Anon Pls. | |
Author: | DeuxMoi and Jessica Goodman |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | William Morrow and Company |
Pages: | 288 (Hardcover 1st edition) |
Isbn: | 9780063257801 |
Pub Date: | November 8, 2022 |
Cover Artist: | Kerry Rubenstein |
Genre: | Autofiction |
Anon Pls. is a novel by the pseudonymous author DeuxMoi and Jessica Goodman. The novel is a work of autofiction and a retelling of the real-life DeuxMoi Instagram account, which publishes celebrity gossip.
The book is a fictionalized retelling of the genesis of DeuxMoi. Cricket Lopez is a celebrity stylist assistant who posts celebrity gossip on an anonymous Instagram account. When the account experiences overnight success, she struggles to balance the increasing demands of the account with her work life.[1]
Anon Pls. was developed as part of a larger attempt to monetize the DeuxMoi account.[2] DeuxMoi came up with the initial concept and was connected to Jessica Goodman through their respective literary agents. While Goodman did much of the writing, she regularly collaborated with DeuxMoi to confirm various details about the celebrity world and to include references to real-world events.[3]
The novel was published in the United States on November 8, 2022 by William Morrow and Company.
When gossip is submitted to the DeuxMoi account, submitters often request anonymity by saying "anon pls" or a variation of the phrase.[4]
Anon Pls. received generally positive reviews upon release.[5] Observer praised the book for capturing "how celebrity gossip culture has been completely democratized by armchair commentators" and commented that the reflections throughout on the nature of internet anonymity were surprisingly thoughtful.[6] Booklist
The book was named one of NPR's "Books We Love" for 2022.[10]
Prior to the novel's publication, HBO Max and WBTV acquired the rights to develop Anon Pls. into a drama series.[11] Sarah Schechter and Greg Berlanti will be executive producers for the show.[12] Fletcher Peters, of The Daily Beast, criticized the acquisition, writing that while she did not believe the DeuxMoi account to be actively malicious, the account's sharing of private details "is not the type of behavior that should be rewarded with a book, nor a TV show, nor the gorges of followers she's amassed on Instagram."[13]