Girl Dinner by Olivie Blake
Everyone on campus knows The House. Year after year, a slew of freshman girls pray that the exclusive sorority will bid on them. But only the best are welcomed in, and The House churns out shockingly perfect young women who go on to become CEOs, stars, and influencers. What’s their secret?
Nina Kaur believes getting into The House is her pathway to success, and she’ll do anything to win over her future sorority sisters. Once she gets in, she searches for the truth behind The House’s reputation while climbing the ranks and getting closer to its charismatic leaders and alumnae.
Meanwhile, Dr. Sloane Hartley doesn’t pay much attention to Greek life on campus. She’s too busy caring for her eighteen-month-old daughter while also trying to prove she’s just as worthy of a faculty position as her husband, even though taking parental leave meant accepting a demotion. But when she’s asked to serve as faculty advisor to The House, she accepts, hoping their success will rub off on her.
The more Nina and Sloane learn about The House, the more questions arise. What does that kind of perfection cost? To what lengths are they willing to go to have it all?
Girl Dinner isn’t the most gruesome of horror novels; it leans heavily into social satire with a creeping sense of dread lurking just beneath the surface. The sorority at the story’s center proves a perfect setting for exploring the competing expectations and impossible standards women face. Nina and Sloane are very different but equally compelling protagonists, and their shifting perspectives bring balance to this roller coaster of a story. Once The House’s secret is revealed, you won’t be able to put this book down until you find out how it ends.























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