cover image Party Girl

Party Girl

Anna David, . . HarperCollins/HC, $24.95 (275pp) ISBN 978-0-06-119872-4

David, who has written about celebrities for glossy mags, delivers the saga of Amelia Stone, who writes about celebrities for a trashy gossip magazine. Amelia’s on the L.A. merry-go-round of sex, booze and drugs, and she likes the ride and the A-list company. The patter is bubbly and witty, whether Amelia is getting in trouble at work, getting tangled up in another sexual exploit, snorting lines or puking on herself. Then her parents send her to a luxe rehab clinic after she ODs and gets fired, and on her last day there she learns she’s been tapped, on the basis of her wild reputation, to write a column for a major magazine. The hitch? She’s now sober, something she’s afraid to admit to her employer. Amelia’s deliberation on this point is drawn out, though David finds a steady supply of material in Amelia’s closet sobriety. Between fake vodka shots and interest from HBO to turn her column into a series (yes, really), Amelia finds her way to a happy, sober ending. There will be inevitable comparisons to Sex and the City (Amelia is certainly cast in the Carrie Bradshaw mold), but pink book jacket connoisseurs will likely prefer the original. (June)