Unexpected ... crazy ... twisted ... diabolical. This book is worthy of all of those adjectives and more!
As I impatiently waited for Tess Stimson's newest release to arrive, I realized that this one was still in my ever-growing TBR bookcase. I cannot believe I almost let this one pass me by - it is such a clever domestic thriller! Kudos to Stimson, as she somehow has a knack for taking tired plot points and making them feel completely fresh. It's a gift, and one that not every thriller writer possesses.
This one starts off with an intense prologue that completely sets the stage from page one. A murder takes place and there are two women found at the bloody scene. It then goes back in time to the events leading up to the murder. You know from the first chapter that Louise is divorced from Andrew due to Andrew's infidelity, and that Andrew has married "the other woman", Caz. Louise can't let go of Andrew though, and she and Caz are in constant competition with each other, trying to one up the other one every chance they get. You know from the prologue that things must come to a nasty head, as Andrew is the one found dead at a family party. You know that "it's always the wife" - the question here though is which wife?
My initial thought was that this would be fairly easy to figure out, as I've read hundreds of domestic "whodunnits"; but it didn't take me long to deduce that all of the narrators, Louise, Caz, and Louise's sister-in-law, Min, were all extremely unreliable narrators, and it was impossible to tell whose version of events was the truth. I thought Stimson did an amazing job at making the circumstances such that any of the versions could be accurate, and I constantly went back-and-forth on which version I believed. At first I liked Louise, then I couldn't stand her and preferred Caz, but then new information would come to light, and I would waffle again. I seriously don't remember the last time I changed my mind so many times about characters!
I really liked the way the alternating timelines worked in this one. It went back to events from seven years in the past to the present time, which both put the pieces together and made it more difficult to ferret out the truth. There were also snippets of police interviews with all of the main players interspersed throughout, which also conflicted my thoughts while playing out perfectly with the plot. But what really blew me away was the ending. I found the ending of Stimson's newest release, "Stolen", to have a somewhat outlandish ending, but this one nailed it in every way! It's not often that I'm reading the final few pages still unsure of what really happened.
This book is totally addictive and has me scouring my TBR bookcase in search of other Stimson books that I may have left unread! All the stars!