks, among many others; and lives in an apartment overlooking the Long Island Rail Road. 'It's a cliché, but I do believe books are an empathy machine, and I want to write (and read) about women who may, from the outside, appear troubled, unlikeable, and difficult,' she says. 'I want to be the defense attorney for all my characters, to try to show why they do what they do, what made them who they are.' Good at: writing about female friendship dynamics; owning tchotchkes and multitasking ; hula hooping. Bad at: ballet; all sports; understanding crystals; sleeping. Likes: movies, including Blue Velvet , Dressed to Kill , Some Like It Hot , and Double Indemnity ; mid-century modern design; Film Forum; pulp fiction; Forest Hills Station House and Natural Market in her neighborhood; Nick Cave's music and newsletter, 'The Red Hand Files'; 'Gen X queens' Kim Deal and Kim Gordon; Real Housewives of New York . Writing essentials: sunlight; Orbit peppermint gum; music. Collects: chalkware; first editions; vintage carnival prizes. Peruse her book recommendations below. The book that…: …made me weep uncontrollably: Denis Johnson's Angels , which starts as a wild road trip tale and turns into something heartbreaking, with some deep truths about the American Dream and those left behind: the desperate and dispossessed. ...shaped my worldview: Joan Didion's Slouching Towards Bethlehem , which seemed to reveal dark, haunting truths about America that, as a 20-year-old, I'd only guessed at before. ...I swear I'll finish one day: George Eliot's Middlemarch . But will I? ...I read in one sitting; it was that good: James M. Cain's Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice , both first-personal confessional crime novels that seem to leap from the page. …made me laugh out loud: Charles Portis's The Dog of the South , or any Charles Portis novel. One of the most idiosyncratic and thrilling voices in American literature. …should be on every college syllabus: Nella Larsen's Harlem Renaissance novel, Passing , a sly, seductive tale that tackles far larger issues. ...I've re-read the most: Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon . I can't help myself. ...has the best opening line: Ford Madox Ford's The Good Soldier : 'This is the saddest story I have ever heard.' …changed my life: Vincent Bugliosi with Curt Gentry's Helter Skelter , which sounds deranged, but I firmly believe that it and Joe McGinniss's Fatal Vision —both extremely flawed books—inspired at least two generations of crime novelists to find their craft. …has a sex scene that will make you blush: Susanna Moore's In the Cut , which left first-degree burns on my fingertips (or so it felt). …sealed a friendship: Jack Pendarvis's Your Body is Changing , which led to a mutual correspondence and now 20 years of friendship and a longstanding two-person book club. …is a master class on dialogue: Dashiell Hammett's Red Harvest, where every line sings. …broke my heart: Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence , which gains power as we accumulate experience and heartbreaks. …everyone should read: Lucy Sante's exquisite memoir, I Heard Her Call My Name: A Memoir of Transition . …currently sits on my nightstand: Patricia Highsmith's Ripley Under Water . I've been re-reading all the Ripley novels in sequence and continue to marvel at her creation. Bonus question: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be: John K. King Used & Rare Books in Detroit, Michigan—more than a million books in an abandoned glove factory—what more could you want? Now 32% Off Credit: Harper Perennial Now 41% Off Credit: Picador Modern Classics Now 41% Off Credit: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Now 24% Off Credit: Vintage Now 35% Off Credit: The Overlook Press Now 18% Off Credit: Dover Publications Credit: Straight Arrow Books Credit: Wordsworth Editions Ltd Now 36% Off Credit: W. W. Norton & Company Now 31% Off Credit: Berkley Now 23% Off Credit: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Now 53% Off Credit: Penguin Press Credit: W. W. Norton & Company

Quinta Brunson Weighs the End of ‘Abbott Elementary,' Says Actors ‘Would Love to Pursue Other Projects'
Quinta Brunson Weighs the End of ‘Abbott Elementary,' Says Actors ‘Would Love to Pursue Other Projects'

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Quinta Brunson Weighs the End of ‘Abbott Elementary,' Says Actors ‘Would Love to Pursue Other Projects'

According to Quinta Brunson, some 'Abbott Elementary' stars are looking to graduate. With the series set to enter its fifth season, the show's creator/writer/star spoke to Bustle about the amount of time it takes to film 'Abbott' — and how that may prevent the cast from pursuing other roles. More from TheWrap Quinta Brunson Weighs the End of 'Abbott Elementary,' Says Actors 'Would Love to Pursue Other Projects' Kelly Ripa Jokes About Taking 'Very Indecent Photos' With David Muir's ABC Portrait, Calls Him 'Commander Handsome' 'Squid Game' Season 3 Becomes First Show to Debut No. 1 on Netflix Across 93 Countries With 60.1 Million Views FilmRise and Shout! Studios Merge to Launch Radial Entertainment 'I have cast members who would love to pursue other projects, and our show is very time-consuming,' Brunson said. 'We shoot about seven months out of the year. That can stop people from being able to do a lot of other things.' Since the show started in late 2021, 'Abbott Elementary' has seen consistent acclaim and become an instantly beloved network comedy. The series has earned a number of Emmys over the years, consistently earning nods in categories like Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series. The hit comedy is credited for launching and revitalizing the careers of a number of performers, with actors Brunson and Sheryl Lee Ralph each winning Emmys for their performances in the past. With this kind of buzz around the cast, it's natural for some stars to want to explore other opportunities. Brunson, serves as 'Abbott's' creator, co-showrunner and star, said that she is exploring new projects herself. 'Right now, I'm receiving scripts, and waiting for that moment that feels like, 'Oh man, this is exactly what I've been looking for,'' Brunson told Bustle. ''Abbott' has been so successful, and I want to use that success to get other people's projects off the ground.' In the modern television landscape, five successful seasons is nothing to sneeze at. If enough cast members want to pursue other work, Brunson and company could have the chance to end their acclaimed series on a high note. All cast members are currently slated to return for Season 5 later this fall. The post Quinta Brunson Weighs the End of 'Abbott Elementary,' Says Actors 'Would Love to Pursue Other Projects' appeared first on TheWrap.

Chase Sui Wonders used to have ‘all the shame around' being mixed race. Now it's her ‘superpower.'
Chase Sui Wonders used to have ‘all the shame around' being mixed race. Now it's her ‘superpower.'

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Chase Sui Wonders used to have ‘all the shame around' being mixed race. Now it's her ‘superpower.'

For Chase Sui Wonders, being mixed race hasn't always been easy. Wonders, who is half Chinese, used to struggle with her identity — and as a young Asian actress in Hollywood, self-acceptance felt unattainable. 'I had all the shame around it. I would try so hard and I would put myself on tape, but it never felt quite right,' she told Vanity Fair in June. 'It always felt like it was written for a white girl, or it was written for a full Chinese girl, or a Japanese girl who has to play a geisha during World War II or something.' This isn't the first time Wonders has opened up about being mixed race. The 29-year-old actress is outspoken about the complexities of navigating adolescence, adulthood, and now, Hollywood as someone who is biracial. As a kid growing up in suburban Michigan, Wonders quickly recognized that she didn't look like everyone else. Her arrival in Hollywood seemed to reinforce the feeling that she didn't belong. 'As far as I'm concerned, being Asian, the community I grew up in was really 'white', and I grew up with a single mom, who is white, so I felt like I was a white person, and it took me a while to accept or just come to terms with the fact that I don't look like everyone else and that's not bad. That was a journey of my youth,' she told Italian Reve in 2024. Eventually, Wonders began to land roles that felt more true to herself. She nabbed her breakthrough role on HBO Max's coming-of-age drama series Generation in 2021, before starring in A24's black horror comedy Bodies Bodies Bodies in 2022. Wonders, a Harvard graduate, currently stars on Apple TV+'s The Studio as Quinn Hackett, a junior executive at a fictional film studio in Hollywood. Hackett, Wonders told Vanity Fair, wasn't initially written as a biracial character. It was only after she landed the role that creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg decided to work that in. (On The Studio, white executives often look to Hackett for guidance regarding diversity.) A special screening of The Studio presented an opportunity for Wonders to celebrate her Chinese heritage offscreen too. For the event, Wonders opted for an archival Prada gown from the fashion house's spring 1997 collection. More than just a charming cherry red dress with a 'dreamy design,' as she told Marie Claire in March, it had elements that reminded her of a qipao, a traditional Chinese dress. 'My grandmother is going to love this dress when she sees these photos,' she said. Next up, Wonders will star in the I Know What You Did Last Summer reboot as Ava Brucks, a role that she told Vanity Fair she was initially drawn to because of how 'all-American' she is. 'You just don't see that many people who look like me who are playing these kind of leading ingenue roles,' she said. 'It felt exciting to step into that and also give her some unique flair.' Where there was once shame in being mixed race, Wonders now feels a sense of pride, telling the magazine, 'The thing that I originally felt very complicated about has now become sort of my superpower.'

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