Some women won't be painted out of history…
Everybody knows that in 1938, runaway heiress artist Juliette Willoughby perished in an accidental studio fire in Paris, alongside her masterpiece Self-Portrait As Sphinx.
Fifty years later, two Cambridge art history students are confounded when they stumble across proof that the fire was no accident but something more sinister. What they uncover threatens the very foundation of Juliette’s aristocratic family and revives rumors of the infamous curse that has haunted the Willoughbys for generations.
But what does their discovery mean? And how is it connected to a brutal murder in present-day Dubai? Sometimes the truth really is stranger than fiction.
Holy cow! On all counts, The Final Act of Juliette Willoughby was quite an elegant tale and also wholly original. Starting off as a slow burn mystery, it quickly shifted into a captivating historical thriller. Told via three timelines and multiple POVs over four parts, the plot ducked and weaved as an onion-like storyline came into view. Was it complex? Most definitely, but thanks to this fiction writing duo, it couldn’t have been clearer. Not once was I lost in the details and instead found myself spellbound to the pages as a story with a ripped-from-the-headlines feel came together in this altogether enigmatic puzzle.
Between the characters and the settings, this book simply came alive on the page. With a character-driven first half, the fully fleshed out personas were both true-to-life and authentic. Granted, there was a bit of dramatic license used here and there, but what would a fictional novel be without that? Boring, to be sure. Add in the locales of Cambridge, Paris, and Dubai, and the atmospheric feel hit all the right chords. That, however, wasn’t the best bit by a mile. Held within these pages were literal jaw-dropping twists. The kind, to be frank, that had me smiling with glee.
All things considered, I am simply gobsmacked by this book. In a completely different style than this duo’s last thriller, The Club, it is quite clear that they’re beyond talented. Capable of showing their brilliance over not just one subgenre but two, I was enraptured throughout this thought-provoking yet suspense-laden plot. From its well-developed characters and dysfunctional family dynamics to its multiple subplots and mysteries, there wasn’t a thing not to love. After all, it was gripping, addictive, binge-worthy, and utterly satisfying in the extreme. Rating of 4.5 stars.
Thank you to Ellery Lloyd and Harper Books for my complimentary copy. All opinions are my own.
PUB DATE: June 11, 2024
Trigger warning: blackmail, infidelity, mention of: domestic violence