Smile and Look Pretty by Amanda Pellegrino
Welcome to my stop on the Smile and
Look Pretty tour! This is Amanda Pellegrino’s debut novel and it will be out
this week. I wanted to introduce you to the book before pub day so you know
what you are in for! Thank you to Park Row Books for sharing the book
information and for allowing me to share it with you. I hope you enjoy the
first chapter.
Backjacket description
A juicy, fun yet piercing debut novel, Smile and Look Pretty tells the story of four assistants working in media who band together to take on their toxic office environments in the ultimate comeuppance—pitched as Sweetbitter meets Whisper Network.
Online they’re The Aggressive One, The Bossy One, The Bitchy One, and The Emotional One. In real life, best friends Cate, Lauren, Olivia and Max all have one thing in common—they’re overworked, overtired, and underpaid assistants to some of the most powerful men in the media and entertainment industries. When they secretly start an anonymous blog detailing their experiences, their posts go viral and hundreds of other women come forward with stories of their own. Confronted with the risks of newfound fame and the possibility of their identities being revealed, they have to contend with what happens when you try and change the world.
Gripping,
razor-sharp, and scathingly funny, Smile and Look Pretty is a fast-paced
millennial rallying cry about the consequences of whistleblowing for an entire
generation, and a testament to the strength of female friendship and what can
be accomplished when women come together.
Excerpt
1
The signs were always there. He was late to a few meetings. He
started happy hour at 2:00 p.m. He promoted from within.
The signs weren’t noticeable at
first. Until they were.
He was late to Marjorie’s
meetings, not Ben’s. He offered scotch on the rocks to the guys. Most of his
former male assistants were now editors.
It took years of working with
him for Cate to learn those things. To realize they were signs.
But he had a reputation. That
she knew from the beginning.
“You’ll need a thick skin,” he’d
said on her first day. A warning.
She didn’t extend him the same
courtesy.
Cate could tell you
every book Larcey Publishing had ever released in its twenty-year history, and
how old she had been when she first read it. The red LP stood out on all the
spines in her dad’s “home office,” which was really the walk-in closet of her
parents’ bedroom converted into a small library lined with bookshelves, the
clothing rails outfitted with a plank of painted wood to form a desk. When she
got home from school, she’d sneak into her parents’ room and read whatever book
was on her dad’s nightstand that week—no matter how age inappropriate the
title. By the time she was ten, she knew she wanted to spend her life helping
people tell stories. Important stories that no one would hear otherwise.
Matthew Larcey was a
literary prodigy, not just to her dad, but to the world. Before he was thirty,
he was known as the next Maxwell Perkins and by thirty-five he used that
acclaim to start his own publishing house. Jobs there were the only ones Cate
applied to during her senior year of college. She started as a production
assistant ten days after graduation, and when the position of Matt’s executive
assistant opened a year later, she was the first to apply.
Matt’s assistant at the
time was a lovely girl from Texas named Eleanor, who tried and failed to
suppress her Southern accent. (Cate later learned Matt forbid y’all from
conversations. Sign.) She interviewed Cate in a conference room with
dull gray walls and two suicide-proof windows that looked out onto Sixth
Avenue, forty-nine f lights below. Cate wore her go-to black dress with a
leather trim and had prepped in the bathroom a few minutes before: whispering
her elevator pitch while applying more mascara; detailing her current
responsibilities as an assistant while running some Moroccan oil through her
frizzy hair; listing her favorite books while swapping out flats and a cardigan
for heels and a blazer.
Twenty minutes into the
interview, Matt Larcey walked in, wearing jeans and an AC/DC T-shirt with a
small hole in the neck. Eyes wide, Cate and Eleanor watched him slowly sit down
at the opposite side of the long conference table, typing on his phone. Despite
having worked there for a year, Cate had never met the company’s founder. He
wasn’t good-looking in the traditional sense—he was far too old for Cate
anyway—but his salt-and-pepper hair paired with his tailored jeans emitted a
kind of effortless power that Cate found enigmatic. She felt reassured knowing
he had smile lines. Maybe it meant he wasn’t as difficult as his reputation
implied.
Eleanor’s gaze darted to
Matt and then back to Cate. “Um, as I was saying—”
“Did you tell her why
you’re being replaced?” he interrupted, looking up at them. His phone buzzed
against the table four times while Eleanor went as red as the LP on the
company’s logo.
“I wasn’t available
enough,” she said quietly.
“Be specific.”
Eleanor took a long
breath and offered Cate a tight-lipped smile. “I was on vacation and missed an
urgent email.”
Cate wanted to crawl
under the table and come back when the tension was gone.
“If I’m working, you’re
working,” Matt said. “That’s the deal.”
Seems logical, Cate thought. Sign.
“I know why you’re
here.” He looked at Cate with an arched brow. “You’re a reader. Right?
That’s what your Twitter bio says? You want to publish something that matters.
The next great American novel, a book that will change the course of literature
forever.”
Eleanor seemed to be shrinking
in front of them, getting smaller and smaller with every word.
“If that’s what gets you
through the day, great,” Matt continued. “By all means, try to find the next
Zadie Smith. If you play by the rules, maybe you will. But there are a lot of
others out there who would kill for this job. So don’t think you’ll get any
favors. If you earn the book, you’ll get the book. Otherwise it will be you
here picking out your own successor.”
When Eleanor appeared at
Cate’s cubicle a few weeks later, offering her the job, Cate immediately
accepted. Because she was a reader. She did want to find the next
great American novel. And, despite its founder’s reputation, Larcey Publishing
was the best place to do that.
Exactly two years later,
Cate sat at her desk in the forty-ninth floor bullpen, moving her eyes slowly
across the floor-to-ceiling color-coded bookshelves packed with LP titles,
thinking about how she was officially the longest lasting assistant in Larcey’s
history. When she had first started, each day she would look up from her desk
at the wall of books in awe, like a tourist admiring the Chrysler Building, and
dream about the day books she discovered and edited would join those shelves.
Now, she had trouble remembering why she wanted to work there so badly in the
first place.
She let out a deep
breath. A wall of color-coded bookshelves was pretty to look at until you
realized how painful it was to put together.
The executive
assistants’ desks were located in the EAB, or Elusive Assistant Beau monde, as
Cate called it before she got the job with Matt. It actually stood for
Executive Assistant Bullpen, but hardly anyone knew that. To Finance they were
Evil Annoying Babies; to editors, Eager Ass-kissing Brownnosers; and to
Marketing, Expendable Agenda Builders. Whatever they were called, she was one
of them. In the center of the rectangular room were two circular velvet couches
around a glass coffee table with a bouquet of f lowers Cate was somehow in
charge of buying and maintaining each week. Lining the perimeter of the room
were seven desks, perfectly positioned outside each boss’s glass office so that
each assistant was always being watched. Like fish in a bowl.
Cate glanced over her
shoulder toward the shadows behind the now-curtained glass wall of Matt’s
office, listening to the mumbles of the third editor in two months getting
fired, and wondered—as they all did at that point—when she should expect
the email from HR inviting her to meet them in Matt’s office at 6:30 p.m. on a
Thursday.
Lucy, the CFO’s
assistant, wheeled her chair toward Cate. “Maggie, huh?” she said, folding her
long blond hair behind her ears as if that would help her gossip better.
“Seems that way,” Cate
responded.
“Do you know what
happened? I thought the self-help category was doing well.”
Cate shrugged. “I’m not
sure.” She tried to look busy, maximizing and minimizing documents, opening and
closing her calendar. Lucy was a great work wife, but she only got the job
because her third cousin twice removed was Stephen King’s neighbor or
something. This made her a “must hire,” thus untouchable. And Lucy knew it. She
was more often found scooting across the bullpen in her white wheelie chair
spreading rumors than actually working.
“Of course you know,
Cate. You’re probably on the HR email.”
As Matt’s assistant, Cate was on all his emails. About the rounds of golf he planned next week. About every book that each editor wanted to acquire this season. About all the firings. She knew that Maggie, a self-help editor, was being fired for considering a position at Peacock Press. Not only were they Larcey’s main competitor, but Cate once heard a rumor that Matt dated its publisher in college, and she broke up with him in favor of his rugby-playing roommate. Either way, the rivalry seemed personal. They had offered Maggie $10K more and a nearly unlimited budget to acquire all the self-help books she could get her hands on. Cate knew everything. And that power was not something she was about to give up for Lucy. It was all she had.
“I guess self-help isn’t
doing as well as we thought,” Cate said.
Before Lucy could reply,
Maggie threw open Matt’s door. The entire room started furiously typing as
Maggie stomped past the EAB, two suited HR reps scurrying behind her. Lucy
picked up the first paper she could find on Cate’s desk and examined it so
closely you’d think she’d just discovered the Rosetta Stone.
As soon as Maggie was
out of earshot, Lucy said, “God, that was awkward.” She lowered her voice to a
conspiratorial whisper. “I heard she’s going to Peacock.”
“Do you really think
it’s Peacock?” Spencer Park whispered from his desk. “What, are they trying to
poach everyone?”
“Poaching the people you
want is more cost-effective than buying a company and paying for all the people
you don’t,” Lucy responded. Cate could have sworn Lucy’s head cocked toward
Matt’s office for the latter part of that statement.
Lucy returned to her
desk and everyone went back to normal until a few moments later, when the heavy
glass door behind her opened again. Cate didn’t need to turn around to know it
was Matt leaving. Her back might be facing his office all day, but she knew his
movements by heart. In the same way, she imagined, he probably knew hers.
Matt moseyed to the
front of her desk, moving his worn, expensive leather briefcase from his right
hand to his left. He’d been kayaking that weekend, and he always got blisters
on his dominant hand when he kayaked. Cate hated that she knew that. “Why are you
still here?” he asked, as if his I’m working, you’re working, that’s the
deal speech didn’t play on a loop in her head 24/7. As if that wasn’t why
she kept her phone on loud all the time, why she woke up panicking in the
middle of the night about missing an email, and why she was that girl who
showed up to bars on Saturdays hiding her laptop in her purse.
“Just finishing up some
work.” Cate glanced at her nearly empty inbox. She was supposed to be on her
way to The Shit List, a much-needed weekly vent session with her friends.
Instead, she was going to be late. Not that that was unusual for her. If Matt
was there, Cate was there, after all.
He looked at Cate, then
at the other assistants, all furiously typing again to seem occupied. “Looks
like everyone else is working a lot harder than you are right now.”
Well, I’m talking to you, Cate wanted to say. I
stopped typing to talk to you.
What actually came out
of her mouth was, “Have a good night.”
She watched him walk
across the EAB and offer a wave and a smile to three executive assistants
standing at the bookshelf, peeling some titles off the wall. “You all work too
hard. This place would be in shambles without you,” he said to them before
turning the corner toward the elevator bank.
After answering a few
more emails, Cate poured some whiskey into her Bitches Get Stuff Done mug,
grabbed her Board Meeting Makeup Kit out of the bottom drawer of her desk and
walked into the bathroom. She was already going to be fifteen minutes late to
The Shit List; what was another fifteen to look presentable and rub some
slightly off-colored concealer on the under-eye circles that seemed to grow
darker throughout the day?
She had discovered the
necessity of a makeup kit on her second day as Matt’s assistant. He had a board
meeting, which was one of the only times she saw him in a suit.
“At exactly four
fifteen, I need you to come into the meeting and bring me a cup of coffee,” he
said. “Just put it in front of me and walk out. Don’t look at me. Don’t look at
anyone. Just in and out. And, you know—” he looked her up and down “—look…presentable.”
Cate could feel her
cheeks flame as he walked away. She didn’t wear a lot of makeup, but she did
always at least look presentable for work.
“Here,” said the CMO’s
assistant at the time. She dropped a small pink-and-white Lilly Pulitzer bag on
Cate’s desk. “That’s code for put on some makeup.”
“I have makeup on.” Cate
rubbed her cheek as if the pressure from her fingers could force blush to
suddenly appear.
She nudged the bag
forward. “Not the kind men notice.”
Reluctantly, Cate
unzipped it and inside found one of everything: powder foundation, mascara,
eyeliner, eye shadow, blush, red lipstick. No variety. Bare minimum to look
like the maximum.
“Put it on my desk when
you’re done. You should keep a board meeting kit here, too. This won’t be the
only time you’ll need it.”
After two years of
board, author, and literary agent meetings, dropping things off at home for his
kid, picking his wife up in the lobby, and countless other occasions for which
Cate was told to “look presentable,” getting ready for margaritas with her
friends was the only time she used the kit to show herself off, rather than be
shown off.
Happy two-year-work-aversary, Cate thought to
herself as she put her makeup bag back in her desk. She took another look at
the bookshelf on her way out. Two years too many.
The weekly calendar
invite for The Shit List pinged on Cate’s phone as she darted up the Union Square
subway staircase. The late May humidity combined with 6-train rush hour crowd
left small beads of sweat on her upper lip and made her curls wild and frizzy.
She passed the produce market closing up shop for the night and the men playing
chess under the streetlights.
When Cate arrived at
Sobremesa, she waved at the hostess and then at their favorite bartender as she
beelined past the crowded bar to join everyone at their usual booth in the
back. Sobremesa was a strange place: corporate but lowbrow. That was strategic.
Find a bar where they were the only group under forty so no one around would
recognize their bosses’ names when Lauren said Pete, an Emmy-winning
screenwriter, had been avoiding her all day; or Max complained that Richard, a
morning news anchor, had stared at her butt for the entire live shoot; or
Olivia yelled about Nate, a washed-up actor who refused to realize he was no
long relevant. They didn’t need their work gossip on Page Six.
Cate stopped when she
saw the three of them in their usual spot, laughing at something Olivia said, a
half-empty pitcher of spicy margaritas moving between them. Lauren was
squinting through her black-rimmed glasses, always refusing to consider a new
prescription until she got promoted and could afford the co-pay. Olivia’s
topknot bounced side to side on her head as she spoke enthusiastically with her
hands, one of her dramatic tendencies as a budding actress. Max sat in the
corner, plucking salt crystals off the rim of her glass and licking them off
her pointer finger.
“Wow,” Lauren said when
she spotted Cate.
“What?” Cate sank into
the booth next to her. Lauren was making too much eye contact, the way she did
when she was annoyed. Max poured the remainder of the pitcher into a fourth
glass and pushed it toward Cate.
Lauren took a long sip
from the tiny straw before saying, “Nice shirt.”
Shit. Cate was wearing
Lauren’s top. The black T-shirt she told Lauren she’d wash and return to her
closet three wears before. The one that now had semipermanent white deodorant
circles under the armpits and was ever so slightly stretched out around the
chest to fit Cate’s larger cup size. “Sorry,” she said to Lauren, who would
hold a grudge until the freshly cleaned and folded shirt was back in her
dresser. It would be at least a month before Cate could borrow anything from
Lauren again, which was a bummer because she’d had her eye on a black pleated
midiskirt for a date next week.
“Whatever,” Lauren said
with a sigh. “Should we just start?” She motioned toward the waitress and, when
she arrived, ordered another pitcher of margaritas in Spanish.
In the center of the
table was a small stack of cash to which Cate added her five-dollar
contribution. She ripped a napkin into quarters and handed them out, scribbling
onto the thin paper, the words bleeding together. I booked Matt’s $37,000
first-class tickets for his family’s Kenyan safari an hour after realizing that
unless I get a raise or my student loans disappear into the ether, I can’t
afford to go home to Illinois for Thanksgiving for the fourth year in a row. Then
she crossed out the latter half. No one she knew could ever afford to leave New
York then, which was why the four of them always ended up doing Friendsgiving
instead. It wasn’t the same as cooking with her mom and then watching her dad
unbutton his pants to fall asleep in his La- Z-Boy in front of the football
game, but it was something.
After everyone finished
scribbling on their napkins, the storytelling began.
Lauren complained about
wheeling an industrial printer covered in blue tarp from the writers’ trailer
to Pete’s trailer parked four long city avenues away during a thunderstorm.
Then, upon showing up to work drenched, was asked by one of the writers to get
coffee for everyone since “she was already wet.”
Olivia had spent an
entire day this week trying to sneak into the W Hotel Residences by schmoozing
a young security guard so that she could do Nate’s laundry there because he
liked the smell of their detergent. “It’s The Laundress,” Olivia said, rubbing
her temples as if the mere mention of the brand’s name gave her a headache.
“It’s what he uses too. Bought it for him myself. But he insists it’s
different.”
Max had to pretend
Sheena’s five-year-old son was hers so she could pick up his ADD medication
before the anchor’s weekend getaway to a resort in New Mexico. The pharmacist
had seemed skeptical, but Max couldn’t return to the newsroom without it. “I
made a comment questioning how we still live in a world where young motherhood
is challenged,” Max said. The pharmacist had stopped asking questions.
The best part about
their four-year friendship, Cate found, was the lack of explanations. They
didn’t have to preface names in their stories with “my boss” or “my friend” or
“the cashier at my bodega.” They never needed to fill anyone in on what they
missed. Because they didn’t miss anything. They knew everything about each
other’s lives. Cate knew that Lauren hadn’t brought a guy home in at least a
year and hadn’t had sex in at least that long as well. She knew that Olivia
rolled her eyes at her Southern Peachtree roots but would secretly perk up
whenever a familiar accent was within earshot, reminding her of home. And Cate
knew that Max’s parents wielded enough old money power and privilege to get her
promoted anywhere, but Max insisted on earning it herself.
Knowing everything about
her friends also meant knowing everything about their bosses. Lauren’s boss
kept bottles of tequila, whiskey, and gin underneath the couch in his trailer.
Cate could tell by looking at a paparazzi photo of Olivia’s boss in People Magazine
whether it was a coincidental shot or he had Olivia tip them off about his
whereabouts. Cate could recognize by Max’s outfit whether she expected Richard,
the handsy morning anchor, to be in the office that day.
Once all the stories
were told and the napkin scraps circled the tea light on the table like a
strange sacrificial ceremony, Lauren said, “Can I make the executive decision
that Olivia wins?” Everyone agreed; folding your boss’s stiff boxers,
regardless of how good they apparently smelled afterward, should win you more
than twenty dollars.
Cate took the piece of
napkin in her hand and looked down at her chicken scratch handwriting. This was
her life. These were the things she spent her days doing. It was her two-year
anniversary as Matt’s assistant, and the day went on just like any other. Cate
wasn’t expecting a cake with her face on it or anything. But some kind of
acknowledgment would have been appreciated. Something that said couldn’t do
it without you or I hope these two years have been worth it or, at
least, a simple thank you.
What did Cate learn
about the publishing industry from booking Matt’s vacations? What did she learn
by organizing the papers on his desk in alphabetical order? What did she learn
from spending a week every November opening up his cabin in Vermont for the
season? She did learn that he spent $600 every year on a new Canada
Goose coat; that the couch in their basement was incredibly uncomfortable to
sleep on; and that his wife kept a dildo in the bottom drawer of her nightstand
(but what did Matt expect, sending his poorly-paid assistant to his rich
vacation house?).
And what had happened
while she’d been 340 miles north, spraying salt all over the cabin’s front
walkway? Spencer filled in on Matt’s desk and was asked to “sit in on” three
author meetings and one board meeting. She’d met only one author in two years,
and the closest she came to board meetings was delivering coffee with strict
instructions not to speak. Did anyone tell Spencer to “look presentable”?
For the last two years,
Cate had only focused on what was at stake: money, access to stamps for mailing
rent checks, free food after author meetings, a foot in the door for her dream
job. But it was starting to feel…fine. Uninspiring. Empty. What was she
working toward?
Cate took one last look
at the napkin before dipping the bottom right corner into the tea light’s f
lame. She held it between her fingers, watching Matt Larcey’s name burn in her
hand as the text slowly turned to ashes and fell onto the wooden table.
After she swept the
ashes to the floor, Cate held up her margarita. “Here’s to the day when we can
make money without doing something degrading.”
Their glasses met in the
middle, and Cate looked at her friends, the assistants busting their asses,
making the rules from behind the scenes. What if they all got together? What if
they called bullshit?
What if they all said no?
Excerpted from Smile and Look
Pretty by Amanda Pellegrino, Copyright © 2021 by Amanda
Pellegrino. Published by Park Row Books.
Keep in touch with Amanda Pellegrino on social
media:
Amanda’s Website: https://www.amandapellegrino.com/
IG: https://www.instagram.com/amandagpellegrino/?hl=en
Twitter: https://twitter.com/amandapellss?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
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