Please Join Us: A Novel
Please Join Us: A Novel book cover

Please Join Us: A Novel

Hardcover – August 23, 2022

Price
$17.03
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
Atria Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1982159245
Dimensions
6 x 1.1 x 9 inches
Weight
1.18 pounds

Description

"Catherine McKenzie has reached new heights with Please Join Us , herxa0propulsive thriller about secret organizations, hidden agendas, and the lengths one woman will go to reclaim her life. You won't want to put this book down!" —Laura Dave, New York Times bestselling author of The Last Thing He Told Me "Catherine McKenzie's latest is a triumph. I was infatuated with this brilliant, tangled web of lies, cover ups and deception. Totally thrilling and empowering, Please Join Us shows how some people will stop at nothing to get what they want. McKenzie never fails to impress!" —Mary Kubica, New York Times bestselling author of Local Woman Missing “I devoured this book in one sitting! The First Wives Club meets The Firm in a chilling, serpentine ride that will leave you breathless. Pleasexa0Join Us belongs at the very top of your TBR stack.” —Liv Constantine, internationally bestselling author of The Last Mrs. Parrish “This searing take on professional networking from Catherine McKenzie is a fast-paced, intriguing, intense read that is as smart as it is suspenseful. Original and thought-provoking, it has plenty of twists and turns to satisfy even the most seasoned thriller reader, and the women of this tour de force will haunt you long after the final page is turned.” —Heather Gudenkauf, New York Times bestselling author of The Weight of Silence and This is How I Lied "You can always rely on Catherine McKenzie for smart, complex, irresistible suspense. Please Join Us takes onexa0sinister turn after the next—just when you think you have it all figured out, she turns the tables again.” —Jessica Strawser, bestselling author of Not That I Could Tell “With a scintillating, timely premise, and McKenzie’s signature page-turning style, Please Join Us is a winner.” —Robyn Harding, internationally bestselling author of The Perfect Family "Another superbly-plotted thriller from Catherine McKenzie, full of signature twists and turns, where readers are invited into the warm waters of a women's group, only to find it's not all sisterhood and solidarity... Join if you dare!” —Roz Nay, bestselling author of Our Little Secret “Catherine McKenzie’s Please Join Us is her best book yet. It’s a page-turning blend of corporate intrigue, secret societies, family drama, and twists galore. You won’t be able to put this one down or relax until the final series of reveals and double crosses unfold…and even then, you’ll walk away with your heart pounding. An intelligent, captivating thriller that really thrills!” —David Bell, author of Kill All Your Darlings “The claws come out! Please Join Us is a diabolical and fast-paced ride through a women’s networking group. This twisty, captivating book will have you reading all night.” – Samantha Downing, internationally bestselling author of My Lovely Wife and For Your Own Good "Stunning, propulsive, and sharp as a knife, Please Join Us is about a secret women’s group and the members determined to get ahead at all costs—just like men do. With a creeping sense of paranoia and full of surprising twists, this smart, feminist thriller explores women’s empowerment vs justice and the grey spaces we inhibit when success is on the line. This one's a knockout!" —Christina McDonald, USA Today bestselling author "Wholly original, utterly enthralling with gasp-worthy twist after twist, Catherine McKenzie's PLEASE JOIN US is an absolute masterpiece. This propulsive thrill-ride about an exclusive, all-female club where nothing and no one is who they seem will have you glued to its pages, bingeing until you reach the explosive conclusion. PLEASE JOIN US belongs in at the very top of your summer reading list." —May Cobb, author of The Hunting Wives Catherinexa0McKenziexa0was born and raised in Montreal, Canada. A graduate ofxa0McGillxa0University in history and law, Catherine practiced law for twenty years before leaving to write full time. An avid runner, skier, and tennis player, she’s the author of numerous bestsellers including I’ll Never Tell and The Good Liar . Her works have been translated into multiple languages and I’ll Never Tell and Please Join Us have been optioned for development into television series.xa0Visit her at CatherineMcKenzie.com or follow her on Twitter @CEMcKenzie1 or Instagram @CatherineMcKenzieAuthor. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1: It’s Not Us, It’s You CHAPTER 1 It’s Not Us, It’s You Then—June I blame the points committee. For those of you who don’t live under the tyranny of yearly evaluations of your productivity and ability to bring in clients being plugged into a mysterious formula that spits out the number of “points” (i.e., money) that you’ll receive each year, perhaps it seems silly to care. But when you’ve worked sixty-hour weeks since you were twenty-six—scratch that, your whole adult life—and you’ve made it, but you still haven’t made it far enough, it’s humiliating. Being a partner isn’t good enough. Being in every “best of” lawyer publication doesn’t cut it. Putting yourself out there in a million ways that make you uncomfortable doesn’t mean shit. If you didn’t bring in the clients and/or the billable hours, your points are cut. Doesn’t matter that you helped build the place. Those years of two-thousand-plus billable hours and no time to yourself—well, thanks, I guess, but what does that have to do with today? Nothing. Your points are being cut, you’re taking a step down, you’re now in the loser tier, and if you don’t course-correct, you’re going to reverse lap the new partners in the most pathetic race ever. Not that they said that exactly, but the sad turn of my mentor Thomas’s mouth when he walked into my office and shut the door to deliver the news said it all. Without some radical intervention, my days were numbered. When Thomas left without giving me any advice on what to do other than to say that we’d “just have to wait and see” if my profile turned into files, I sat at my desk and stared at my computer screen as if it might deliver answers. What had gone wrong? Sure, the last year had been less busy, but that was because one of my main clients had gone bankrupt. It wasn’t my fault—I wasn’t their financial adviser. They were the kind of client you didn’t replace in ten seconds, or in ten months. But that hadn’t been taken into account. I’d done everything I was asked to do and more, and it hadn’t been enough. What was I supposed to do now? I needed to get out of my head, so I called Dan. “Should I be putting pink champagne on ice?” he asked as a greeting, the answer assumed, his anticipation of our celebration palpable. I felt the sudden need to cry. Dan had sung those words, like he often did, with the confidence of certainty. In thirty-nine years, Nicole Mueller had never failed, so I had to be calling with good news. I turned my back to the glass door of my office so no one could see when the tears fell. “Um, no, decidedly not.” “Wait, what?” I could imagine Dan sitting in his own office in Jersey City. He was in-house counsel at a bank, changing paths five years ago when he didn’t make partner. I’d supported his choice. We didn’t both need to be working this hard, particularly if his firm wasn’t going to recognize his worth. The bank paid well and let Dan have his weekends. It was an easy decision. “They put me in the Samuel tier,” I said, naming a partner who was one point away from being kicked out. “The loser tier? No, you’re shitting me.” “I wish I was.” I stared hard at my computer screen, blinking back tears. It was open to Facebook, a place I went when I needed to distract myself for a minute or ten with pictures of cute puppies and smart-alecky kids. “Why?” “My hours were down.” “But AlCorp. went bankrupt.” “I know.” “That wasn’t your fault.” “I said that.” “They didn’t give you any warning?” I thought back to the meeting I’d had with the points committee in May. Everything was positive. In January, I’d been named as one of the top 40 lawyers under 40 and had been featured in a prominent lawyers’ magazine. I’d made a bunch of other lists too; the clients loved me, my hours were down, but they were sure that was a blip. I was a model for others to follow, they’d implied—maybe even said—as Thomas nodded along like a proud parent. I’d left the meeting confident. Getting their decision today felt like being in front of a judge who’s made up her mind but doesn’t tell you what she’s going to do, so you have no way of convincing her otherwise. “No, there was no warning. Thomas seemed so… guilty.” Dan growled. “Fuck Thomas.” “Yeah.” “Seriously, Nic. You should leave.” I stared at my hands. My nails were chipped and ragged. Was I not polished enough? Was that why? I’ve never been big on personal grooming. That sounds bad. I’m a clean person, I dress well, and my shoulder-length chestnut hair is well-kept, but the extra primping that a lot of professional women seem to find the time to do? I’ve never had the patience for it. “And go where?” “Lots of firms would be happy to take you.” I turned away from Facebook, facing my windowsill. It was cluttered with the plaques they encouraged you to buy when you made all those lists. Best Lawyers, Chambers, Who’s Who. I was in all of them. Future star. Litigation star. Consistently recommended. I was supposed to make full equity partner this year—that was the plan. Instead, I was moving away from that goal. “Not now. I should’ve taken Fosters up on their offer last year.” “What’s changed?” “Me. In the eyes of the legal world.” “You don’t have to tell them about the points.” I smiled sadly at my own reflection. My dark-blue eyes were tired, and my hair was pulled back too tightly from my face, making me seem severe. I looked like a loser, despite Dan’s optimism. It was one of the things I loved most about him—how naïve he still was, his Ohio earnestness firmly in place despite more than fifteen years in this city. It was why he didn’t make partner. His firm didn’t think he had a killer’s instinct, and they were right. “They probably already know.” “How?” “Because people don’t sit on this kind of information.” My email ping ed, dragging my eyes back to my screen. “Goddamn it.” “What?” “I just got an email from Albert and Prince.” “The recruiters?” “The recruiters for mid-level law firms, yes.” “It’s a coincidence,” Dan said, but he didn’t sound like he meant it. Dan might be naïve, but he’s not stupid. “It’s been five minutes since I got the news, and they already think I’m vulnerable enough to move my practice to a firm I didn’t even interview at.” “Maybe they’d respect you more there? Big fish in a small pond and all that.” “Maybe.” “So?” “I wouldn’t be able to respect myself.” I hadn’t meant to say that out loud, but it was true. I don’t know when I turned into a law firm snob, but I was. It wasn’t that those mid-level firms didn’t do good work; they did. Lots of smart people I’d gone to law school with had ended up at that level. But it wasn’t where you chose to be. It was where you washed ashore. Until now, I’d only had choices, not inevitabilities. But Dan had been at one of those firms, and he hadn’t even made partner— God I was awful, even in my own head. “Sorry, I know how that sounds.” “It’s okay,” Dan said lightly. I forgot sometimes, because his ego was so firmly in check, that he still had one. Bad enough that his wife was the star in the family. I didn’t need to rub it in. “No, it’s not. How about this. Why don’t you put that champagne on ice after all and I’ll leave early, and we’ll order from Kam Fung?” “I thought you had to work.” “I did, but fuck it. Fuck them.” “That’s my girl.” I smiled. “I’ll see you at six, okay?” “You betcha. Keep your chin up.” “I always do.” We hung up and I kept staring out the window. Midtown lay below—all that buzzing ambition, the striving, the aggressiveness. I’d loved it from the first time I’d visited for interviews in my second year of law school. I was top of my class at Yale, and even though I had zero contacts in the legal world, everyone wanted me. Taking me to dinners I couldn’t afford and providing me with hard-to-get theater tickets. What was not to love? My computer ping ed again. A Facebook notification. I’d tried a thousand times to turn the stupid things off, but I’d never managed it. I didn’t ask the IT department to do it, because those guys were spies who were only too happy to report infractions to the managing partner. Guess who’s having a baby! my high school friend Tammy had written. Oh God, another one? Ever since I turned thirty-nine, I noticed a peculiar phenomenon among my high school girlfriends who’d remained child-free until then—they were all getting pregnant for the first time. The Last-Minute Babies, I called them. Getting one in before they were forty. Dan and I had decided not to have kids, but it wasn’t something you advertised, not unless you wanted to get interrogated about why, and told how babies were so wonderful and enriching and who was going to take care of us when we were old? And then everyone just assumed it was because you were too focused on your career. As if that were a bad thing. Dan never had to answer these questions. If men ever wondered why women were angry all the time, they could start there. Congratulations! I wrote, then turned back to my inbox. Fifty new emails had accumulated in the hour I’d lost to the points committee bomb dropping. I scanned through them quickly. Three recruiters had already reached out, and several of my partners had written short Sorry! or That’s crazy! emails. No other content. No mention of points. Plausible deniability that they were criticizing management. Billings took a 75 percent drop on points day. Usually that pissed me off, which showed my lack of empathy. I probably had some apologies of my own to dole out. I certainly didn’t care about billing today. Instead, I decided to clean up my emails then leave, even though it was the middle of the afternoon. I spent an hour deleting and triaging emails so I could exit without a black cloud of guilt. When my inbox was finally under control, I stood and raised my hands above my head. An email arrived. Please join us, read the subject line. God, another drinks thing. I was already losing one to two nights a week going to networking events. But if I was going to turn this situation around, I couldn’t turn invitations down. I opened it and sat back down as I read. Dear Nicole, Have you ever wondered why your career hasn’t progressed as far as it should? Why others have continued to climb the corporate ladder while you’ve been stuck in place? We’ve been there. Despite years of hard work and all the talent in the world, our careers were stalled too. Why? Because the boys’ club still exists. No one wants to talk about it, but it’s true. So we decided to do something about it, and that’s how Panthera Leo was born. Women helping women succeed the way men have for centuries. Over the past twenty years we’ve become a network of CEOs, managing partners, executives, and money managers—every successful woman you know is probably one of us. And that’s why we’re writing to you. You’ve been recommended to us, and we’d be delighted if you’d become a member. All it takes is a few minutes of your time to complete our application, which can be found at www.pantheraleo.com. A few minutes, and everything you always wanted could be yours. Our next experience is happening soon. Please join us. Best, Karma & Michelle Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Named one of 2022’s best and most-anticipated thrillers by
  • Goodreads
  • ,
  • CrimeReads
  • ,
  • Motherly
  • ,
  • Westport
  • Magazine
  • , and more!
  • A “propulsive thriller about secret organizations, hidden agendas, and the lengths one woman will go to reclaim her life” (Laura Dave, author of Reese’s Book Club Pick
  • The Last Thing He Told Me
  • ) from
  • USA TODAY
  • bestselling author Catherine McKenzie.
  • At thirty-nine, Nicole Mueller’s life is on the rocks. Her once brilliant law career is falling apart. She and her husband, Dan, are soon to be forced out of the apartment they love. After a warning from her firm’s senior partners, she receives an invitation from an exclusive women’s networking group, Panthera Leo. Membership is anonymous, but every member is a successful professional. It sounds like the perfect solution to help Nicole revive her career. So, despite Dan’s concerns that the group might be a cult, Nicole signs up for their retreat in Colorado. Once there, she meets the other women who will make up her Pride. A CEO, an actress, a finance whiz, a congresswoman: Nicole can’t believe her luck. The founders of Panthera Leo are equally as impressive. They explain the group’s core philosophy: they’re a girl’s club in a boy’s club world. Nicole is all in. And when she gets home, she soon sees dividends. Her new network quickly provides her with clients that help her relaunch her career, and a great new apartment too. The favors she has to provide in return seem benign. But then she’s called to the congresswoman’s apartment late at night where she’s pressed into helping her cover up a crime. And suddenly, Dan’s concerns that something more sinister is at play seem all too relevant. Can Nicole extricate herself from the group before it’s too late? Or will joining Panthera Leo be the biggest mistake of her life?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(133)
★★★★
25%
(111)
★★★
15%
(67)
★★
7%
(31)
23%
(102)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Sign me up! I’m ready to join this group

This was such a juicy and fun read. I have a thing for powerful secret societies and seeing it from the point of a view of a new person joining the organization. It’s one of my favorite type of stories to read so I automatically knew I was going to like this.

At first glance it’s somewhat similar to last year’s A Special Place for Women since they’re both about an all female organization empowering each other and helping each other advance in their careers. Yet, I think Please Join Us is darker, more clever, and an overall better read. There’s a lot of deceit and suspicious activity that was fun to read about. The stakes are high and this isn’t a group of women you can say no to. On the flip slide, they can provide amazing advantages and benefits which makes their power all the more alluring.

Overall, I really enjoyed Please Join Us. It’s a page turner and it made me want to be part of a powerful female organization. I can all too relate to the feeling of men being given unfair advantages over women and how women have to work harder to prove themselves. I mean, what women wouldn’t want to smash the patriarchy and achieve power and riches at the same time?
3 people found this helpful
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Not for me, waste of time

It's not often I actively dislike a book, but I did this one. In the first half (while Nicole is being chastised at work and recruited by the secret society) I found her unlikable and self-centered. And I didn't like the mush spouted by the secret society. It was also patently obvious they were manipulating her and Nicole never once wondered about that. The second half, where the action is, is so convoluted with so many lying characters I gave up trying to figure out the details and just shouldered through (it was the only book I had at the time.) There are others who liked it but I found it an annoying waste of time.
2 people found this helpful
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What Could Go Wrong?

Nicole Mueller is devastated. Her once-promising legal career is a thing of the past and she and her husband are about to lose the home they love. Even her once-solid marriage seems to be on shaky ground, as lately, they both seem to want different things. She comes this close to ignoring an email invitation to join a networking group designed to support and empower women. Throwing caution to the wind, she decides to attend their retreat, leaving her floundering life behind. After all, things can't get any worse, or can they? She is slightly rattled by the women she meets. They all have extraordinary careers, but Nicole, not so much. Was her invitation a mistake or do they see something in her that she cannot see herself?

At first, it seems like she made a very wise decision. Her new friends and their connections are already benefitting Nicole. She has a new client, and a new place to live, and even though her marriage seems a bit worse, she is sure things will improve with time. All too soon though, she is summoned to cover up a murder, Knowing she has made the worst decision ever, she wants out of Panthera Leo. But the cost will be everything she has worked for and maybe even her freedom.

At this point, the twists and turns were relentless, and I have to say, I did not guess how this story would end. A cat and mouse game ensues, but who is the cat and who is the mouse? A page-turner that sagged a little bit for me towards the middle, but then barreled full steam ahead to the conclusion.

I received a DRC from Atria Books through NetGalley.
1 people found this helpful
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Wonderful writer

All of Catherine McKenzie’s writing is awesome.
Enjoyable read.
1 people found this helpful
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Meh...

This book was a "meh" for me. I enjoyed the strong female characters. However, it was a bit more political than I expected. Parts fell flat and lagged, and at it times, the plot was all over the place. It was hard to keep the characters straight. The end did have a nice twist, but it was a bit of a struggle to get there. Based on the description, I was expecting more suspense than was delivered.

Disclaimer: I received a complimentary copy, but I wasn't required to leave a positive review.
1 people found this helpful
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Compelling concept, a bit too much profanity, but still enjoyed

“Life is all around you. The more you know about it, the more you can shape it to your will. Pick your target, learn everything you can about it, and then go in for the kill.”

“That’s the thing about obedience. it feels safe. But it’s only safe it the person has your best interest at heart.”

I’ve read four of McKenzie’s books now. They do have some language (this one had 29 f-words and 18 s-words), but I keep reading them when they come out so she must be doing something right.

This one had good suspense and I liked that the main character was smart.

There are some #MeToo and anti-patriarchy elements in this book so if you don’t like that, you might want to skip this one.

Brief Summary

Nicole is partner in a law firm and has just received a warning that if she doesn’t bill more hours she may lose her partnership.

It was perfect timing, then, to receive an exclusive invite to a special retreat in Colorado for corporate women who are tired of having to work so much harder to get the pay, promotions, and recognition that men seem to get so easily. This was a networking club to help put women in prominent places.

“Women helping women succeed the way men have for centuries.”

Nicole adds the super cheap cost of $5000 to her work expense report, ignores her husband’s suspicions that it’s a cult and joins this retreat. No internet. No phone. Just a harmless networking event with polar plunges, long hikes in the middle of nowhere, and promises to stay loyal to the group and help each other whenever someone asks.

Also, don’t ask questions.

“To be like men in the world. Not to question how or why we get things, because they never do.”

These women actually are in top tier jobs and have a lot of connections. What could be wrong with this?

Nicole soon finds out when she does the group a favor and takes on a court case they’re (all) involved with. The questions keep accumulating and when she’s forced to help dispose of a body, she wants out.

But that might be harder than she thinks…

The Panthera Leo

The group is called Panthera Leo and its symbol is the female lion:

“The female lion. Because she’s the one that gets things done in the pride. Without women, the men wouldn’t eat, they wouldn’t have the ‘lion’s share’ to take. That’s true for humankind too, but often unacknowledged, even today. ‘The woman behind the man,’ sure. But she’s supposed to be nice and polite. She’s not supposed to be primal. Gentle, not vicious. Only men are allowed those attributes.”

The nationwide group is broken into smaller prides of 5 women. The prides don’t interact with each other.

They are told really harmless sounding things like:

“Influence is everything.”

“You should trust your pride. Instincts can lead us astray.”

“focus more on yourself, to find the things that can make you happy.”

“Sticking together is what protects you. Don’t get separated from the Pride because otherwise, you might end up with your neck snapped.”

I was expecting the more common type of cult in this book but this was a corporate cult. You weren’t entirely cut off from your loved ones, but there was a certain type of hold on these women that trapped them in this group.

I thought this deviation was very compelling.

It’s kind of an interesting thing to think about if you’re a conspiracy theorist. It’s easy to speculate that people in top positions owe others some favors or had some help getting there. What if all these people are part of some sort of corporate cult?!

Honestly, it probably wouldn’t take much to convince me of that these days. I think I’m becoming more susceptible to conspiracy theories. Please don’t take advantage of me.

The Patriarchy

It does seem like a lot of books written in the last couple years with strong female leads go down the road of anti-men, the patriarchy, blah blah. I’m not a believer of that. And some books go too far and I find them nauseating to read. (Ahem, Two Nights in Lisbon)

I’m just going to throw this in because asking questions is a good thing. If everything is the patriarchy, do the stats actually reflect that when considering equal things?

Thomas Sowell, in his book Discrimination and Disparities, reveals that, for example, when looking at salaries of faculty members at universities:

“Male faculty members in general had higher incomes than female faculty members in general. But among similarly qualified faculty, women who never married earned higher incomes than men who never married.”

Just because we may see less women than men as CEOs does not mean there is discrimination or inequality. Equal outcomes is not the measure of equality. A lot of women do get married and prefer to work less hours. When we compare the right things we find out that maybe there isn’t actually inequality at all.

This is not to discredit all of the #MeToo power/control instances where men took advantage of women as a prerequisite to work-related things. That is a for sure a problem and for sure needs to stop.

I’m merely proposing that the whole ‘patriarchy’ thing may be a bit blown out of proportion.

Also, it is not lost on me how women who promote the patriarchy-cause often seem to promote that women need to be more like men. I don’t know what they mean by that, but it’s a little insulting to women if, in order for women to be ‘better’ we have to be ‘more like men.’

Shouldn’t we be proud to be women? Men and women ARE different. They look different, they’re built different, they think different, they process different. Ask any neurologist. But different does not mean superior to either gender.

I get that there are conversations to be had about gender differences and what is right and wrong, but I’m just tired of the world constantly telling me I’m generally disadvantaged because I’m a woman and I need to try to be like men, but not just like men, superior to men.

In Please Join Us, the Panthera Leo leaders make some strong statements:

“Putting men in charge of women’s companies is one of our specialties. Diversity this and diversity that and sensitivity training and you know what’s changed? Exactly nothing, that’s what. If you have a vagina then you’re handicapped. God forbid if you have a kid or show an emotion at work.”

“That’s part of what we’re about. Creating an environment where you don’t have to think like a woman. You don’t have to query why you got something or whether you deserve it. You can just be a man about it.”

I don’t necessarily think McKenzie wrote Nicole as someone who would go that far. After all, she is married to a man whom she loves and respects. They are both intelligent lawyers, who, though they had their struggles, remain committed to each other and respect each other’s voice and work.

I like that Nicole likes to ask questions. She is regularly scolded by the Pride for asking questions but she is not cowed by them. She is smart enough to recognize when something is off and secure enough to protest.

Here’s one of her wisdoms when the group is promoting changing their lives:

“I think that sometimes people change just for change’s sake. And that’s not necessarily a good thing. It’s easy to think that the grass is greener on the other side, but it isn’t always better, just different.”

Conclusion

If the swearing isn’t too much for you, I would recommend this book. I think I liked it better than a couple of her other ones. I talked a lot about the patriarchy stuff, but I didn’t feel like the entire book was a megaphone for modern feminists. It was largely relegated to the Panthera Leo and Nicole was largely resisting them.

The plot was driven by Nicole learning more about them and investigating why her life was falling apart because of them and how to overcome it.

It was a smart thriller and I appreciate that. I get tired of the insecure, easily controlled, unreliable female protagonist with attachment issues. Nicole was definitely not that.

It’s a quick and intense read, and though I said in a different review that I might not read any of hers anymore, I might have to take it back… I’m probably going to read the next one…

Oh wait, one more thing… the last page. WHAT?! I’m genuinely confused. And whenever I try to figure it out, I’m overwhelmed and I give up. Feel free to share your theories with me in the comments. But those will probably be spoilers, so other people should avoid reading them. Kthanks.

One last side note: If you are interested in the whole cult thing and how language is used to manipulate people, I would highly recommend Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism. It’s a great and entertaining read that will help you be able to see red flags in seemingly innocent (but prevalent) tactics people use to convince you to ‘join them.’

**Received an ARC via NetGalley**
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LOVE

I LOVED this book! Timely and pitch perfect, so yourself a favor and pick this up!
✓ Verified Purchase

Great read

Please Join Us by Catherine McKenzie delves into secret organizations, hidden agendas, and how someone can take back control over their life.

“I received an email many years ago inviting me to a women’s networking group with different professions. I was told I was recommended by someone although they would not tell me who. I thought if I decided to do it everything would then be made clear to me. However, I did not keep that email. I did not go partly because my husband said it was crazy. Some of the professions are intricate to the plot.”

At thirty-nine, Nicole Mueller’s life is on the rocks. Her once brilliant law career is falling apart. She and her husband, Dan, are soon to be forced out of the apartment they love. After a warning from her firm’s senior partners, she receives an invitation from an exclusive women’s networking group, Panthera Leo. Membership is anonymous, but every member is a successful professional. It sounds like the perfect solution to help Nicole revive her career. So, despite Dan’s concerns that the group might be a cult, Nicole signs up for their retreat in Colorado.

“The Leo Organization has CULT vibes. The women in charge of it use some of the techniques of a cult to control the others. They become all the people in Nicole’s life and discourage her to go outside the group. They do the providing. They are manipulative, dominant, demand loyalty, and obedience.”

Once there, she meets the other women who will make up her Pride. A CEO, an actress, a finance whiz, a congresswoman: Nicole can’t believe her luck. The founders of Panthera Leo are equally as impressive. They explain the group’s core philosophy: they’re a girl’s club in a boy’s club world.

“Feminism is a theme. There is still a long way to go with the old boys’ network. It is underground, but still there. They are less overt now. I put in this quote, “If you need anything you come to this group. To your Pride… women don’t need to fight for their dominance; they join willingly to achieve the best result for all.” This is the mantra of the book. There is a stereotype that women are competitive with each other. This is because usually there is only one woman around the board table. If another woman comes in, they are perceived as a rival. I do think men pit women against each other. Everyone is socialized to be super critical and observant of women’s behavior. I do not think women are cattier or more aggressive around other women.”

Nicole is all in. And when she gets home, she soon sees dividends. Her new network quickly provides her with clients that help her relaunch her career, and a great new apartment too. The favors she must provide in return seem benign. But then she’s called to the congresswoman’s apartment late at night where she’s pressed into helping her cover up a crime. And suddenly, Dan’s concerns that something more sinister is at play seem all too relevant. Nicole questions if joining Panthera Leo was the biggest mistake of her life and wonders how to extricate herself from the group.

Readers will be reminded of the problems women face at work, the Me-Too movement, networking, marriage, blending private and public lives, which are all part of this thriller.
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Couldn’t put it down!

I read this book in less than a day! I couldn’t put it down! The characters were interesting, the plot quickly paced, and the plot elements unique. I’d love to see a sequel!!!
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Great thriller!

Took me a little bit to get into this book, but once I did I was hooked! There were a lot of twists at the end that I didn’t see coming! Ready to check out more by this author.