Search This Blog







2026 Cover Lovers Reading Challenge (hosted by Yours Truly)

2026 Literary Escapes Challenge





2026 Build Your Library Reading Challenge








Dragon Rambles' Law of Fives Bingo



2026 Pioneer Book Reading Challenge





Generic Thriller Fails to ... Thrill
(Image from Indiebound)
For New Yorker Lake Warren, summer usually means relaxing in the Catskills with her family. Not anymore. Newly separated from her husband of 14 years, she's facing divorce proceedings and a vicious custody battle. Nothing relaxing about that. In fact, her lawyer suggests, she needs to be as vigilant and nunlike as possible until the divorce is finalized. It's not as if Lake's knocking back admirers with a stick, but the new doctor at the fertility clinic for which she's consulting has been dropping some not-so-subtle hints. Desperate for some male attention, Lake finally succombs to the charms of the very sexy Mark Keaton. A few hours later, she finds him dead, blood pouring out of the open gash in his throat. Shocked and terrified, Lake flees the scene. She can't risk losing her kids over a one-night stand, let alone a murder investigation.
Sound pretty generic? That's because there's nothing original about Hush, the newest thriller from Cosmopolitan's editor-in-chief Kate White. The writing's dull, the plot's been done, and not one of White's characters would recognize a personality if it walked up and slapped them across the face. So colorless is this cast that I could hardly tell one player from another - forget actually caring about any of them. Our heroine is no exception. I really didn't give a darn whether she solved the murder, got stuffed into a freezer, or rotted in jail. She never, not once, felt human to me. Likewise, the plot didn't grab me, didn't make me care at all. The fact that I didn't abandon this book after the first chapter says something, I guess, because I did tear through it pretty fast. Still, if I hadn't agreed to review Hush for my friends at TLC Book Tours, I wouldn't have bothered sticking around for Chapter 2.
(Readalikes: Think Mary Higgins Clark, but with a lot more edge and none of the charm.)
Grade: D
If this were a movie, it would be rated: R for language, violence, and sexual content
To the FTC, with love: I received an ARC of Hush from the generous folks at Harper Collins. Thank you!

Readin'
Heiress of Nowhere by Stacey Lee
Listenin'
The Daisy Children by Sofia Grant
Followin' with Bloglovin'
-
State Of The ARC #621 hour ago
-
-
-
-
What I’m Reading This Week (4/30/26)10 hours ago
-
Monthly Round-Up: April 202614 hours ago
-
Time Travel Thursday18 hours ago
-
-
Miss Newbury's List21 hours ago
-
-
-
Service Model23 hours ago
-
A Review of Technosphere1 day ago
-
-
-
Books read in April1 day ago
-
FO Wednesday: Tonnach Cardigan1 day ago
-
Wordless Wednesday ~ Daily Walk 21 day ago
-
-
-
An Unexpected Peril by Deanna Raybourn2 days ago
-
We Burned So Bright by TJ Klune2 days ago
-
The Lost Girl of Craven County2 days ago
-
-
-
-
-
Sunday Salon: April 26, 20265 days ago
-
-
-
April TBR4 weeks ago
-
Madrigals and Mayhem by Elizabeth Penney2 months ago
-
10 Book Covers with Unique Typography2 months ago
-
-
No Roundup this month11 months ago
-
Sunday Post #5681 year ago
-
-
Girl Plus Books: On Hiatus1 year ago
-
-
-
What Happened to Summer?2 years ago
-
6/25/23 Extra Ezra2 years ago
-
-
-
-
-
Are you looking for Pretty Books?3 years ago
-
-
-
-
-
-
Grab my Button!
Blog Archive
- ► 2021 (159)
- ► 2020 (205)
- ► 2019 (197)
- ► 2018 (223)
- ► 2017 (157)
- ► 2016 (157)
- ► 2015 (188)
- ► 2014 (133)
- ► 2013 (183)
- ► 2012 (193)
- ▼ 2011 (232)
- ► 2010 (257)
- ► 2009 (211)
- ► 2008 (192)
2026 Goodreads Reading Challenge
2024 - Elementary/Middle Grade Nonfiction
2023 - Middle Grade Fiction
2022 - Middle Grade Fiction
2021 - Middle Grade Fiction
2020 - Middle Grade Fiction

