New York Times,ย USA Today,ย and #1 Amazon bestselling authorย Freida McFaddenย is a practicing physician specializing in brain injury who has penned multiple Kindle bestselling psychological thrillers and medical humor novels. She lives with her family and black cat in a centuries-old three-story home overlooking the ocean, with staircases that creak and moan with each step, and nobody could hear you if you scream. Unless you scream really loudly, maybe.
โWelcome to the family,โ Nina Winchester says as I shake her elegant, manicured hand. I smile politely, gazing around the marble hallway. Working here is my last chance to start fresh. I can pretend to be whoever I like. But Iโll soon learn that the Winchestersโ secrets are far more dangerous than my ownโฆ
Every day I clean the Winchestersโ beautiful house top to bottom. I collect their daughter from school. And I cook a delicious meal for the whole family before heading up to eat alone in my tiny room on the top floor.
I try to ignore how Nina makes a mess just to watch me clean it up. How she tells strange lies about her own daughter. And how her husband Andrew seems more broken every day. But as I look into Andrewโs handsome brown eyes, so full of pain, itโs hard not to imagine what it would be like to live Ninaโs life. The walk-in closet, the fancy car, the perfect husband.
I only try on one of Ninaโs pristine white dresses once. Just to see what itโs like. But she soon finds outโฆ and by the time I realize my attic bedroom door only locks from the outside, itโs far too late.
But I reassure myself: the Winchesters donโt know who I really am.
They donโt know what Iโm capable ofโฆ
A New York Times, USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller and winner of a 2023 ITW Thriller Award. This unbelievably twisty read will have you glued to the pages late into the night. Anyone who loves The Woman in the Window, The Wife Between Us and The Girl on the Train wonโt be able to put down The Housemaid!
โI got severe whiplash from the twistiest turnsโฆ Every time I thought I had it figured outโฆ WRONG!!!โฆ I am still reelingโฆ outstandingโฆ If you love a top notch psychological thriller that will have you questioning your own sanity, then this 5 star read is for you.โ NetGalley reviewer, โญโญโญโญโญ
โWhat a wild ride!!! Freida definitely delivered the best twisty endingโฆ Gripping from start to finishโฆ honestly, I just could not put it downโฆ An absolutely mind-blowing shocker that kept me guessing and on the edge of my seat literally until the very end.โ Goodreads reviewer, โญโญโญโญโญ
โOne wild ride!โฆ So many twists and turnsโฆ I was hookedright away โ I even read my Kindle while waiting in my kidโs school pick-up line so I wouldnโt have to put this book down!โฆ addictiveโฆ pure perfection!โ Goodreads reviewer, โญโญโญโญโญ
This book was hyped up quite a bit, so I shied away from reading it for awhile, then I wished I’d read it sooner. It was a bit more sinister and dark than I expected, but I figured out some parts of the ending pretty early on. Halfway through, there is a huge switch-a-roo that I knew was coming but couldn’t put my finger on exactly what the author had in store… It lived up to its reputation as being a thrilling page-turner. I like listening to books with multiple voices instead of reading them, and I highly recommend the Audible version of this one. I was very happy with the ending. It will not disappoint. I have the sequel, The Housemaid’s Secret, on my reading short list.
Wilhelmina “Millie” Calloway – a young woman, 27 years old, with a criminal past, who is employed as a housekeeper by a rich woman, Nina Winchester, with a seeming mental health condition. At 27, Millie Calloway emerges from a decade-long imprisonment, embarking on a challenging quest for employment. Her journey leads her to the Winchester household as a live-in housemaid, a role she accepts with eagerness, given her limited options due to her criminal past.
Nina Winchester – the storyโs co-narrator and a woman in her late thirties, presents a facade of the affluent, troubled housewife.
Andrew Winchester – initially seen as a sympathetic character trapped in a loveless marriage, is gradually revealed as the antagonist.
Cecelia “Cece” Winchester – Ninaโs young daughter, initially appears as an odd, demanding child.
Lucy Foleyย studied English literature at Durham University and University College London and worked for several years as a fiction editor in the publishing industry. She is the author of five novels includingย The Paris Apartmentย andย The Guest List. She lives in London.
A REESE’S BOOK CLUB PICK
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
ONE OF THE NEW YORK TIMES BEST THRILLERS OF THE YEAR
โI loved this book. It gave me the same waves of happiness I get from curling up with a classic Christie…The alternating points of view keep you guessing, and guessing wrong.โ โ Alex Michaelides, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Silent Patient
“Evok[es] the great Agatha Christie classicsโฆPay close attention to seemingly throwaway details about the charactersโ pasts. They are all clues.โ — New York Times Book Review
A wedding celebration turns dark and deadly in this deliciously wicked and atmospheric thriller reminiscent of Agatha Christie from the New York Times bestselling author of The Hunting Party.
The bride โ The plus one โ The best man โ The wedding planner โ The bridesmaid โ The body
On an island off the coast of Ireland, guests gather to celebrate two people joining their lives together as one. The groom: handsome and charming, a rising television star. The bride: smart and ambitious, a magazine publisher. Itโs a wedding for a magazine, or for a celebrity: the designer dress, the remote location, the luxe party favors, the boutique whiskey. The cell phone service may be spotty and the waves may be rough, but every detail has been expertly planned and will be expertly executed.
But perfection is for plans, and people are all too human. As the champagne is popped and the festivities begin, resentments and petty jealousies begin to mingle with the reminiscences and well wishes. The groomsmen begin the drinking game from their school days. The bridesmaid not-so-accidentally ruins her dress. The brideโs oldest (male) friend gives an uncomfortably caring toast.
And then someone turns up dead. Who didnโt wish the happy couple well? And perhaps more important, why?
Lucy Foley was suggested to me by a dear college friend (Thank you, Erika!), so I knew she’d be my next read. We find out pretty early on that there is something mysterious that happened while the guys were at boarding school together that may have included someone dying. It’s mysterious as to who or what throughout the book. We also find out that something happened with/to Charlie on the stag (bachelor party) that was pretty severe but no one will talk about it.
The narrators for this book are Aoife, Hannah, Charlie, Olivia, and Johnno. Each chapter of the book bounces between the perspective of each of these characters and between the present and past. At first, the sequencing irritated me, but when I got to the middle of the book, I absolutely loved it. There are some twists, folks, and I WAS HOOKED. The more I read, the easier and easier it is to guess the endings. This one surprised me, and because of that, I highly recommend. I am reading The Paris Apartment next, and I’m excited to see if that one lives up to Foley’s reputation.
Olivia – Julia’s bridesmaid and half sister (they share a mother), withdrawn and not at all happy to be at her sister’s wedding, recently had a traumatic breakup
Will – Julia’s groom, tv star
Julia (Jules) – Will’s bride, owns a magazine called “The Download”
Hannah – Charlie’s wife, feels like a fish out of water in the posh, expensive surroundings of the venue and the wedding guests, the “plus one”
Alice – Hannah’s older sister, commited suicide
Charlie – Hannah’s husband and Julia’s best friend and best man, MC for the wedding day/night
Aoife (pronounced EE-fa) – the wedding planner and owns the wedding venue property
Freddy – Aoife’s husband and resident chef on the property
Pete – groomsman, boarding school friend
Femmy – groomsman, boarding school friend
Duncan – groomsman, boarding school friend
Johnno – Will’s best man, became friends in boarding school, surley, brooding, forgot his suit for the wedding and borrows Will’s spare
Barbara Kingsolver is from Appalachia and set out to write The Great American Appalachian Novel… AND DID SHE EVER.
Y’all… 21 hours and 3 minutes (560 pages) and I SAILED through it. LISTEN TO THIS BOOK instead of reading it. The narrator is absolute perfection. No one could be a better Demon. Unlike some of the reviews I’ve read, I absolutely wanted it to end. This is not an easy read. It made my heart bleed and overflow almost simultaneously. Regardless of his misfortune and addiction, Demon IS SO GOOD. He remains so good throughout the entire book, which is a testament to humanity as a whole. He describes the happy times of his childhood as anyone would. I can relate to his descriptions of playing with friends outside during childhood years. This gives us all a thread of continuity and weaves us into Demon’s train of thought and perspective.
I loved Ma and HATED Stoner and Romeo. These men prey on single mothers and are horrific subhumans. I literally reacted to much to the gut wrenching parts of this book that my Apple watch congratulated me on my workout… and I wasn’t working out… While most of us aren’t Ma and Mariah, we feel like it. Motherhood is so hard and we all feel like we are failing unforgivably sometimes, and honestly, sometimes we are. Parts of this book made me recall my inadequacies as a mother and wonder how my kids will remember it all. I was angry at Ma for staying with Stoner, but in her position, and as beaten down as she’d been her entire life, she’d just given up years ago. I can’t imagine and I’m grateful I am not and never will be in that position. I was so stupid at 18 years old, but I thank God for family and resources that would never let me sink into Ma’s life.
This is a necessary read and truly a work of art. I was up at 3:30 am this morning thinking about Demon and his chosen family, as they aren’t fictional characters at all. There are countless Demons and Emmys and Dories and Junes and Hammerhead Kellys and Tommys and Fast Forwards all over our great nation and the world, surviving as they know how. I watched several documentaries that realistically depict the drug epidemic in Appalachia. The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginiaย is a 2009 documentary film directed by Julien Nitzberg chronicling the White family of Boone County, West Virginia. It isn’t an easy or tame watch, but I highly recommend it. It elicits the same emotional rollercoaster as this work. And under the differences, traumas, addictions, lifestyles, and intensity is the raw underbelly of people just doing their best to survive bigotry, shame grief, and hunger. Most humans on the planet can relate in some way to that.ย
The style is unmatched. It reminds me of Cutting for Stone in the sense that you need to read it slowly to absorb all of the beauty, but I loved it even more. I loved the way Demon references religion and the Bible. I can totally see his perspective. And OH MY GOODNESS the figurative language in this masterpiece… Otherworldly. It addresses society as a whole – poverty, addiction, domestic violence, child abuse, discrimination in various forms – while fostering the connective heartbeat of raw, unfiltered humanity straight through all of the impossibilities and devastations.
Some of my personal favorite gems from this masterpiece…
“Pestering the tit of trouble”
‘The monster truck mud rally of child services”
“Keeping secrets from young ears only plants seeds between them.” (woosah….)
… and that is just in the first 11 minutes…
“One nation, underemployed”
“A thing grows teeth once its put into words.”
“Spittin’ poison in my brain” referring to Stoner’s influence on Demon regarding Maggot’s sexuality
(Most of the character analyses for this book are paraphrased from LitCharts. There are a ton of characters and I was so enamoured with the writing that I didn’t take great notes…)
Demon Copperhead – Demon, born Damon Fields, is the novelโs protagonist. Demon is born in a trailer bathroom to a young mother who is addicted to drugs. Throughout the novel, Demon struggles to overcome the circumstances of his birthโpoverty, generational trauma, and his motherโs addiction, which he ultimately inherits. He serves as an example of the hardships that people in Appalachia face as a result of external forces like inadequate social services, poverty, and a lack of employment opportunities. Demonโs character, in particular, helps illustrate the harm caused by pharmaceutical companies that targeted the Appalachian region and overprescribed opioids they knew to be addictive.
Ma – Demonโs mom is young when she has Demon. During Demonโs childhood, Mom works at Walmart and tries, at various times, to enter recovery from addiction.
Maggot – born Matt Peggot, is Demonโs closest friend growing up. Demon spends as much time at Maggotโs house as his own. When Mom becomes involved with Stoner, Stoner forbids Demon from spending time with Maggot because he suspects that Maggot is gay.
Stoner – Murrell Stone, nicknamed Stoner, is Momโs boyfriend who is physically and verbally abusive to Mom and Demon.
Satan – Stoner’s dog
Mrs. Peggot – Nance Peggot, more often referred to as Mrs. Peggot, is Maggotโs grandmother who, along with Mr. Peggot, helps raise Maggot after his mother, Mariah, is sent to prison. The novel portrays Mrs. Peggot as kind and caring, and she and her husband become a surrogate family to Demon.
Mr. Peggot – Mrs. Peggotโs husband, is a kind and patient man, He helps raise Demon. He sustained a leg injury while working in the mines and has not walked easily since.
Mariah Peggot – Maggot’s mother, serving prison time, 18 when she went to prison, due to retaliating for domestic violence.
Romeo – Maggot’s father, egotistic and self-proclaimed too good for Mariah, “A fox in the hen house” as Mrs. Peggot says
Emmy – the daughter of Humvee, who passed away before the novel takes place. After Humvee died, the Peggots took in Emmy. When Maggotโs mom was sent to prison, though, the Peggots couldnโt raise two children, so Emmy went to live with her aunt June in Knoxville. June eventually formally adopts Emmy. Emmy is depicted as smart and wise beyond her years.
Aunt June – Maggot and Emmyโs aunt who becomes Emmyโs adoptive mother. June is a nurse in Knoxville who then moves back to Lee County to be closer to her family. She also steps in to help both Demon and Emmy when they are at their lowest and then financially supports their journeys to sobriety.
Angus – born Agnes Winfield, is Coach Winfieldโs daughter. She does well in school and initially plans to leave Lee County to go to a four-year college as soon as possible.
Fast Forward – the larger-than-life football star who Demon first meets at Cricksonโs farm. At first, Fast Forward seems charming to everyone who meets him, and Demon thinks of him as a kind of real-life superhero. As the novel, progresses, though, this charming faรงade peels away to reveal a darker, more sinister personality.
Coach Winfield – takes Demon in and helps raise him. Demon lives with Coach and Coachโs daughter, Angus.
Dori – Demonโs girlfriend. Demon is surprised to learn that Dori is a heavy user of opioids, which are prescribed to her father Vester, who is dying of cancer.
Tommy Waddell – one of the foster boys whom Demon meets at Mr. Cricksonโs farm. The novel portrays Tommy as a sweet, kind, caring, and gentle person. Tommy is one of my favorite characters in the book.
Dr. Watts – the doctor for the football team and the doctor at a pill mill, a kind of pain management clinic that will write prescriptions for anyone who pays for one.
Kent – Aunt Juneโs boyfriend who is a pharmaceutical representative. Kentโs job consists of trying to get doctors to prescribe opioid painkillers more often.
Hammerhead Kelly – a cousin in the Peggot family, related through marriage. He is a sweetheart.
Miss Barks – meets Demon when he is 10, one of Demonโs case managers through the Department of Social Services (DSS).
Mr. Crickson – the foster parent whom Demon first goes to live with after Mom overdoses.
Dick – Betsyโs brother and Demonโs great-uncle.
U-Haul – born Ryan Pyles. Coach Winfieldโs assistant who will later become an assistant football coach.
Mr. Armstrong – an English teacher at Demonโs middle school. He recognizes that Demon is a strong student and recommends him to the gifted and talented program.
Ms. Annie – the art teacher at the high school. She encourages Demon to pursue his talent for drawing. Ms. Annie is married to Mr. Armstrong. Ms. Annie is white and Mr. Armstrong is black.
Mr. Ghali – the owner of Gollyโs Market
Rose Dartell – one of Fast Forwardโs friends, though Fast Forward seems to treat her only with contempt. Rose seems jealous of Demon for the attention that Fast Forward gives him.
โSutanto brilliantly infuses comedy and cultureย into the unpredictable rom-com/murder mystery mashup as Meddy navigates familial duty, possible arrest and a groomzilla.ย Iย laughed out loud and you will too.โโUSA Todayย (four-star review)
โA hilarious, heartfelt romp of a novel aboutโwhat else?โaccidental murder and the bond of family. This book had me laughing aloud within its first five pagesโฆ Utterly clever, deeply funny, and altogether charming, this book is sure to be one of the best of the year!โโEmily Henry,ย New York Timesย bestselling author ofย Beach Read
One of NPRโs Best Books of 2021!
One of PopSugarโs โ42 Books Everyone Will Be Talking About in 2021โ!
What happens when you mix 1 (accidental) murder with 2 thousand wedding guests, and then toss in a possible curse on 3 generations of an immigrant Chinese-Indonesianย family?ย
You get 4 meddling Asian aunties coming to the rescue!ย
When Meddelin Chan ends up accidentally killing her blind date, her meddlesome mother calls for her even more meddlesome aunties to help get rid of the body. Unfortunately, a dead body proves to be a lot more challenging to dispose of than one might anticipate, especially when it is inadvertently shipped in a cake cooler to the over-the-top billionaire wedding Meddy, her Ma, and aunties are working at an island resort on the California coastline. Itโs the biggest job yet for the family wedding businessโโDonโt leave your big day to chance, leave it to the Chans!โโand nothing, not even an unsavory corpse, will get in the way of her auntieโs perfect buttercream flowers.
But things go from inconvenient to downright torturous when Meddyโs great college loveโand biggest heartbreakโmakes a surprise appearance amid the wedding chaos. Is it possible to escape murder charges, charm her ex back into her life,ย andย pull off a stunning wedding all in one weekend?
Characters:
Meddy (Meddelin) Chen – Meddy Chen is the protagonist of the novel, photographer in the family business, dissatisfied personally and professionally when we meet her at 26 years old
Big Aunt – Meddy’s oldest aunt, 20 years as a pastry chef, meets with potential clients
Second Aunt – Meddy’s second oldest aunt, does hair and makeup for the weddings
Forth Aunt – entertainment for the weddings
Ma – Meddy’s mother, does floral arranging for the weddings
Nathan Chen – Meddy’s college love, she’s still in love with him at 26 when we meet her, the CEO of the event hotel on an island off the coast of LA
Selena – Meddy’s best girlfriend
Jake – Meddy’s blind date, her mother catfished him into a blind date with Meddy, continues to insert how rich he is in conversation, super pushy, Meddy tases him, he wrecks her car, and winds up as the problematic dead body in the story
Jacqueline – the bride, she’s a sweetheart and not a good match for her jerk fiancee, Tom
Tom Cruise Sutopo – the groomzilla
Maureen – Jacqueline’s Maid-of-honor
I fell so hard in love with Jesse Q. Sutano while reading Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers. My goodness, this kind of love is so much stronger than anything I’ve ever felt for some dusty male… I can live in a world of entertaining fiction with this soulmate and I’m all for that. Escapism is what keeps me going…
I love all of the pop culture references in this book. It makes Meddy more relatable and gives us immediate commonalities. Meddy’s family’s first language is Indonesian, and Meddy’s is English, so this makes for fun comedy. The interactions and accents are based on Sutano’s own upbringing and family, so it is absolutely endearing and not stereotyping at all.
Sutano peppers in Chinese/Indonesian cultural tidbits of knowledge, which I loved. It was such a full-bodied, fun read. I really loved the characters, except the ones we are intended to not like.
Mary Kubica is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of many suspense novels, including THE GOOD GIRL, PRETTY BABY, DONโT YOU CRY,EVERY LAST LIE, WHEN THE LIGHTS GO OUT,THE OTHER MRS.,LOCAL WOMAN MISSING and JUST THE NICEST COUPLE.
A former high school history teacher, Mary holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, in History and American Literature. She lives outside of Chicago with her husband and two children.
Her first novel THE GOOD GIRL was an Indie Next pick in August of 2014, received a Strand Critics Nomination for Best First Novel and was a nominee in the Goodreads Choice Awards in Debut Goodreads Author and in Mystery & Thriller for 2014.
LOCAL WOMAN MISSING was an Indie Next pick in May of 2021, a nominee in the Goodreads Choice Awards in Mystery & Thriller for 2021, and a finalist for an Audie Award.
Maryโs novels have been selected as Amazon Best Books of the Month and have been LibraryReads selections. Theyโve been translated into over thirty languages and have sold over five million copies worldwide. Sheโs been described as โa helluva storyteller,โ (Kirkus Reviews) and โa writer of vice-like control,โ (Chicago Tribune), and her novels have been praised as โhypnoticโ (People) and โthrilling and illuminatingโ (Los Angeles Times). She is currently working on her next novel.
Shelby Tebow is the first to go missing. Not long after, Meredith Dickey and her six-year-old daughter, Delilah, vanish just blocks away from where Shelby was last seen, striking fear into their once-peaceful community. Are these incidents connected? After an elusive search that yields more questions than answers, the case eventually goes cold.
Now, eleven years later, Delilah shockingly returns. Everyone wants to know what happened to her, but no one is prepared for what theyโll findโฆ
In this smart and chilling thriller, master of suspense and New York Times bestselling author Mary Kubica takes domestic secrets to a whole new level, showing that some people will stop at nothing to keep the truth buried.
โComplex, richly atmospheric and thoroughly riveting, LOCAL WOMAN MISSING is a thoughtful look at how even the most innocuous secrets between happy couples and beloved friends in tightly knit neighborhoods can sometimes turn so unexpectedly and terrifyingly deadly.โ ~ Kimberly McCreight / New York Times bestselling author of Reconstructing Amelia and A Good Marriage
โDark and twisty, with all the white-knuckle tension and jaw-dropping surprises readers have come to expect from Mary Kubica.โ ~Riley Sager / New York Times bestselling author of Home Before Dark
โIโm shamelessly addicted to Mary Kubicaโs juicy, unpredictable reads, as much for her well-rounded, fully human, flawed characters as her sizzling plotsโand she just keeps getting better. LOCAL WOMAN MISSING is a propulsive journey through a winding maze of secrets, leading to a jaw-dropping twist that I never saw coming. Loved every minute.โ ~ Joshilyn Jackson / New York Times bestselling author of Never Have I Ever
โImpossible-to-see-it-comingโฆ. [Kubica] takes readers to a whole new level of deceit and irony.โ ~ Booklist
โThe twists, turns, and an unpredictable ending make it irresistible.โ ~ Library Journal
โA pitch-perfect domestic thriller from the always-reliable Mary Kubicaโฆ Donโt miss this unforgettable story about what strong women have to do in desperate circumstances.โ ~ Apple Books
I heard mixed reviews on this one, so I decided to find out for myself. I had to make a list of characters, because the time hops, different voices, and perspectives were a little challenging for me to process. This story is based in an upper middle class suburb outside of Chicago. There is a lot going on and a lot of different players. To bring some order to the plot, I also made a list of questions regarding the plot I wanted to answer by the end of the book. I got most of them answered, and some weren’t really important to answer by the end.
I was okay with the ending. I would have given the book 3.5 stars, if possible. It absolutely kept my attention, but the very unrealistic nature of a lot of the circumstances in the story made it lose some appeal for me. It does serve its purpose as a thriller, and I will read additional books by this author. I liked the fact that I didn’t even almost guess the ending.
Josh Dickey – Married to Meredith, father to Delilah and Leo
Meredith Dickey – second to go missing with Delilah, Married to Josh, Delilah and Leo’s mother, doula, didn’t show up to work unbeknownst to Josh for a few weeks, planned to testify in court against Dr. Feingold for malpractice when delivering Shelby and Josh’s baby, Grace
Delilah Dickey – second to go missing with Meredith, kidnapped and lived in a dark basement for 11 years
Leo Dickey – Delilah’s younger brother, one of the first person voices in the book, angry and resentful when Delilah comes home, 4 years old when Meredith and Delilah go missing
Gus – trapped in the basement with Delilah
Kate – Bea’s partner, Josh and Meredith’s neighbor, vet
Bea – Kate’s partner, Josh and Meredith’s neighbor, musician, has recording studio in the garage, born leader
Shelby Tebow – first to go missing, cheating on her husband with Sam, Meredith was Shelby’s doula
Jason Tebow – Shelby’s husband, cheating on his wife, insurance agent, wanted to play NFL football but didn’t due to knee injury, seems like a huge jerk all-round
Grace Tebow – Shelby and Jason’s baby girl, an infant when Shelby disappears, sustains brain trauma due to Dr. Feingold using forceps during birth
Dr. Feingold – Jason tells Kate and Bea that this was Shelby’s only enemy, doesn’t have good bedside manner, Meredith planned to testify against him in Tebows’ malpractice suit
Charlotte – neighbor in late 50s who lives alone with her husband and watched kids in the neighborhood, keeps Delilah and Leo when they are young
Janette – midwife that Meredith works with
Cassandra and Marty – neighbors, Marty and Meredith dated in college and she lost her virginity to him