After Not All Diamonds and Rosé
Capote's Women by Laurence Leamer
If you loved watching Housewives privilege crack under pressure in Not All Diamonds and Rosé, Capote's Women delivers the same delicious chaos—but with Manhattan swans, literary betrayal, and secrets spilled in print. Same voyeuristic thrill, same unvarnished drama, zero sanitization. It's insider gossip elevated to high art, and the schadenfreude is absolutely intoxicating.