Beautiful, scenic Lucerne, Switzerland is an idyllic place to live. Newlyweds Wesley and Rose Blackwood have moved there from New York City for Wesley’s new high-paying job; they are happy with the other expats they have met through the company, TIG, and enthralled with the land of chocolate, cheeses, safety, and gorgeous scenery. Rose is very happy to have met Jacqueline, one of the wives of Wesley’s co-workers, because it seems they have connected and are on the way to becoming fast friends. When Jacqueline disappeares, Rose begins to see the underbelly of the company, its employees, the expat wives, and her husband himself. It appears Rose has no one to trust and nowhere to turn as her marriage begins to fail in this foreign town of mystic folklore and frightening imagery where she barely speaks the language. Though she had to give up her job as an investigative reporter when the couple moved and she is unable to work because her permit does not allow it, Rose begins to piece together all of the circumstances surrounding her using her skills; and when she does, she discovers no one and nothing are as they seem.
This psychological thrill ride takes the reader from the bloom of young newlywed love to the ugliness found under the surface of a psychotic personality. Everything Rose believed about her husband Wesley was false, though on paper and by reputation, he is perfect. The reader is as confused as Rose is while piecing together snippets of information that seem harrowing but have logical explanations, or seem innocent and are truly evil. Included are issues of (warning) gaslighting, emotional abuse, murder, depression, and a host of other triggers that build suspense, eeriness, and outright fear as the novel progresses through to its stunning conclusion. The story is nerve-wracking, exciting, all-consuming, and it was impossible to put down. Unpredictably written with a keen eye and deft hand by author Courtney Hargrove, we are masterfully taken along through the twists and turns of this wild ride to its shocking climax and conclusion. I highly recommend “The Expat Wife” to all readers of psychological thrillers except those who might be triggered by any of the previously mentioned mental illness issues.
I’d like to thank BookSirens, Courtney Hargrove, and One Moment Books Dark for the opportunity to read and review this ARC.