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Not Safe For Work
Not Safe For Work
Feb 15, 2026 6:09 AM

Author:Isabel Kaplan

Not Safe For Work

The compulsively readable novel about a young woman trying to succeed in Hollywood without selling her soul - perfect for fans of Sweetbitter, My Dark Vanessa and Exciting Times

'Deliciously sharp, ridiculously funny, and surprisingly heartfelt' COCO MELLORS

'A blistering look at the hidden side of Hollywood' GLAMOUR

'Frank, funny and unputdownable'CLAIRE MESSUD

'Glittering. A funny, spiky, compulsive story about toxic workplaces' EVENING STANDARD

'A frank account of leaning in and its inherent filthiness' RAVEN LEILANI

________

You knew Hollywood would be difficult.

So when you land a job in television, you're ready for anything: pulling all-nighters, leaning on your powerful mother's contacts, keeping your boss happy whatever - and whoever - the cost.

You thrive under pressure, and are determined to excel. But there's a dark side to the industry that's about to rear its head. And soon, you must decide your place in it:

Follower. Troublemaker. People-pleaser. Rulebreaker.

If you don't know who you are yet, how can you know where you stand?

But no one is supposed to have it all figured out . . . Right?

________

'Sharp, fun . . . The writing is fresh and stylish. I loved it' DAILY MAIL

'Wholly engrossing and shrewdly observational' ZAKIYA DALILA HARRIS

'An intoxicating exploration of male-dominated workplaces' TIME

'Ambition bites back . . . So visceral is the narrator's voice that every time I opened the book it felt like sliding into uncomfortable heels. Brave' NEW YORK TIMES

Longlisted for the Center for Fiction Prize

Reviews

Glittering. A funny, spiky compulsive story about toxic workplaces, lean-in culture and #MeToo

—— Evening Standard

A frank account of leaning in and its inherent filthiness. Kaplan captures the psychological, and at times literal, gymnastics required of striving women

—— Raven Leilani, New York Times bestselling author of Luster

Readers who were obsessed with My Dark Vanessa, this one is for you. A blistering look at the hidden side of Hollywood

—— Glamour, 'BEST NEW BOOKS'

Wholly engrossing and shrewdly observational . . . that rare kind of read that made me giggle just as much as it left me gutted

—— Zakiya Dalila Harris, New York Times bestselling author of The Other Black Girl

Sharp, funny . . . The writing is fresh and stylish and the conversational tone helps the thought-provoking narrative zip along. I loved it

—— Daily Mail

Frank, funny and unputdownable . . . behind the glitter and the justice, everyone is tarnished and compromised - including even our narrator. Kaplan, with her sharp and nuanced eye, sees it all, and tells it brilliantly

—— Claire Messud, New York Times bestselling author of The Woman Upstairs

Deliciously sharp, ridiculously funny, and surprisingly heartfelt . . . I cannot wait to discuss it with everyone I know

—— Coco Mellors, author of Cleopatra and Frankenstein

Brilliantly deadpan and spiky in all the right ways. An accurate, darkly funny but also brutal portrayal of everyday workplace and world power dynamics. I couldn't put it down

—— Emily Itami, Costa-shortlisted author of Fault Lines

With her sun-bleached Hollywood setting, Kaplan transports us to another world - one which is achingly familiar. A novel which makes us examine our own complicity, while also weaving in threads of tenderness, drive and office-based humour which at times feels delightfully absurd . . . I inhaled this book - and came up for air still reeling

—— Katie Hale, author of My Name is Monster

Ambition bites back in Isabel Kaplan's Not Safe For Work, a novel that hits close to a few recent news events . . . So visceral is the narrator's voice that every time I opened the book felt like sliding into uncomfortable heels. Brave

—— New York Times

An intoxicating exploration of male-dominated workplaces . . . NSFW is gripping, with a lot to unpack, making it excellent book-club fodder

—— TIME, Best Books of July 2022

An energetic page-turner with plenty of delicious insights into Hollywood . . . and countless witty, wry passages

—— Jewish Chronicle

Rachel Joyce has a genius for creating the most damaged and difficult character and making us care deeply about their redemption. Maureen Fry and the Angel of the North is a powerful finale to her classic trilogy of heartbreak and healing.

—— Clare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures

At last it's Maureen's turn! It may only have the physical heft of a novella but Rachel Joyce's angry-sad latest packs the weight of a long marriage into the space of several well ironed handkerchiefs. Just brilliant.

—— Patrick Gale

Maureen Fry is wonderfully complex, flinty and closed and obsessive yet full of love and concern for others as she navigates her present and her past, carrying her terrible burdens of grief and guilt.
Rachel Joyce is deeply attuned to the complex rhythms of life and love and she sublimates this understanding, sentence by delicate, powerful, glistening sentence into an unforgettable story. It's beautiful all through, but the closing chapters are just astonishing, transcendent and hope-filled and life-affirming. I'll never forget this wonderful novel or the sunny, slightly teary day I spent reading it.

—— Donal Ryan

This book is short but very special. As fans of Rachel Joyce might expect, it's funny, touching and quite beautiful. It's also packed with wisdom about love and loss - and is sure to provide comfort to anyone who's known grief.

—— Matt Cain, author of The Secreet Life of Albert Entwistle

Maureen is so beautifully and unflinchingly portrayed - a complex contradiction of brittle and prickly with an underbelly of fragility and fear. Her journey - both physical and psychological - is compelling and profoundly moving and leaves the reader feeling fully satisfied and just a little lighter.

—— Ruth Hogan

In this slender, lyrical novel, Rachel Joyce offers a story as epic and encompassing as that wide-armed angel of the North. A journey of redemption, forgiveness and love. A journey you don't want to miss.

—— Helen Paris, author of Lost Property

Rachel Joyce writes with incredible depth, beauty and heart. Reading her prose is like listening to great music - sometimes soft and sweet, sometimes heart-rending, always beguiling. This is an emotional story about loss, resilience and reconciliation. Maureen Fry is a prickly kind of star... but wow, how she shines!

—— Hazel Prior, author of Call of the Penguins

Beautifully written and endlessly touching, Rachel Joyce once again captures what it means to be human in the final book of her wonderful trilogy.

—— Phaedra Patrick

Maureen is the sort of person we pass in the street every day, every hour, and probably give little thought to. She is difficult perhaps, a little brittle, unable to engage successfully with the world, and maybe hard to warm to - an embattled figure often lost against the vast opera of life. But Rachel allows us to see into her complex universe, feel first-hand her fears, the profound longing, the grim phantoms of the past, the ordered rebelliousness, and strange, dark sense of humour - and of shame. This story also happens to tie three life-affirming, vital and unpredictable novels together into a perfect, never-ending dance..

—— Damian Dibben, author of The Colour Storm

This is a deceptively simple story of love, forgiveness, fulfilment and hope. I can't think of any other novelist quite as tender and compassionate as Rachel Joyce, who understands that miracle of transformation when human fragility becomes strength of spirit.

—— Bel Mooney

This is a fitting and deeply moving end to the trilogy of Harold Fry. A portrait of a woman adrift in grief, it is as fragile as a songbird and just as beautiful.

—— Sarah Winman

Profoundly moving and deeply human, this story of self-discovery and forgiveness is essential reading. I loved every word.

—— Bonnie Garmus

I adored Harold & Queenie, but who knew Maureen waited in the wings to steal my heart? A testament to just how exquisitely Rachel Joyce understands people, and written with kindness and such perception. I can't recommend it enough.

—— Joanna Cannon

I was enthralled from the first page of this short, powerful book. Maureen is a wonderful, frustrating character--so rigid, and so frightened of what she might learn about herself and her own past. We all have some Maureen inside us, and so the journey we take with her across England and into her own personal tumult is a satisfying, visceral one.

—— Ann Napolitano

Astonishingly powerful... Truly stunning

—— Ruth Jones
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