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Reese Witherspoon's 'Heartfelt' Summer YA Book Club Pick Is Written By a Famous Mother-Daughter Duo
Reese Witherspoon's 'Heartfelt' Summer YA Book Club Pick Is Written By a Famous Mother-Daughter Duo

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Reese Witherspoon's 'Heartfelt' Summer YA Book Club Pick Is Written By a Famous Mother-Daughter Duo

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, SheKnows may receive an affiliate commission. Reese Witherspoon's newest YA book club pick is here! Before the summer comes at us in full swing, Witherspoon already has our back with the perfect summer read, for you or your kids! More from SheKnows Today's Top Deals Witherspoon's latest YA pick is Stuck Up & Stupid, written by Mean Girls and The Last Thing He Told Me star Angourie Rice and her actress and playwright mom, Kate Rice. 'Summer just got a whole lot brighter!' Witherspoon wrote on Instagram alongside a shot of actor Raegan Revord reading the newly released novel. 'We're so excited to announce Stuck Up and Stupid by @angourierice & @katericewriter as our Reese's Book Club Summer YA pick!' the caption continued. 'This sharp, hilarious, and heartfelt novel is giving major Austen vibes with a fresh twist — and we're obsessed. 😍' 'Grab your sunnies, your snacks, and your copy,' the caption completed. 'We've got a summer of swoons ahead. 💛' In the official synopsis, readers learn that the novel follows Australian teen Lily as she enjoys a summer at her idyllic home in Pippi Beach when Hollywood superstars come to stay. That's when she meets Dorian Khan, a superstar who seems more arrogant than anything else. 'While most of the locals, including Lily's glamor-obsessed mum, are thrilled to be so close to the A-listers, Lily can't help but see them as superficial and arrogant, especially Dorian, the most famous of them all,' the description reads. 'But as Lily's and Dorian's paths continue to cross, she begins to wonder if she's got him all wrong.' Stuck Up & Stupid 'Stuck Up and Stupid' by Angourie & Kate Rice $14.00 $19.00 26% off Buy Now On Amazon $19.00 Buy Now on Barnes and noble $18.00 $19.00 5% off Buy Now on According to Angourie and Kate, the novel, which started back in August 2020, is an updated and modern version of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice for young readers. 'Elizabeth Bennett became Lily, an eighteen-year-old high school graduate who is trying to enjoy her last summer before she decides what to do with her life,' they detailed to Witherspoon's book club. 'The small English village in Hertfordshire became Pippi Beach, a sunny, sandy, idyllic place where you can leave your worries (and your shoes) behind. And Mr Darcy became Dorian Khan, a Hollywood movie star who arrives at Pippi looking for a reclusive summer vacation, only to find himself entangled in local parties and beach games, and he can't get local girl Lily out of his head.' 'Pride and Prejudice is the blueprint for the modern romantic comedy. In Stuck Up and Stupid, we wanted to capture all that has made Pride and Prejudice so timeless: embarrassing families, nosy neighbours, close-knit female friendships, awkward encounters with your crush, and the courage it takes to admit you were wrong.' Stuck Up and Stupid, which came out today on May 6, is already available to order. Get ready for the summer with a copy for your teen today! Find all the best YA Books tfrom Reese Witherspoon's Book Club. More Top Deals from SheKnows Best of SheKnows Sign up for SheKnows' Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

From Marvel to Mr. Darcy: Why actor Angourie Rice based debut novel on ‘Pride & Prejudice'
From Marvel to Mr. Darcy: Why actor Angourie Rice based debut novel on ‘Pride & Prejudice'

USA Today

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

From Marvel to Mr. Darcy: Why actor Angourie Rice based debut novel on ‘Pride & Prejudice'

NEW YORK – Angourie Rice is in the business of breathing new life into classics. You've seen the actor as Betty Brant in the latest Tom Holland 'Spider-Man' movies and as Cady Heron in 2024's musical remake of 'Mean Girls.' Now, she's adding author to her repertoire with 'Stuck Up & Stupid' (out now from Candlewick Press), a YA retelling of Jane Austen's 'Pride and Prejudice' she wrote with her mother, the playwright Kate Rice. In a sit-down interview just ahead of Mother's Day, Angourie and Kate tell USA TODAY what it was like to 'meet each other as artists' after a lifetime of being mother and daughter. Angourie says she's excited for fans to see a more personal side, especially because the book is set in two places close to her heart – her native Australia and adopted Los Angeles. 'This is sort of a piece of my home that we've put in the book and that we're sharing with people,' Angourie says. 'That's scary and vulnerable, but it's also exciting because it's something that has really defined who I am and the place that we describe in the book is so special and unique, but also I think universal.' The ultimate mother-daughter project: How Kate and Angourie Rice wrote a novel together 'Pride and Prejudice' is well embedded in the fabric of the Rice family – Angourie recalled fond memories of Kate reading it aloud to her as a kid. Kate herself had always considered writing about the next generation of Bennet family members. Then, when Angourie asked Kate if she'd write her a modern-day retelling (perks of having a writer mom), Kate suggested they do it together. After outlining the novel alongside Austen's original, they wrote the first few chapters by hand while on vacation on the beach. They took turns writing and reading what the other had written. They kept a strict rule with editing in those early drafts – only add, don't remove. 'As a writer, you get very critical of yourself and I didn't want us to bring that criticism to each other's work,' Kate says. 'I wanted just to make sure that it was a very supportive way of writing together because it's bad enough when you're writing and you have your own voice in your head going, that's terrible.' 'It's also very improv,' Angourie adds. 'Like 'yes and.'' Some find sharing their writing to be a vulnerable experience at first, but Angourie says that wasn't the case with 'Stuck Up & Stupid.' Kate has already seen her through 'the most embarrassing moments' of her life, she says. 'When I think about working together, I think about how great it is to have something beyond our relationship as mother and daughter,' Angourie says. 'It's coming together to create this thing as two creative people who are being creative and who tell stories. And that's really cool to sort of, I guess, meet each other as artists.' 'Stuck Up & Stupid' brings 'Pride and Prejudice' to the 21st century 'Stuck Up & Stupid' keeps the essential elements of 'Pride & Prejudice' with some key modern-day upgrades – no daughters shipped off into marriage here. Mr. Collins isn't trying to wed his cousin to keep the family fortune close. The Mr. Darcy and Bingley characters are celebrities rather than wealthy Englishmen. 'Why retell this?' was the question in both Kate and Angourie's minds as they wrote. Ultimately, it was a task of examining what universal themes survive and which deserve a fresh spin. 'There are some scenes in there that just could have happened yesterday, could have happened today,' Kate says. 'I remember feeling so intensely the anxiety and hurt of the characters,' Angourie adds. 'It didn't at all feel far away to me. It didn't feel like these characters were created 200 years ago.' The original 'Pride and Prejudice' has a lot to say about women's inferior standing in 19th-century society. From Charlotte's spinster monologue to Lydia's scandalized elopement and the general pressure of Elizabeth and her sisters to marry off hastily, there's a lot that needed a facelift. 'Stuck Up & Stupid' is instead billed as a novel for "a generation of teens who are definitely NOT looking for love." It also gives more color to the mother character, as Mrs. Bennett is traditionally depicted as a derisive woman whose only goal is to get her daughters married. 'For us, it was also about exploring the mother and daughter relationship a bit more and really trying to give that character a chance to grow,' Angourie says. Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY's Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you're reading at cmulroy@

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