Lenght: 7h 56min All she has to do is to pretend to be his girlfriend…
Alicia has left her young son behind with her sister to chase a better life in London. But she’s not just chasing opportunity. She’s escaping the truth. And no one in her new life needs to know what she’s running from.
At The Orbit — a glittering high-rise where the city’s elite come to play — Alicia waits tables and watches everything. She knows just how to blend in, how to charm, how to make people see what she wants them to see.
So when the charismatic owner of The Orbit, Trent Connors, offers her a deal — pretend to be his girlfriend for an enormous salary and a luxury apartment in The Orbit — she says yes. Of course she does.
After all, it’s only pretend… Until it’s not.
Soon, Alicia is living the life she’s always dreamed of — but behind the flawless façade, something is deeply wrong.
And all the while, back home, her sister is hiding something far worse — something terrifying that Alicia has no idea is creeping closer.
She thought she was the one playing a double game.
But Alicia may not be the only one faking it.
And this time, the lies she’s learned to rely on might not save her — they just might finish everything.
Kim is the number one bestselling author of sixteen psychological crime thrillers. She has sold over two million copies of her books worldwide. She has also written four Carnegie-nominated Young Adult novels as Kim Slater for Macmillan Children’s Books. Kim has an MA in Creative Writing and lives with her husband in a small Nottinghamshire village.
Publishers: Bookouture, Sphere, Grand Central, Audible Agent: Camilla Bolton at Darley Anderson
It’s a 3.75 for me. Kept me entertained while getting ready for work and en route to work, but would I tell all my friends to read it? Nahhh. One of those “just call the cops already” thrillers, but I played along AND I will say the end did have a twist I was not expecting.
It was okay, but a lot of things made no sense. Like what motivated Trent to seek out these random women to employ? Why would he trust a woman he had just met to do spy-work for him? And why on earth did he allow two different women to blackmail him??
K.L. Slater’s books have mostly been misses for me in recent years. But I keep reading in the elusive hope that I’ll strike gold again. This book was included in my audible plus membership, so at least I didn’t use a credit.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
there is a reason it was a free audible original lol - kept me somewhat entertained on my 400km drive but it was tedious and I did want to drive off the state highway at least twice, think Claudia Jessie saved it if I’m honest
I really enjoyed this. Had me gripped from start to end. I'm not sure why some reviewers are so down on it.
The multiple POV approach isn't confusing *at all*. Just 3 POVs, with 3 different voices. Mainly tho, this is Alicia's story, and she's a strong lead, whose depth is revealed and layers peeled back as we go along.
Sure, the sister is the weakest of the 3 leads, and you might want to smack some sense into her, but her role makes sense in the whole context.
A super climax, a neat twist, and *excellently* performed by Claudia Jesse (so good, I've tracked down 2 other audio stories featuring her)
I'm sure it's just me, but the abused woman who stays/lets the man come back in her life, OMG I just can't. I know this happens in real life. I don't understand it but I know it is too common to be believed. But man, I just cannot even in yet another book plot.
The rest of it was just ridiculous. No way she goes from being a server on the catering staff to the penthouse, with someone in power having her make event decisions and business insights, as if he didn't already have staff to do those tasks. Please. Also, the author decides not to tell you why the MC is in the situation she's in until essentially the whole story and all the tension is already over. Essentially they just reveal the MC's motivation in an epilogue. As a result, I couldn't get on board or root for the MC at all.
Alicia leaves her young son with her sister and moves to London, determined to reinvent herself and escape a past she won’t confront. At The Orbit, an exclusive high rise for the elite, she slips easily into the background, watching everything. When its charismatic owner, Trent Connors, offers her a lucrative arrangement to pose as his girlfriend, she accepts a deal that quickly becomes more complicated than either of them intended. As she settles into this glossy new life, the cracks beneath its surface begin to show, while her sister back home hides a far more dangerous secret that is slowly closing in.
The book didn’t quite meet the author’s usual standard for me. Aside from Alicia, several characters felt underdeveloped, and the plot was fairly predictable, with only one twist that surprised me. I’m typically fully absorbed in this author’s work, but this time the story didn’t have the same depth or momentum that normally keeps me turning the pages.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an advanced copy of the book, opinions expressed are my own.
I like after finishing the audio. I didn't like any of the characters. Alicia was so worried about her baby but she knew where he lived and could see him? She was manipulating and dishonest. Alicia makes sure Trent might have to face the law for the young woman's ACCIDENTAL death. All he did was lie about being there when it happened. But she doesn't have a problem with Trent pushing someone off a building? Just because she wanted him dead, too. makes her an accomplice! no respect for her, either!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
How far would you go to protect your family. Hired by one man to sabotage another. The mark plays into her scheme and now she has a chance to free herself from both and make a good life for her and her family.
It was just ok. The story line was intriguing enough but the MC is supposed to be some super sleuth, and she just ended up being annoying. Who leaves their 2 year old to move hours away at the demands of someone else instead of calling the police? She was a private detective who clocked him as a cheater and when he threatens her, she just takes it? Makes no sense to me. Also when the boyfriend has the sister pinned in the bathroom, she calls the MC who is hours away instead of the police?! Make it make sense. Not the best Slater book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Unexpected, delightful plot twists but moves slowly, heavy on descriptions of every breath, dress, room, emotion. Characters are two-dimensional, predictable--the sleazy mobster business guy, the Machiavellian real estate titan, the abused girlfriend, the clever fairytale heroine who outwits the villains with the help of the empowering sisterhood of older women.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
There were times when I was confused in this book. I do feel as if the ending felt super rushed and every character changed their behaviors which did not feel natural.
K.L. Slater is a veteran of the "domestic noir" genre, and The Waitress delivers exactly what fans expect: secrets, shifting loyalties, and a high-gloss setting that feels just a bit too perfect. However, while the premise is addictive, the execution occasionally feels like a retread of familiar thriller tropes.
The Hook: High Stakes and Glittering Lies The "fake dating" trope is usually reserved for rom-coms, but Slater twists it into something much more sinister. Alicia is a compelling protagonist because she isn't "innocent"—she’s a woman running from a dark past, making her the perfect unreliable narrator.
The Setting: The Orbit is a character in itself—a claustrophobic, high-end high-rise that perfectly encapsulates the "gilded cage" feel.
The Conflict: The dual-timeline/dual-perspective structure keeps the tension high. While Alicia is playing a dangerous game in London, her sister’s storyline back home provides a slow-burn sense of dread that balances the fast-paced glamour of Trent Connors' world.
Why it’s a 3/5 Despite the strong setup, the middle section of the book sags under the weight of some predictable "thriller logic."
Suspension of Disbelief: The deal offered by Trent Connors—a massive salary and a luxury apartment just to play a girlfriend—is a bit of a stretch, even for a psychological thriller.
The "Twist" Fatigue: If you read a lot of Slater or Freida McFadden, you might spot the "big reveal" coming from a mile away. The book relies heavily on characters making questionable decisions to keep the plot moving, which can be frustrating for readers who prefer a more grounded mystery.
The Ending: While the climax is explosive, it feels somewhat rushed compared to the meticulous buildup of Alicia’s lies.
Final Verdict The Waitress is a solid, popcorn-style thriller. It’s the perfect "beach read" or "airplane book"—fast-paced and engaging enough to keep you turning pages, even if it doesn't reinvent the genre. It’s a story about the masks we wear and the price we pay for a "better life," though it lacks the emotional depth to make it truly haunting.
Read this if: You love stories about the dark side of the ultra-wealthy and don't mind a few far-fetched plot points. Skip this if: You prefer gritty, realistic police procedurals or are tired of the "unreliable narrator" trope.
This is one of those thrillers where you don’t know who’s using who but everyone is not to be trusted. We meet a young woman who is waitressing at a party but the real reason she is there is to meet Trent the owner of the new building and a man she needs to get under the skin of in order to save her own. Will she get close enough or does he already have plans of his own for her. The difference is she is doing this for her son and will stop at nothing to make sure he is safe! Don’t miss.
I loved this book! It is a little different than some of her books, but it is much better than some of her books! I would have given the book a 5, but I did not find the ending as twisty as others did!