For fans of Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Miranda July–and the darker edge of Breaking Bad and Uncut Gems–comes a whip-smart, irresistible debut novel about a college senior who has 48 hours to sell her recently deceased mother’s surprise stash of rare pills, or suffer the consequences.
Arvy Keening is just trying to get through the week. Tantalizingly close to leaving her college years at Westheimer University behind, all she has to do is pass her finals, pack up her life, and ship off to San Francisco for a prestigious Big Pharma internship. The problem? Arvy just found 200 hits of Molly in her dead mother’s closet. And when two drug dealers come to collect what they are owed, they reveal that the pills are not Molly, but Mona – a rare pharmaceutical that induces intense orgasms. The dealers give Arvy an ultimatum: Sell 200 Monas in 48 hours or die.
To aid in her seemingly impossible quest, Arvy recruits Wolf, Westheimer's resident drug dealer who also happens to be infuriatingly charming and distractingly sexy. In a race against the clock, Arvy and Wolf barrel through their college town, leaving a series of erotic shenanigans in their wake; appealing to horny co-eds, lonely barflies, and a mysterious sorority whose sisters have their own ideas for Mona’s potential uses. But if Mona has a knack for unleashing visceral reactions in the body, what will it unlock in Arvy, who has been repressing grief over her mother’s death for weeks?
Unashamedly brash, bold, and blistering, 200 Monas is a truly one-of-a-kind read, a playful and honest examination of sexuality and grief, and a sharp, searing love letter on how to release all that’s inside you.
Jan Saenz is a writer, educator, and native Houstonian. Her work has appeared in 68 to 05, Paper Darts, HAD, and more. She loves teaching creative writing, having worked as a consultant for Kinder High School of Performing and Visual Arts. Before teaching, she worked as a writing coach for Lone Star College. Her debut novel, 200 Monas, will be published by Little, Brown in March 2026.
This one wasn’t for me, but I do think others would enjoy it. Just not what I was expecting. This is a story about a girl who accidentally inherits 200 hits of “Mona”- a drug that gives women intense orgasms. She is working with the campus drug dealer and trying to unload these so she isn’t killed by the cartel that comes after. I was interested in her grieving process and how she reconciled who her mother was, who apparently died of suicide. For me, I got a bit uncomfortable with the overtly sexual content when the characters used the drug. I wanted to know more about Wolf and his relationship with rose. That said, I do think that others may really enjoy. The writing style is very strong for a young main character (early 20’s).
Thanks to NetGalley and Little Brown for the ARC. Book to be published 3/3/26
Arvy is about to graduate college and start her life when her mom passes. Sure this puts a hold on her plans for her future, but what’s in store for her is an adrenaline fueled race against time. She finds 200 hits of a drug that she’s sure she knows what it is. Not so fast, these are Monas. A fantasy-like drug that has orgasmic effects. The dealers that supplied the Monas to her mother comeback to collect money that’s owed. In hasty fashion, she seeks out the drug dealer on campus for help to sell the Monas. Wolf is easy on the eyes in that really sexy way. They make their way through campus and nearby haunts to peddle the Monas. It’s a fun ride and so steamy. With all the urgency and activity it doesn’t leave much room to grieve. In Arvy’s own way she finds peace.
I thoroughly enjoyed this fast paced read and Jan Saenz is on my radar! Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher Little, Brown and Company for an early copy.
What do you get when you give Breaking Bad’s Heisenberg mascara tear streaks, an anxiety disorder, and a pink convertible? Jan Saenz’s 200 Monas, that’s what. This book was such a good time. I feel like all of my five star reviews lately contain the words “I never wanted it to end,” or “I couldn’t put it down,” but it’s so unbelievably true this time, I swear. I felt like I was in the middle of it all, like I knew these people and I was truly invested in the outcome of the seventy-two-ish hours we follow them through. I don’t even know how to describe this book without giving the whole thing away, but I’ll try:
Basically, Arvy is an undergraduate student at a fictional university in Texas. Her mom has just died in a car accident. Accident? Purposeful? Who’s to say. She’s been tasked to clean out her childhood home as it’s being prepped for sale. She finds a stash of miracle orgasm drugs. Turns out her mom was a secret drug dealer. Mom’s supplier shows up, says, “Arvy, you have two days (barely) to give me the ten grand your mom owes me, or I’m gonna kill you and make it look like an accident!” Chaos and hilarity ensue.
I loved this book. Clearly! I don’t know that it will be for everyone - it’s pretty sexually explicit, like, moreso than most romance books I’ve read - but it’s funny, it has a lot to say about being a young woman in today’s society, and the male lead, Wolf, is so hot you could cook an egg on him. I think if you’re drawn to the cover and the summary, you should give this one a shot.
Also, Amazon, if you’re listening, Timothy Olyphant is the only person who could play Francis Pete. You and I both know it.
original notes:not sure how much i'm allowed to say about this one FIVE MONTHS OUT FROM PUBLICATION but this. in my eyes, this is a perfect book. oh my god. i will never be over it. i wanted to start it over right when i finished it. incredible!!!
A feral little firecracker of a debut, this reads like someone spiked a grief novel with jet fuel and bad decisions. Saenz delivers a wild, sweat-slick, slightly cringy romp that never pretends to be respectable, and is all the better for it.
To the unbothered, lusty perverts who buckle in without a single clarifying question— my people— the ride is fast, unrepentant, and exactly what I came for. May it also scratch that itch for you.
Some books are very weird and extra and I love it, so I hoped this one would be like that but after 20 % I dnf:ed. It was to over the top and the some of the descriptions had me cringing badly. But I do see the appeal for the book as I said some very weird and extra books works for me but some don't.
This book was WILD, kind of dumb, and absolutely ridiculous, but also very fun up until about the 70% mark. That's when it started to lose me. I went in expecting a weird girl fiction, but somehow got the smuttiest book that ever smut—a horny, unhinged rom-com escapade. Once the premise stops escalating, there really isn't much underneath to carry it. It's still a fun read, just not what I hoped for. Don't go in expecting anything deep.
After attending the Buzz Books live call, I knew I NEEDED 200 Monas in my life. I was lucky enough to win a copy of each book mentioned that evening, but 200 Monas had my #1 spot without question—the second my copy arrived I dropped all other reads & dove right in. My eyeballs couldn't take this in fast enough, so the sec the audio was also available here on NG I requested it so I could listen even faster and get to the end of this beauty. Speaking of the audio—Vanessa Moyen fuggin KILLLLLLLED it. Having started this one out w/ my eyeballs I was so so curious how the narrator would handle the moans—Vanessa nailed 'em. It wasn't unbearably awk, it sounded authentic without making me any more uncomfy than comes w the territory, she was phenom.
During the Buzz Books call, Jan herself dubbed this a unique take on grief. Having dealt w grief in strange ways myself, I was so looking forward to seeing how our FMC Arvy would handle it. She did not disappoint, holy sh!t. This is WILD but in all of the best ways. I was nervous, esp w this being a debut, that things could take a disrespectful turn if not done well (I mean, drug induced O's & a dead mom? yeeeesh). I had no reason to fear, Jan played this perfectly. It's no wonder she's already got the screenplay in the works (which I CANNOT wait for, btw).
I'm not a romance girlie, in fact if anything I'm known to be the opposite...until now. Jan was so sneaky w the cute stuff that it sucked me right in. Moderation by Elaine Castillo is the only other novel to have pulled this side out of me!
The only comparison I can make is Kimberly King Parsons' We Were the Universe. If you loved the vibe of that gem, 200 Monas is for you.
This review is kinda all over the place & I know that. Full transparency, I'm in the middle of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) & it's got my brain all wonky lately...but I didn't want to wait any longer to shout from the rooftops that this is a banger. So, this is what ya get, sorry. lolz
Thank you times a milli to Jan Saenz, Little Brown & Co,, Vanessa Moyen, Hachette Audio, Buzz Books, & NetGalley for the physical ARC, DRC & ALC (the latter in exchange for my honest review...that they would have gotten anyway bc I loved this so much I can't keep it to myself).
I predict this debut-novel will be a bestseller and I think it is going to appeal big-time to those who love All Fours and Bunny. Seems Amazon MGM has already acquired the film rights, not sure how they are going to make this true to the book without it garnering an X-rating, but I look forward to seeing what they do with it.
The book's premise is excellent, the execution, meh. I did want to like it more than I did because there were mad-cap elements along with interesting characters, things I always do enjoy in a story but the story itself, despite the clever premise, was so very, very predictable. I was able to anticipate pretty much every twist and turn; maybe others won't. But the one thing that, unfortunately, sticks with me most is the lack of empathy Arvy has regarding Shelly, which makes me kind of hate her (no spoilers, you will have to read the book, then tell me if you disagree).
Disclosure: Received an uncorrected ARC of this book from NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company/Hachette Book Group (Thank you!) in exchange for an honest review.
4,5 This was a weird hot mess in the best way possible. I just love imperfect stories that do their own thing. I laughed. I smiled happily and sadly. The romance bits were kind of exactly how I prefer them ; quirky and funny but still tender in a subtle. This book was very much for me.
while this was a fun ride it definitely wasn’t what i was expecting. felt more like a romance with a back drop of a crazy story, which i don’t enjoy. i was entertained but i did have to force myself to finish after we reached the 100 page mark. i didn’t find this to be sexy or erotic even tho its about a pill that makes you orgasm and it didn’t offer anything profound about grief or womanhood or any of the themes i think it was going for? honestly this should have just been marketed as a romance because comparing this to miranda julys all fours is CRAZY
Wow, this book was a wild ride I never expected. I couldn’t believe the chaos that occurred in a matter of days for poor Arvy. I was laughing at many parts of this book and my jaw dropped in shock at others. Wolf’s character was pretty interesting and I love the relationship between the two of them. This book is not your average thrilling read. It’s sexy, silly, and suspenseful.. I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
What a sexy little thriller-comedy-romance? Not really sure how I would classify it but I was so hooked the moment I started reading 200 Monas.
We have Arvey who’s mother just passed away & left behind 200 very rare pills that no one else has on the market. & these pills give you an extreme O. She has to sell them within 48 hours or as the mobsters say “she will be swimmin with the fishes.”
I was so hooked on the premise but the writing is so funny & fast paced. The turns this story takes & the people she meets along the way were so well fleshed out. Plus the narration (gifted the ALC) was PHENOMENAL! If you have the opportunity to listen to this one I would totally recommend. The narrator deserves all the recognition for bringing this story alive.
Jan Saenz creates such a heartfelt story of a daughter trying to come to understand her mother posthumously through her side hustle of drug dealing while also navigating this new chapter in her life of graduating college.
I can not wait for everyone to get their paws on it! I think it’s going to be a crowd favorite & something unexpected!
Will def be keeping an eye out for more of Jan’s work.
This had moments of genius and moments of cringe. The story was clever and the slow burn romance was perfect. I do wish that Arvy would have showered sooner though. I couldn’t stop thinking about how gross she must’ve smelled. I appreciated the spice, it’s a book about a sex drug for Pete sake.
A real struggle to get through for me tbh. It starts strong, introducing heavy themes of grief and mental illness and loved ones keep secrets alongside talk of sex and orgasms and party drugs. I was eager for the knitting of the two of them together, those two wildly dissimilar concepts, of expressions of grief being compared to orgasm, and I guess I sort of got that? But the way it comes about is so…I’m not holding a full scarf after finishing it, just scraps of yarn.
There’s a nugget of genuine brilliance in here, but it doesn’t quite realize its potential, getting bogged down with over-the-top characters in Pete Francis & Marge, Len, and dear god Rose. The main characters do have genuine chemistry, and some of their dialogue is incredibly well-written and compelling (shout out to the post-theatre party fight, it felt realistically messy in a great way), but Wolf’s story is woefully incomplete and he also flips between the archetypal Sad Boy and the archetypal Horny Bad Boy on a whim, sometimes completely mismatching the tone of the scene he’s in.
Arvy is mercifully consistent, and her segues between horny and sad are explained well. She’s a hot mess, trying to cerebralize something that is entirely emotional and needs to be felt. It’s a good angle for a scientist, though I wish it had been explored more that she’s kind of a genius at biochem? Though I like where she ends up! Bright future, learned a lot about herself and her own power, I just wish the novel ended on her final voicemail. The fluff that comes after was unnecessary and drags the focus away from her.
I also, unfortunately, was not the biggest fan of the prose. It randomly swaps between functional language and some of the purplest prose I’ve ever read, which runs entirely counter to Arvy’s more scientific mind. Ironically, the writing is at its best in the pseudo-sex scenes, which makes them stand out in a good way among the tonally confused scenes the likes of the first meeting with Pete Francis & Marge, Wolf trying to confess to Arvy what he did, and the feminist volcel cult party.
All in all, good for some smut with a half-baked plot constructed around it, I wish it had tried harder to draw parallels between grief and orgasms, though I do appreciate the ending monologue paying lip service to the fact that taking Mona is like grief in that they’re both uncontrolled and all-consuming. Needed a bit longer in the oven to draw them closer together and actually say the quiet part out loud if the tone of every other scene is over-the-top slapstick comedy.
My Selling Pitch: Breaking Bad meets Margo’s Got Money Troubles meets Girl Dinner for a sexy madcap romp. Sex pill book makes me cry was not on the bingo board, and yet here we are. Undiagnosed autistic and her exasperated not-boyfriend will do it for me every time!
Pre-reading: For fans of Fleabag? Say less. I’m SAT.
(obviously potential spoilers from here on) Thick of it: CAMARADERIE, I mean🎶 (Pry this joke-)
The girlies and our thing for hands is crazy.
T Swift sin
Hi autism.
Stop letting strangers in your homes!
How the fuck can you be allergic to pickles? I would die.
I thought the dog was deaf?
So the dog does die-
This would make a phenomenal limited series.
No, that’s it. Roll credits right here. Five stars. This is so funny. I love campy tone shifts.
It’s very Breaking Bad, I assume. (Still haven't watched it.)
Not a minty boy lol
This reads like the yellow hair story in Mouth.
Title drop
Unfortunately, I’m having the best time. I love them.
The audiobook is very good.
Harry Potter sin
Me on ovulation day.
Mom’s gotta be bipolar, no?
Does it make men irresistible maybe?
I want one. He’s sexy.
Why hasn’t she seen him? Some psychological thing?
My eyebrows shot up at the kiss.
Is his mom the head of the sorority or something?
They kinda give Pip and Ravi, and I won’t hear otherwise.
Chad has his or someone important to him’s nudes maybe? (Nailed it!)
The sorority is kinda giving Girl Dinner. I’m so intrigued!
We love Kindle smut.
He’s gotta be Rose’s son. (Yup.)
I LOVE THEM.
I knew I was right about the nudes.
Wow, pine and mint-all the cliches lol
I love them together. The tension is so good.
Brother, I’m such a square and even I’m like feed her smoke like it’s oxygen. I’m unwell.
Hehehe kicking my little feet!
This audiobook is sooo good too. Idk why my brain can register the sexy man voice she puts on as sexy man. Like I forget it’s being acted? Does that make any sense? I feel like the girls that get it, get it.
This book writes horny femme desire so well.
It is so funny that she keeps taking horny drugs before big events.
We’re gonna need a bigger boat made me cackle out loud.
Why do her sleep shorts have a zipper?
I feel like this book counts as fun in funerals.
I hate how much I love a desperate baby, wake up scene.
Girl, that’s his mom. Keep uI.
You can’t highlight the whole book, Samantha. But I want to!
I’M JUST SUPPOSED TO BE NORMAL ABOUT THIS. Cream filled, double stuffed, elbows deep, and messy. Oh god, I need to be sedated.
Her name also means horny so-
This is just that incel no nut thing. And it’s ridiculous. And scientifically disproven.
That is so funny. I hate insta love and this book takes place over the course of 24 hours, and I feel like I’m holding up my barbie dolls being like now kiss.
It’s too happy. What’s gonna go wrong and why is it gonna make me burst into tears?
I also love the STEM bits because that was me.
I hate chortle. Why is it in every book lately? Remove it.
IF THIS BOOK BLUE BALLS ME ONE MORE TIME
I do not want him to be bad. Don’t do this to me.
Yesss get his pictures back from Chode!
I hope he didn’t sell some drug to her mom.
HOW MANY DO YOU WANT The shriek that left me
This is so real too of like everything‘s horny and then you start thinking and you’re like fuck, it’s not horny anymore!
He’s so lovely, I swear to god, book.
Just let them be together. Don’t do this to me, please. please. I don’t want to skip to the end, but I actually need to know that they’re OK and that actually, she can have good sex with him when she communicates, and- I’m actually gonna lose it.
Why did he steal the drugs? Why did he give them to Chanel?
Arvey better get a happy fucking ending
I love this stupid book. Why is it making me tear up? That is what good men do!
Yeah, no that did it. I fully teared up. I love this stupid book.
That ending voice note is so good This book is so thematic. It’s so good. How do people not like this??? I love this book! (It’s a lot of DNFs over the dog.)
I’m gonna throw up. I love this book so much.
I feel like there was a better spot to end it than going back to the dead dog joke because it’s quite distasteful, even though that dog needed to be put out of its misery, that’s a bad way to go.
And also sue me, I wanted to watch them have really good sex because you know they will. You tell me it’s big all book and nobody tracks down a condom in this mess?
But fuck me, I love this book.
Post-reading: If you told me a book that opens with a dog being shot was going on my best books of the year and favorites of all time list, I would’ve spat in your face.
Let’s get that wildly upsetting bit and my one gripe with the book out of the way so I can gush profusely for the rest of this. No one likes a dead dog, and while it certainly drove home the threat of the dealers, the main character is a little too laissez-faire about it. I know theoretically not everyone likes dogs, but girl, that’s a hard sell to your audience. I also didn’t love the callback to it at the end of the book. Yes, we needed closure on that plot point, but it soured their reunion.
Okay, complaining over. Y’all. This book. This fucking book! I loved it. I barely have words beyond that. I do think I read it at precisely the right time. I too am a messy 20-something with unprocessed grief who just has to laugh at it so she doesn’t cry until a book emotionally eviscerates her because it hits so close to home. I think if you’re an overwhelmed stem girly somewhere on the spectrum who’s been disappointed by men time and time again… bitch, this is your book. She’s just like us, for real!
It’s such a sensory-laden book which I think really works to drive home the female gaze coded, desirous writing. Shit’s sexy. The tension between these two characters is immaculate. You’re gonna be ready to throw things as the book goes on and continues to blue ball you. It is top-tier banter.
I think the over-the-top characters surrounding them also help their quieter stories. It’s a really good balance to have these almost satirical villains and then these more grounded, reflective heroes. Plus, it’s fucking fun. The audiobook for this is phenomenal. There’s so much punchy dialogue in this, and the audiobook narrator did a great job acting it out.
This never reads like a debut and it bites off so much. It’s such a hard book to pitch. Ha ha, girlypop has 48 hours to sell drugs! is already plenty for a wacky buddy comedy, but then you throw in this nuanced take on grief processing and how people try to wrestle control back from traumatic events with sex and then you also couple that with conversations about consent on college campuses, and then please hold, because we’re still not done, and we’re throwing in some social commentary about big Pharma, predatory feminism straight out of an Olivie Blake novel, and different layers of mommy issues and mental health. I’m out of breath just listing it off, and this goddamn debut makes it feel effortless, as if you couldn’t write one theme without writing about the others.
I loved it. I loved it. I loved it. She is going to be an auto-buy author for me. I’m not going to shut up about this book. Truly, I’m going to be so insufferable about it. You have to read this. Let me say it again, you HAVE to read this.
Who should read this: Pip and Ravi fans, but like adult fans Laugh so we don’t cry at grief fans Desire written for the female gaze fans Fleabag fans
Ideal reading time: Spring
Do I want to reread this: Yes
Would I buy this: YES.
Similar books: * Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe-messy girl lit fic, family drama, social commentary, addiction * Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash-lit fic, satire, family drama, social commentary, cults * Just Watch Me by Lior Torenberg-messy girl lit fic, family drama, grief, social commentary * Girl Dinner by Olivie Blake-dark academia, horror, litfic, queer, social commentary, cults * A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson-mixed media, YA thriller, romance * American Rapture by C. J. Leede-hear me out, it is also a book about grief and desire, it just goes about it in a very different way. Dystopian, horror, queer, social commentary * Soft Core by Brittany Newell-lit fic, psychological horror, queer, revenge thriller * Fruit of the Dead by Rachel Lyon-lit fic, myth retelling, family drama, addiction * Mouth by Puloma Ghosh-short story collection, lit fic, fairytale retellings-specifically the Yellow Hair story
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
SO GOOD!!!! I could not put this book down for a second. It was fast paced, funny, emotional, and 🔥🔥🔥 literally everything you could want in a book. Could’ve done without the Shelley of it all but I’m willing to look past it. I feel so lucky I got to read this as an ARC. Everyone mark your calendars!!!
Thank you to the team at Little, Brown and Company for the ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Arvy Keening is fucked. Not only is she 3 finals away from the end of her college career and the start of her new life in San Francisco, but she's now saddled with selling the drugs she found in her dead mother's closet. She has 48 hours to rid herself of 200 Monas- a rare, orgasm-inducing drug- or the dealers who sold her mother the Monas will kill her. Thankfully, she's got Wolf, Weistheimer University's sexiest and most well-connected drug dealer, to help her out. The story follows the duo as they sell, suck, and stumble their way through Westheimer and its clientele. Ranging from skeptical sorority sister to the higher-ups of the town, Arvy and Wolf have their work cut out for them.
200 Monas is a solid debut novel. While the blurb compares it to the likes of Phoebe-Waller Bridge and Miranda July, I believe a more apt comparison would be to the movie Booksmart or a collegiate version of Uncut Gems. This movie is uniquely bursting with youthful, playful energy similar to that of Booksmart, while having some of the high-stakes tension of Uncut Gems. This novel also has moments of tenderness and heart, especially when discussing themes of loss, grief, and mental health. That being said, there were definitely issues with pacing, repetitive scenes and dialogue, and the novel did take a slight narrative turn that made the ending feel uneven and certain plot points were rushed.
Between the story that feeds the current appetite for sexy, snappy, and suspenseful narratives to the already penned deal with Amazon for the screen rights, I believe 200 Monas will be one of the hotter books of the year. and I will definitely be keeping my eye on Jan Saenz's future work!
objectively, this is a four star - a rompy Ride with some flaws (i.e. a littler draw out with a few too repetitive sex scenes in the third act) but I can't give a book with this title about an orgasm drug not not give 5*.
I may have had the wrong expectations for this book. I thought this would be more weird girl lit fic about a college age girl grieving after losing her mother and dealing with dealing (lol) the surprise she left behind. While this does happen we don't get much about the relationship between her and her mother or really much detail about her grief. Instead this felt more like an absurdist horny college romantic comedy from the early 2000s (but with more consent thank god) It was entertaining enough but not in a way that was for me. I think if you go into this with the right expectations you may have a better time than I did.
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for access to this book for free. I am writing this review voluntarily and honestly
I'm no kind of prude, I don't care if there's constant sex and a multitude of descriptions of engorged genitals, if you want your characters to get laid every ten pages, go for it. But I'd like some kind of coherent plot and maybe ONE realistic, relatable character amid it all. I hated the way it represented women and men both, with or without the pill.
I had a coworker reading this book, and her talking about it immediately made me go and request it for myself. For a story about a grieving college student selling an orgasm drug, this book is strangely sweet and hopeful. I loved the characters. They felt so real and fleshed out. Some of the side characters were a little over the top, but in the best way. I wouldn’t go into this book expecting the next literary masterpiece, that isn’t what this book is. And I think it isn’t trying to be either. This book is a whirlwind, comedic, hopeful, sexy adventure. It reads like a rated R comedy movie.
Speaking of how it reads, I got the audiobook format, and let me tell you, that narrator put their entire being into reading this book. I heard all of the “monas.” I felt the emotions. The voices they did for the other characters were so distinct that I could always tell who was talking. The narrator gave them all a distinct cadence and personality to their voices, which only added to the fun and lively characters.
This was fantastic. I went in expecting something absurd, funny, and weirdly sexy. I got all of that with a side of really cute romance and the best intimidating drug dealers ever. Seriously, I can’t believe I am rooting for the “bad guys” to succeed by the end. I would recommend this book to people who enjoyed books like Sky Daddy.
Trigger warning: (Not really a spoiler, but I know some people like to go into these things blind.)
Thanks SO, SO much to Netgalley and Hachette Audio for letting me go on this wild, wild ride. I will definitely be reading more by this author the minute it comes out.
This is a bit of a firecracker of a novel, very chaotic but in a good way. Once it gets going, it moves fast and has this “can’t look away” vibe that kept me hooked. The energy reminded me a lot of Uncut Gems: messy, high-stakes, and full of escalating chaos that somehow makes the ride even more fun.
What surprised me is how much romance is in the story. It’s not just a side plot, it’s actually a meaningful part of the narrative. I loved the entrepreneur…Wolf 🙏🏾 who brought a lot of charm.
200 Monas is veryyyyy horny in a way that’s intentional and fun, and I appreciated the conversations around desire, relationships, and being a woman in a female body. It’s also thoughtfully touched on grief!
This sounds a little crazy on paper, but the writing pulls it off. For a debut, it’s incredibly entertaining, and filled with so much personality. If you liked Margo's Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe, I think you’ll have a lot of fun with this one. Truly a wild ride. I laughed so much, lol.
Arvy is grieving her mother's recent death and is ready to finish college and move away for a prestigious internship. While cleaning out their shared home, Arvy finds 200 hits of a mystery drug. When 2 drug dealers show up at her house, she discovers that the pills are Mona, a drug that gives women intense orgasms, and that she will be killed if she doesn't sell them all and hand over $10,000 to the dealers within 48 hours.
What ensues is an absolutely ridiculous 2 days of Arvy testing out the Mona and working with the campus drug dealers try to unload the pills.
This was certainly an unforgettable book with some hilarious moments (the drug dealers were amazing comic relief). The writing was incredibly vivid and I felt like I was right there with Arvy and Wolf every sweaty and anxious step of the way.
This is one unexpected wild ride of a book! I absolutely enjoyed this and couldn’t put it down. Don’t let the synopsis fool you - there is a whole lot more depth and storyline going on here than you think.
What a crazy plot and off-the-wall cast of characters. Arvy (short for Harvey) is having a pretty bad time. Her mother has just passed away leaving unanswered questions and residual fears for Arvy about how her mother died and if the depression, or “funk”, that haunted her mother will become her burden as well. To top that, her mother’s will has conditions she has to meet, finals she has to pass and now she’s got a bag of orgasm pills, Monas, to sell in just over 24 hours.
The plot takes off at the start and never slows or stops. The cast of characters and supporting plot sidelines are wild and creative. The writing is downright funny. There are heavy themes throughout, though, with the reaching impacts of depression and the complicated relationships between mothers and their children being pervasive and right at the forefront. These themes balance the wilder aspects of the story and bring a different kind of edge.
The writing is smooth and so well done with many subtle lines that hit right on point. Arvy truly is a mess and so lost without her connection to her mother yet, in spite of that, she manages some insane situations and starts to find some footing for herself. Her counterpart, Wolf, is her perfect balance and just about the best guy you could find. He really is such a good person despite what stereotypes would lead you to believe. Watching the two of them stumble through this maze of madness and find something to trust in each other was sweet, emotional, touching and fun. Arvy and Wolf are really great characters that I loved. Francis Pete and Marge, though, are pretty big scene stealers.
This will make a great movie and I’m looking forward to it. The book is really good, though, so start here! Definitely recommend!
Thank you to NetGalley, Little, Brown and Company and the author for the opportunity to read an advance copy of this wild book and share my thoughts.
Brace yourselves, readers, because this is a really wild ride of a book. I'm certain that I'm not the intended audience. Arvy, a college student, is grieving the loss of her mother. Going through her things, she finds a box of pills, 200 monas, guaranteed to give you the most mind-blowing orgasm of your life. She needs money to settle a debt, and tries to unload the pills with the help of the hot local drug dealer. What ensues is completely bonkers and, I have to admit, while entertaining, also very cringey. The writing is engaging, pulling the reader right into the story. I kept asking myself why I continued to read it, but I had to see it to the end, which was surprisingly rewarding.