Best Offer Wins?

“In his witty and thought-provoking manner, Mark Twain once famously said, ‘It’s no wonder that truth is stranger than fiction. Fiction has to make sense.’” https://www.socratic-method.com

Sometimes, though, truth is not stranger than fiction. And thankfully, sometimes truth is kinder than fiction, too. Recently a friend and I had both just finished books that bothered us in various ways, which isn’t to say books shouldn’t bother us—it’s quite often important that they do—it was just that in the case of these books, the way we’d been bothered had less to do with subject matter and more to do with the marketing expectation that readers would respond positively to the various dastardly deeds of the protagonists, and that, indeed, there did seem to be plenty of readers out there who backed up that claim—readers who “loved” these books (and so maybe by extension that means they loved the protagonists? Maybe?).

I don’t remember the title of the book my friend was referring to; she said it was something about killers who were in love and only killed bad people—sounded like a Dexter type theme, and I know that was a highly watched television series, so I guess there’s an audience for that. I can’t claim to be someone who is above consuming questionable content. I’ve read hundreds of books in most genres and not all of them have been particularly elevating. That said, I have seldom read a novel with a less likable protagonist than the one Marisa Kashino gives us in Best Offer Wins (With the possible exception of Humbert Humbert, the protagonist/narrator of Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita).

Best Offer Wins is a Good Morning America Book Club Pick and was published by Celadon Books in 2025. From the book jacket: “…Margo will prove again and again that there’s no boundary she won’t cross to seize the dream life she’s been chasing. The most unsettling part? You’ll root for her, even as you gasp in disbelief.”

Uh. No. But let me take you back to the reason I read that blurb and took the bait. Coincidentally, on the same day my husband and I were submitting a bid on a house we wanted, Marisa Kashino’s thriller about a woman who will stop at nothing to get her dream house came across my desk at the library. It was a new purchase, and my job was to catalog it and get it ready for patron check-outs. I joked with my realtor that I hoped I wouldn’t become as obsessed with home buying as the teaser on the book jacket hinted the book’s protagonist, Margo, did.

Truth being, in this case anyway, less strange than fiction, I didn’t. Thank goodness. But I did check the book out and take it home to read over the weekend. I’m not normally inspired to write reviews about books I don’t like, but there’s something about this one that pushes me. What that tells me is that I did find it engaging, at least enough to finish it, but that, also, it troubled me. I think I kept reading to see if it would be possible to “root for her even as [I] gasped in disbelief.”

That stage never arrived. The backstory on Margo did indicate she’d had very tough breaks, enough of them, too, and that would normally soften a reader’s judgement and bring her to life in a way that would help the reader to care about her, but Margo’s behavior was so egregious that she remained not only unlikable, but monstrous. And I don’t mean monstrous in the sad way that Frankenstein was a monster because he was a victim and you felt sorry for him. Margo’s kind of monstrous is the carefully calculated kind that lacks any hint of personal responsibility or remorse.

I’m not sure what it says about me that I read the whole book anyway, and that gives me pause. I think perhaps my weird fascination with the book represents a part of contemporary America to me that I don’t understand and cannot accept, but that I still keep trying to fathom. I want people to have homes. I want people to care for each other. I want to love my neighbors as myself.

Each turn of the page offered hope, however slight, that Margo would learn some kind of moral lesson or would offer her a kernal of insight, forgiveness, or redemption, but in the end, there was none. No tenderness. No justice. Just a sad expose of a society where dreams can become as dangerous as despair, and the only thing that matters is the win.

In that way, the book is a success, I guess. A pretty good satire. Excellent social criticism, and social criticism is very much in order these days in my opinion. With Best Offer Wins out of the way, I’m happy to announce that Mr. P and I purchased a delightful home in the beautiful UP—the upper peninsula—in the lovely U.S. state of Michigan. We will be off to a new chapter there soon and leaving the awe-inspiring West and central Nevada behind with love for all we’ve learned and the friendships we treasure. By the way, we accomplished the purchase of the Michigan house without any nefarious activities nor bidding war mayhem.  Sometimes, you see, truth is not stranger than fiction, and sometimes it is kinder.

Wishing you all happy days and cozy nights as we move through February and into March. Be Well!

The Upper Peninsula, Michigan, U.S.

10 Comments

Filed under Books, Commentary, Fiction, Home

10 responses to “Best Offer Wins?

  1. congratulations on the new place! i bet the UP will provide so much inspiration for you. i can’t even imagine how much wildlife and beauty I’d see up there.

    I’ve heard of the book. great review. i do also believe it’s a valid mirror of what we see in today’s society – right down to the very ending where she’s forced to take what she gets.

    perhaps she would have been better off purchasing a house in the beautiful countryside to begin with. Mike

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  2. Yay, congratulations, Lori! So happy for you and Mr. P. 😊 I hope the move goes well and you enjoy the beautiful house and surroundings. The picture looks great—even reminds me a bit of our Seattle area forests and lakes. In any case, so glad the house hunting is over and now you’re ready to embark on your next adventure. Looking forward to reading more about it as you settle in.

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    • Thank you, Roxana. I think the UP will provide inspiration, and you are right—there is a little something of the Pacific Northwest in the northern Midwest. So much water and so many trees to love. 💕 🥰

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  3. Congratulations on your new home! I’m so happy for you. The photo of the UP looks amazing.
    I am so glad to read this review. I haven’t read this book, but I read a lot of books that are highly recommended, and sometimes I end up disappointed. After reading so many positive reviews, I start to wonder if something is wrong with me? I’m glad to find someone that can just be honest in their own opinion, regardless of what everyone else thinks. …. And I’m getting tired of the genre that’s trying to make bad behavior acceptable.

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    • Thank you, Rose! I really like to hear opinions about books, too. It’s great to hear what your reader friends think! I appreciate your congratulations on our new move to the UP, also! We have some exciting work ahead of us. 🤓

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  4. It is hard to root for protagonists who have little in the way of redeeming qualities, but I wouldn’t be too hard on yourself for finishing the book. Of course, you were probably waiting for the moment when the character suddenly finds morality. If that didn’t happen, at least one would expect that, in the end, she would face some consequences for her evil ways. In a perfect world, that would happen. It would also bother me to be lured into purchasing a book based on some false promises. I also have stuck with stories, waiting for something that never came.

    Best of luck with the new home and new adventures.

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