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Everyone Has Something to Hide

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Guilty secrets never dieOne dark stormy night, Maddy and Sadie did a very bad thing.

Since then they’ve gone their separate ways. Back to their perfect lives in their perfect houses with their perfect husbands – and tried to bury their guilty secret deep.

Now they’ve each received a coveted invitation to the White Feather Masquerade Ball. Anyone who’s anyone will be there!

But they’ve also received a mysterious threat.

Someone knows what they did.

And they’re about to be unmasked…

🥀🥀🥀🥀

Readers LOVE Everyone Has Something to Hide!'It's smart … and hooks you in from the moment you first open the book. And you won't want to put the book down until you have consumed every part of it.’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

'This really has it a story about friendship, marriage noir, a dark secret, and even a ball masquerade! The ending left me speechless.’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

'This twisty thriller had me hooked from the first page! Dark, juicy, and impossible to put down!’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐

'A gripping, tense, well-plotted, clever story’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐

280 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 14, 2025

2 people are currently reading
37 people want to read

About the author

Hannah Emery

7 books17 followers

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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Jen.
1,124 reviews115 followers
September 14, 2025
This was a really engaging read that I had trouble putting down. It centers on Maddy and Sadie, who did something unthinkable 10 years ago and lost touch, but are brought back together when a similar event arises. Chapters alternate between their POVs and you also get chapters from Pearl’s POV, where you quickly learn her inappropriateness in the lives of the other 2 women.

This was an interesting story, as the reader pretty much knows what the “bad thing” is through most of the book, but there are so many other twists thrown in regarding the details of that event and even the relationships between the characters that it felt suspenseful the whole way through. I also liked the current and present timelines that helped me to better understand the characters- characterization was done well without a ton of time spent on it. The ending made me sad but I also felt it worked with the rest of the story.

Overall, this was a fast-paced read with surprise twists and I would recommend to those who enjoy psychological thrillers. Thanks to NetGalley for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jackie.
1,310 reviews
October 13, 2025
3.5 ⭐️

Everyone Has Something to Hide drew me in with its mix of buried secrets, a glamorous masquerade ball, and tension of old mistakes that refused to stay hidden. This was my first read by Hannah Emery and it delivered plenty of drama, suspense, and intrigue.

The story follows Maddy and Sadie, two women bound by a dark secret from a terrible night years ago. They’ve tried to move on and create picture-perfect lives, but the past refuses to stay buried. When both receive invitations to the glamorous White Feather Masquerade Ball, it becomes clear that someone knows the truth—and is ready to expose them. What should have been a dazzling night of celebration quickly spirals into a tense game of masks, secrets, and revenge.

Hannah Emery’s writing is smooth and intriguing, with a focus on secrets, guilt, and character tension. Her straightforward, atmospheric style keeps the story engaging and easy to sink into.

I was immediately attracted to the premise—two women bound by a dark secret from their past. I also loved the unique setting of the masquerade ball, which I hadn’t come across in a thriller before; it brought a glamorous yet unsettling feeling that really amped up the suspense. Most of all, I appreciated the dual perspectives, which gave me a deeper look into both Maddy and Sadie and added layers to their complicated friendship.

What fell a bit short for me were the twists—they felt a little too straightforward, though that might be because I read so many psychological thrillers that I’ve gotten good at spotting them early. I also thought some of the characters’ motivations could’ve been more developed, and the pacing slowed down in the middle. I’m pretty picky about pacing, and I tend to lose interest when the dialogue gets bogged down in small, everyday details. Still, despite those few critiques, I found this to be an entertaining and enjoyable read overall.

If you enjoy authors like Shari Lapena and K.L. Slater who are known for their domestic secrets, layered relationships, and twisty, character-driven suspense, you’ll likely enjoy Hannah Emery’s writing as well.

Thank you Net Galley and HarperCollins UK for an advance copy in return for my feedback.
Profile Image for Janna (Bibliophile Mom).
225 reviews22 followers
October 12, 2025
Motherhood, secrets, and a sprinkle of vengeance - this thriller doesn’t disappoint. I’ve been deep in the thriller trenches for the past three years, and if there’s one thing I’ll never get tired of, it’s stories starring moms who are juggling chaos, clumsiness, and catastrophic secrets. This one is perfect for a weekend binge while running errands and working out.

I finished it in a day. Each chapter had me twitching like I’d just seen my teens' Snapchat stories: mysterious, messy, and impossible to look away.

Sadie & Maddy – Two moms with skeletons in their closets and mental health checklists on their fridge. They’re doing their best to survive marriage, motherhood, and the ghosts of bad decisions.

Pearl – Younger, angrier, and on a mission to make everyone pay. She’s not here for redemption.

What I liked:
❥ Fast-paced and easy to digest
❥ Deeply relatable characters
❥ Alternating POVs that kept the tension alive

What made me sigh:
❥ The slow start (but hang in there as it gets juicy)
❥ The revenge plot felt like a déjà vu
❥ The harsh truth about tweens and teens oversharing online (disturbing but real)

Ratings Breakdown:
❥ Setting – ⭐️⭐️/5
❥ Character Building – ⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
❥ Writing Style – ⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
❥ Message – ⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
❥ Overall – ⭐️⭐️⭐️/5

If you enjoy "whodunits" with messy secrets, flawed women, and a touch of domestic suspense, this one’s worth picking up.

Themes: revenge, motherhood, mental health, and the emotional toll of unresolved anger.

Huge thanks to NetGalley, HarperCollins UK One More Chapter, and author Hannah Emery for the advance reader copy! All thoughts are my own which are unfiltered, unbiased, and straight from my thriller-obsessed brain.

~JaNnA~
Profile Image for Natalie K.
612 reviews30 followers
September 18, 2025
This was okay - entertaining enough, but I wasn't a fan of the characters and they came across as flat. I wanted to feel something more for them, whether it was like or dislike. Unfortunately, I just ended up indifferent.

The big reveal, wasn't that big of a deal by the time it was revealed. I'd guessed a lot of it already. Just an odd book overall.

Thank you to NetGalley for the free review copy.
Profile Image for Hollie Payne.
168 reviews4 followers
October 26, 2025
Im always a bit apprehensive when trying a new author, but thisbwas a great surprise.
Im becoming more of a fan of dual POV, though this was a little confusing with the added timeline changes. It was easy to grasp once you're fully immersed in the story
The twists in this book! I didnt expect any of them, and I love how near the end, more twists came out of nowhere. I cant wait to read more from Hannah
Profile Image for Get Your Tinsel in a Tangle.
1,510 reviews25 followers
October 15, 2025
Listen, if you’ve ever screamed “WOMEN!” while watching a Lifetime movie at 2 a.m., Everyone Has Something to Hide is your spiritual snack. It’s got everything: secret crimes, repressed guilt, moms in crisis, stalkers with a flair for dramatics, and a masquerade ball that is 1000% not going to end in polite small talk and canapés. Hannah Emery invites us to the messiest reunion since your high school group chat imploded, and it’s a vibe. A 3-star vibe, but a vibe nonetheless.

Maddy and Sadie, who are so clearly the names of women who own three different scented candle brands between them, did something very bad one stormy night a decade ago. You know, as one does. And by “very bad” I mean something happened that night that left one girl broken, two women bonded by silence, and a whole lot of therapy appointments overdue. Cut to now, where they’re both playing the “we’re fine, we have husbands and well-frothed lattes” game when surprise! They each get an invite to the White Feather Masquerade Ball, a glammy event that’s basically Chekhov’s Costume Party. Oh, and a threatening note. Because of course they did.

The story flips between their POVs, plus one from Pearl, who is either the most obvious red herring of all time or the ghost of teenage vengeance incarnate. Pearl is young, mad, and very online, which makes her the natural chaos agent in a book full of suburban lies and yoga class-level denial. And while the plot tries to keep her shrouded in mystery, the vibe is “I know what you did last summer, but make it millennial trauma-core.”

Honestly, the dual timelines did a lot of emotional heavy lifting. The flashbacks to That Night™ were solidly constructed and gave just enough drip-feed dread to keep me interested. And the present-day unraveling was... fine. There are moments of real tension, especially as the ball looms closer and everyone’s unraveling like an Anthropologie cardigan. But the pacing? Bumpy. There’s a whole middle chunk where I felt like I was stuck at a PTA meeting that wants to be scandalous but just keeps circling back to who forgot to bring the gluten-free snacks.

The twists, unfortunately, hit like someone whispering “boo” from across the room. If you’ve read more than two thrillers or even just watched a few episodes of Pretty Little Liars, you’ll probably clock the Big Reveal halfway through. And then there’s this weird vibe shift where one character nobly sacrifices herself in a moment that felt less like redemption and more like, “I guess the book needed to end somehow?”

I wanted to feel something for these women. I really did. They’re juggling secrets, guilt, motherhood, and the ever-present threat of being canceled by society and each other. But aside from Pearl (who was giving strong “you tried to ruin my life and now I’m here to make cupcakes out of your bones” energy), most of the emotional beats felt more like echoes. Not hollow, just... quieter than they should’ve been.

Still, I wasn’t mad. The setup is juicy, the writing’s accessible, and the premise has that delicious domestic noir flavor that makes you want to text your best friend “girl, WHAT did I just read.” If you’re into thrillers that dip a toe into drama rather than diving headfirst into the deep end, you’ll enjoy this one. But if you’re looking for something that punches you in the gut and then offers a tissue? You might leave the ball a little underwhelmed.

A mid-tier masquerade mystery with some great party favors and undercooked revenge hors d'oeuvres. Solid three stars.

Whodunity Award: For Turning a Masquerade Ball Into a Full-Blown Trauma Renaissance Tour

Huge shoutout to HarperCollins UK, One More Chapter, and NetGalley for the ARC and the emotional whiplash. Thank you for letting me attend this masquerade of secrets where the drama was high, the masks were cheap, and no one knew how to just... go to therapy.
Profile Image for J Kromrie.
2,488 reviews47 followers
November 23, 2025
Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this eARC.

🕵️ Hannah Emery’s Everyone Has Something to Hide is a taut psychological thriller that thrives on secrecy, suspicion, and the fragile bonds between people who think they know one another. It’s a novel that grips not through spectacle alone, but through the unsettling realization that every character carries a hidden truth—and those truths can be deadly.

🌒 This novel is steeped in unease, with ordinary domestic and social settings transformed into landscapes of paranoia.

Emery’s prose is sharp and economical, creating a mood where silence and implication carry as much weight as dialogue.

The pacing alternates between slow-burn tension and sudden revelations, keeping readers perpetually unsettled.

👤 The central figures are layered and flawed, each defined as much by what they conceal as by what they reveal.

Emery crafts supporting characters with deliberate ambiguity, ensuring that allies and threats are never easily distinguished.

Relationships are volatile, charged with mistrust, and every interaction feels like a test of loyalty.

🔍 Identity and deception form this novel’s core, asking whether we can ever truly know those closest to us.

The narrative interrogates the corrosive effects of secrets, showing how concealment distorts memory, trust, and belonging.

Emery explores the fragility of perception, suggesting that truth itself may be a shifting construct.

🎧 The structure mirrors the fractured psychology of the characters, weaving past and present into a disorienting but compelling whole.

Emery employs shifting perspectives and unreliable narration, heightening suspense while deepening psychological complexity.

This technique ensures readers are never passive observers—they are complicit in the uncertainty.

⭐ Everyone Has Something to Hide is a chilling, psychologically rich thriller that lingers long after the final page. Hannah Emery delivers a story that is as much about the instability of identity as it is about the mechanics of suspense, leaving readers unsettled and reflective.
Profile Image for Connie.
2,496 reviews62 followers
November 14, 2025
Sadie works as a music teacher at the local high school. Her husband, Rob, is a paramedic. They have a daughter, Blake, 15. Sadie worries about her daughter excessively just wanting to protect her. Rob tries to calm her but she gets upset at times. She thinks someone is watching her.

Maddy is married to Gregory, a successful thriller author. Their home is exquisite as Gregory’s success has made life easy for them. They have a son, Eliot. Maddy worries all the time that Gregory is having an affair.

Sadie and Maddy met at a playground some years ago and became friends. Since Maddy wasn't sure if Gregory would get home to go to a fund-raising ball, she invites Sadie to go with her. Gregory shows up and Maddy is sure she sees someone with him. After too much alcohol, something happens and someone is injured. Now, Sadie wants nothing to do with Maddy and worries that they hurt someone that night.

This book was frustrating to read. I don’t care for a story that doesn’t come right out and say what’s going on. It’s confusing and I almost did a DNF at 20 percent. However, I decided to work to finish it. It did but did not enjoy it. Too many damaged people. In the end, why Maddy? Sorry. Not for me.

Copy provided by NetGalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.
Profile Image for The Cookster.
612 reviews68 followers
October 31, 2025
Rating: 2.3/5

"Everyone Has Something to Hide" is pitched by the marketeers as a psychological thriller. Personally, although I would acknowledge the presence of certain elements associated with this genre, I see this more as an envy-driven domestic noir that leans quite heavily towards women's fiction.

The story is told across two timeframes and from the perspectives of three central protagonists. Maddie and Sadie are former friends with a shared secret from ten years earlier that they hope has been confined to the past. Pearl is connected to Maddie and Sadie from those earlier events and is very much a malevolent presence in their lives. The scene-setting stages are quite drawn-out and I found myself losing interest and switching off at times. Thankfully, in the final third, matters do improve significantly and the closing stages of the book are far more engaging and culminate in a neatly constructed and satisfying conclusion. Overall, this is not a bad read, but nor is it one that I would be raving to my friends about.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for supplying an ARC in return for an honest review.
Profile Image for Angela  Mellor.
955 reviews3 followers
November 15, 2025
Everyone Has Something To Hide is about how dark secrets consume you.
Maddie and Sadie met through their children, a friendship of sorts is started but is abruptly ended due to an awful accident that has to stay secret. Ten years later and they have received an invite back to where the accident happened but they receive a threat, someone knows what happened and what the real truth is. Are their lives heading for disaster or can they find out who knows before their lives are left in ruins?
This was a decent thriller that I enjoyed, it does have a slow start but stick with it as it does get going. The book is told from both women’s POV and also Pearl and this worked well. You are lead down a few garden paths which I liked and there were a few twists and the one at the end fitted in fantastically. The characters although not very likeable you did feel for them especially if you thought someone was coming into your home! The storyline although slow to start picked up to become a decent thriller.
I would like to thank NetGalley and HarperCollins UK, One More Chapter for this ARC I received in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Ana.
26 reviews
November 20, 2025
Everyone Has Something to Hide is a story about Maddy and Sadie, two women who share a dark secret from a stormy night in their past. They receive glamorous invitations to a masquerade ball—along with a threat that someone intends to reveal what they’re hiding.

I appreciated that this novel touches on relevant modern-day issues, such as the consequences of buried secrets resurfacing, oversharing on social media, and the lack of transparency in relationships.

Although it’s marketed as a psychological thriller, it reads more like a contemporary novel with hints of suspense. For me, it lacked the surprises typically expected from a thriller. The “secrets” were quite obvious from the early chapters. While the story picks up around the middle, it loses momentum toward the end. As I read the final chapters, I kept asking myself “Why?”—not because of a shocking twist, but because one particular event felt random and poorly explained.

Unfortunately, I had high expectations for this novel and ended up disappointed. I believe I would have enjoyed it more if it had been described more accurately.

Thank you to One More Chapter for this e-ARC. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Andrea.
130 reviews6 followers
October 3, 2025
Review of ‘Everyone Has Something to Hide’ by Hannah Emery, due to be published on 14 November 2025 by Harper Collins UK, One More Chapter.

Sadie and Maddy share a secret, a dreadful event that happened 10 years ago. For Sadie, her memory is patchy, but she’s haunted by what they did. They haven’t seen each other since the event, but now they are both invited to a masquerade ball, at the very same location as all those years ago.

The story is told from the point of view of both characters, interspersed with that of another character whose life was changed after the event. Through the dialogue it pieces together what happened leading up to the event, and after, and what it means for both Maddy and Sadie now that they have been reluctantly reunited. Other incidental characters storylines detail how the actions of one night, impacted those around them, in unexpected ways.

A well described narrative which made it easy to visualise the scenes together with building the tension to the conclusion. Recommended read.
Profile Image for Roz.
693 reviews17 followers
November 9, 2025
Told under multiple protagonists, this was at times a dark and unsettling thriller and one that I really wasn’t sure while reading who the villain was.

Maddy and Sadie become unlikely friends and attend a ball which Maddy’s husband appears to have missed. Due to a combination of terrible circumstances and an ill advised drive home an accident occurs, from which Maddy and Sadie leave without reporting. Ten years later and neither of their lives seems to have recovered. No longer friends each has suffered and seem to be paranoid about being watched, or are they?

Good concept although I felt that the book covered old ground several times. The ending was unexpected and very sad and I found the relationship between the female characters and their families sometimes seemed unrealistic.

Thanks to Netgalley, the author and the publisher for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Louise Wilson.
3,648 reviews1,689 followers
November 4, 2025
3.5 stars rounded up

This story follows Maddy and Sadie. The women share a dark secret that happened ten years ago. But the past keeps creeping up on them. Then they receive an invitation to the White Feather Masquerade. But someone knows all about their secret and they're ready to expose them.

Maddy and Sadie are mothers with a hidden secret. They have made a lot of bad decisions in their lives. The story is told from alternating points of view. The pace was slow to begin with. The characters are well-developed but flawed. It covers: revenge, mental health issues, and mother hood.

Published 14th November 2025

I would like to thank #NetGalley #HarperCollinsUK #OneMoreChapter and the author #HannahEmery for my ARC of #EveryoneHasSomethingToHide in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Farah G.
1,984 reviews37 followers
October 10, 2025
What do you do when you get invited to the social event of the season - and then discover that there's a dark conspiracy that lurks behind the invitation? Maddy and Sadie, who left each other in the rearview mirror long ago because of the uncomfortable secrets that they share, are about to find out...

Because whether the guests like it or not, all the masks are very soon coming off at the prestigious White Feather Masquerade Ball!

This is an entertaining story, but not all the twists were as unexpected as a reader might wish. It gets 3.5 stars.

I received a free copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for Jessica Chiles.
122 reviews10 followers
October 19, 2025
3.5 rounded to 4

This book gets in your head a little bit. I finished it about an hour ago and I'm still not sure how to feel. There isn't a clear cut choice on who is the victim, who to root for. I think the only character I felt relatable was Sadie but I found myself having difficulty feeling for them. Not many redeeming qualities to be found.

The writing was good, straight-forward, quick read. There were a few little surprises. Personally, the wrap up felt a bit drawn out but overall a good read.
1,941 reviews51 followers
September 9, 2025

This is one of those wonderfully-convoluted novels I am fond of. It involves two friends--Maddy and Sadie, a car accident at night and a young girl with secrets of her own.Told in 10-year increments, the book details how each of the characters meet, have families, keep secrets, and eventually discover that lies are usually always discovered! I raced through it as it's a unique plot that kept me guessing until the end!
Thanks to NetGalley for this ARC!
Profile Image for Laurie.
447 reviews11 followers
November 2, 2025
Thanks NetGalley for the ARC of Everyone Has Something to Hide by Hannah Emery

This book was just ok for me, it was an easy read although I was not connected to the characters, I didn't really love any of them. The story was told from the point of view of the three main characters, at times confusing.
I think the plot needs some help, it dragged for me at times and I just got bored reading. It felt repetitive at times.

This is the 2nd book I've read by this author
Profile Image for Sarah Jane Higginbottom.
132 reviews
November 2, 2025
A fast-paced domestic thriller about two women whose perfect lives start to crumble when their shared secret resurfaces. The tension builds well, and the masquerade setting adds a nice touch of mystery. While some twists are predictable and the characters could be deeper, it’s still an entertaining, easy read for fans of secrets-and-lies stories. ★★★★☆
Profile Image for Liv.
968 reviews5 followers
November 2, 2025
Although this was an easy read, there wasn't really anything special about the mystery or the characters and I wasn't massively engaged. I enjoyed it whilst I was reading it but probably wouldn't pick it up again!

I received a copy from the publisher in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for Lori Boyd.
785 reviews93 followers
December 11, 2025
⭐️⭐️⭐️💫 (3.5/5)

Two women, once friends, are torn apart by a dark secret and are thrown back together when that secret is threatened to come to light. Who knows this secret and is threatening them and everything they love?

If you’re a fan of Lifetime movies, this one is for you. Characters are fairly one dimensional, unlikable. I really had a hard time connecting with them. Talk about bad decisions! One character is out for revenge and will do anything to get it. Told from 3 different points of view and two timelines interspaced throughout, which kept the suspense flowing. Ending was somewhat expected but wrapped up nicely.

Thanks to Harper Collins UK, One More Chapter and NetGalley for this ARC. This is my honest opinion.
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