‘I was hooked right away and excited to turn the page’
– NetGalley Review, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
‘In some ways, this is a satire about Hollywood elites and how they live in a weird world . . . But mostly it felt like the desperation to achieve our dreams’
– NetGalley Review, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
‘Sharp, unsettling, and surprisingly tender . . . We follow Raj Ladlani, a gay Indian American actor whose big dreams have quietly curdled’
– NetGalley Review, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
Raj Ladlani is one of thousands in LA: an unemployable actor. He has reasons to believe he is spectacularly talented (his beloved acting coach Anthony says so), a legend in every way but for the success.
His anonymous life working at Yogurtland, obsessively reading Vanity Fair, and fantasizing about stardom, comes to an end when he answers a job ad detailing a relentless, laughable parade of menial responsibilities for a ‘Hollywood Family’. So begins the astonishing decline and fall of Raj Ladlani.
The Simp tells the story of Raj’s momentous employment and the destruction that follows in the wake of his time with the with the H Family: Jim, a macho director determined to prove himself as an artist; and Anna, his much younger wife who has ambitions of her own.
And when the job reveals itself to be an absurdist walk through affluent domestic chaos and misguided engagements with identity politics, Raj might be about to lose it – on a very public stage.
‘Funny, poignant, and positively delightful’
Graham Moore, author of The Holdout
‘A searing, hilarious farce’
Nikesh Shukla, author of The Boxer
– NetGalley Review, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
‘In some ways, this is a satire about Hollywood elites and how they live in a weird world . . . But mostly it felt like the desperation to achieve our dreams’
– NetGalley Review, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
‘Sharp, unsettling, and surprisingly tender . . . We follow Raj Ladlani, a gay Indian American actor whose big dreams have quietly curdled’
– NetGalley Review, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
Raj Ladlani is one of thousands in LA: an unemployable actor. He has reasons to believe he is spectacularly talented (his beloved acting coach Anthony says so), a legend in every way but for the success.
His anonymous life working at Yogurtland, obsessively reading Vanity Fair, and fantasizing about stardom, comes to an end when he answers a job ad detailing a relentless, laughable parade of menial responsibilities for a ‘Hollywood Family’. So begins the astonishing decline and fall of Raj Ladlani.
The Simp tells the story of Raj’s momentous employment and the destruction that follows in the wake of his time with the with the H Family: Jim, a macho director determined to prove himself as an artist; and Anna, his much younger wife who has ambitions of her own.
And when the job reveals itself to be an absurdist walk through affluent domestic chaos and misguided engagements with identity politics, Raj might be about to lose it – on a very public stage.
‘Funny, poignant, and positively delightful’
Graham Moore, author of The Holdout
‘A searing, hilarious farce’
Nikesh Shukla, author of The Boxer
Reviews
Engrossing. A Ripleyesque story of envy and self-abasement, cut through by a satire on the hypocrisies and pretensions of Hollywood
A searing, hilarious farce about race, class and power in Hollywood, which acts as an important parable about wealth and ambition and the things we must do to get ahead. Written with a director's eye for detail, an acerbic tone and a big heart, this is a searing satire about the film industry