I’m Jade Lee Wright, psychological thriller author.
Although I first dipped my toe into the world of publishing with two self-published novels, I’ve spent the past few years fully immersing myself in the craft. I study English Literature and Creative Writing through the Open University and have since gone on to sign multiple publishing deals—including a two-book deal (and a brand-new follow-up two-book contract!) with Joffe Books.
My debut psychological thriller with them, The Baby Group, was released in July 2025, and my second, The Family Secret, is due out in January 2026. Both have been snapped up by Audible and will be coming to audio soon.
I was longlisted for the Lucy Cavendish Fiction Prize 2025 and shortlisted for the 2024 Marlowe & Christie Novel Prize.
When I’m not writing (or daydreaming about the next twist), you’ll usually find me with my nose in a book or looking after my two baby boys.
Not sure where to start! I’m so grateful to the wonderful team at Joffe Books for picking up my book and giving me the opportunity to share it with the world. Thank you to every reader, reviewer and person supporting me on my writing journey. It is so appreciated and I hope you enjoy my twisty thriller!
I received this book from the publishers via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Darcy and her fiancé Alex are looking for a fresh start when they move to the seaside town of Rock, preparing to get ready for their first child together. Joining an antenatal class seems like a good way to make new local friends going through the same experience and while Darcy struggles to connect with the women, she can't help let past insecurities and paranoia get in the way.
This was a very fun, gripping and well-paced thriller that sucked me right in from the start! It definitely helped (in some ways) that I'm currently 36 weeks pregnant and very familiar with a lot of the things Darcy is going through in this book, and could empathise a lot with the way she second guessed her own mind at times and hormones as yes sometimes pregnancy can make you think some crazy things. Darcy is an insecure person and it really highlights the fractures in her relationships with people from Alex to Carmen and Lucy.It can be hard to read at times especially when Darcy's insecurities makes her internally judge the other women in different ways.
As the story progresses and the pregnancies get bigger (and babies begin to arrive) we see shifts in relationship dynamics and personalities and tensions really rise up. I would have loved even more in some of the ways we see Darcy spiraling about things from the wedding dress to the attempted break-in - would love for subtle things like this to have happened from the start of the book versus the last part.
As for the last part which included the birth and subsequent events, I was literally gripped - I told myself I was going to read only to a certain part and then I'd go to sleep but I could not put the book down until I'd finished it. The scenes were so visceral and written so well. I do think afterwards, maybe because this part was so tense, the pace slowed down a bit ahead of the story wrapping up but I still enjoyed the ending. And the epilogue left me like !!
I received a copy of The Baby Group from the publishers via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
The story follows Darcy, who relocates from the London suburbs with her boyfriend just months before giving birth. Hoping to make new connections, she joins a local baby group. At first, things seem normal—until unsettling events begin to unfold.
The premise had potential, and the writing itself was solid. However, the suspense never fully hooked me the way I like my thrillers to. While there were a few intriguing moments, the pacing felt slow, and I found it hard to stay fully engaged. It was just okay for me overall.
4.5 stars for sure!!!! I don’t even know where to start with this book… it was actually insane. It was the fastest book I have ever read in my life I didn’t put it down all day!! This story had me hooked from the start and I was so lucky to get to read it as an ARC. The FMC Darcy and her not so beloved fiancé Alex are in the pregnancy journey, having made some mistakes in the past they have moved away from home to a brand new place. Here they make new friends at an antenatal class and find out they know less about eachother then they thought 👀 the twists were so unpredictable and they just keep coming one after the other. There’s one piece of advice I’d give to Darcy if I could and that is to trust NOONE. (The only reason I didn’t give this book a 5 stars is because I was genuinely so infuriated with Darcy for being such a naive Ning Nong- that’s my trust issues coming out to play though poor Darcy just thinks the best of everyone)
Thriller isn't my preferred genre, but I really enjoyed this one!
The story starts at the end, with Darcy having just given birth but someone has taken her baby.
The story then jumps back a few months, and we follow Darcy and Alex on their pregnancy journey, as they join an antenatal class. The prologue sets a sinister undertone which remains throughout the book, with little seeds of information planted regularly, casting doubt on everyone involved (and rightly so!!).
Jade's descriptive writing really brought the characters and setting to life, and I could feel everything Darcy was feeling. I even, for a brief moment, felt huge sympathy for the perpetrator (although as more was revealed that didn't last!!).
I connected to this story as it is about pregnancy and motherhood, which is a journey I've been on myself in recent years, and that side of the story is relatable and raw. But this book also ticks all the boxes of things that thriller fans will love - suspense, plot twists, high stakes and more. It's gripping, emotional and shocking - including the epilogue! I was so engrossed reading the end of the book that I missed my stop on the train to work 😅.
If you love thrillers I recommend this! If you're a mother, I recommend this! If you're pregnant... maybe wait for a little while... but I recommend this in a year or so 😂. I look forward to future books from Jade!
So firstly, WHAT THE HECK?!?! This was SUCH a good book! The pacing felt perfect, fast enough to stay interesting, but not so fast that I felt completely lost. This one had some good twists too, one or two felt a lil predictable but others I was like what just happened?! I loved Jade’s writing style, and felt easily engaged throughout. Honestly the tension was SO real. I still don’t know if I liked Darcy or not, but I really did feel for her throughout. As a girly with an anxious attachment style, I GET IT yk. But also girl, maybe don’t be so judgemental x Definitely a read I recommend, and I can’t wait for more books from Jade!!
"The past is the past. It's not going to get in the way of things here."
Brilliant psychological thriller with a wild third act.
The story builds slowly and steadily, sometimes at the risk of becoming repetitive (which I thought was a great way to show just how repetitive arguments can be), but it picks up speed. There are four parts (titled April, May, June, and July). The first two are more or less build up with little seeds thrown about here and there. The third part is where the wheels start turning and the fourth is where the writer just floored it. It's incredible. Zooming past at incredible speed before coming to a somewhat open ending destination where you can decide whether, in your mind, you want the characters to be happy or let that Epilogue take effect in your brain.
As far as characters go, Darcy can be a superhero if there was a way to harness anxiety into some kind of superpower. She's pregnant. She has anxiety. She has trouble making friends. She has a tragic backstory that can almost rival Peter Parker or Batman (maybe a bit of an exaggeration, but still). She's a mess. She has secrets, fears, insecurities, nightmares, and flaws. The whole package. But most important of all, she is resilient. She goes through it all. Literal blood, sweat, and tears. She does it alone, mostly, and comes out the other side. Supporting characters are good. The couples at the antenatal class, Alex, even Debbie, and the late introduction of Rob. The policewoman who gave two fucks about the whole wedding dress scenario and the attempted break-in.
This gave me similar vibes to Verity and Gone Girl. The main character losing their fucking mind to the point where even you start questioning yourself whether this is a Shutter Island scenario. The writer kept the central secret pretty close to the chest, dropping a hint or two in the first half. While I questioned it a little when it was revealed, I ended up liking it more than I thought. Maybe because it was revealed in one of the most batshit crazy scenes in the book. As for that Epilogue, I'm going to pretend I didn't read that. I liked it. It has a very horror film quality to it where the evil hasn't gone away completely. I want to and don't want to read more of this story at the same time. Mainly because I don't want the main character to go through any more shit and yet, the villain intrigues me and I want them to suffer.
Easy to read with a few British idiosyncrasies you can probably Google (although there is a glossary at the end for US Readers which I found amusing). Short-ish (230+ pages). Dark and serious subject matter. Gets gory towards the end. Very tense; both in its third act and the conversations between the characters.
Recommended. 👍
Title: The Baby Group Writer: Jade Lee Wright Publisher: Joffe Books ISBN: 9781805731382
This book starts off with an explosive prologue, making me want to swipe the pages of my kindle faster. Darcy has just given birth and her baby has been taken, leaving her and her fiance Alex lifeless beside the birthing pool.
"My baby's been taken," Darcy sobs into the phone. And before she can digest all that has just happened, she slumps into unconsciousness.
Darcy and Alex have been together just under a year when Darcy fell pregnant just a couple of months into their relationship. But this was what she had always dreamed of - being a mum. OK, so it wasn't planned and it was unexpected but it could work. And so they are looking for a fresh start when they decide to move from the busyness of London to the quiet Cornish seaside village of Rock and preparing for the arrival of their baby together.
Darcy decides to join an antenatal class, figuring it might be a good way to make new friends. They could share their experiences together whilst forming firm friendships. But Darcy has always struggled to make friends and she finds it difficult to connect with the women in the group, her past insecurities looming heavily. Add to those along with pregnancy hormones, her paranoia flares.
At first, she connects with Cora and feels an affiliation with her but soon her insecurities cloud her judgement as she begins to feel shut out from the rest of the group. This is highlighted even further as one by one the women begin giving birth and each becomes a mother. The dynamics of each begin to shift as tensions rise and their little group becomes smaller, shutting Darcy out completely.
Stupidly, Darcy confides in no one about her fears but then how could she? Who could she really trust? It was clear from the outset that there are insecurities around her relationships and for the most part it is completely understandable why she in turn shut everyone out. But did she really have no one? It seems so.
Of all the women in the antenatal class, Carmen and Lucy are the ones Darcy trusts the least. But when Cora, Rachel and Violet all start to shut her out, Darcy wonders what she has done to upset them. Why are they meeting up in cosy little gatherings in cafes, some of them with their bundles while others still awaiting the arrival of theirs? Even Lucy, with whom she had grown much closer to in recent weeks, has ghosted her while gathered with the others laughing away - most likely at her. Again, her paranoia flares. She can't confide in Alex her insecurities - he doesn't even know the half of it, let alone will he understand. He's her rock, her security; if he didn't believe her she doesn't know what she'd do. So she kept her fears, her paranoia and her insecurities to herself.
As her due date approaches, despite the women shutting her out of the group entirely, Darcy has noticed Lucy sidling up to Alex. Is something going on there that she isn't aware of? Darcy is sure something is going on but Alex will only deny it and throw familiar accusations at her. And he wouldn't be entirely wrong. Needless to say, a ton of drama ensues.
After most of the book detailing Darcy and her insecurities, constantly whining about having no friends and being left out to be being jealous of all the women for a variety of reasons and berating Alex for a previous infidelity, we get to the culmination of events that precede the penultimate climatic conclusion. And boy, does it get interesting! Up till now I found myself skimming pages with a dragging realisation that Darcy was infinitely annoying and Alex was a complete knob. But now the tension mounts as Darcy goes into labour and things get hairy to say the least. She changes her mind about birthing plans but no one seems to be listening to her. She is terrified and scared and tries calling for help but to no avail. And then secrets burst to the surface as Darcy realises the dreaded reality of her situation. And in the end, her baby is gone. Darcy is inconsolable.
The final twists were revealing in themselves, although it was the very l ast one in the epilogue that I didn't see coming, as I predicted everything else that unfolded with ease. But that was a nice a touch to leave readers dangling.
This is a fairly quick read though it took me longer due to personal reasons and time being a factor. But I raced through over half of the book this afternoon to its thrilling end. Darcy was hard to like because of her constant whining. I could relate to her with not making friends as I too find it hard to make friends but she just constantly moaned on an on about it. I didn't like Lucy either. She was completely transparently fickle and bitchy. The other women were OK but most of the focus was on Lucy and sometimes Carmen and Cora. So it was up to us as readers to work out which one we couldn't trust. Alex was a complete twat. He could have at least tried to be a little more understanding but he didn't even try. Instead he shoved Darcy in the direction of Lucy when it was clear she wasn't comfortable with her. Instead of taking her concerns seriously, he waved them away and told her to get a grip basically. I would have liked to get a grip on him - firmly around his neck!
A quick read, it was intriguing enough but the pacing was a little sluggish in parts and I found it hard to stay fully engaged. I loved the ending though. Everything from where Darcy goes into labour to the birth and the aftermath was nail-biting and I raced through those pages till the final conclusion.
I would like to thank #JadeLeeWright, #JoffeBooks and #ZooloosBookTours for an ARC of #TheBabyGroup in exchange for an honest review.
I thought I'd read the "shocking final twist" and then there was another one!
This was just what I needed, a psychological thriller that keeps you guessing and surprises you just when you think you've got everything figured out.
The set up is brilliant, the characters are believable (and frustrating in some cases!) and the storyline is packed full of twists and turns and that disconcerting uncertainty that plagues the main character. She's paranoid because she's been cheated on before, and as readers, we become paranoid too.
I read this book over a few (working) days, picking it up every chance I got, and I highly recommend it! This is an author to keep an eye on. I can't wait to read more from her.
Darcie and Alex have been together less than a year, now they're just weeks away from the birth of their baby. They've moved from London to a lovely seaside town, and decide to join the local antenatal class in order to make new friends. Everyone seems lovely except from Lucy. She seems to take a disliking to Darcie, and yet somehow is getting very close to Alex. As due dates get nearer, Darcie is sure something is going on. She just isn't sure what.
Okay, so this one was a little difficult for me to get into at first. It was mostly Darcie constantly whining that she had no friends, and how she felt left out of groups when she did make friends, and feeling jealous and constantly freaking out on Alex about his previous infidelity. Then it was her going to the antenatal classes, meeting other women who all made her feel jealous about the way she looks, and attempting to become friends while desperately clinging on to Alex. Most of this time was spent talking about birthing plans and pain relief and babies in general. I get it, it's a story about a group of pregnant women. But having been a pregnant woman, we do have other things to talk about. It would have been nice for there to be some kind of break in the baby talk. However, once we get into the last third of the book, things start getting interesting. One by one, the women start having their babies, and Lucy is trying to be friendly with Darcie. Things all seem great until Darcie starts being snubbed by the group and realises they're all meeting up without her. Drama unfolds and she's left with no one around her but Alex who is a dick. Then Darcie has her baby. What happens is terrible and scary, and we finally start getting to the "thrilling" part. Secrets come out, and it's filled with tension. The final twists in the epilogue are what made me round my rating from a 3.5 to a 4*. It took me the better part of 2 days to read this purely because it just wasn't gripping me to start with.
I've been so excited to read this book and it certainly didn't disappoint. Beautiful, engaging writing and fully developed characters who you love to hate. I won't lie. I didn't particularly like any of them but I think that was the point!
It's certainly a slow burn. Not a huge amount happens until well past the half way point so I did find things a little slow which is my reason for 4 stars. Personally, I didn't feel the usual tension at the start either as I already knew what was going to happen from reading the blurb.
But boy, when things kick off, it's an all out rollercoaster! Did I see the twists coming? One of them, yes. The other? Heck no! A brilliantly executed twist!
I can't wait to read more from this author. Possibly a future sequel? We shall see! Highly recommended for readers who love their thrillers on the slow burn side.
P.S. I had mental flashbacks to my own pregnancy and giving birth! 🤣🤣 that was traumatic enough!
I do love a good thriller, particularly thrillers like this one that keep the reader enthralled and unable to tear themselves away from the story.
in Jade Lee Wright's terrific debut, we're introduced to Darcy and Alex who have just moved to Rock, Cornwall. Their relationship is still fairly new, but Darcy is pregnant and decides to join antenatal classes to help her make friends.
Her relationship with Alex isn't perfect as Darcy is still battling insecurities from finding messages with another woman on Alex's phone. Cornwall should be a happy new start for them, but Darcy often feels lonely, and even in her new group of expectant mothers, she feels left out and alone.
There were so many twists in the plot, while I guessed a couple, I was hit by the final one right at the end; expect most readers will be.
It's a really well-written debut and I can't wait to read Wright's next book, due out next year.
This gripping domestic thriller delivers a tense ride from start to finish. We have Darcy and Alex, whose fresh start in Cornwall following Alex's infidelity, quickly goes downhill after they join an ante-natal group. Darcy's desperation for acceptance clashes with her growing unease about certain members, building atmospheric tension. Jade Lee Wright crafts a fast-paced narrative, skillfully building Darcy's suspicion and paranoia. I felt a couple of the characters were unnecessary, while some characters' issues weren't really explored, but this didn't detract from my enjoyment of the book. While the ending might be predictable for seasoned thriller readers, the journey there was enjoyable, making it a good choice for fans of psychological suspense. My thanks to Joffe Books for the ARC.
Thank you to NetGalley, Jade Lee Wright, and Joffe Books for the eARC. This gripping psychological thriller was full of unexpected twists and turns—I never saw them coming!
The book starts at the end, with the prologue being near the end of the whole story. Which really draws you in, as you want to know what the heck has happened?
We follow Darcy and Alex as they move away to Cornwall to start a fresh after issues in London. They are expecting their first baby and Darcy thinks it’s a great idea to join an antenatal classes to make friends and prepare for the babies arrival little do they know what chain of events this brings to their door.
There were quite a few characters to get my head around and a past event in Darcy’s life that keeps coming up that alludes to there being a connection between that event and future events. The characters were well developed some you loved and some you hated. I did find Darcy grated on me a little tbh, but once I’d read the book I kinda understood why she was the way she was and I couldn’t help but feel very sorry for her in the end.
There’s plenty of twists and turns some you may see coming some you may not, but even having figured some of it out hadn’t ruined the joy of reading the book. I did struggle a little as it was a bit of a slow burn and the first half was a little slower than I’d have like but all the character building of all the baby group as well as Darcy and Alex did help bring in more emotion when it all came crashing down at the end.
A great debut novel and would definitely pick up more by this author for a fun easy and thrilling read.
Wow! Let me just get my breath back after finishing this. What a whirlwind the last third or so of this book is! It will hook you in and not let you go until the very end, but even then it’s not going to let you go, you are going to want more.
Darcy and partner Alex live in busy London, but decide to make the change to the quiet Cornish coast when they find out they are expecting a baby. With no friends or family close by, joining the local baby group seems the perfect answer! Soon Darcy is surrounded by people in a similar position to her, but is everyone who they appear to be, are they all the great friends they seem to have become?
This one really does stretch the imagination, but in a good way. In the first part of the book we get to know the characters and start to see different things happening, start to make suspicions and maybe not trust characters we did initially. Then the story really kicks up a gear, until it ends, spilling its secrets and making you question what you thought you knew.
I really like how the author twisted everything together, laying things down that you might not notice until later in the book. The pace is fast, the characters are well developed but not always likeable! However you may find your opinion of people changes throughout.
I honestly can’t believe this is the authors debut novel. It’s clever, it’s well written and it really does keep you guessing. I can’t wait to read whatever comes next from this author.
All in all a must read, but be sure to clear your diary as it’s incredibly hard to put down!
This was such an addictive read. Jade Wright really knows how to build tension in the small, everyday moments of motherhood and then twist them into something much darker. The premise is sharp and timely, but what I enjoyed most was how quickly the story pulled me in.
I’ll admit, I guessed a couple of the twists (kind of!), but that didn’t take away from the ride. Even when I saw certain things coming, I was hooked to see how the characters would react. Yes, there are some holes in the plot if you really sit and pick them apart, but honestly—that’s fiction. I’ve written my own unlikable characters before and exaggerated their quirks, and it’s part of the fun. Think about how Poirot’s mannerisms are over the top, yet that’s what makes him unforgettable.
And speaking of unlikable characters—oh my goodness, the mom and her fiancé had my blood boiling at times. They’re frustrating in totally different ways, and I’m pretty sure that was done on purpose. They made me feel something, and isn’t that what good writing is supposed to do?!
On a more personal note, I also appreciated the theme—pregnancy and all that jazz—because it’s something close to my own field of work. I can’t give away too much, ha, but it definitely added an extra layer of connection for me.
The book does a great job balancing drama with suspense. The baby group setting itself was both cozy and claustrophobic, making it the perfect backdrop for secrets to spill out. It really shows how quickly friendships can turn when trust is broken.
The Baby Group was a tense, twisty read with characters you’ll love to hate, moments that made me roll my eyes (mostly in the best way!), and just enough drama to keep me racing to the end.
I can hardly contain my excitement for next year when Jade's new novel hits the shelves!
Such a good psychological thriller - it is the very definition of unputdownable!
Darcy and fiancé Alex have moved to a small community to start new lives with the baby they are expecting. In an attempt to meet new people they enrol for an antenatal group. As hoped they bond with these other couples, but Darcy finds a couple of the other women she warms to less, one she actively avoids. We learn early on that Darcy has some trauma in her past that cause her night terrors and has given her physical scars. As the pregnancy wears on strange things happen to make Darcy question whether someone is out to get her - is she paranoid or....
Great, great novel and an author I am definitely following for new releases!
My thanks to NetGalley, author and publisher for the opportunity to review this book in exchange for an advance copy.
This was a slow to start domestic/psychological thriller, but the pace picked up in the second hald of the book.
The friendship group was weird but I think that was the point.
I liked Darcy, but I felt bad for her. To have to feel like you have to rely on someone solely because you have no one else.
The Book starts with Darcy's baby being taken and then we are taken back in time when she was pregnant and trying to make friends with the baby group. This begins the build up to the shocking secrets and betrayals that unfold at the end of the book.
The epilogue divulges another epic twist, but I think I prefer the story without it.
I had so many theories over the course of reading this book, and I couldn’t keep up with all the twists and turns in the end! A really thrilling read, with an achingly apparent thread of tension that gets turned up over the course of the story. Some characters are very… unexpected! Brilliant debut and one for the crime/thriller fans!
The books starts with such a gripping prologue I just couldn’t stop reading I finished this book in three days! I read it putting my daughter to bed, I read it drinking my coffee and when I could fit it in during the day. . Jades writing style has you wanting more and keeps you guessing with each page. I did guess one of the twists but the twist right and the very end… wow I didn’t see that coming my jaw hit the floor. Reading in Darcy’s POV was frustrating at some points as for me I wasn’t sure if I could trust her but let’s just say she can’t trust anyone! . I highly recommend picking up a copy of the baby group and I can’t wait to read more of Jades books.
I saw this book recommended in a book group im in so glad I gave it a try. Drawn instantly into the storyline i was hooked into Alex and Darcys story. Having a baby is meant to be the best time of your life, until its not! Jam packed with drama, twists and secrets this is definitely a read you don't wanna miss! *Read as part of KU*
Tragic, scary, heart pounding, satisfying, and wonderful!! Just WOW! I read it in 2 days, I couldn't stop. I lost sleep but couldn't stop! You will too!
Wow, where to begin... I struggled to put this book down. It was a slow-burning thriller but with plenty of twists and turns. I wasn't taken by Darcy and she frustrated me enormously but I'm guessing that was intentional. I did feel many emotions for her and can understand some of her actions given her state of mind. Jade Lee Wright clearly has a talent for storytelling, she created quite a picture in my mind. The story flowed very well and all the twists were very well thought out. I didn't guess all of them. I'll definitely look out for more by Jade in the future.