I'm not sure this was an actual novel, it's more like a bunch of short stories with a lot of plot and character overlap, which is weird in a way, because I was expecting short stories straight but then there's this inward spiraling that only exacerbates the fact that it's often hard to tell who's who exactly, though through no fault of the reader, it's mostly the characters who are too disoriented to have clear ideas of who they are. Anyway, we know it's not East Coast but L.A. and environs, and there's a seemingly homogenous tribe of uniformly bored and dull yuppies who are all about 20 and look a few years less, lounging around 1980s on a variety of abused prescription meds and coke and whatever, and they smoke a lot of pot, visit each other's poolsides and parties and photo shoots and other exclusive social events, and deal drugs and suck cock for drugs and tape videos compulsively and generally act like nihilistic brats with expensive habits and absurdly shallow relationships.
It's all really hilarious actually: these are like the most gruesome parody of privileged white (blond, buff, rich, racist etc) kids entirely disfunctional, drugged out of their minds and generally clueless. That is, it would be hilarious, with all the disinterested luxury and excess, if it wasn't for all the sadistic passive agression or downright slasher violence nonchalantly juxtaposed in carefully measured doses, from coffee spoon to swimming pool. The compartmentalization of characters and narratives gives scope to a nuanced spectrum of mindstates, from deranged braindeath to almost relatable, from self-victimizing to horroristic monstrosity. The Informers reads like a kind of satirical freakshow, a modern-day hypebolic rag of courtly scandals and high (huhhuh) society misdemeanors, sometimes outlandish beyond incredulity, but generally too peppered with delicious details to rule out as possibly a thing. Vicarious, brutal, high-budget, cliché'd and quirky, riddled with black humor to the extreme: I found myself embarrasingly entertained.