Category Archives: Aimee Molloy

Review: Goodnight Beautiful by Aimee Molloy

Title: Goodnight Beautiful by Aimee Molloy
Publisher: Harper
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery, Suspense
Length: 293 pages
Book Rating: B+

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through Edelweiss

Summary:

From “master of clever misdirection” (Kirkus Reviews) Aimee Molloy, author of the New York Times bestseller The Perfect Mother, comes an irresistible psychological thriller featuring a newly married woman whose life is turned upside down when her husband goes missing.

A handsome psychotherapist. His lonely wife. And in his home office ceiling, a vent …

You’d listen too, wouldn’t you? (You know you would.)

Newlyweds Sam Statler and Annie Potter are head over heels, and excited to say good-bye to New York City and start a life together in Sam’s sleepy hometown upstate. Or, it turns out, a life where Annie spends most of her time alone while Sam, her therapist husband, works long hours in his downstairs office, tending to the egos of his (mostly female) clientele. Little does Sam know that through a vent in his ceiling, every word of his sessions can be heard from the room upstairs. The pharmacist’s wife, contemplating a divorce. The well-known painter whose boyfriend doesn’t satisfy her in bed. Who could resist listening? Everything is fine until the French girl in the green mini Cooper shows up, and Sam decides to go to work and not come home, throwing a wrench into Sam and Annie’s happily ever after.

Showcasing Molloy’s deft ability to subvert norms and culminating in the kind of stunning twist that is becoming her trademark, Goodnight Beautiful is a thrilling tale of domestic suspense that not only questions assumptions but defies expectations.

Review:

Goodnight Beautiful by Aimee Molloy is an absolutely brilliant mystery that is incredibly riveting.

Psychologist Sam Statler is a reformed player who is now happily married to his wife Annie Potter. The couple have recently relocated in Sam’s hometown  due to his mother’s dementia diagnosis. Sam quickly establishes a woman heavy practice that is located in a historic Victorian home that belonged to the last surviving member of the town’s founder. Unbeknownst to Sam, his sessions can be heard through the vent in his recently renovated office space.  When Sam disappears one evening on his way home, Annie knows something terrible has happened to her husband. But with the police treating his disappearance as voluntary, she decides to see if she can find him on her own. Will Annie find Sam before it is too late?

Sam is keeping some very major secrets from Annie that she discovers soon after his disappearance. Although she harbors a few doubts, she remains convinced something nefarious happened to her husband. Police Chief Franklin Sheehy is disinterested in the information she provides to him. Annie remains confident Sam would never leave her but will she give up searching for him in the aftermath of surprising discoveries?

Goodnight Beautiful is a thoroughly engrossing Mystery with a clever storyline. The characters are intriguing and the small town is the perfect setting for this gripping story.  With absolutely stunning twists and diabolical turns, Aimee Molloy brings this smart mystery to an outstanding conclusion.  Highly recommend this suspenseful mystery to fans of the genre.

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Filed under Aimee Molloy, Contemporary, Goodnight Beautiful, Harper, Mystery, Rated B+, Review, Suspense

Review: The Perfect Mother by Aimee Molloy

Title: The Perfect Mother by Aimee Molloy
Publisher: Harper
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery, Suspense
Length: 336 pages
Book Rating: B

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through Edelweiss

Summary:

An addictive psychological thriller about a group of women whose lives become unexpectedlyconnected when one of their newborns goes missing.

A night out. A few hours of fun. That’s all it was meant to be.

They call themselves the May Mothers—a group of new moms whose babies were born in the same month. Twice a week, they get together in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park for some much-needed adult time.

When the women go out for drinks at the hip neighborhood bar, they want a fun break from their daily routine. But on this hot Fourth of July night, something goes terrifyingly wrong: one of the babies is taken from his crib. Winnie, a single mom, was reluctant to leave six-week-old Midas with a babysitter, but her fellow May Mothers insisted everything would be fine. Now he is missing. What follows is a heart-pounding race to find Midas, during which secrets are exposed, marriages are tested, and friendships are destroyed.

Thirteen days. An unexpected twist. The Perfect Mother is a “true page turner.” —B.A. Paris, author of Behind Closed Doors

Review:

The Perfect Mother by Aimee Molloy is a riveting, suspense-laden mystery about the disappearance of a six week old baby.

A group of first time mothers form a mother’s group they dub the May Mothers because all of their due dates are in May. After everyone gives birth, they remain friends and support one another as they traverse the complicated changes their newborns bring to their lives. On July 4th, Francie Givens, Nell Mackey, Colette Yates and the only dad in the group, Token, convince single mom Winnie Ross to join them for a night out. With Nell’s prospective nanny Alma Romero watching Winnie’s baby, Midas, the group head out for a night of frivolous fun at a local bar. However, Winnie disappears at some point during the evening, leaving her phone and house key behind which Nell holds for safekeeping. Just as everyone is to head about home, Alma makes a shocking discovery: Midas is missing from his crib. With the police making little progress in the case, media scrutiny turns to the May Mothers who are launching their own investigation into what happened to Midas.

The chapters alternate between Francie, Nell, and Colette’s perspectives as they try to make sense of what happened to Midas and their own struggles with motherhood. Nell is unexpectedly called back into work before her maternity leave is scheduled to end and she is very concerned that her past might be uncovered during the investigation. Colette is falling farther and farther behind on a project with a looming deadline when she stumbles onto case files about Midas’s disappearance. Francie is fixated on Midas’s kidnapping and she continues to insert herself in the police investigation as she takes her suspicions about different suspects to the lead detectives assigned to the case. All of the women are initially extremely sympathetic to Winnie’s devastating loss, but as she keeps out of the public eye, they begin to wonder why she is so conspicuously absent.

Interspersed with their narrations are occasional chapters from an unknown person’s point of view. This woman is obviously part of the May Mothers’ group but her identity remains carefully shrouded in mystery.  As the story unwinds, she becomes increasingly fraught as she desperately tries to cling to someone who might be slipping away from her. Who is this woman and what, if anything, does she have to do with Midas’s disappearance?

The Perfect Mother  is an intricately-plotted mystery that is quite compelling. The characters are well-drawn and their lives with a newborn are realistically depicted.  Aimee Molloy does an absolutely outstanding job keeping the truth about what happened to baby Midas cleverly concealed until the novel’s shocking conclusion. Fans of the genre do not want to miss this outstanding fiction debut.

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Filed under Aimee Molloy, Contemporary, Harper, Mystery, Rated B, Review, Suspense, The Perfect Mother