PLUM SYKES was born in London and educated at Oxford. The author of the novels Bergdorf Blondes, The Debutante Divorcée, and Party Girls Die in Pearls, and the Kindle Single memoir Oxford Girl, she is a contributing editor at American Vogue, where she writes about fashion, society, and Hollywood. She has also written for Vanity Fair. She lives in the English countryside with her family.
Outrageously Jilly Cooperesque * Sunday Times Style * The brilliantly satirical new novel that’s got the Cotswolds smart set buzzing with speculation …it may finally be time for Jilly [Cooper] to make way for a new chronicler of Cotswolds life. * Daily Mail * A forensically well-observed narrative ... will it do for the Cotswolds what F Scott Fitzgerald did for the Hamptons ... a shiny satirette of country living where everyone is unmuddied but filthy rich. * The Times * A stiletto-sharp look at the glamorous end of the Cotswolds. I loved it! -- Katie Fforde A fabulous and funny bucolic romp – Plum Sykes does it again. -- Hannah Rothschild, author of The Improbability of Love Wives Like Us made me laugh so hard I actually knocked over my lamp. Can a book be so wickedly smart, so effortless, so chic and hilarious that you would stumble through the night to find a new lightbulb just so you can keep reading way past your bedtime? In a word, yes. Plum Sykes is in a class of her own when it comes to peeling back the layers of status paranoia amongst the poshest of the posh as she delivers a delectable tale that you never want to end. I would risk all the lamps in my house to read stand-alone novels about every single character in this book! -- Kevin Kwan, author of Crazy Rich Asians Wives Like Us may be set in the most gorgeous English manor house, but I’d happily sleep in the shed if it meant I could tag along with these marvelous characters – Tata, Minty, and their chic and crafty butler. -- Jenny Jackson, author of Pineapple Street Delightful * Vogue * I absolutely adored Wives Like Us, I thought it was so fun and funny, a romp and a riot - and a glorious dollop of much needed escapism. -- Daisy Buchanan A riotous romp … Her unique blend of shrewd social commentary and knowing humour, with a dash of what she calls ‘affectionate satire’, is reminiscent of Nancy Mitford, PG Wodehouse and Evelyn Waugh. * The Lady * A comedy of manners with an emphasis on the comedy ... In Sykes’s skilled and observant hands however madcap fare is always more than just a good time, it’s a nuanced look inside a specific world, where even the most humorous happenings can tell us something meaningful about the decidedly less glamorous lives we mere readers live. * Town & Country * Wickedly funny * Citizen Femme * Hotly-anticipated * Mail Online * An amusing flight of fancy … Wives Like Us is more Sex and the City – or Sex and the Shires – than The Code of the Woosters. It mocks its subjects while glamorising them. The book is also something of a roman à clef. * The Spectator * Cleverly structured, very well-written and has a delicious, knowing ending … I gobbled the sugar lumps and am leading them to the winners’ enclosure. * The Spectator * The best-accessorised novel of the season. * Saga * Fabulously glamorous and gossipy. -- Louise Roe, Sheerluxe It's stuffed with fascinating characters wearing fabulous clothes. I loved it. * Daily Mail * A riotous, delightful read * Woman's Own *