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Tenderness

Not yet published
Expected 21 Jul 26
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Shay was no longer in the cult, but still, it made her wedding guests nervous that she was bringing them to an island . . .

On a remote island off the coast of Virginia, family and friends gather to celebrate the wedding of Shay O'Connor and Andrew Pruitt. From the moment the guests arrive, all they can whisper about is the bride, who recently left the headline-making cult Synanon.

Told from the interwoven perspectives of Shay's brother William, her longtime friend Joel, and Shay herself, this slow-burn mystery excavates dark family histories and romantic regrets. As the wedding approaches, Joel and William pull at the loose threads of Shay's story, and it becomes clear there is an even greater threat on the island than the secrets each character is keeping from one another.

304 pages, Kindle Edition

Expected publication July 21, 2026

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About the author

Rowan Beaird

4 books191 followers
Rowan Beaird's first novel, The Divorcées, was named a best book by Harper’s Bazaar, Elle, People, The Independent, and the Chicago Review of Books. Her second novel, Tenderness, will be published in July 2026. She is the recipient of the Ploughshares Emerging Writer Award, and her short fiction has been nominated for a Pushcart.

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5 stars
17 (22%)
4 stars
19 (24%)
3 stars
31 (40%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 48 reviews
Profile Image for Jill.
427 reviews97 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 4, 2026
TENDERNESS
By Rowan Beaird
Narrated by Evan Sibley, Katherine Chin, and Pete Cross

3.5 stars rounded down
Set in the 1970s on a remote island off the coast of Virginia, Tenderness unfolds over the weekend of Shay and Andrew’s wedding. Having recently escaped a violent cult, Shay arrives carrying emotional scars and secrets from her past. As family and friends gather to celebrate, tensions simmer beneath the surface. Shay’s brother, William, hopes to reconnect with her, while Joel, a former boyfriend, struggles with unresolved feelings. Rumors of an uninvited guest only add to the growing unease.

This is a slow-burn literary suspense novel that leans more heavily into family drama and character exploration than cult thriller. Told through the perspectives of Shay, William, and Joel, the story maintains a sense of foreboding, with the cult’s shadow lingering over much of the narrative. As the wedding weekend progresses, it becomes clear that nearly everyone is keeping secrets.

The emphasis here is on emotional tension, relationships, and character development rather than plot-driven suspense. The characters are messy and flawed—which I generally appreciate—but I found many of them frustrating, making it difficult for me to fully connect with their journeys. The mystery didn’t truly gain momentum for me until the final quarter of the book.

I did enjoy the isolated island setting, which added to the atmosphere and sense of confinement. This was my first experience with Rowan Beaird’s work, and while Tenderness was ultimately an okay read for me, I would be open to reading more from her in the future.

The audiobook narration was solid, and I appreciated having different narrators for each of the main characters, which helped distinguish the shifting perspectives.

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the ALC.
Profile Image for Lizzy Brannan.
345 reviews26 followers
May 22, 2026
“Follow the law of inertia. Allow what is at rest to remain at rest.”

There is an ominous atmosphere permeating this whole novel. The writing, coupled with the stellar narrators, Evan Sibley, Katharine Chin, and Pete Cross, brought us a gradual, full-circle seep of dread, til the island was returned to its stasis.

Friends and family have gathered to celebrate the marriage of Shay O’Conner and Andrew Pruitt. But as they arrive, they can't help but notice the eerie vibe of the isolated island. Shay has recently escaped the bizarre cult, Syanon. Her brother, William, and long-time friend, Joel, have suspicions about whether their leader is still on her trail, especially when they spot someone carrying the same characteristics as the cult members. Joel is also wary of Andrew. He and Shay have been best friends since they were little, and Andrew doesn't really seem like Shay's type. Nor does he know her as Joel does.

This slow, slow-burning mystery is told from multiple perspectives. It's a great story, but it is very slow, up until the last 85%. The characters are well-developed; I just kept waiting for something to happen most of the time, primarily regarding the possibility of the looming cult leader. It is fine to have slow development. The pacing just seemed the same, with a couple of important inciting incidents. Overall, I'm glad I read it.

Thank you, NetGalley, Rowan Beaird, narrators, and Macmillan Audio for this audio ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Lindsay Hunter.
Author 21 books438 followers
February 6, 2026
I loved this so, so much. Rowan Beaird is officially one of my fave authors of all time. Just gorgeous.
Profile Image for Sherrie.
527 reviews35 followers
July 5, 2026
3.5 stars

This is my first introduction to Rowan Beaird. I was intrigued by the premise and the time period. The book is set in the 1970's against the backdrop of a wedding happening on an island off the coast of Virginia. There was a cult aspect described that involves the bride, Shay. This was enough to pique my interest, so I requested the advance copy.

I found Beaird's writing extremely readable and lyrical. The story weaves POV's from Shay, her brother William, and her ex-boyfriend Joel, who are all attending the wedding. We learn about each character's history and Shay and William's family growing up. The cult elements are there, but in the end, they fell a bit flat for me.
The most intriguing parts of this story for me were the clash of haves and have-nots, complicated family histories, and the lengths that the characters go to (especially William and Joel) in protecting Shay. The atmosphere of the island was a character in itself. It really brought the book to life for me. This is a character-driven story, so if you're looking for a fast-moving plot, this is probably not the choice.

Thank you to Flatiron Books, Book Browse, and NetGalley for the advanced e-ARC.
Profile Image for Sherry Moyer.
788 reviews29 followers
May 31, 2026
𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗛𝗔𝗣𝗦
On a small island off the coast of Virginia, a wedding is being prepared. Shay and Andrew and a small group of friends and family arrive, but instead of celebrating the joy and happiness of the young couple, everyone is whispering about the bride.

Shay, with her head shaved and her spirit dampened, has just left Synanon, a cult which has recently been making headlines.

No one can understand why an Ivy League educated woman with a wealthy and doting fiancée would fall prey to such a group.

With time counting down to the inevitable vows, Shay’s story begins to unravel, exposing secrets and truths.

𝗙𝗘𝗘𝗟𝗜𝗡𝗚𝗦
I really enjoyed this quiet exploration of the complexities of human nature.

Told through three different points of view: Joel, Shay’s best friend, William, her younger brother, and Shay, the stories are intricately interwoven to slowly reveal the mysteries of their parts and how they influenced each other.

The 1970s setting adds a layer of nostalgia to the story that felt true and interesting.

There are small secrets and big regrets and it all plays out against the wedding to a wealthy family looking to protect a reputation.

𝗩𝗜𝗕𝗘 𝗖𝗛𝗘𝗖𝗞
This is a quiet character driven novel with an ending that fits, so if you’re looking for something explosive, you won’t find that here.

𝗪𝗛𝗬 𝗔𝗨𝗗𝗜𝗢
The audio is superb, with each of the three main characters voiced by a different narrator.

𝗥𝗘𝗖𝗢𝗠𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗗
If character driven family messes are your jam, if you don’t need an explosive reveal, I highly recommend this one.
Profile Image for JenJenReads.
352 reviews2 followers
July 8, 2026
I wanted more. More cult, more eerie atmosphere, more chaos…just more.

The premise pulled me in, but the story never fully developed for me.

I never became fully invested in the characters or their relationships.

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the opportunity to listen to this title in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Judy Collins.
3,488 reviews459 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
July 9, 2026
A SOLEMN ISLAND WEDDING VS. THE CORROSIVE SHADOW OF A CULT
“A young woman escapes a notorious 1970s cult only to step straight into a luxury island wedding, where the secrets of her past refuse to stay left behind.”

In Tenderness, bestselling author Rowan Beaird follows up her acclaimed debut, The Divorcées, with a simmering, historical slow-burn psychological mystery. Moving her character-driven precision into the mid-1970s, Beaird crafts a disquieting, atmosphere-heavy narrative saturated with themes of privilege, family fractures, and the lingering threat of psychological control.

The story hinges on a deeply fractured family gathering on an isolated island, forcing everyone to look closely at the thin line where protection ends, and manipulation begins.

📌 The Hook
~A lavish 1976 wedding on a remote Virginia island.
~A wealthy, Ivy League bride who recently fled a violent cult.
~Shaved-headed figures lurking in the island shadows.

🛗 Elevator Pitch
A taut, atmospheric historical suspense novel following family and friends gathered for a luxurious destination wedding on a private island. But instead of celebratory romance, the air is thick with paranoia as everyone whispers about the bride, who has just mysteriously walked away from the infamous California cult, Synanon.

🔍 Review Breakdown

Intro
In 1976, guests assemble on the private, sun-bleached landscape of Wakefield Island to celebrate the upcoming nuptials of Ivy League graduate Shay O'Connor and her wealthy fiancé, Andrew. But behind the elegant cocktail parties and manicured lawns, absolute unease saturates the air.

Everyone is obsessed with the fact that Shay has just escaped Synanon—a headline-making rehab clinic turned dangerous, religious cult. Though Shay claims she simply walked away unharmed, whispers of shaved-headed figures on the island persist. Driven by guilt and romantic regret, her timid younger brother, William, and her long-lost college friend, Joel, begin pulling at the loose threads of her narrative, slowly uncovering a threat far greater than any of them could have anticipated.

Setting
The deceptive, uneasy paradise of Wakefield Island off the coast of Virginia—a wealthy family estate trapped between the encroaching Atlantic sea and an oppressive atmospheric heat.

Vibe
Simmering, dreamlike, and intensely psychological. It carries the heavy historical dread of an Emma Cline novel mixed with a dark, "culty" twist on The Wedding People.

Genre
Historical Mystery / Psychological Suspense / Literary Fiction

Themes
~The corrosive power of domestic self-deception
~The fragile, messy connective tissue between siblings
~The permanent trauma of cultic conditioning and brainwashing
~Class privilege acting as a shield for dark family histories

👥 Standout Characters
~Shay O'Connor: The enigmatic, highly intelligent bride whose terrifyingly calm demeanor and time inside the Synanon cult position her as a beautiful puzzle.

~William O'Connor: Shay’s anxious younger brother who arrives on the island saddled with immense guilt over letting her fall victim to the cult in the first place.

~Joel: Shay's complex college friend, navigating years of romantic regret and unrequited love while trying to determine if she is truly safe.

✍️ Author Writing Standout
Rowan Beaird excels at drilling down into the quiet, interior headspace of complex characters using lush, incredibly piercing prose. By purposefully anchoring Shay's perspective firmly in the past while William and Joel struggle in the present day, she creates a haunting psychological disconnect. She treats the dark, real-life history of the Synanon cult with immense care, letting the underlying paranoia slowly build into a gripping countdown clock.

Takeaway
You can walk away from a cage, but that doesn't mean you've left the bars behind in your mind.

Title Significance
"Tenderness" acts as a brilliant, heartbreaking irony. The lives, histories, and memories of these characters require a remarkably gentle touch, yet the reality they face on the island is sharp, cold, and entirely unforgiving.

Metaphor
The wedding dress functions as a central metaphor—a pristine, white symbol of high-society normalcy and recovery that attempts to hide the psychological scars and dark secrets beneath it.

🎧 Audio Standout (ALC Review)
“A captivating and enchanting multi-voice narration that will leave you spellbound.”
The stellar multi-cast narration features Evan Sibley, Katharine Chin, and Pete Cross (favorites). Having distinct, highly expressive voices for the three rotating points of view adds an extraordinary layer of emotional depth. Sibley captures William's fragile anxiety flawlessly, Chin infuses Shay's perspective with an eerie, detached dreamlike quality, and Cross carries Joel's deep romantic longing beautifully. If you love historical thriller audiobooks with a masterfully acted cast, you must grab this version.

💭 My Thoughts
“What begins as an elite, sun-drenched destination wedding fast becomes a tense, claustrophobic reckoning with a past that refuses to let go.”

Having thoroughly loved Beaird's debut, The Divorcées, I was highly anticipating her sophomore novel—and she completely blew me away. Her ability to peel back the layers of human intimacy, guilt, and self-delusion is spectacular. The pacing behaves like a beautifully constructed, mesmerizing slow-burn, ensuring you feel the rising baseline tension in your chest with every single chapter. It is intensely character-driven, lushly written, and builds to a final sequence of truths that will leave you entirely breathless. An absolute standout for your literary suspense shelf!

Verdict: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (5/5). "A mesmerizing, lushly written, deeply disquieting historical mystery that masterfully turns a private island wedding into a profound psychological battlefield."

📚 Recs: What to Read Next (Read-Alikes)
If the cult dynamics, private island isolation, and slow-burning historical mystery of Tenderness have you completely hooked, add these to your TBR list:

~The Divorcees by Rowan Beaird
~The Girls by Emma Cline
~The Guest List by Lucy Foley
~The Wedding People by Alison Espach
~Lady in the Lakea by Laura Lippman

Special thanks to Macmillan Audio, #MacAudio2026, and NetGalley for sharing an advanced listening copy in exchange for my honest thoughts>

blog review posted @
JudithDCollins.com
@JudithDCollins | #JDCMustReadBooks
My Rating: 5 Stars (audio)
Pub Date: July 21, 2026
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Profile Image for Elena Kellow.
192 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
July 7, 2026
Thank you to Flat Iron Books for the advance copy!

This book has elements of mystery, romance, and a slice of life all at once. The characters and writing style pull all the pieces together in a way I found myself missing when I wasn’t reading. I honestly put off finishing this book because I didn’t want it to be over.
Profile Image for Cassie (eclectically.bookish.cassie).
387 reviews8 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 23, 2026
3.25 stars

Shay and Andrew are having an east coast island wedding. It's the 1970s and Shay has just left an increasingly well-known cult. Her hair is starting to grow back after being shaved, her fiancé's wealthy family is paying for island improvements, including repainting the interior of the local inn. Everything seems to be going well, except for some of the odd occurrences throughout wedding week (broken windows, pests—all rowdy kids or coincidence, right?)... Except for the secrets her brother, William, is keeping. Except for the unresolved feelings her friend, Joel, is holding. Except for the full story of Shay's time at Synanon and whether cult members may still be keeping an eye on her.

I liked this one, but didn't love it. The characters were interesting and layered. The family dynamics were complicated and messy. The narration was great with three different voice actors performing the parts of Shay, William, and Joel. The pacing is slow and the plot unfolds gradually. There's a bit of mystery and intrigue to it, but it's not a thriller and does not lead readers into a huge reveal at the end. The ending feels a bit anti-climactic, but in a way that fits with the story.

I don't really have any big complaints about this one, except that I wanted a little more resolve for all of the characters. We hear memories of their pasts, but the entire novel occurs over the course of one week, so there isn't really a big chance for them to develop or grow. I'd like to see where this group of family and friends ends up 5 years from now. I also might have clocked more development and made more connections if I'd had the print in front of me in addition to the audiobook.

Overall, I liked the 1970s setting, the multiple points of view, the complex family, and the look at wealth and belonging. If any of that piques your interest, this could be a great read for you.

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the advance listener copy and the opportunity to read early.
Profile Image for O'Dell (Just Read it Already).
702 reviews28 followers
July 8, 2026
I received an advance copy of this book courtesy of the publisher. All thoughts are my own.

I feel like I've not been picking great books lately. I went into this one expecting a juicy mystery with cult creepiness and maybe a few chills. Instead, I was bored and tuned out for a lot of it.

Set on a remote island off Virginia, family and friends gather for Shay's wedding to her fiance Andrew. Everyone is quietly buzzing about the fact that Shay recently left a headline making cult, and nobody can figure out why someone with her background would have joined. The story is told from three perspectives, Shay, her brother William, and her longtime friend Joel, and as the wedding approaches, William and Joel start pulling at the threads of what actually happened to her.

The writing is genuinely good, and I appreciated the multiple perspectives. The problem is I finished it and struggled to figure out what the book was actually trying to say.

William was the only character I really connected with, and honestly his sections were the most interesting part of the book. This is a guy who comes home, discovers his aunt has died, and still goes to the wedding and tells everyone she simply chose not to come. That's such a specific, unsettling choice, and I wanted so much more time inside his head.

The cult storyline, which should have been the engine of this whole book, just sort of sits there. It never became the central mystery it was clearly set up to be nor was it especially creepy. It was like a threat that just fizzled.

I listened to this one, and the narration team of Katharine Chin, Peter Cross, and Evan Sibley did a great job, fully inhabiting their characters. Even so, my mind kept drifting while I listened.

Overall, this one just did not click for me.
1,250 reviews54 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
June 9, 2026
Thanks to NetGalley and Manilla for the advanced copy of this title in return for an honest review.

I own a copy of Rowan's book The Divorcees but haven't read it yet, so she was a new author for me.

There are quite a lot of characters and interweaving stories to keep on top of so you have to have your wits about you.

The synopsis made it sound like a thriller and I suppose it is, in a way. It's a quiet, mysterious, suspense novel more than an actual thriller. So there's no real all-guns-blazing thrill, it's more psychological than that. Which isn't a negative, I like slow thrillers and fast thrillers. But it did make the overall story a bit slow for the most part, and then everything seemed to happen in the last 20% or so. But the ending worked well.

It focusses more on the characters than the plot - which I generally prefer - but I felt on this occasion there were just too many characters to focus on, which meant I couldn't invest in any so wasn't fussed by what happened to them. There was no standout one or two to focus on.

I think the isolated island setting added to the mysterious suspense feeling so that was a big tick. The island itself becomes a character because of the atmosphere Rowan has created.

There is a lot to like about this book and I can see other people really loving it - and I will definitely be reading The Divorcees sooner rather than later. But there were a few issues for me. The slow pacing is one yes, but the main one is the characters. None of them are standout enough to carry a quite minimalist plot, which meant I didn't have much investment in it. I think it's got the bones of a great story but it just needs a bit more meat to it to really impress me.
Profile Image for Annabel Pickard.
19 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 29, 2026
3.5 🌟 rounded to 4

“She wasn't soft like William; she fancied herself tough in the way men were tough, not so easily hurt.”

A fabulous holiday read, the tension tantalisingly builds as we see guests flock to Wakefield Island to celebrate the wedding of Shay and Andrew. But are they all there to bear witness to the wedding of the season, or to see for themselves whether Shay has really walked away from the cult that changed her life?

The opening chapter has a staccato rhythm as Beaird sets the scene in photography style snapshots. From then on the wedding weekend unfolds through the eyes of three narrators: Shay (the ex cult member come bride to be), William (her vulnerable and lonely younger brother), and Joel (the best friend who is so obviously in love with the bride).

I loved the build up of tension and how the story unfolded piece by piece. The character development was also brilliantly executed. We go from seeing Shay through everybody else’s judgemental eyes to understanding what drove her to the cult, how and why she escaped, and the heartbreaking realisation that she isn’t the young woman just “going along” with Andrew’s meticulous plans, but that she has chosen the path she believes will hurt the least amount of people.

Beneath the shiny facade of the Synanon Cult the underlying themes of the novel are grief, relationships and survival.
I only wish the cult had been explored a little more; but maybe that’s the history major in my wanting far more history in a historical fiction novel (there’s never too much).
Profile Image for Aleesha Williams.
202 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 14, 2026
🎙️ Narration Review

First listen from all three narrators for me! One thing I appreciated right away was how distinct the voices felt. Joel and Carmen could not sound more different if they tried! Joel has a much deeper, more traditionally "manly" voice while Carmen's is noticeably softer and younger, which made it easy to settle into the POV shifts. Katharine Chin captured Shae perfectly…reserved, thoughtful, intelligent, and carrying so much emotion beneath the surface. A lot of Shae's story relies on subtle character work and Katharine handled it beautifully.

📚 Story Review

The cult here begins as a rehabilitation facility, which immediately adds an interesting layer to the story. The narrative follows Joel and Will in the days leading up to a wedding, while Shae's chapters mostly look backward, slowly revealing how she became involved with the group in the first place. This is definitely a character driven slow burn. In fact, the pacing reminded me a lot of historical fiction, not because of the setting, but because the book is more interested in people, relationships, motivations, and emotional growth. The conversations between Will and his mother felt especially authentic. Those scenes had the kind of messy honesty that makes family dynamics so compelling to read.

This won't be the right fit for readers looking for a fast paced thriller about cults, but if you enjoy women's fiction, layered characters, complicated relationships, and watching a story slowly unfold, it's absolutely worth the listen!
Profile Image for Aysia.
104 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 19, 2026
I was excited for this after a brief read of the description: cults and secrets at a wedding! I mean what more could a person want. That said, I was kind of disappointed in the execution of the novel. For most of it, I was honestly bored and didn't really care about the characters or the story. I really enjoyed the multi-perspective narration and the narrators themselves did a great job with what they were given.

Tenderness by Rowan Beaird takes place at the wedding weekend of Shay and Andrew as they bring their families and friends together at an island owned by Andrew's family. In the story we get Shay's perspective, along with her brother William's and her college friend/lover Joel's. Shay has recently departed from the Synanon cult, William is holding a family secret close to his chest, and Joel is trying to prove to everyone (including himself) that he is no longer in love with Shay. A lot of secrets are both held and shared, mysterious people show up to the island, and plot pieces seem to just fizzle out rather than become resolved.

I feel like this novel has the bones to really be something interesting, it just fell flat for me. I was finding myself listening not to enjoy it, just to get it over with.

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for an advanced copy of this audiobook in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Dev (lit.lark).
502 reviews19 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
June 29, 2026
Thank you to Macmillan audio for the early audiobook copy!

I really enjoyed this book. I think my favorite part was the setting. The island is a bit unsettling, and there's an ominous undertone to the entire book, just because of where it's taking place. It was just the right amount of unsettling.

Each POV had a distinct voice and I enjoyed the way the way the author wove their stories together, both past and present. This is not a book that has explosive action or jaw dropping scenes, but it's a wonderful display of humans and incredibly character driven. I loved all their secrets coming out slowly throughout this book. Despite there not being huge dynamic moments in this story, my attention was so focused on learning more about these people and wondering how the wedding weekend would go.


NARRATION: this narration was wonderful. Each narrator did a wonderful job capturing the essence of who they were voicing, and they felt like perfect matches for their characters. It made it really easy to follow along.

My only wish was for a little bit more on the actual cult. I would have loved a deeper dive into it. I do believe that was the author's choice to leave us wanting more, though.

If you like slowly paced, very character driven stories, this might be one you should pick up!
Profile Image for ShersBooks.
43 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 27, 2026
Audiobook Version

Tenderness brings together a lot of interesting elements, blending intricate family dynamics and a complex love triangle with a determined cult leader to create a compelling premise. The storyline is told from three perspectives: Shay (the main female protagonist), her brother William, and their longtime friend Joel.

Where the novel lost some of its momentum for me was in its pacing and depth. Given the high-stakes themes, I wanted a racing heart, a page-turner and perhaps even some tears, but the emotional intensity didn't quite deliver. Because of that, staying fully invested until the end was a bit of a challenge.

However, the audiobook narration by Evan Sibley, Katharine Chin, and Pete Cross truly brought the story to life. Having three distinct narrators for the three main points of view was the absolute chef’s kiss, giving each character, literally, their own voice.

Overall, Tenderness is a well-written novel with a great foundation, anchored by the standout sibling bond between Shay and William, and the deep history and love found in Joel.

Thank you Netgalley and Macmillan Audio for the advanced listening copy, the opinions expressed are my own.
Profile Image for Mari.
100 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 5, 2026
“Tenderness” by Rowan Beaird is set around a wedding on a small island in the 1970s, where the bride is trying to start fresh after leaving a controversial cult. The story’s point of view moves between her, her brother and a close friend, gradually building a picture of their shared past—old loyalties, regrets and things left unsaid—while a quiet sense of tension grows as the wedding approaches and it becomes clear the past hasn’t quite stayed in the past.

What I really loved is how calm it all felt – even though the various story lines are anything but calm. The writing has this steady, unhurried flow and I genuinely enjoyed spending time with the characters, getting to know them and finding out more. It was difficult to stop listening once I got into the flow. Telling the story from three perspectives works beautifully together and gives a more rounded sense of everything without feeling repetitive.

The audiobook is just as good. Having three narrators for the three viewpoints makes it really easy to follow and adds to that sense of being properly inside each character’s head. Overall, a really absorbing book.

Thank you to Macmillan Audio, NetGalley and Rowan Beaird for an advance listening copy of this book.
Profile Image for Maureen Hester.
42 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 4, 2026
Tenderness by Rowan Beaird was a bit of a letdown for me, and I give it 2.5 stars (rounded up to 3). Initially, Tenderness caught my attention because I thought the 70s setting with the dark specter of a cult hanging over a wedding weekend could lend to a very unsettling read. Unfortunately, this fell flat. Although the book was advertised as just "fiction," and not in thriller/suspense/mystery genre, the book description really gave the vibe of something that would be suspenseful. It seemed as if the cult would play a more central role in the plot (which I would've liked!), but the book was really more focused on the complexities of family dynamics. This was an EXTREMELY slow burn, and often I found the pace to be quite sluggish. If I am being honest, there was no point at which I was bummed to have to put this down.

Although the story itself wasn't the most enthralling, I will say that Beaird really does a great job laying out a scene and painting a picture of the WHERE. I felt like I viewed the whole 70s island setting painted in sepia tones, and I did appreciate the artistry.
Profile Image for Abigail E.
540 reviews26 followers
May 24, 2026
••• ARC/ALC REVIEW •••
Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ (3.25)
Do I recommend: it’s fine!
***Out July 21***

Reminder that I enjoy a three-star read but they don’t stick with me long! Not mad I read it but also could have lived without it.

This book had an interesting premise (we’re on an island for a wedding, and the bride recently left a cult..but did she TRULY escape?!), but the execution left me wanting more. I don’t need all plot lines to be nearly wrapped up (I truly LOVE an ambiguous ending) but this one seemed to forget about some things entirely.

The narrators kept me listening and did an excellent job with bringing their characters to life. This is a slow-burn, character driven, literary fiction with a slight mystery vibe so if that sounds appealing to you I say go for it!

Thank you to MacMillan Audio for the free copy in exchange for my honest review as part of the Early Listeners program!

#MacAudio2026
1 review
Review of advance copy received from Author
February 5, 2026
I am constantly in awe of Rowan's talent as a storyteller! This book is suspenseful, romantic, a little scary at times, and an expert study in grief and how vulnerable we truly are as humans. It illustrates the lengths we will go to for the people we love, good or bad. Where do we put all that love we have for someone when they're out of our life? Each character goes on a journey to answer that question and I was hooked immediately.

I absolutely loved the ending and wish I could continue reading about the characters, but then it would be a full blown TV show and not this gorgeous snapshot of a wedding where everyone has a secret (although, I would definitely watch that TV show...someone call Bob Netflix). Will be recommending this book to everyone I know!
67 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 21, 2026
Tenderness was super interesting. I usually like when fiction brings in something from history, and while this one did that, it’s FAR more a study of our three main characters than the real cult one briefly joined. I’m still thinking about how fully a weekend can capture a person. Do I REALLY know these characters, or did I just take in a snapshot of the most extreme versions of themselves? Is it all the same? This one leaves you with a lot to wonder about, but I’m okay with that. The narration and alternating perspectives are woven together meaningfully and they keep the pace going. Recommend for fans of locked-room thrillers who want to dip into general.

Thank you to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for the ALC. This one is out 7/21.
Profile Image for Bernadette.
345 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 18, 2026
I really enjoyed Rowan Beaird's last book so I was super excited to read her latest book. I love anything related to cults and family drama. This one was really interesting and very character driven. The story centers on alternating chapters based on three different people. There is a lot of suspense throughout the book ! You will keep wondering how it will end. The writing is really beautifully done. The narrators really did a phenomenal job of bringing each character to life. Give this one a read.


Thank you Netgalley and Macmillan Audio for the audiobook in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Michelle.
766 reviews7 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 16, 2026
I really liked this book!! Set in the '70s on a remote island for a wedding, the bride has recently left Synanon (a cult), her brother arrives with a big secret, a college friend/jilted ex of sorts brings a new girlfriend, the groom's family is quite wealthy, and there are quite a few more things being said and unsaid amongst the wedding guests and island dwellers over the long wedding weekend. The book feels mostly calm and measured, slowish pacing, with an undercurrent of mystery and a feeling like the other shoe is going to drop at any moment. There are multiple POVs, and the audiobook is well read with different and distinct narrators.
Profile Image for Jackie Trimble.
487 reviews7 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 28, 2026
I received this as an audiobook from Netgalley. The description seemed like it would be more. I don't know if it was the narrators, or if this is just mandatory for literary fiction, but it was just a downer. I forced myself to finish it yesterday so that I could just take this off my "reading" list.

I hate when mental illness is passed off as "insightful" or "meaningful". Yeesh - this book was filled with characters who had serious things going on in their lives, probably triggered by their father's bipolar disease turned suicide.

Perhaps others would like it, but I just don't need that sadness in my life.
Profile Image for Terri.
2,496 reviews52 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
July 1, 2026
I listened to the audio version of this book. There were three narrators--Evan Sibley, Katherine Chin and Pete Cross. Their narrations were awesome, but I just could not get into this book.

I felt like it was really slow, especially in the beginning. I just kept wondering where it was going and what the point was. It was about Shay's wedding on a remote island, but I didn't feel like I ever got to know Shay. The most developed character seemed to be William. He has a secret from the very beginning of the book, but even that doesn't seem to really be expanded on when the secret comes out. This just wasn't for me.

Thanks to Macmillan Audio for the copy. All thoughts are my own.

Profile Image for Abby.
65 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
July 6, 2026
Tenderness by Rowan Beaird, narrated by Evan Sibley, Katharine Chin, and Pete Cross, was a tough one for me to get through. The premise was interesting, cult history and family secrets, but the beginning was very slow and I never felt connected to the characters. I kept finding myself wondering where the story was going, and unfortunately it never quite grabbed me.

I feel a little bad saying this, but I honestly could not tell you much about what this book was about by the end. It just did not land for me, and I wonder if revisiting it at a different time might change my experience entirely.
1,101 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 6, 2026
Many thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the free audiobook in exchange for my honest review. The cast of narrators, Evan Sibley; Katharine Chin; Pete Cross, did a wonderful job reading this story!

A wedding on a remote island leads to secrets being revealed among the families.

I was originally interested in the book as the bride, in the story recently left a cult, so I thought this could be an interesting story. However, the story fell flat and I had a hard time remaining engaged. Overall an okay listen that was a bit if a let down.
Profile Image for Stephanie Peterman.
155 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 22, 2026
i really wanted to love Tenderness. cult history, family secrets, messy wedding weekend dynamics on a private island – on paper, it had all the ingredients for something juicy, but the execution didn't quite match the promise. i found myself detached from the characters and underwhelmed by the stakes. several plot threads felt like they were introduced with intrigue, only to drift away or fizzle out before they could really land.

thank you to netgalley and the publisher for the ALC in exchange for my honest opinion.
Profile Image for Greg Zimmerman.
1,020 reviews239 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
June 21, 2026
This is sooooo so good. Beaird is a supremely talented writer and this slow-burn mystery with elements of class clash, cults, and forbidden love will certainly scratch your summer-read itch.

Check out this absolute banger of a first line, too: “Shay was no longer in the cult, but still, it made her wedding guests nervous that she was bringing them to an island.” Talk about being more than a little unsettled right off the bat!

I get to interview Beaird for the Chicago Review of Books this week, so much more on this great book later.
Profile Image for Becca.
418 reviews31 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 1, 2026
Oh, this was just wonderful. The sense of place was palpable, the characters were rich with nuance and trying their very best (I love a character who is trying their best. The narrator switching was used thoughtfully, keeping the pace steady without slowing things down. There was such intimacy to each of the narrations, both in writing and performance-- I especially loved Evan Sibley's Joel.
Definitely in my top three of the year so far!
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