Selles põnevikus, mis lausa nõuab ühekorraga läbilugemist, muudab kujuteldamatu tragöödia teismeliste elu ja pöörab perekonnad üksteise vastu. Parimad sõbrad Lindsey, Kendra ja Dani leiavad end iga lapsevanema õudusunenäost, kui nende teismeliste poegadega juhtub tragöödia, mille tagajärjel on üks poiss surnud, teine koomas ja kolmanda trauma on nii suur, et ta ei saa rääkida. Alates oma elu hirmsaimast ööst sukelduvad kolm ema meeleheitlikult selle kummalise juhtumi uurimisse. Kas nende jõukas Lõuna-California eeslinnas võis tõesti juhtuda midagi nii kohutavat? Peagi avastavad nad, et see oli alles algus, ning häirivad avastused viivad judisema panevate küsimusteni: kas nad üldse tunnevad oma lapsi? Kas nad tunnevad üksteistki? Kui pinnale kerkib rohkem saladusi, ähvardab kahtluste vari mürgitada nende perekonnad, sõpruse ja terve kogukonna. Kui illusioon õnnest ja turvalisusest on ammu kadunud, peavad naised silmitsi seisma südamevalu, armukadeduse tagajärgede ja topeltelu elamise ohtudega.
USA Today bestselling author Lucinda Berry is a former psychologist and leading researcher in childhood trauma. She’s written multiple bestsellers reaching millions of readers worldwide. Some of her bestselling works include The Perfect Child, Saving Noah, When She Returned, The Best of Friends, and Keep Your Friends Close. Her books have been optioned for film and translated into several languages.
If Berry isn’t chasing after her son, you can find her running through Los Angeles, prepping for her next marathon. To hear about her upcoming releases and other author news, visit her on social media (@lucindaberryauthor) or sign up for her newsletter at https://lucindaberry.com.
So many secrets, in fact, that my head is spiraling a bit -- and not in a good way. Aye, aye, aye . . .
Kendra, Dani, and Lindsey, best friends since childhood and mothers to three teenage boys, experience a tragedy that is every parent's worst nightmare. After a hard night of partying, a terrible accident involving the young boys occurs. In a matter of moments, one boy is dead, another is in a coma, and the third is unable to communicate, having withdrawn inside himself.
It's a horrible nightmare -- one that I, personally, cannot contemplate too deeply as a mother of two young boys. And I would be remiss if I did not forewarn readers that the subject matter of this novel is very disturbing at times and may make for a difficult read, particularly for those who are parents.
So, what happened that night? Well . . . you will have to read the novel to find out.
The Best of Friends opens with a prologue that is dramatic and intense. The reader is immediately inserted into the panic that Kendra experiences the night of the accident, feels her fear. One is very quickly absorbed into the narrative --
-- and then it all, unfortunately, turns into one big mess.
And all the messiness, my friends, is a result of the writing.
First off, Berry’s writing is simple and pedestrian. The novel does not require much thought from the reader, as Berry's writing style lacks any sort of real nuance or complexity.
Secondly, the novel is in serious need of character development and voice distinction. The story is told from the points of view of the three mothers, through alternating chapters, and in all honesty, I struggled to keep the characters' names straight and to remember whose viewpoint I was reading. Juggling three viewpoints and voices should not be this tough to do. But in this case, it is tricky because Kendra, Dani, and Lindsey are basically the same woman, just in triplicate.
Thirdly, -- and related to the above-mentioned problem -- in what I believe is a misguided attempt by Berry to write the novel in a fashion similar to Liane Moriarty's Big Little Lies, she initially withholds too much information about the women and their lives from the reader. Berry takes her time . . . WAY too much time . . . and s-l-o-w-l-y unfurls the defining details of the characters, their lives, their hidden scandals and secrets. But she doesn’t reveal enough to the reader in the very beginning so that a clear mental image of the three women can be formed in one’s mind. It is extremely difficult to fully connect to the story and the characters because of this.
And lastly, I feel like Berry throws random, out-of-the blue, jarring facts about the characters into the narrative . . . only to then, very oddly, never mention them again. It's as if she wanted to desperately up the shock factor and the scandal, and then forgot to fully weave all the dangling loose ends into the story. For example, almost 3/4 of the way into the book, Berry slips in the fact that one of the women has an eating disorder -- but then that's it. The reader never learns anything else about said eating disorder. AT ALL. Umm . . . really?!?! An eating disorder is not something that should be haphazardly tossed into a narrative, only to then be instantly forgotten.
There is also an allusion to a character maybe, possibly, having a drinking problem . . . but I have no clue as to whether it was ever fully clarified in the story. And at the very end of the novel, a reference is made regarding an event that happened during the women's junior year of high school. But for the life of me, I don't believe we ever find out what actually transpired. I've even skimmed back through the novel and searched, in an attempt to find an earlier reference to that particular night that I may have read and then misplaced in my mind. I have found nothing and am still left scratching my head about it. (If anyone finds another reference or an explanation of the event, will you please let me know?)
And after all that . . . after wading through the novel’s extremely messy and disorganized narrative . . . the big reveal of the who and the how and the why of the tragic accident involving the three teenage boys is a bit of a letdown. It is so anti-climactic, in fact, that I was even taken aback while reading it, not having realized and being surprised that I had, indeed, arrived at the grand finale.
Sigh. ‘Tis disappointing, I know.
Oh! I must also mention the epilogue -- so unbelievable and utterly ridiculous. Even now, I am shaking my head in disbelief.
The Best of Friends earns two stars from me, as my interest was held well enough that I was inclined to at least see it through to the end. But unfortunately, I am unable to recommend it.
I received an Advanced Readers Copy from #NetGalley and #ThomasandMercer in exchange for an honest review. All opinions included herein are my own.
Five tragic, emotionally suffocating, heart-wrenching, soul-shattering, tear-jerking, and profoundly poignant stars!
This book is a powerful exploration of friendship, motherhood, grief, and devastating loss. It asks: How far would a mother go to uncover the dark truth behind her child’s death? Should she accept the facts and move on, or keep digging until the terrifying reality comes to light, risking her family, friendships, and reputation? To echo Jack Nicholson’s iconic line from A Few Good Men: “You can’t handle the truth!”—but sooner or later, the truth emerges.
An unthinkable tragedy strikes suburban lives, shattering the foundations these families built. Lindsey, Kendra, and Dani share a sisterhood, having grown up together, aged together, and become mothers and confidantes. Their children, too, formed close bonds. But one eerie night, gunfire tears through the silence, and in its wake, a single tragedy changes everything. Among the three children, one is dead, one is in a coma, and the third is too traumatized to recount what happened.
Kendra’s son, Sawyer, is dead, but she refuses to believe it was a simple accident. Something darker lurks beneath that night’s events, and as the investigation unfolds, her frustration grows. Lindsey’s son, Jacob, remains in a coma, and only Dani’s son, Caleb, holds the answers. Yet, Dani’s controlling, abusive husband bars Kendra from speaking to him. What really happened that night? Did one of them try to harm the others, or is the truth even more complex?
Prepare yourself for a heart-wrenching, shocking conclusion. (Minor spoiler alert: once the truth is revealed, these three women’s lives are forever changed, haunted by that night.)
This fast-paced, thought-provoking story unfolds through the voices of three deeply flawed yet relatable women. It’s captivating, and I couldn’t put it down—despite my eagerness to binge the new season of Money Heist! My fingers were glued to the pages, and my mind was completely absorbed.
Though I haven’t read The Perfect Child, which I’ve heard great things about, I’m now eager to dive into it. I’m thrilled to have discovered such a talented author.
Huge thanks to NetGalley and Thomas & Mercer for providing this gripping ARC in exchange for my honest review. Follow me on medium.com to read my articles about books, movies, streaming series, astrology:
This is a heartbreaking story of friendship and motherhood and I would be lying if I said that it didn't bring me to tears. As a mother of a teenage boy, well, this just really hit close to home.
Lindsey, Dani, and Kendra have been life long best friends. They used to fantasize at sleepovers about how they would all live nearby one another, get married, and have children. They would have family vacations, backyard barbecues, holidays, and basically all the milestones that life brings you they would share together. As luck would have it their dreams came true.
Sawyer (Kendra's son), Jacob (Lindsey's son), and Caleb (Dani's son) have grown just as close as their mothers. They are your typical teenage boys that enjoy playing soccer, video games, and partying however one night proves fatal: Sawyer lays dead, Jacob is in a coma, and Caleb won't speak.
Questions and blame threaten everything these women hold dear including their friendship.
For the first 30% of this book I was so confused. The mothers and sons were interchangeable and I had a hard time keeping up with who was who but I did eventually settle in okay and once I was in I couldn't stop turning the pages. The ending I began to see coming and it is just heartbreaking. I had to tissue up for those last few chapters. I do have a small gripe with the epilogue - it seemed a bit too contrived of a twist.
Tragedy can strike anyone in an instant so all I can say after reading this is go home, hug your kids, and tell them how much you love them. 4 stars!
Thank you to NetGalley and Thomas & Mercer fro providing me with a digital ARC in exchange for an honest review.
An addictive and emotional tale of secrets, lies, grief and loss
3 best friends are plunged into a nightmare scenario after their teenaged sons' sleepover goes wrong, 1 son is dead, 1 son is in a coma, 1 son won't speak.
3 families turn against each other, as they try to find out what an earth happened that night?! The premise for this was A*, it sounded right up my street, and I requested it as soon as I saw it! The prologue was excellent, drawing me in, and hooking me quickly! I could feel the emotion, and was so tense reading it!
Then it all went a bit wrong! The story was told from the three best friends' POV (Lindsey, Kendra and Dani), and it should have been a great way for me to see all of their thoughts and emotions, should have been!the problem was, that the three characters were so similar, that I couldn't tell them or their families apart! Their voices didn't differ at all, and I had to write down the name of each woman, their husband, and their children, and keep referring to it for about the first 30% of the book! That wasn't fun! It was actually really frustrating! Each woman felt like the same character, and none of them felt fully developed. They were also, all fairly unlikeable. They were cruel to each other, and their families, and despite being in such a shit situation, I just couldn't really connect with any of them. I mean, as a parent, this story should have been devastating to me, but it wasn't?! I was invested after it got going, but it wasn't gut wrenching like I thought it would be, and that is 100% down to the way that the characters were written.
Once I got to about 50%, then I admit that the plot became more interesting, the pace did pick up, and the book became a real page turner for me. I wanted to know what happened, and why! There were a few twists, and lots of secrets. I liked the way that Lucinda Berry showed the effect that tragedy had on the three women and their families, how the grief and loss effected all of their relationships! As the story progressed, old rivalries, jealousies and insecurities all came out. These so called perfect families were not all that they seemed, and they were all hiding things!
I was finally enjoying the book, and then came that anticlimactic and unrealistic ending...*sighs* There were also some plot lines mentioned, and then never followed up? For example, the women alluded to something bad happening with Kendra in high-school, but it was then never spoken of again? An eating disorder was also mentioned, as was a drinking problem, but again they were left unresolved? And don't even get me started on that epilogue, I mean come on!! The Best of Friends was a tragic, heavy and emotional family drama with a bit of a mystery, but it was more about the family dramas. I find it hard to explain my feelings about it, because not much happened, the characters were unlikeable, and yet I couldn't stop turning the pages?! I think, that, had the characters been more developed, and distinctive, then this could've been a really good book, instead of a fairly good book.
Many thanks to NetGalley UK and Thomas and Mercer for the digital ARC, in exchange for an honest review.
The Best of Friends, eh? With friends like the three women in this novel, who needs enemies?
This was a tough one for me to rate. While I enjoyed the premise and was kept mostly entertained, the overall feel of the book was a little sloppy.
I agree with some other reviewers who mentioned the voices of the three main characters, Kendra, Lindsay, and Dani, were virtually indistinguishable. Though the women grew up together and claimed to be lifelong best friends, their relationships remained very superficial. They were, in fact, often cruel, catty, and vindictive...one of the many reasons I didn't particularly enjoy, or root for, any of them.
My biggest gripe, however, were story lines, brought in for shock value, which went absolutely nowhere. We were led to believe one of the women had a substance abuse problem, another an eating disorder, and apparently, there was some big life-altering crisis their junior year of high school...yet none of these issues were ever developed or explained. And why was the cop made out to be some sneaky dude with an agenda? Yet another story line which seemed to just up and disappear.
The conclusion? Underwhelming and predictable. The epilogue? Dorky.
My overall feeling about The Best of Friends is one of disappointment, as the writing felt somewhat elementary. It's odd, because I know and love Lucinda Berry's work, and this simply didn't live up to the sheer talent I've read in her other stories. However, if you're looking for something quick and entertaining...and you don't mind gaping plot holes or limited character depth, this is a good choice.
Available for purchase August 18, 2020.
My sincere appreciation to NetGalley and Thomas & Mercer for my review copy.
Best friends, Mothers, Secrets, Lies, Teenagers, Heartbreak, Tragedy, and Tears....
Three women who have been friends for an awfully long time have their worlds shattered when a tragic accident leaves one of their children dead, another in a coma, and one unable to speak due to trauma. How do you go on, how do you find the answers, how do you move forward?
Reeling from that devastating night, each woman is faced with challenges not only withing themselves, in their marriages and in learning that no matter how well you think you know your children, there are just some things they manage to keep a secret. As a police officer investigates the tragedy, the reader becomes the proverbial fly on the wall, watching as each woman's world is altered forever.
She sucked me in with this one and initially I had a hard time keeping track of who was who until the women's characters were more fleshed out. I was not too shocked at one part of the reveal, I saw that coming but the reveal in the epilogue was a bit of a shocker for me!
Overall, once I got going, I found this to be a fast and absorbing read. This is an emotional one folks, so be warned. It is also thought provoking. There are a lot of characters that feel the same in the beginning, so if you get frustrated by this, my advice is to hang in there as they do become fleshed out.
**This may have some triggers for some.
Thank you to Thomas and Mercer and NetGalley who provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All the thoughts and opinions are my own.
'What if there's a crazy shooter?' Reese asks at the same time.
I ignore them and step outside before shutting the door tightly behind me. Three police cars race down the street and make a left at the corner just like all the others. I take off running. People are coming out of their houses, milling down the street while I sprint past them.
'Dear God, please don't let anything happen to my baby.'
ABOUT THIS BOOK: Best friends Lindsey, Kendra, and Dani endure every parent’s nightmare when a tragic accident befalls their teenage boys, leaving one dead, another in a coma, and a third too traumatized to speak.
Reeling from the worst night of their lives, the three mothers plunge into a desperate investigation of the bizarre incident. How could something so horrible happen in their wealthy Southern California suburb?
They soon discover that the accident was just the beginning, and troubling discoveries lead to chilling questions: Do they really know their children? Do they even know each other? As more secrets surface, a fog of doubt and suspicion threatens to poison their families, their friendships, and the whole community.
With the illusion of happiness and safety long gone, these women must now confront the hazards of heartbreak, the consequences of jealousy, and the dangers of living double lives.
MY THOUGHTS: I failed to become invested in The Best of Friends by Lucinda Berry. I have read this author previously, and really enjoyed her work, but this just left me cold. For a short novel, this felt inordinately long!
The characters were interchangeable, lacked definition, and I had difficulty in remembering what children belonged to which parents.
The chapters are narrated by the mothers of the children, Dani, Kendra and Lindsey. But it was easy to forget who was narrating.
There really is no feeling of suspense, and there are tantalizing tidbits dropped into the narrative which are never explored or explained - the most glaring of which is an oblique reference regarding something that happened when these three were at school, but that was it. A scandal waiting to be exposed, or the possibility of one, and there's no clarification, no further reference to it. Frustrating!
Several times I thought of not finishing The Best of Friends, but I wanted to know what these three had been up to. As it is, we never find out. Disappointing, and mundane. Not at all what I expected from the author of Saving Noah, which I loved.
A lot of other readers love this book. Reading is a very personal subjective experience, and not every book is for every reader. So, if you enjoyed the extract, and the plot summary interests you, please do read The Best of Friends by Lucinda Berry. I hope that you are one of the many who love this book.
⭐⭐ depressed stars
THE AUTHOR: Dr. Lucinda Berry is a former clinical psychologist and leading researcher in childhood trauma. Now, she spends her days writing full-time where she uses her clinical experience to blur the line between fiction and nonfiction. She enjoys taking her readers on a journey through the dark recesses of the human psyche.
If Berry isn’t chasing after her son, you can find her running through Los Angeles, prepping for her next marathon.
DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Thomas & Mercer via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of The Best of Friends for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.
For an explanation of my rating system please refer to my goodreads.com profile page or the about page on sandysbooksday.wordpress.com
Wow this book was quite a struggle to get through. It was LITERALLY a drag to get through this. I almost felt like I was punishing myself. I was so excited for this, it sounded so good and the reviews were great. Maybe I read too many mystery/thrillers lately but this was just boring.
The beginning was a dump of characters who all blurred together as one. I found it hard to keep track of everyone and had to remind myself who was who very often. The moms, dads, and even the all of the kids turned into different names but same characters. There wasn't anything that set them apart from each other. The friendship between the mothers were fake and hard to believe. The end didn't shock me but rather disappointed me. Really sad this one didn't work out.
Thank you to the publisher and to Netgalley for the copy of this book. APPRECIATE IT REGARDLESS.
Buddy read with Emma and Massiel.
PS - if anyone knows any amazing thrillers please let me know ty
They were the best of friends for most of their lives. Married and bought houses close to each other. In and out of each other's lives and thrilled when they had sons who also became best friends. Until an unforseen tragedy strikes. Now devastated, bent with sorrow and grief,they are determined to get answers. How could they not see this coming? How can their friendship withstand this? How well do we really know our children.?
This was for me a page turners, became quite entrenched in this story. A parents worse nightmare. Needed to know what happened. The author does a good job of keeping the plot moving, revelations in a timely manner. Shortly before books end I did have a pretty good idea of what happened, and I turned out to be correct. Didn't know all the details though. The mother's reactions though and what they chose to do didn't quite, for me, ring true. Still, definitely a page turners.
Honestly if this wasn't an audiobook I woulda DNF. But I was able to get through the work day listening to this shitshow.
The Plot- Lindsey, Kendra and Dani all grew up together as best friends. They all had families and everyone became close. Each had a son, and their sons became BFFs. One night tragic strikes, one of the boys ends up dead, the other comatose, and one speechless. what happened?
My Thoughts- This book was so boring. I swear the author was inspired by a wattpad stories, cause aint no way she was serious with this.
I figured out the "mystery" within 10% of the book... the reason why I continued I just wanted to know why and if I was right. NOT SURPRISED I WAS RIGHT. Even the "why" was anticlimactic. After the audio was done. I just turned off my headphones and sighed.
And let me throw it out there this is not a thriller, this is a poorly written family drama. I like lifetime movie drama book but this one just sucked.
The multiple pov were told by each of the boys mom. Easily confused. Could not tell the difference in their shitty basic personalities. Every character in this book was so unlikable. The only character I probably would of liked is the one dead.
oh and then there was a cheating husband that was being catfished. Cause how you falling in love with someone you 1)never met. 2) dont even know the real name, just a screen name 3)no clue what this person looks like.(not saying looks are everything) When this was being told in the story I rolled my eyes so far back I swear I saw my brain cells depleting.
This was shit. Can’t stress it enough
BYE.
🎧AUDIOBOOK🎧
MY LB Ratings- Keep Your Friends Close- 3.85 Stars The Best Of Friends- 1 Star
The Best of Friends follows three women, along with their families, trying to cope with the tragedy of losing their children one way or another. I was extremely excited to read this because of the many favorable reviews I’ve seen. Friends, disappointed is an understatement.
Before going into the book, I had expected a fast-paced thriller/mystery but this novel was far from that. The mystery aspect was handled very poorly. The families didn’t do much sleuthing, instead we followed them going on with their everyday lives and dealing with the aftermath of the tragedy.
This was more of a domestic drama rather than a mystery in the vein of Big Little Lies. There is nothing wrong with a domestic drama, I just had different expectations going into the book because of the false marketing. If it actually spent some time solving the mystery than highlighting the pointless family drama, then I would have had a better time.
In terms of the plot, the prologue was gripping and I was 100% engaged, after that the story went downhill. The first half of the book was so messy. I could not get all the characters straight and they all started to blur together, to the point that I had to actually draw up a diagram to discern everyone from each other. This was a huge red flag because a well-rounded character should each have their own unique traits. Instead, all we got were characters with surface-level personalities and no depth.
Additionally, the book had so many domestic thriller tropes imaginable. I am tired.
Now onto the characters! The story was told in three POVs, Kendra’s, Lindsey’s, and Dani’s. The characters were all unlikeable and I found it difficult to relate to them. As I mentioned earlier, all the women were not distinguishable from one another. They all had the same personality and no unique “voice”. I would constantly get mixed up with who’s POV I was reading. The one thing that really irritated me was that we are told the three women are best friends but they didn’t treat each other as such. The Best of Friends? This should be called The Best of Acquaintances.
Kendra: She was so unlikeable. Examples being that she would compare her youngest son to a beast, she lied to her so-called best friends and she doesn’t understand why she was in the wrong and won’t admit her mistakes.
Lindsey: I don’t know why her POV was in the book at all. It served no purpose whatsoever and I felt that her family drama was to just create unnecessary tension amongst all the families.
Dani: Admittedly, her story was slightly more interesting than Kendra’s and Lindsey’s, but it was so clichéd. I’ve seen the trope so many times in domestic thrillers, so I was not impressed.
The ending was anticlimactic and predictable. All that built-up tension with a terrible payoff. It was also unrealistic and unnecessary. The “twist” that occurred at the end came out of the blue was added just for the sake of shock value.
Overall, I did not have a good time reading this. I apologize for this messy review but I am so very disappointed. However, take this with a grain of salt. I have seen favorable reviews so maybe this might be for you! I personally did not like it.
In The Best of Friends, Berry starts with a heart-stopping bang—the dreaded middle-of-the-night phone call—then delivers a dark and gritty tale that unfolds twist by devastating twist. Intense, terrifying, and at times utterly heartbreaking. Absolutely unputdownable.
Gripping, suspenseful, and heart wrenching are words to describe this tale of friendship and family bonds stretched to their limits. It brought me to the edge of my seat and to tears all at the same time. It’s definitely a rollercoaster ride until the last page. I absolutely recommend this book to anyone that wants to take an emotional journey with many intriguing twist and turns along the way. Thank you Netgalley and Thomas & Mercer for giving me an ARC of this captivating and emotional story.
Lindsey, Kendra and Dani had been best friends since childhood. Their husbands were also friends and they lived close to one another in Norchester, South California. The night their lives changed irrevocably began as any other; the three older boys were at a sleepover when shots were heard, then sirens followed and lives changed. One of their boys was dead, another was in a coma and the third was uninjured, but was too shocked to talk.
While the police investigated, questioning everyone thoroughly and more than once, the lives of the three friends slowly shattered. The husbands had secrets, the wives also had secrets. The loss and grief was debilitating and they wondered if they would ever recover from it. Would they find out what really happened that night? They were certainly finding out that they hadn’t known their sons as well as they thought they had…
The Best of Friends is my first by Lucinda Berry and I really enjoyed it. My only problem was the amount of characters and trying to keep who was who straight in my head. The plot was different to anything I’ve read before, and was intriguing, tragic, heart breaking and unputdownable. The Best of Friends is narrated by the three women and is a psychological thriller which is thought provoking and poignant. Highly recommended.
With thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my digital ARC to read in exchange for an honest review.
So y'all know the drill about a thriller book but since I really hated this book I'll just go ahead and describe how the book was with gifs.
The characters:
Kendra
Lindsey
Dani
The plot is basically about three families and if what happened was an accident. There are a lot of characters so it can be confusing, the worst part is more than 60% of characters don't play a part in the whole book they are just pure extra.
The "mystery" is so predictable and boring that in chapter 20 I knew what happened and who did what.
How they make us think the mystery was:
How it really is: (This is actually accurate because in the plot there is something related with online companionship and dating websites)
After a part of the "mystery" was solved, these were the reactions of the moms
Kendra
Lindsey
Dani
This book was really boring, there was nothing to hold on, the characters are all fake which was one of things I hate the most. There isn't any mystery at all is more drama family than anything. But then again, I'm pretty hard to please with thrillers if you like short chapters and drama family you are more than welcome to read this book.
The Best of Friends wasted no time in grabbing my attention. The action starts in the very first sentence and doesn’t let up from there. I was captivated, wanting to know what happened, to whom, and why.
Kendra, Lindsey and Dani have been best friends since they were children. They grew up, married, moved close to each other, and had children. Their sons, Sawyer, Jacob and Caleb also became best friends, and life was pretty good for everyone. Except that it really wasn’t. There were secrets in each family that just didn’t seem that important, until one of the boys dies from a gunshot wound, one is left on life-support, and one is intensely traumatized. What happened?
The parents, grief-stricken and looking for answers, find their worlds spinning out of control. As they work with the detective to get to the bottom of that horrible night of the shootings, other problems in their lives start to become important, and their eyes are opened to things kept buried or never known until now.
I was intrigued with this story from beginning to end, as the author, Lucinda Berry, releases only small tidbits throughout to let you know what might or might not be the answer to the what, who, and why of everything. I was never able to figure out exactly what happened until she made it clear, and even when I finally learned the truth, there was one more surprise at the end that I never saw coming.
There were so many pieces to this story, and the author tied them together skillfully, never losing my attention. What a gripping tale!
My thanks to NetGalley and Thomas and Mercer for an ARC in exchange for my honest review.
"Do they really know their children? Do they even know each other? As more secrets surface, a fog of doubt and suspicion threatens to poison their families, their friendships, and the whole community. With the illusion of happiness and safety long gone, these women must now confront the hazards of heartbreak, the consequences of jealousy, and the dangers of living double lives."
This was a difficult one to accept as a parent's nightmare unfolds. A tragic accident between 3 teenage boys leaves 3 mothers grieving. Lindsey's son Jacob is in a coma, Kendra's son Sawyer is dead and Dani's son is the only living witness but so traumatized he is left in shock. This will leave the reader shocked with a surprising revelation. This was not my favorite of Berry's but she writes with such an expression you can't help but feel the reality behind her words. In a time period of children's uncertainty and identity, this book dwells on division and a hidden violence that some families encounter as they live double lives with their lies and secrets. The narrators Amy Rubinate, Tara Sands and Coleen Marlo did a fantastic job as each mother explores motherhood, grief and loss.
A tragedy involving three teenage sons of lifelong friends remains an open ended mystery.
We know the end result, but we don’t know what happened or who, if anyone, is at fault. The sole survivor is so traumatized he can’t speak about it.
As each family attempts to grasp the shocking turn of their lives, at the heart is a story of relationships - between friends, family members, husbands and wives, sons and daughters.
I thought this may be too sorrowful to read during these stressful times, but an underlying lifting sentiment was surprisingly affected by the author. That’s talent!
This was a fast read and flowed easily.
My first novel by Lucinda Berry, but it won’t be the last as I’ve happened upon an impressive “New to me” author.
Thank you to Netgalley, Thomas & Mercer, and Lucinda Berry for my advance copy.
I have no doubt that this will be on my top 10, maybe even top 5 list of BEST BOOKS OF 2020.
I was gripped by this story of Kendra, Dani and Lindsey, who have been best friends forever! Now they have children of their own, and each of their teens are best friends to each other. One night, a horrific event takes place while the teens are hanging out. One ends up dead from a shotgun wound, another is in coma due to a shot to the head, and the other is alive but seemingly unable to talk and explain what happened. This creates a domino effect in the lives of the three women and their families.
This is an unputdownable drama that doesn't stop pulling you until the very last page, which has a surprising little twist. The beautifully smooth and descriptive writing by Lucinda Perry makes a great reading experience and very difficult to set the book down. I absolutely loved THE BEST OF FRIENDS, and can't wait to read more from this author.
Thank you to Thomas & Mercer, author Lucinda Berry, and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
The Best of Friends by Lucinda Berry chronicles a tragedy that affects three teenage boys as well as their families, especially their mothers, who are best friends. Dani, Kendra and Lindsey have their world turned upside down when a sleepover goes completely awry, leaving one boy dead, one in a coma and one struck silent from the shock. The trauma reverberates through the three families, including the siblings. I looked forward to reading this thriller but I have quit after several hundred pages. I found that the many family members were confusing due to the numerous side stories of each person in all three families. I realized that I had lost interest in the characters and was not involved in the book enough to want to know how the story ended. The author, Lucinda Berry, is a trauma psychologist, which could account for the novel reading like therapy notes. Please know that this is only my opinion and I am positive that many will enjoy The Best of Friends. Thank you to Thomas & Mercer and NetGalley for the e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
3 women, lifelong friends have 3 sons 1 is dead, 1 is on life support and 1 wont speak, this follows a ‘shooting accident’ after a night partying The life long friendship of all 3 women is about to tested, to the limits Written in the ‘now’ the story follows all 3 as they try and discover what really happened that night, and as their desperation gets stronger the gloves come off as they become more determined to get to the truth Secrets are discovered and uncomfortable truths about their own lives laid bare as the thin line between their friendship and needing answers starts to waver I found it quite an emotional read, quite sad in parts as things and lives become more and more unravelled There is a conclusion, unexpected, in fact there are quite a few and maybe the last part of the epilogue wasn’t needed, a tad unrealistic after a whole book that felt just the opposite, it can get confusing re names, there are 3 friends, 3 husbands, 3 children then multiple siblings so at times you need to stop and just remember who is who but it really is worth it for this hard hitting well written story 8/10 5 Stars
Lindsey, Dani and Kendra have been inseparable and best friends since elementary school. Still living in the same neighborhood and all raising kids, they’re ecstatic that their high school senior boys, Jacob, Sawyer, and Caleb, have also become and remained best friends.
The boys are hanging out one night and planning to stay at Dani and her husband’s house. When Kendra hears sirens ringing throughout the neighborhood in the middle of the night and sees them stop at Dani’s house, she starts to panic. The families’ worst fears come true when they learn there’s been a gun accident. One boy is dead, one is alive but non responsive, and the third is so traumatized he’s gone mute.
Each woman must come to terms with her new reality - Kendra has lost a child, Lindsey’s child is in a vegetative state, and Dani’s has become paralyzed with fear and is suffering from extreme PTSD.
No one but Caleb knows for certain what happened that night and he has emotionally and psychologically retreated into himself. Did Jacob kill Sawyer and then attempt suicide? Did Caleb do this to both boys? Were they in a drug fueled haze? Was it a crazy accident?
As each mother tries to discover what happened that night, secrets start to surface. Secrets each woman has held close, the husbands are keeping, and even that the boys were concealing.
This book was fantastic, tragic, and beautiful all at once. I loved the friendship parallels between the mothers and their sons. It was easy to form connections to the characters and I saw pieces of myself in each woman. Their history was well developed and the drama and familiarity among the characters perfectly fit the storyline. Though the subject matter was heavy and this was a very emotional read at times, I liked that there were enough side stories to detract from the tragedy a bit. I liked that some of the storylines didn’t completely wrap up and left us to imagine how things unfolded. I can’t recommend this one enough!!
Thank you to Netgalley and Thomas & Mercer for an advanced copy of this novel.
Many Thanks to Net Galley, Thomas and Mercer and the author for a chance to read and review this book. All opinions are expressed voluntarily.
#TheBestOfFriends#NetGalley
An absolutely absorbing, emotional and gut-wrenching story of friendship and jealousy and human psyche, The Best Of Friends by Lucinda Berry has two pairs of friendship that is being explored. Dani, Lindsay and Kendra have been friends from elementary school, have continued to live close together, marry and have children and luckily for them, their eldest 3 sons, Caleb, Jacob and Sawyer also share the same deep abiding friendship.
Football heroes, they tend to party hard and a night of gaming sleepover ends with a gun fired twice, one of them dead, another with a traumatic brain injury and the third going mute suffering from the shock of it all. The aftermath of this incident drive forth the cracks in the lives of the 3 women as truths begin to emerge out of hidden crevices. Marital abuse, emotional affair, drinks and drugs, heart-breaking grief, motherhood; so much gets discussed as the reader is taken on an emotional journey thru’ the POV’s of Kendra, Lindsay and Dani.
The author has the exemplary ability in providing the different facets of human life and bringing to the focus that no one is perfect and that there are secrets hidden in each individual that no matter how much one believes in knowing the other, there could still be things that you may never know. The 3 women, their husbands, all the children, even Detective Locke; is fleshed out so well that all these characters become real in a reader’s mind. The scenes in the hospital, the unbearable torment as a mother, the subtle abuse being borne, there’s no 2 ways about it, this book does make your heart bleed.
The Best Of Friends is definitely not a pulse pounding thriller; but the final twist in the tale left me open-mouthed, WOW, never expected a whiff of that anywhere in the book.
Poignant!
This review is published in my blog, https://rainnbooks.com/; Amazon India, Goodreads and Twitter.
4.5 - I literally couldn’t put this down, read it through dinner, through TV time & literally while I was getting changed. I was HOOKED.
Lucinda Berry has a really unique style where you beleive the psychological side of her psychological thrillers. All grounded in her experience as a doctor which give them authenticity you can’t find in many places.
This book was heartbreaking and thrilling at the same time. Really twisty and gripping. The only reason I didn’t rate it 5 was because the ended concuded in a matter of about 15 pages, it was a *tiny bit* rushed.
Still absolutely loved it though. Definitely recommend!
I really wanted to like this book, I just didn't. I really tried. The plot was intriguing; 3 teenage boys, best friends hanging out at one of their homes in a wealthy, suburban neighborhood when tragedy strikes. One boy is dead, the other in a coma, & the 3rd boy too traumatized to speak. Was it an accident or murder-suicide or just plain old murder?
Each chapter is from the viewpoint of one of the boy's mothers, who are also lifelong best friends. While I should have had my heartstrings pulled at these women dealing with the tragedy, I didn't. They were shallow & passive-aggressive & each one suspicious of the other. They aren't even likable in a love to hate them thriller kind of way. Had I not looked at the name of whose chapter it was I wouldn't have known whose chapter I was reading. They were just dull & boring. These ladies wouldn't have lasted one season on the Real Housewives. Well, maybe Beverly Hills.
Not only did the book lack interesting protagonists, but there were also so many extra characters. I forgot whose kid belonged to which woman as the story weaved through present-day & flashbacks to when the moms were in high school & then the events leading up to the tragedy. I read Game Of Thrones & had a much easier time keeping track of everyone than I did in this book.
I sped read through this book because I had to know what truly went down that night. And it was as uninteresting & predictable as the characters. The family "secrets" thrown in throughout as what I am assuming were supposed to be the "twists" fell flat & weren't shocking at all. All in all, it wasn't suspenseful & not a thriller.
I should write something nice about the book though. It was a fast read.
*I received an Advanced Readers Copy of this novel from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions included herein are my own.*
That was dramatic. And intense. Three women (Kendra, Lindsey and Dani) are best friends from school. They have three sons (Sawyer, Jacob and Caleb) who are also best friends - all 16-17 years old. The families are close. They all live in a really ‘nice’, safe area in nice, comfortable homes. Life is good. Until it’s not.
One night the boys are going to spend the night at Caleb’s house playing a new video game. Kendra and Paul Mitchell have been chilling out in front of the TV when they hear a bang. A second bang soon follows but that one really sounds like a gunshot. It came from the direction of the Madison house. Kendra bolts out the door and runs in that direction. Her only thought is of her son, Sawyer, who is staying over there.
As she approaches, emergency vehicles are everywhere. She is not allowed through. Three anxious sets of parents wait at the hospital to find out the fates of their sons. One is dead, one is horribly injured and possibly in a coma and the third is rendered catatonic and mute. This story is (one of) every parent’s worst nightmares. The repercussions following that night, the blame game, the uncertainty as the uninjured but totally traumatised teen has still not uttered a word start to fracture the women’s friendship. Only one person really knows what happened that night and he is not talking.
As the truth slowly emerges and some of the secrets are stripped away the parents are shattered. If only the boys had spoken about this! They had no idea. And that, dear readers, is the scariest part of all. None of the parents really knew their sons and this story was so very plausible. I really, really enjoyed the book but the narration, told in the alternating voices of the three women, was hard to follow. I keep notes these days as I’m bad at remembering names but I was constantly having to check which son (or daughter or husband) belonged to which woman as their voices were very similar. Many thanks to Netgalley, Thomas & Mercer and Lucinda Berry for providing a copy of the book for me to review.
Unbelievably stirring and compelling straight out of the gates! Such a page turner of a read.
The lives of three best friends -- Kendra, Lindsey, and Dani are disrupted when a tragedy strikes. What takes place is the unraveling of each of their marriages, and the revealing of secrets that were kept hidden for years.
As each woman struggles with their own loss, you are swept up in all the emotion, trauma, and psychological dilemmas that each of them faces.
Difficult to put down. An excellent novel and will be sure to keep the author, Lucinda Berry on my radar. Five star read!
Thank you NetGalley and the publisher Thomas & Mercer for the opportunity to read this book in exchange from my honest review.
Reading this popular and highly rated novel was torture for me, but as I was interested in what actually happened, I struggled to the end.
The relationships, who was married to whom, who did the children belong to, was just a mish mash. There needed to at least be a page that listed who was with whom. Narrated by three best friends, mothers of three teenaged boys who end up having an incident while drunk, leaving one dead, one in a coma and one completely shut down. There was little to show just how the three women were friends as they hardly intereacted civilly to each other once the even happened.
A dog's breakfast for me, I guess I'm just not a fan of these type of books, but it certainly was not a well written book whatever the genre is.
This is an intriguing mystery that starts with an incident in the first chapter and is not resolved until the end. I could really feel for the three mothers and their different reactions to what happened, and how their lifelong friendship both ebbed and flowed as the investigation continued. At times, I felt like a voyeur into their marriages and family relationships. Graded it down a bit because I really, really dislike reading about spousal abuse. Even if the person eventually gets up the courage to leave, everything surrounding the situation made me feel angry. I know it happens, but I don't like reading about it. This is the second inventive suspense novel of Berry's that I've read and I'm impressed yet again. I applaud her creativity and look forward to seeing what she comes up with next.
I voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book, all opinions are my own.