Rumaan Alam is the critically acclaimed and bestselling author of the novels Rich and Pretty, That Kind of Mother and Leave the World Behind, which was an international bestseller, a finalist for the National Book Award and the Orwell Prize, and adapted for a major motion picture in 2023 starring Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawke and Mahershala Ali. Alam’s writing has appeared in the New York Times, New York Magazine, New Yorker, New York Review of Books, Bookforum and New Republic, where he is a contributing editor. He studied writing at Oberlin College and lives in New York with his family.
Alam is scathingly funny ... Entitlement invites comparison to Edith Warton’s House of Mirth and Sylvia Plath’s Bell Jar ... Books of this calibre transcend personal experience. I barrelled through – propelled by its wit and unshakeable dread – and promptly read it again. Only then could I luxuriate in its tautness. Mundane conversations distil into dazzling singsong and the whole is expertly held together by its narrator’s sly interjections. Its stylishness belies discipline, for not a word is wasted. Like New York, it will linger despite its apparently cavalier air * Irish Times * The eagerly awaited follow-up to Alam’s brilliant Leave the World Behind, which was made into a Netflix movie by the Obamas, is a searing look at race and class * Australian * Alam knows how to develop a character, measuring each stage in Brooke’s corruption carefully against the constants of family and friends. He is also a superb writer about New York, Brooke’s sweaty subway journeys being a particular highlight. And his technique of parachuting into other characters’ points of view — a hallmark of Leave the World Behind — remains a brilliant way of energising dialogue scenes * Financial Times * Alam’s well-honed instinct to endow Brooke with a selfishness that could give any Ottessa Moshfegh protagonist a run for her money – a statement issued here with sincere admiration ... Alam’s writing is never more brilliant than when it ridicules corporate America ...The sort of shrewd, propulsive read the word “zeitgeisty” ought to be reserved for * Guardian * Written with Alam’s customary alertness to how small details ... can reveal a whole life, Entitlement is an engrossing exploration of the pitfalls of privilege and philanthropy * Spectator * With his slow-building drama and carefully drawn characters, Alam makes clear he is writing fiction rather than creating content ... Artfully, Alam presents Brooke as neither a victim nor a do-gooder, making her instead more selfish than selfless, more prickly than pricked * Times Literary Supplement * Rumaan Alam is a rarity ... It feels like the setup of a familiar drama about workplace power and its abuses, but Alam has something more interesting in mind ... Entitlement – a psychological thriller that subtly turns into a vicious exposé of affluent liberalism – also sneaks up on you, and wins you over * New York Times Book Review * Alam’s writing is loose-limbed, expertly observed, flying along with the engine of a commercial novel and the fine eye of a literary one * Guardian * Alam’s observation of the attitudes and trappings of contemporary upper-middle-class American life has a delicious precision. His shopping lists are as vivid as poems * New Yorker * Masterfully examines morality, privilege, identity and societal tension. Alam’s sharp, observant prose unpacks the complexities of modern life, particularly the intersections of race, class and power … Thought-provoking commentary and richly drawn characters. No one does uncomfortable truths about contemporary America like Alam, who holds a mirror up to our times, the endless ambition, desperation for wealth and consumer culture that underpins it all * Glamour * In many ways, Entitlement is nothing like Alam’s revered 2020 disaster novel, Leave the World Behind ... There is no apocalypse, for starters. But look a little closer and it’s all there: the incisive interrogation of class, race, money, society; the breathtaking plot and the beautiful writing; the way it makes you feel uncomfortable, but look at the world around you anew * i * Clever and engrossing, the novels builds slowly to a dramatic finish * Mail on Sunday * A nervy social drama eyeing the complex contours of prejudice ... A slow-burn tale of connivance and deceit with a knockout ending * Observer, Autumn Fiction Special * An uneasy, intriguing probing of want, need, freedom and race * Daily Mail * Entitlement is needle-sharp: discomfiting, disquieting, mesmerising. Alam taps deep into the greed and ambition that make us human, and that make us miserable’ -- Rebecca Makkai, author of THE GREAT BELIEVERS A quick-witted, daring, beautifully composed novel – deeply knowing and full of wonder -- Susie Boyt Rumaan Alam’s writing is vivid and gorgeous. This is a book that I loved, in part because it feels forbidden, centring on that taboo subject which is ‘other people’s money’. Peeking in on the lifestyles of the uber wealthy is a favourite pastime of mine and here Rumaan Alam offers that up in droves but not only that, the chance to peek into their souls … Alam is expert at subtly detailing Brooke’s sometimes loneliness as she exercises social mobility, a longing for a sense of self-hood and identity that perhaps is the secret fuel that propels her ambition. I cannot recommend this book enough, I truly devoured it and enjoyed every second -- Celine Saintclare, author of SUGAR, BABY These characters, their money and their morality come together in an absolutely devastating thunderclap -- Kiley Reid, Sunday Times bestselling author of Such a Fun Age Should come with an undertow warning ... I was pulled under. Rumaan Alam has mastered that eerie moment when an ordinary gesture has the potential for disaster -- Louise Erdrich, Pulitzer Prize winning author of The Night Watchman Held me spellbound from its evocative opening to its startling, audacious last pages -- Danzy Senna, author of Caucasia Reading Entitlement felt like having a vise slowly tightened around my heart ... Elegant, precise and devastating -- Charles Yu, National Book Award-winning author of Interior Chinatown