Review: Precious You by Helen Monks Takhar

Precious You by Helen Monks Takhar Review
Precious You by Helen Monks Takhar
Release Date
March 10, 2020
Rating
8 / 10

Precious You focuses on Katherine, an experienced editor who had recently returned to work after taking a break because of mental health issues and upon her return, she has to face a new management. Besides her worries about not being able to impress her new boss, she also becomes concerned about Lily—the young, vibrant, and creative intern who is always one step ahead of her. Lily seems to possess everything Katherine wants, everything that she is lacking in and also seems to try to sabotage her and undermine her power every chance she gets. Instead of avoiding her and not getting into a game of cat and mouse, Katherine is too intrigued and lonely to resist the possibility of getting closer to this younger version of herself. Soon, they become involved in some very twisted mind games that will change both of their lives forever.

The novel provides a great analysis into the generational gap between millennials and Gen X, highlighting those intergenerational differences and how they become essential in the power struggle between Katherine and Lily. Katherine, who’s a part of the Gen X, sees Lily as oversensitive, someone who’s taking things way too seriously all the time, who’s obsessed with social media and thinks she can do anything and everything no matter how competent she is for the job. Basically, she complains about Lily being a snowflake ‘with all her triggers’ and desire to do things properly. While Lily thinks Katherine is ungrateful and unaware of how easier her life had been. Furthermore, she mentions that Gen X had a lot to gain from the power imbalance between them and the millennials and because of that, they’ve tried to maintain it with unpaid internships, inadequate sexual relationships in the workplace and so on.

Besides that, the feminist aspects are very complex and well discussed—the power play between the two women is widely based on the fact that Katherine is no longer as young and as attractive as Lily. She’s very insecure about that and the way she sees it—when you are in your twenties, you have the attention of men, they favour you, they will listen to your ideas, but as soon as you get to your thirties or fourties, you do not interest them anymore, your beauty is no longer an asset that can help you advance in your career. This is a problem because men usually wield the power and they are the ones who bestow it on whoever they see fit—usually someone shinier and younger that comes forward. I loved how it was mentioned that women don’t support each other enough when it comes to this, that they should fight more for objective criteria instead of being content with getting the advantages that come with youth and beauty.

This book is everything you expect upon reading the blurb and yet so much more than that, sadly it had quite a few shocking moments that didn’t work for me. I would say the psychological aspects were very well-done. I was constantly trying to predict who’s going to win, how they are going to hurt each other next, who has the upper hand and how they are going to use it – but there were a few plot-lines that seemed a bit far-fetched and mostly present to add to the shock value. Katherine made some very frustrating decisions as well, she is so intelligent and has been working in a highly competitive work environment for 20 years, I was expecting her not to get caught up in so many of Lily’s games and learn to predict her behaviour sooner than she did. Even so, this fast-paced psychological thriller was enjoyable and constantly kept me on the edge, its strengths surpassing its weaknesses by far.

All in all, this is an exceptional debut due to its strong female characters and thrilling conflicts, while touching on important subjects such as feminism and workplace dynamics. The writing was impressive and I adored the way the author weaved the plotlines so effortlessly and in such ways that you couldn’t stop reading until you knew how everything will go down. The structure is also very intriguing with diary entries for Lily while Katherine addresses Lily directly in her point of view, which feels very intimate and meaningful to their connection. The dynamics between these two women are very complex and I don’t believe I will forget these characters, nor their story anytime soon. The story is absolutely haunting and you should definitely add it to your to be read pile if you like amoral characters and being kept in the dark until the very end.

Precious You is available from Amazon, Book Depository, and other good book retailers as of March 10th 2020.

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Synopsis | Goodreads

An obsessive power struggle between an editor and her millennial intern turns dangerous in this debut psychological thriller–for readers of Luckiest Girl Alive and You.

Trusting you was my first mistake.

To Katherine, twenty-four-year-old Lily Lunt is a typical “snowflake.” Soft, entitled, unflaggingly earnest, the privileged, politically correct millennial will do whatever she can to make it big as a writer, including leveraging her family’s connections. She’s got it easy. To Lily, Katherine Ross, a career woman in her early forties, is a holdover from another era: clueless, old-fashioned, and perfectly happy to build her success on the backs of her unpaid interns.

When Lily is hired as the new intern at Leadership magazine, where Katherine is editor in chief, her arrival threatens the very foundations of the self-serving little world that Katherine has built. But before long, she finds herself obsessively drawn to Lily, who seems to be a cruel reminder of the beauty and potential Katherine once had, things she senses Lily plans to use against her. Is Katherine simply paranoid, jealous of Lily’s youth as she struggles with encroaching middle age? Is Lily just trying to get ahead in the cutthroat world of publishing? Or is there a more sinister motivation at play, fueled by the dark secrets they’re both hiding? As their rivalry deepens, a disturbing picture emerges of two women pitted against each other across a toxic generational divide–and who are desperate enough to do anything to come out on top.

As unsettling as it is provocative, Precious You cuts to heart of questions surrounding modern female rivalry, obsession and deceit. Helen Monks Takhar delivers an explosive take on the contemporary workplace and the disparate generations that power it, turning the professional roles women play on their heads in a razor-sharp, revenge-driven thriller for our age.


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