Review: Entitlement

Rumaan Alam (That Kind of Mother; Leave the World Behind) offers a slow-burning, insidiously creepy study of money and culture in his quietly distressing novel Entitlement.

Native Manhattanite Brooke, at 33, feels hopeful about her new job at a charitable foundation, following nine unhappy years spent teaching at a charter school. "People heard the Bronx and thought lead paint, asthma, trucks, and whores at Hunts Point," but it wasn't funding that was the issue, exactly. She's not professionally ambitious so much as she yearns for a little more than she has. The new job is initially just that--until she forms a special bond with the octogenarian billionaire, the famously self-made Asher Jaffee, whose money she disburses. Brooke embraces his advice to "Demand something from the world. Demand the best. Demand it." As she sinks into the sumptuous life Asher invites her into, Brooke becomes increasingly confident in the demands she makes of the world, sure that she is doing good and doing well. With Alam's signature tone of building foreboding, however, the reader becomes less and less sure.

Money is at the heart of Entitlement: what money can and cannot buy; how to give away Asher's; where Brooke can find more for herself. Her financial status is, if not perfectly secure, not uncomfortable (even if nothing like her dear friend Kim, whose trust fund runs to the unspecified millions). Meanwhile, race is a more understated part of her story. Brooke, a Black woman with a white mother and a white brother (she's adopted), "spent most of her time with white people, who never discussed the allegiance of race, because they did not need to." Moreover, "Brooke didn't care to defend the fact that she felt more loyalty to an old white man than a Black woman her age."

Her difficulties with priorities and identity are most apparent in conversations with a robust cast of family and friends, and with the woman whose humble but humming community dance school Brooke would like to fund: the older Black woman is self-assured, yet resists Brooke's help in a way she doesn't comprehend. "Brooke didn't know how to phrase it. Would the money not make them happier? Wasn't that how money worked?"

Entitlement explores the difference between "wants" and "needs" through Brooke's contrast to the dance school proprietor, who insists she does not need Asher Jaffee's money. Alam is ever adept and incisive with the subtle examination of interpersonal as well as systemic issues: race, class, ambition, avarice. Entitlement provides a deceptively silky backdrop for the kinds of thrillingly uncomfortable questions at which Alam excels. --Julia Kastner, librarian and blogger at pagesofjulia

Shelf Talker: With an atmosphere that is sexy, enchanting, and unsettling, Rumaan Alam's expert fourth novel probes concepts of privilege, wealth, value, and morality.

Powered by: Xtenit