The Stepfamily by Bonnie Traymore
Building on the success of tense mysteries like Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl (2012), author Bonnie Traymore has crafted a deliciously unsettling domestic thriller with her new novel The Stepfamily.
Laura’s on the verge of living the life she’s always wanted. At the age of twenty-seven, she put her career plans on hold, married handsome widower Peter Foster, settled down in his Silicon Valley home, and helped raise his two children.
Fast forward over a decade and her life feels like a fairytale. Her career is soaring, she and her husband are empty-nesters and Peter’s company is on the verge of an FDA approval that could make them more money than they’d ever dreamed they would have. When a series of freak accidents turns the fairytale into a nightmare however, it becomes clear that someone is out to get her. Is it someone jealous of her success? Or is it perhaps someone more dangerous and even closer to home?
Laura has never been the type to make enemies, but she senses that her husband Peter is keeping secrets. When she starts digging into the family’s past, she only finds that the rabbit hole goes ever deeper. With the walls closing in, she needs to find out why someone would want to harm her…and what really happened to Peter’s first wife.
My favorite aspect of the novel was the character complexity. “Traymore, most recently the author of Little Loose Ends (2022), provides readers with a sympathetic hero in Laura who tends to bury her feelings,” says Kirkus Reviews. Thanks to the unique narration however, readers are able to circumvent Laura’s facade and experience first-hand her thoughts, feelings and development. I also appreciated how cleverly Traymore kept me guessing by writing characters like Peter in a manner that prevents me from solving them too early, something from which other mysteries often suffer.
DELICIOUSLY UNSETTLING
The tension between Laura and her husband Peter is brilliantly crafted, and the way their relationship evolves over the course of the book is a masterclass in development. The investigations involving Laura’s car and the attempts on her life are enthralling, and most importantly logical, which helps keep readers immersed in the story and its stakes.
As I mentioned earlier, the narration style itself is also unique. The chapters alternate between Laura’s first-person perspective and the third-person narration of Peter’s point of view. Opposing points of view (hence my mention of Gillian Flynn’s bestselling Gone Girl) definitely increases the suspense and weaves into the story an adversarial quality that kept me on my toes and left me constantly yearning for the perspective to shift again. Through this quality, Traymore expertly handles reveals and twists and presents a well-paced mystery that always stays one step ahead of its readers.
Traymore’s writing style is truly engaging and the plot is well-crafted, serpentine in its twists and turns and tantalizingly unpredictable. Full of well-developed, nuanced characters that defy traditional notions of good and bad, The Stepfamily is the perfect read for those itching for a thriller that immediately grabs hold and doesn’t let go.