Ratings12
Average rating4.2
One fateful encounter upends the lives of two women in this tense domestic thriller, a modern spin on Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers On A Train that flips the script on race and gender politics. “I’m a big believer that women should help each other, Tasha,” she says. “Don’t you think?” Tasha Jenkins has finally found the courage to leave her abusive husband. Taking her teenage son with her, Tasha checks into a hotel the night before their flight out of D.C. and out of Kordell Jenkins’s life forever. But escaping isn’t so easy, and Tasha soon finds herself driving back to her own personal hell. As she is leaving, a white woman pounds on her car window, begging to be let in. Behind the woman, an angry man is in pursuit. Tasha makes a split-second decision that will alter the course of her life: she lets her in and takes off. Tasha and Madison Gingell may have very different everyday realities, but what they have in common is marriages they need out of. The two women want to help each other, but they have very different ideas of what that means . . . They are on a collision course that will end in the case files of the D.C. MPD homicide unit. Unraveling the truth of what really happened may be impossible‒and futile. Because what has the truth ever done for women like Tasha and Madison? Master of psychological suspense L.S. Stratton has written a gripping murder mystery about two perfect strangers whose lives become dangerously entangled, a must-read for fans of crime thriller books.
Reviews with the most likes.
4 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
This definitely was a slow burn for sure. Sometimes with some of the details given, I was wondering why it was in the book at all. I enjoyed Tasha and her relationship with her son and with Morris. She definitely had more dimension than Madison.
I kind of slogged through the detectives POV but of course everything comes together in the end.
While I was reading, I was set on giving it a 3 or 3.5 stars BUT those last 50 pages reaaaaalllly made this whole book for me. I think this was my face about 5 different times within the last 50 pages >
this is bingeable, has so much depth, nuance, and commentary, and it has classic domestic thriller twists. what more could you ask for?