Crime, sex, prostitution, drugs, money, and revenge. I can see how this book had people in a chokehold in the 80s. Maybe if I were more innocent or had less life experience, I would've delved into the juiciness and been immersed in the story. That's why a lot of people who enjoyed this book say they were teenagers or YAs when they first discovered this book in the 80s and hid it from their parents. Preteen/teenage me would've loved this book, especially with the hype of my friends reading it too, but mid-30s me in 2025 was perturbed.
There were not one, not two, but SEVERAL on-page rapes of children and adults (poor Carrie got pimped out by her grandma at 13 or 14 - although the characters at fictional, I wanted to get Carrie out of there to safety, but first karate chop the throats of her grandma and the grown ass man she sicced on Carrie). There's this thing about the 80s where trigger warnings didn't exist and rape and SA were constantly overlooked in movies (i.e. Lewis in Revenge of the Nerds, Biff in Back to the Future, etc.), so of course it was in book form too. But for there to be several rapes, the first one to a child within the first 5 minutes of the book, I was immediately taken out of the story. I listened to the audiobook narrated by the author and let me tell you something -- hearing Jackie Collins say "nigger" not once, not twice, but SEVERAL times infuriated me. I get it -- the characters are racist, the story was published in the 80s, and the events took place before the 80s, so I'm supposed to let it slide...
If I were to ignore everything that irked me with the writing, the plot was good. Because everyone loved Lucky and her character lives on for 10 books in the series, I thought I would like her the most. But nope, the character I emphasized with most was Carrie and I wish she had a happier ending. Just when I thought she did, part two of the story happened and Carrie just couldn't catch a damn break.
After reading, I don't know if I'd recommend this for the modern reader. Maybe the black modern audiobook listener, but only so they can feel how I feel and we'll have something to commiserate over.