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The Bling Ring: How a Gang of Fame-Obsessed Teens Ripped Off Hollywood and Shocked the World Paperback – May 21, 2013

3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 334 ratings

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The Bling Ring by Vanity Fair writer Nancy Jo Sales is an in-depth expose of a band of beautiful, privileged teenagers who were caught breaking into celebrity homes and stealing millions of dollars worth of valuables.

With a list of victims that reads like a "Who's Who" of young Hollywood, including Lindsay Lohan, Orlando Bloom, Paris Hilton, and Rachel Bilson, The Bling Ring is the stuff of writers' imaginations—with one exception—it's a true story.

The media asked: Why would a group of kids who already had designer clothes, money, cars, and status take such risks? Award-winning journalist Nancy Jo Sales found the answer: They did it because they could. And because it was easy.

The Bling Ring: How a Gang of Fame-Obsessed Teens Ripped Off Hollywood and Shocked the World is a shocking look at the seedy world of the real young Hollywood.


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From the Back Cover

The true story that inspired the Sofia Coppola film

Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Orlando Bloom, Rachel Bilson: robbed. More than $3 million in stolen clothing, jewelry, shoes, and handbags reported missing. Who is behind one of the most brazen string of crimes in recent Hollywood history? Meet the Bling Ring: a band of club-hopping teenagers from the Valley with everything to lose.

Over the course of a year, the members of the now infamous Bling Ring allegedly burglarized some of the biggest names in young Hollywood. Driven by celebrity worship, vanity, and the desire to look and dress like the rich and famous, these seven teenagers made headlines for using Google maps, Facebook, and TMZ to track the comings and goings of their targets. Many of the houses were unlocked. Alarms disabled. A "perfect" crime— celebrities already had so much, why shouldn't the Bling Ring take their share?

As the unprecedented case unfolded in the news, the world asked: How did our obsession with celebrities get so out of hand? Why would a group of teens who already had so much, take such a risk?

Acclaimed Vanity Fair writer Nancy Jo Sales found the answer: they did it because each stolen T-shirt or watch brought them closer to living the Hollywood dream . . . and because it was terrifyingly easy. For the Bling Ring the motivation was something deeper than money—they were compelled by a compulsion to be famous. Gaining unprecedented access to the group of teens, Sales traces the crimes minute by minute and details the key players' stories in a shocking look at the seedy, and troubling, world of the real young Hollywood.

About the Author

Nancy Jo Sales is an award-winning journalist who has written for Vanity Fair, New York, Harper's Bazaar, and many other publications. She has written profiles of Damien Hirst, Hugh Hefner, Russell Simmons, Donald Trump, Tyra Banks, Angelina Jolie, Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, and Taylor Swift. Her acclaimed 2010 Vanity Fair piece "The Suspects Wore Louboutins" is the basis for the Sofia Coppola film The Bling Ring. Sales lives in New York City with her daughter.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ It Books (May 21, 2013)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 288 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0062245538
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0062245533
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 7.7 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.31 x 0.65 x 8 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 334 ratings

About the author

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Nancy Jo Sales
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Nancy Jo Sales is an award-winning journalist, bestselling author and documentary filmmaker, known for her insightful and thought-provoking reporting and writing on youth culture, celebrity culture, technology and women’s issues.

Sales began her career as a journalist in the early 1990s, working for New York magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, Vanity Fair and other publications. Among her best-known articles is her 2013 piece for Vanity Fair entitled "Friends Without Benefits," which explores the world of teenagers and the pervasive influence of social media on their lives. The article went viral and sparked widespread discussions about the impact of technology on young people.

The article later served as the basis for Sales’ 2016 nonfiction book, American Girls: Social Media and the Secret Lives of Teenagers, which delves into the lives of teenage girls across America and the pressures they face in the digital age, focusing on issues such as cyberbullying, online harassment, misogyny and sexualization. American Girls received acclaim for its in-depth reporting, analysis and Sales’ ability to amplify the voices of young women and girls of diverse races, ethnicities and socioeconomic backgrounds.

In 2015, Sales gained recognition for her Vanity Fair article entitled “Tinder and the Dawn of the 'Dating Apocalypse,'” which explores the influence of dating apps on modern courtship. The article went viral and sparked a national conversation about the effects of technology on dating and intimate relationships. Sales’ 2021 memoir Nothing Personal continues her research with further examination of how dating apps exacerbate loneliness and alienation as well as sexism, racism and LGBTQ discrimination.

In addition to her writing, Sales is a director and producer of documentary films. In 2018, HBO released her documentary Swiped: Hooking Up in the Digital Age, which explores the impact of mobile dating on contemporary dating culture, focusing on dating app addiction, the dehumanization of romance and the potential dangers of online dating.

Other notable articles by Sales include 2010’s “The Suspects Wore Louboutins” for Vanity Fair, which tells the story of a group of California teens who burglarized the homes of Hollywood celebrities between 2008 and 2009. Sales’ article became the basis for the 2013 Sofia Coppola film The Bling Ring starring Emma Watson.

In 2013 Sales expanded her reporting on the case with The Bling Ring, a non-fiction book which provides an in-depth account of the events surrounding the burglaries. The book examines the culture of celebrity obsession, materialism and social media influence that contributed to the motivations of the young people involved. The Bling Ring received attention for its compelling storytelling and commentary on fame, youth culture and the dark side of celebrity obsession.

Sales’ best-known celebrity pieces include profiles of Courtney Love, Taylor Swift, Angelina Jolie, Gwyneth Paltrow, Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, Hugh Hefner, Donald Trump and Damien Hirst. Her 1998 story on Leonardo DiCaprio, “Leo, Prince of the City,” has been recognized as one of the most memorable celebrity profiles of the last several decades.

Sales’ other notable crime stories include 2007’s “The Golden Suicides,” about the double suicide of artists Jeremy Blake and Theresa Duncan, and 2003’s “Somebody Hung My Baby,” which uncovered evidence suggesting that the hanging death of Feraris “Ray” Golden in Belle Glade, Florida, was not a suicide, as had been widely reported. After the publication of Sales’ story, the police chief of Belle Glade resigned.

A regular contributor to the Guardian and Vanity Fair, Sales remains an influential voice on subjects related to youth culture, technology, gender dynamics and gender inequality. She continues to write and explore the ever-evolving landscape of digital culture, offering insights into the challenges and complexities of living in a hyper-connected world.

Her work has been praised for shedding light on difficult aspects of contemporary society, offering readers and viewers a deeper understanding of the challenges and experiences faced by women and young people. She has spoken at nearly 100 high schools, middle schools, universities and organizations and been a featured speaker at conferences and events discussing youth culture and social media. She has appeared on many TV and radio news shows including Nightline, Good Morning America and Fresh Air with Terry Gross.

Born in West Palm Beach Florida in 1964, Sales attended Phillips Exeter Academy, graduating as a Presidential Scholar. She was a Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude graduate of Yale, which awarded her its Willet’s Prize for fiction writing. She received her MFA in Writing from Columbia. Her awards include a 2010 Mirror Award for Best Profile, Digital Media, a 2011 Front Page Award for Best Magazine Feature and a 2015 Silurian Aware for Magazine Feature Writing. She has taught at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY. She is the mother of Zazie Sales, a screenwriter and filmmaker.

Customer reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
3.8 out of 5
334 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book enjoyable and well-written. They also appreciate the incredible insight and interesting story. Readers describe the book as great and an eye opener to society.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

32 customers mention "Engagement"23 positive9 negative

Customers find the book an enjoyable read and say it's better than the movie.

"...It's as enjoyable to read as a gossip blog, but intellectually nutritious - it will give you quite a bit to think about." Read more

"...I read this book yesterday and thoroughly enjoyed it...." Read more

"This book was mediocre...." Read more

"...with the kids from the original source material are surprisingly engaging chapters about the change in youths' fascinations over the years towards..." Read more

16 customers mention "Writing quality"12 positive4 negative

Customers find the writing quality of the book very well written and interesting. They also mention it's a quick and easy read.

"This is a quick and easy read, and I'd also read the Vanity Fair articles by the author, so I was familiar with the subjects and the theme of teens..." Read more

"...to believe that this isn't, in fact, fiction, as it reads like a finely tuned crime mystery...." Read more

"...Some of his sentences, like those cited, are awkward or grammar free, but this technique rather helps the theme along...." Read more

"...I love how Sales writes: very easy to understand and the points she makes about this day and age are so true...." Read more

14 customers mention "Content"14 positive0 negative

Customers find the book has incredible insight, information, and thoughtful discussions. They also say it's entertaining and a thought-provoking case.

"...It's as enjoyable to read as a gossip blog, but intellectually nutritious - it will give you quite a bit to think about." Read more

"...It's worthy information and it certainly helps with context, but it does make the book a bit deeper than the case appears to be from a cursory look." Read more

"...Now a movie chronicles the phenomena. The author does an erudite and extensive case for his theories...." Read more

"...She inverted an appropriate amount of social commentary that made me think I need to double down on my own kids about living within your own means..." Read more

14 customers mention "Story"11 positive3 negative

Customers find the story interesting, dynamic, and poignant. They also say the book is an eye opener to society and the testimony of Orlando Bloom is poignant and something they had not read before.

"...Nancy Jo Sales tells the story well, attempting to understand what motivated the different teens involved...." Read more

"...A most dynamic book that I highly recommended." Read more

"...He manages to do this within a fascinating and flowing narrative...." Read more

"...The testimony of Orlando Bloom was very poignant and something I had not read before. Looking forward to the movie!" Read more

Book ok but printer of book sucks
3 out of 5 stars
Book ok but printer of book sucks
There are so many issues with the printing of this book. As you can see in my picture they skipped page 198 and printed 199 twice!! This happens several times in the book I have.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2013
The story at the center of The Bling Ring is total tabloid fare - a group of Valley teens burglarize celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan, both to have objects touched by fame, and to get money for partying, drugs, etc. Nancy Jo Sales tells the story well, attempting to understand what motivated the different teens involved. And she also weaves in very thoughtful discussions about the place of fame and celebrity in contemporary culture. It's as enjoyable to read as a gossip blog, but intellectually nutritious - it will give you quite a bit to think about.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2013
I broke a New Years Resolution to read Nancy Jo Sale's The Bling Ring. My resolution was to hold off on buying new books, with the exception being ebooks for my Kindle strictly for vacations. My UK trip is still a few weeks away and last week I decided to take a look at the British Airways inflight entertainment schedule.

Naturally, Sophia Coppola's The Bling Ring, inspired by Sale's book, is one of the options. I'm a huge fan of Coppola, yet missed the movie when it was in theaters. I had been planning to read the book while on vacation and rent the movie upon returning, but noticing it on BA's schedule, made me impulse buy the book and devour it within two days.

I'm so glad that I broke my resolution, because Sale's investigation of the aptly named Bling Ring was fascinating. The Bling Ring was the name given to a group of Southern California teenagers who in 2008 and 2009 committed a string of robberies targeting celebrities. The kids were so enamored with the celebrities that they felt by stealing their clothes, jewelry and sometimes even underwear that they could somehow become celebrities themselves.

These kids were brazen. They targeted celebrities that they felt had superior fashion sense, such as Rachel Bilson or Miranda Kerr. In some cases, they would find a particular article of clothing that celeb had been photographed wearing and go after that specific piece. The teens would wear the stolen clothing out, often to the same clubs that the celebrities frequented. They flaunted their crimes.

Sales makes a compelling argument that technology not only allowed for the ease in which these crimes were committed, but it has also changed the way in which we view celebrities. With the popularity of social media sites, celebrities are accessible in ways that they never have been in the past.

The minute a celebrity leaves their house or travels out of town, a paparazzi or even just a fan, snaps a photograph and puts it on the internet. The kids used this to their advantage, as they knew when a celebrity was on a flight out of town and gone from their homes. They used Google Maps to find out information regarding their victims property, including the best entrances to the homes.

We live in a society in which we demand that celebrities trade in their privacy to gain fame. There are no barriers and the kids took this a step further, by actually breaking into the one area that should still be off limits. The common response from all of the celebrities targeted was one of a loss of security, not so much for the property, but because their one safe haven was violated.

On a personal note regarding the topic of celebrity privacy, yesterday, I was at a children's play area in Burbank with my friend and her daughter. Her daughter started playing with a little girl and they really hit it off. It turns out that the kid was the child of a celebrity and is rather well-known herself. There was a lot of protection surrounding this little girl, including having her use an alias. She seemed very sheltered and a bit sad.

I was thinking about it a lot last night, especially with regard to the privacy issues raised in this book and then this morning, one of the first stories that I saw on the E! website app was an article on Suri Cruise. These children are famous by association, yet their lives are on constant display. Public demand + ease of technology + very little legal protection = a big problem. I hope that some of the recent anti-paparazzi legislation passes.

The most striking element amongst the teens involved was their overwhelming sense of entitlement. This entitlement even seemed common among their parents, who were quick to defend the teens. All of the defendants escaped without a very harsh punishment and I got the feeling that the only one it really affected was Nick Prugo. Prugo showed a real sense of remorse when caught and made efforts to come clean with police, so much so, that he was accused of ratting out the other teens.

Most of the kids involved were from a privileged background, yet they felt entitled to be on the fast track towards the type of fame that comes with being a socialite and reality TV Star. Someone like Paris Hilton, who was one of the victims, was a celebrity that the kids hugely admired. Some of the girls involved were even filming their own reality show for E! Television, when they were arrested. They arrest and trial were worked into the production only increasing their exposure and fame.

The amazing thing was along with this sense of entitlement, it was as if they really didn't think that they were doing anything wrong or that it was possible that they would get caught. Most striking was Sales' interviews with one of the defendants, Alexis Neiers. Neiers babbles on and on about how she was wrongly accused and that the truth will come out. She is incoherent and it is as if she thinks if she tells her lies enough that they will become the truth. Or maybe she even believes her own lies. She sounds like a scared little kid.

Sadly, to some degree, the Bling Ring kids remind me of many kids that I know in my own life. It's an unfortunate trend in our society to want more than we need and to never feel anything is enough. I don't know anyone who would push as far as the Bling Ring kids, but I do see a smaller scale of parents spoiling their children rotten and the kids becoming entitled and complacent. This, coupled with the fascination towards fame and getting rich quick, leads some kids to devalue school or to create unhealthy goals.

Our society has forgotten how to press pause on immediate gratification and this is a big problem. The Bling Ring kids are an extreme version of the problems that plague many people in society. We should take Sales' examination of their case as a teachable moment and take a critical look at our own lives.

One last take-away from the book... don't leave a key under the doormat! Paris Hilton's house was robbed several times and each time, the kids just opened the door with a key found under the mat. Lindsay Lohan and Rachel Bilson both had alarm systems that they didn't use. I know that we all want to trust and feel as though we live in a place that is secure, but that's not reality. I have several friends who live in great neighborhoods and have been victims of home robberies in the last year. The best defense is to be proactive with security. You never know who is lurking around your neighborhood.

Please visit my blog for more reviews and thoughts.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 31, 2024
The author meanders for large sections about the importance of fame, feminism, and social anxiety rather than telling the story. The book took me two months to read because it down hold my attention with all the interludes. It’s Ok .
Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2018
Wow I had no idea how this played out. I watched the movie a couple years ago and stumbled across the book so decided to read it. It went way deeper than the movie did with a bit more detail and you can really get a good grasp on the kids that it's about. If you've ever wondered how the did it, then read this book. I kept thinking to myself while reading or listening to the audible version, how did they have the nerve to do the first one!!? I think I would've been so nervous that I wouldn't be able to stand up straight, much less hang out in the house and look through everything to decide what I would want to take. I thought it was kind of breast to get a view into the kids frame of mind at and after the burglaries. I truly feel that of all the charges they got off way to easily and not one of them were sorry for what they did and only sorry that they couldn't continue. I also think that given the chance again each and every single one would do it again and again. I hate how the media had turned into this circus act following celebrities around like they do! . It's one thing to grab a photo of a celebrity out at the club's or a nice restaurant, but not to the extent of where the paparazzi go to. They are NORMAL prep plus that have extraordinary jobs. That's it! I'd the media that has made kids so celebrity hungry and I couldn't believe the facts of how teenagers when asked, the percentage that choose to be rich and famous over actual REAL and ATTAINABLE lives they will end up with. Staying with such high aspirations of how easy it seems to be to become"rich and famous", it did will be a crushing disappointment when REALITY his them head on. It had made me realize I need to talk to my boys about how life is, how life elm be and what goals are truly attainable with hard work, do they can be successful and have a lot of money and be able to get the material things they want by hard work. I guess most people don't realize that some of the most LOVED celebrities that seem to have it all are some of the most sad inside.

I think I went of track a bit......angry it's a good book for the inside details of the case and the kids that pulled it off.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2013
This is a quick and easy read, and I'd also read the Vanity Fair articles by the author, so I was familiar with the subjects and the theme of teens wanting desperately to be celebrities themselves and wear designer clothes, jewelry, etc. However, now that I've come to the end of the book I feel like I want to take a bath. I feel grimy from the sleaze that the kids and the celebrities and the author herself exude. It's disheartening to say the least that we live in a world where kids are growing up in a culture of vulgarity and excess with almost no direction from adults, with no schooling, little parental guidance, abusing drugs, binge drinking, and now here comes a writer (and a film director) to exploit these misguided children. And I fear the kids themselves will rush to read this because they'll see it as extending their time in the spotlight.
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Top reviews from other countries

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sonia drappier
2.0 out of 5 stars Attention ! pages manquantes
Reviewed in France on May 28, 2022
L'histoire est intéressante et le livre bien écrit. Je ne mets que deux étoiles car il y a un problème avec l'impression : au total il manque 6 pages qui sont remplacées par des doublons de la page suivante. (exemple : manque p 198 mais il y 2 fois la 199. Idem deux fois la 203 mais pas de 202 ; deux fois la 230 mais pas la 229...).
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Buy it. Even if you’ve watched the film. Brilliant!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 18, 2018
Excellent book.
MGMontreal
4.0 out of 5 stars Good read, but confusing at times
Reviewed in Canada on August 2, 2013
This was a good light read, but I found it confusing at times with all the players in the game. The best part of the book was the explanation as to how our society led these teenagers to do what they did.
Erlinda Bickel
4.0 out of 5 stars Linda
Reviewed in Germany on October 20, 2013
spoiled, rich and very bored- is what I would describe this kids-watch out - your kids might even make them into heroes.
guillaume flavian
3.0 out of 5 stars Ce livre est une excellente étude
Reviewed in France on September 4, 2013
Ce livre est une excellente étude de la vie des jeunes aux USA .
Et de la bêtise des adolescents aujourd'hui et de leur totale absence
de jugement .