Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Honey

Not yet published
Expected 7 May 26
Rate this book
A wickedly funny, adrenaline-rush of a novel about a graduate student who murders bad men and justifies it in the name of feminism, by a bold new voice in fiction

Yrsa is in a funk. She’s bored of her PhD program, bored of her research on Afropessimism, bored of the entitled undergrads she has to cater to. But most of all, she’s bored of the men in her life—especially the bad ones.

When her best friend, Nina, confesses to having an affair with her professor, and that he’s stolen her research, Yrsa is mad. On the quad, Yrsa bumps into the professor and witnesses his an unfortunate incident involving his San Pellegrino and a bee allergy. What she sees that afternoon awakens something in a taste for murder.

Emboldened, Yrsa decides to chase that high, and soon, no sexist, misbehaving man within commuting distance is safe.

With each murder, Yrsa feels a greater sense of meaning and purpose—finally, her doctoral research feels useful. But how long can killing in the name of feminist and racial solidarity justify her actions? Will her rampage ever assuage her feelings of rage and revenge? And how long until her actions—and buried family secrets—come back to haunt her?

Kindle Edition

Expected publication May 5, 2026

28 people are currently reading
13562 people want to read

About the author

Imani Thompson

2 books23 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
50 (28%)
4 stars
72 (40%)
3 stars
46 (26%)
2 stars
8 (4%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 112 reviews
Profile Image for Liv Kaelin.
241 reviews28 followers
October 14, 2025
I'm a smidge confused with this one. This is described as "wickedly funny", but I'd argue it's more serious in tone and academic than that would lead you to believe. Nonetheless, I enjoyed the more serious topics surrounding racial justice and inequality more than the otherwise silly thriller that this is pitched to be.

Unfortunately, the writing here didn't really work for me. If this had been a general fiction novel surrounding race, afropessimism, and revenge as a concept I think it would've worked a bit more for my personal taste. However, I feel like we were trying to dive so much into those topics that the thriller plot points would just kind of fall off and never be fully developed, and because we were trying to make this a thriller, it didn't dive into other topics as thoroughly as I felt like I wanted it to. A classic case of trying to do so many things that it didn't really commit to any of them.

Unfortunately, 2.75 stars rounded up from me. I look forward to seeing what else this author writes in the future!

Thanks so much to Random House and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Zana.
901 reviews344 followers
December 6, 2025
I thought that this would be my new favorite unhinged female serial killer novel, but the stars weren't aligned this time.

There were funny one-liners (presented in a very British-style dry humor manner), and I really liked the discussions on being a Black academic at Cambridge. Unfortunately, most of the good stuff happened offscreen.

It wasn't until the last 25-30% that we actually see what's happening with Yrsa and her victims. I understand that it was due to the FMC's drug abuse (so she most likely was mentally checked out most of the time), but the drug abuse didn't even happen onscreen either. It was disappointing and it didn't make for an exciting read.

If you're a fan of My Year of Rest and Relaxation, then you might like this. Both feature sarcastic, disaffected, and (at times) mean FMCs who aren't satisfied with their lives and who self-destruct in unhealthy ways.

Thank you to Random House and NetGalley for this arc.
Profile Image for Erin.
3,114 reviews392 followers
November 12, 2025
ARC for review. To be published May 5, 2026.

3 stars

Yrsa is a PhD student writing her dissertation on Afropessimism. Her best friend, Nina is having an affair with her professor and he steals Nina’s research. Yrsa is furious. Then Yrsa gets to watch him die due to his allergy to bee stings and it changes something in her…she starts chasing that high.

Feminist and fun, I enjoyed this dark academia thriller (though it bothered me throughout that I have no idea whether I’m pronouncing “Yrsa” correctly in my head.). No idea whether it will stick with me though (and, now, I mere two weeks later it’s already pretty fuzzy.)
Profile Image for Ashlee Mitchell.
20 reviews1 follower
September 16, 2025
Yrsa is certainly a morally grey and interesting character, and this novel spent a lot of time providing context for her motivation to kill. This was a twisty, funny read, and I liked the tie to her research with Afropessimism and the nuance of her being a Black woman seeking retribution. I was puzzled at her choice to constantly engage and spend time with problematic men, even in pursuit of kills, and personally found her inner monologue a bit aggravating. The ending felt rushed and I would've liked to see some threads further fleshed out. Nonetheless, this a strong debut. This will appeal to readers who enjoy diverse, feminist suspense and eccentric character studies. Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for the ARC.
14 reviews
September 18, 2025
This is a story about a woman named Yrsa who kills a man with a bee. That’s how it starts, anyway. But really, it’s a book about control who has it, who’s taken it, and how far one woman is willing to go to reclaim it. Yrsa’s voice is sharp, academic, and restless. She is not here to be liked. She is here to think, rage, dissect, and dismantle and she invites you to watch.

The themes of Afropessimism and justice, intellectual theft and power, are heavy and rich. The book hums with ideas. But often it hums louder than it speaks. Yrsa’s inner monologue, while intellectually charged and fiercely singular, sometimes feels like trying to listen to a symphony while assembling IKEA furniture you know something important is happening, but you're not entirely sure where to put the screws.

Some plot threads start with intrigue but fade rather than resolve. And while the narrative voice is undeniably bold, the emotional core felt distant at times.

I appreciated the academic lens, especially the exploration of Afropessimism and justice, but the pacing and dialogue often left me disengaged. Some plot threads felt underdeveloped, and the emotional core didn't quite land for me. Still, Imani Thompson is clearly a bold new voice, and I'm curious to see where she goes next.

Readers drawn to character studies over clean plots, and to questions over answers, may find more sweetness in the sting than I did.

2.5/5 stars.
Thank you to NetGalley, Random House, and Imani Thompson for the advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jen G.
286 reviews4 followers
September 27, 2025
Deranged yet funny. Sadistic yet sweet. I predict Yrsa is going to become one of the decade’s most controversial characters. I found the last quarter particularly powerful, especially once readers learn the back story of Yrsa's relationship with her grandmother and estrangement from school friends. This is a real sensation, particularly for a debut novel. I predict that a movie adaptation will arrive shortly.

Favorite quotes:

"DNA. Trace it back and her lines become crossed, polluted and pollinated. An Irish man and an enslaved woman, some say. The Sargasso Sea and hot work. Body work. Oranges and tobacco. A mistress, a master, a boy who decided to take a boat. Others say Egypt and the Nile to Calcutta. But it's hard to know. Back when they drew maps for the world they wanted to see. Then back before, when color wasn't color and the gods were closer to the earth. Imprints in the red soil. In land spoiled and unspoiled and spoiled again. When tongues spat different syllables and all the patterns, all the shapes, were newfound. Cinnamon to the bark. Where is she in this, in lines twisted and sequenced to their double helix. Because the dead aren't dead, they carry. Bone lines, blood lines. The bodies that the sea swallowed and dissolved and turned to sand. Is she, the maternal, stronger? Back before it was women and women and men. When it was finding feet and star worlds. Was it built on violence—or love—in the nucleus, in the chemical base of this, here, her."

"In a moment, she stands, watching the bottom of the elevator as it climbs the shaft, her mind full of men who think the entire world belongs to them. They are like dogs, marking everything in sight, and the minute a woman claims something for herself, they piss on it, too."

Thanks NetGalley and Random House for eARC.
Profile Image for Eve L. Fell.
Author 11 books78 followers
November 15, 2025
✨Releasing May 5th, 2026✨

4/5 🍒

Yrsa is a professor for a college in the UK. She is passionate about the content of her work and the trouble that women of color go through in today’s society. She begins her descent into madness because of men.

Men who she has a tendency to sleep with. She gets pleasure out of using them to fill her desires and not be used herself. She has a hard time developing feelings for people period. Whether it be men, her friends or her family. Early on it’s pretty safe to assume that she is mentally unstable, possibly sociopathic.

As the book progresses we see her snap. She is done being nice to men. Especially men who are pieces of crap in her eyes. She makes a silent vow to herself to do something about these men who she knows. In her mind they don’t deserve to live for one reason or another. Even though to a normal person those wouldn’t be reasons to murder someone.

She starts on a killing spree. Slowly she becomes a serial killer. In her mind she has a good reason as to why she’s killed each person and nothing can change that. But will she eventually feel bad for what she’s done? Or will she full steam ahead and continue her spree?

So this is the authors debut novel. I agreed to read this in exchange for an honest review through Net Galley and Random house publishing company. I think some of the chapters fell a tad flat for me. I also don’t understand this being advertised as a “funny” book. It’s not funny at all and touched on a lot of racial issues within our society in present day.

This book was dark, serious and at times disturbing. Nothing about it was comical to me. I also wished certain characters and relationships were fleshed out more. But I did enjoy Yrsa and everything she had to offer in the book. I will be keeping an eye out for more of this authors work.
Profile Image for jay.
166 reviews16 followers
November 25, 2025
This was a strong debut, and the author included a lot of themes of treatment of black women in society, complex family relationships, and justifications for murder, just to name a few. However, a lot of the plot lines didn't feel properly wrapped up, and the ending had me wishing there was more left.

Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this eArc in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Sacha.
1,991 reviews
December 8, 2025
3.75 stars

I cannot tell you why this book is "wickedly funny," as described. I enjoyed this read. I had a lot of feelings and thoughts about the content and tone. Funny? That was truly never on the list. If you're coming here because of this billing, please know that you may have to travel to the Upside Down to find out where this is supposed to be happening. I...just don't get this at all. If you're coming to this book for any other reason, great. It's a wild read in a good way.

Yrsa is over it. And by "it," I mean gross men behaving in disturbing ways. The challenges include but are not limited to (1) Yrsa decides what is disturbing and (2) her punishment methods are extreme and permanent. Creep her out. She'll kill you. You must give her this; she's committed to the bit.

One of several aspects of this novel that I loved and feared is that the nasty stuff Yrsa encounters is ubiquitous. These dudes aren't outliers. I know these guys, and so do you. I'm also fed up with this behavior, and certain events of the last few years have further exhausted some of us. You know the part where we're going backward in obvious ways and terrible treatment of women is regularly applauded and rewarded, including by folks in high power positions. So the world Yrsa exists in isn't some bizarro dystopia. It's just...this. Her reactions are big, but also I can't say I haven't had the thought. So there's that whole thread to think about from cover to cover.

Another riveting element of this novel is what slowly unfolds with Yrsa's backstory and family history. What I wouldn't do for a prequel. My main gripe - aside from having to suspend a lot of disbelief (and still being confounded by the hilarity promised here) - is that I wanted more of that origin story.

Reading this made me feel like a voyeur, a cheerleader, a potential killer, and...a fan of Thompson's. Go off, Yrsa. I never want to meet you, but I will always be happy to read about your escapades (and anything else Thompson produces, too)!

*Special thanks to NetGalley and Lauren Chrisney at Penguin Random House for this widget, which I received in exchange for an honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.
1,981 reviews51 followers
October 7, 2025

This is a fascinating look at Yrsa, a PH.D. student who meets Ethan online and hopes it goes somewhere. But things soon spiral out of control and there are bees, poison,, murder plans, and so much more! It's wacky and often unbelievable, but it's a hoot and unlike anything else I've ever read! Thanks to NetGalley for this ARC!
Profile Image for Trisha.
5,984 reviews236 followers
Want to read
October 3, 2025
oooh this sounds so good! I'm in!

A huge thank you to the author and publisher for providing an e-ARC via Netgalley. This does not affect my opinion regarding the book.
Profile Image for Adelina.
79 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2025
October 2025:
Publishing date: May 2025
Reviewed by @literary.listener

Wowza. I got this ARC from @netgalley and I am so thankful!! @_imani_thompson_ hit it out of the park. What a well written and interesting story.

The story follows the female main character in her exploration of violence. She is currently doing her doctorate at the University and struggling to find a way to finish her dissertation. She also is dealing with the complex relationships between friends, family, and exes. When the buzz (🐝) of an opportunity comes, she takes it. And the reader gets to follow her linking the past to the present.

Really think this a great quick read that explores a lot about not only being a woman, but a Black Jamaican young woman trying to find a place in this world that fits their mold. Beautiful!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Haleigh.
39 reviews1 follower
September 24, 2025
ARC review! :)

This book is a solid 3 stars for me. I think, for me, it took almost half the book to get really interested in it. Outside of the actual killings and oddly enough, the relationship with her mother, I find that it fell flat and hard to keep my attention. The dialogue was extensive and while it was realistic and easy to read, it just really did not keep me interested and at times it felt more like a chore to get through the conversations and the reward was the little bit of action we got with each kill. The men in this book also…. while written accurately, it just annoyed me that we had SO much time with them. I really loved the premise of the book, I love feminine rage, I love realistic and complicated relationships, and I loved the view point this book offers of feminism and a women of color seeking revenge. It just felt boring at times.
Profile Image for whitney.
149 reviews
October 11, 2025
I breezed through this wonderful novel, not just because it is good but because I was ridiculously invested and stressed out over Yrsa’s circumstances. I ended up rating this one a 4.5 because it was truly just so much fun.

Honey is about a PhD student named Yrsa who goes on a killing spree, which she justifies both for feminism and research purposes. A decent amount of her dissertation is building off of theory by Saidiya Hartman, describing the ways that violence is repeated by oppressed peoples—Yrsa specifically talks about Black people/descendants of slaves. She claims that it is her methodology, therefore, to repeat violence against (mostly) white men who have horrific ideas about race and women. While this may sound strange and easy to mess up, Thompson makes Yrsa a truly compelling character in how she works out her ethical logic. Also, the novel is ridiculously funny and I found myself laughing out loud by the end. Thompson is a terrific writer and has elevated a simple archetype of a serial killer into a provoking novel that is incredibly fun to read.

Thank you NetGalley for the advanced copy!
Profile Image for Samirah.
195 reviews3 followers
December 7, 2025
ARC Received: NetGalley - Random House
Publication Date: May 5, 2026

Honey is sharp, unsettling, and very different from what I expected. I actually had no idea what to expect. What looks like a feminist revenge story is really an exploration of how theory can become a shield for personal collapse. And Yrsa is mentally collapsing for real.

Yrsa, a Black PhD student, understands power, history, and violence with striking clarity — but the further the book goes, the more obvious the gap between her insight and her actions becomes. The violence feels less driven by belief and more justified after the fact.

The ending offers no closure, which is exactly why it works I feel. Yrsa remains unseen not because people around her are naïve, but because she still sounds legible. Remember she is highly intelligent which beg the question to me, why is she doing this?? I didn’t feel comforted by this book (which I don’t think is the point at all), but I did keep thinking about it long after finishing. A lot of people may now mesh with style of character development, she didn’t make you want to root for her. For me it was a solid 4.5 stars read.
Profile Image for Violet.
998 reviews55 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 30, 2025
I hated the first two-three pages (the writing was atrocious, like Imani Thompson tried to pack every cliche of the insufferable Gen Z Cambridge PhD student there), but so glad I kept reading because the rest was fun and well-paced, witty and really entertaining. Ysra is a PhD student in Cambridge, writing about Afropessimism. When her friend's PhD supervisor, who stole her research after having an affair with her, chokes on a bee in his lemonade in front of her, she doesn't call the ambulance straight away as she realises how fun it is to watch him choke and die. (No spoiler, this is the summary of the book.) She obviously develops a taste for blood and... starts thinking about how she could get that thrill again and again.
It made me think of My Sister The Serial Killer, it has the same vibe, similar humour, similar enough plot. The author has tried to make this more about race and academia as well, which works, and I liked how much of the sociopath Ysra is at every page.

Free ARC sent by Netgalley.
Profile Image for Addison (Taylor’s Version).
118 reviews5 followers
February 7, 2026
This novel kills it in the name of feminism.
“Honey” is fast paced. The novel is full of pop culture references, that do date the novel in this current time, but that also paint Yrsa as a relatable character. While reading “Honey” the reader can expect every single event to escalate as quickly as possible. The plot is not twisty, there isn’t much doubt to what is going to happen, but this adds nuance. Every aspect of this novel questions racial micro-aggressions and the reality of being a black woman in a society that was not built for black women.

Despite being a fictional work, “Honey” is filled with sociology, theories and history. A common theme is the assumption of “black anger.”
Thompson’s writing is a highlight of this novel. Quick and sarcastic, Yrsa is written to be at times despicably unlikable and at other times an absolute pleasure to figure out.

Thank you to Penguin Random House and NetGalley for prominent an ARC in exchange for a honest review.
Profile Image for em.
631 reviews94 followers
February 8, 2026
I think this was trying to do too much in a small book. Yrsa was deeply unlikeable and not an interesting morally grey way, but more annoying and lack of development. There were so many plot lines and themes weaved throughout this story and none of them felt developed enough to be entertaining or even worthwhile. Honestly I really thought this was going to be a great feminist thriller, but it was a drag to read.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for kindly providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review. #Honey #NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Melody.
96 reviews1 follower
January 27, 2026
Honey by Imani Thompson is a debut that follows Yrsa, a disillusioned Black PhD student whose accidental involvement in a professor’s death inspires her to start a killing spree against problematic and misogynistic men. Yrsa’s justification for violence blurs the line between feminist theory, afropessimism (the subject of her PhD) and personal obsession but is a bit more nuanced than a simple revenge against bad guys story. Moments of humanity slip through for both Yrsa and the men she targets, and some of her kills backfire in ways that show her lack of control.

The book felt a little disjointed throughout with some side characters and plot lines that felt irrelevant to the overarching story and were left unresolved. The ending read like a good thriller which I quite enjoyed but felt mismatched to the rest of the book. I did really enjoy the premise and recommend this if you are looking for weird girl lit written by a BIPOC author.

Thank you to Random House Publishing and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Miss Murder.
232 reviews57 followers
September 13, 2025
Yrsa is in a funk. She’s bored of her PhD program, bored of her research on Afropessimism, bored of the entitled undergrads she has to cater to. But most of all, she’s bored of the men in her life—especially the bad ones.

When her best friend, Nina, confesses to having an affair with her professor, and that he’s stolen her research, Yrsa is mad. On the quad, Yrsa bumps into the professor and witnesses his death: an unfortunate incident involving his San Pelligrino and a bee allergy. What she sees that afternoon awakens something in her: a taste for murder.

Emboldened, Yrsa decides to chase that high, and soon, no sexist, misbehaving man within commuting distance is safe.


This was a unique and fascinating read. I was expecting some comedic, half-assed “thriller” that leaned in on tropes I’ve seen before. Instead, I got a surprisingly academic and morally gray story about an intelligent woman who gets herself into trouble by testing her hypothesis that killing “bad men” can release Black women from oppression.

Maybe it’s because I’m a sociologist myself, but I loved the interwoven academic theory and discussion that was key to Yrsa’s development. Although I can’t say Afropessimism is something I’m familiar with, it provided a unique plot device that kept me coming back for more.

I do think there were some storylines that felt unfinished, and the ending itself was a little abrupt. But all in all, I loved the change of pace this book had in comparison to my usual books - I am sure this is just the beginning in Imani Thompson’s writing career.

Thanks to NetGalley/Random House Publishing for the ARC!
Profile Image for Cory ⛤.
453 reviews6 followers
November 16, 2025
thank you so much netgalley for the opportunity to read this book as an arc

honestly this wasnt quite what i was expectin, ence my rating. the premise sounds really interesting to me but based on it, i was expecting a much funnier silly book. however this book holds a few important topics on a more serious note
so this isnt to say this is a bad book whatsoever, just not what i was expecting from it and what i was craving. but still really reccomend.
Profile Image for Sandy.
883 reviews15 followers
October 15, 2025
I was so looking forward to reading this book, described as “wickedly funny”. Unfortunately, I found this unusual tale to be more sad than funny, as the main character seemed depressed and dissatisfied with her life. The story started out very slowly, but picked up significantly at about 50%. I received a complimentary copy of this book and chose to write a voluntary, unbiased review.
Profile Image for Natalie Beecroft.
61 reviews2 followers
December 10, 2025
“That man there with a taste for young girls and a deleted internet history, how would you do it? Him, there, who says women can't say no, go on, how would you?”

Imani Thompson sums up what we’re all too scared to admit to thinking: how WOULD we get away with murder if we could?

Honey is rooted in both academia and hyper-current pop culture and references. Propulsive and witty, with favourite quotes including:

“Is she about to be blackmailed? She's only got £496 in her Monzo.”

“Maybe if she'd started gardening she wouldn't have started killing people.”

“Why can't she just shag in peace? Why do men have to speak?”


Yrsa is a brilliant, morally grey, determined and strong protagonist with undeniable draw and allure. I couldn’t wait to see her next move. Why is she the way she is? It’s gradually drip-fed to us in a very pleasing way throughout the book. Twists and turns with a wholly believable cast of characters. 95% of the men? Diabolical.

Can’t wait to see what this author does next!
Profile Image for Danna.
1,051 reviews23 followers
November 4, 2025
Honey disappointed me. It’s labeled as wickedly funny, but it read like an interior drama that is weighted down by the heavy themes like racism, misogyny, afropessimism and more. While the plot intrigued me, the writing didn’t. It felt flat and slow, and while I wanted to love Yrsa, painted as an avenger, I found her impossible to connect with.

Not recommended. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Aaron McQuiston.
610 reviews21 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 31, 2025

Afropessimism is a social critique that theorizes that Black people will always be seen in a civil society as enemies due to the racial structure of a society built on slavery, colonialism, and racism. Blackness is something that was born from enslavement and colonialism because of the way people of color were seen in society and this view has not changed nor will it change in the future. The only way that racism will end is if society ends. (I know there is more nuance to these ideas, but this is a very basic outline.) This is the backdrop of Yrsa’s thinking in Honey, the debut novel by Imani Thompson. Yrsa is studying at university and writing a paper on Afropessimism, and after a colleague steals her friend’s research and publishes it as his own, Yrsa starts to see that there is only one way to really deal with the frustration of being a black woman in society. Kill horrible men.

The story really makes sense in the simplest terms. Women are growing tired of terrible men, but most women do not do anything about it. Since Yrsa does not feel like she is in a society that accepts her anyway, she might as well try to change society in the small way that she can. When Yrsa confronts the research stealing colleague, they are talking about on a park bench. She sees a bee flying around his drink, and her intrusive thought to knock the bee into his drink win. Yrsa watches him die. This gives her a high that she has been craving, and the more that she looks around her, the more she sees that it is easy to point out terrible men who are successful while she is struggling. Horrible men are everywhere, and this makes it easy for her to start hunting for men who are sexist, misogynistic, and/or racist, and teach him a lesson.

I like Yrsa for her bored mischievousness. She does seem like someone who is having an existential problem with not feeling like she belongs anywhere in the world, and she is overwhelmingly bored by it. The only thing that makes her feel important is getting rid of horrible men. She is someone who needs more help than society is willing to give her, and this also plays into her feelings on society due to her research on afropessimism. She feels like the social structure has let her and all women down, and there is no real redemption through the expected channels. She finds her own way to help herself, even if that has turned her into a monster. I enjoy thinking about the questions that this novel asks, and it makes me wonder how many women will read this novel and completely agree with Yrsa’s actions. Honey reminds me of American Psycho in a way that it is more about the commentary on society than it is about a clean resolution of the story.

I received this as an ARC from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Rachael Stray.
373 reviews10 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 11, 2026
Honey had all the ingredients to become my new favourite unhinged female serial killer novel: a Black academic protagonist, feminist rage, sharp humour, and a woman seeking justice against “bad men” (without condoning murder, obviously).

As a fellow sociology graduate, I was especially drawn to the academic angle, and the exploration of power, control, and retribution felt very close to my own interests. The stars weren’t quite aligned for a full five, but this is still a strong, compelling debut.

Yrsa is not written to be likeable – and that’s very much the point.

Her voice is sharp, restless, academic, and full of anger.

She dissects the world around her with intelligence and bitterness, and she invites the reader to watch her do it.

This is a novel about control: who has it, who loses it, and how far one woman is willing to go to take it back.

Yrsa doesn’t soften herself for the reader, and the book doesn’t try to excuse her either – it simply lets her exist in all her mess, rage, and contradictions.

There are some genuinely great moments within this book.

The dry, very British humour works well, with sharp one-liners that cut through the darkness.

I also really enjoyed the discussions of being a Black female academic at Cambridge, and it’s genuinely nice to read a contemporary novel set in Cambridge that actually uses the setting meaningfully rather than just as a backdrop.

The way Thompson weaves Yrsa’s research into the narrative, particularly the connections to Afropessimism and power structures, adds real depth and texture.

My main frustration is that too much of the most interesting material happens off page. For a book about a woman slowly becoming a serial killer, we spend surprisingly little time actually seeing the killings or the psychological descent.

Even Yrsa’s drug abuse – which explains some of the narrative distance – mostly happens in the background. It isn’t until the final 25–30% that the story fully shifts into focus, and that section is easily the strongest part of the novel.

The last quarter is powerful, especially when we learn more about Yrsa’s grandmother, her past, and her estrangement from her school friends.

These emotional threads give real depth to her character and finally ground the violence in something human and personal.

Unfortunately, the ending feels rushed, and there are a few storylines that I would have loved to see explored in more detail.

Still, Honey is twisty, darkly funny, and full of ideas.

It’s not a comfortable read, and it’s not meant to be. It’s a novel about rage, justice, control, and a woman who believes – completely – in the rightness of what she’s doing.

Whether she ever feels guilt is left open, but her certainty is what makes her so unsettling.

This will really appeal to readers who enjoy feminist suspense, morally complex protagonists, and character-driven psychological novels.

Not perfect, but bold, original, and a very promising debut.

With thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for MundiNova.
811 reviews51 followers
November 7, 2025
You gotta love an evil antihero to enjoy this book

If you like Ottessa Moshfegh, Mona Awad, or Agustina Bazterrica, be prepared to add Imani Thompson to your must read list.

This book is 100% my jam!
I love villains. I think they're infinitely more interesting than heroes. A good person doing good things is boring! It's so much more satisfying to try and understand why villains do the things they do. That's what I want to read. And Yrsa is an amazing villain/antihero I could empathize and understand even when I didn't agree with her reasoning.

It took me a little while to get into this book, but all the little set-ups led to an amazing mystery with literary reveals that provided many emotional 'gut punches' along the way. I think that's what I'm so impressed by, that Thompson was able to leverage mystery genre elements to layer into a literary novel to utilize red herrings and trauma backstory 'clues' along the way (like eating sweets after a kill). It made the story structure solid and impressive. I had theories about who was sending the blackmail emails--because several possibilities were set up beautifully to be suspects--but was still surprised in the end. Then the whole mystery with the grandma paid off brilliantly and added depth and meaning to the overall story.

But let's talk about the gem of this novel: Yrsa. I've never read a character like her. She makes choices I think are crazy, but the choices all make sense in who Yrsa is as a person and her past experiences. Her choices drive the story to it's inevitable conclusion. Literally :-) But more importantly, I could understand her pain, her mania, her ennui, and her anger. I didn't agree with it, but it made sense within the context of her character and that's why I love villains! Yrsa isn't a true, mustache-twirling villain, but killing that many people for the reasons she did definitely puts her in that category. I wanted her to succeed in her endeavors, even when it meant innocent people had to die.

What more can I say? I loved this and ended up staying up too late at night reading because I had to know how it all ended.

I received a copy from NetGalley and the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

Story: 5 stars
Character Development: 5 stars
Writing: 4 stars
Profile Image for Prof. Christina.
99 reviews1 follower
January 18, 2026
4 Stars — A Dark, Provocative Dive into Justice and Madness

Honey by Imani Thompson is a bold, unflinching exploration of morality, trauma, and the blurred lines between justice and madness. As a psychologist and professor myself, I found the novel’s layered portrayal of Yrsa profoundly compelling, even as it veered into the dark and theatrical. Thompson’s narrative is rich with detail, immersing the reader in Yrsa’s fractured psyche and her justification for her increasingly violent actions.

Yrsa is an intriguing character — a little unhinged, undeniably complex. Her background, peppered with racial violence and personal trauma, is laid bare with raw honesty, making her actions both disturbing and understandable. Her descent into vigilantism, driven by boredom and a desire for justice, raises provocative questions about the limits of morality and the cost of fighting fire with fire. Thompson’s descriptions of Yrsa’s reasons for her murders are detailed and unsettling, making you question whether her motivations stem from genuine conviction or a deeper psychological unraveling.

The novel’s dark tone and theatricality create an adrenaline rush that kept me engaged from start to finish. It’s a story that doesn’t shy away from the gritty realities of systemic violence and the emotional toll of unaddressed trauma. The narrative’s focus on feminist and racial solidarity as justifications for Yrsa’s actions adds a layer of complexity, prompting reflection on the boundaries of activism and justice.

However, I do wish the ending had been fleshed out a bit more. While the story’s climax is intense, I felt some threads—particularly regarding the buried family secrets—could have been explored further to give a more satisfying resolution. Nevertheless, the novel’s provocative premise and Thompson’s daring voice make it a memorable read.

Overall, Honey is a gripping, thought-provoking novel that challenges readers to confront uncomfortable truths about justice, morality, and the human capacity for violence. It’s a daring debut from a bold new voice in fiction, and I look forward to seeing where Thompson goes next.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 112 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.