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Palm Beach Confidential by Susannah Marren

A sharp, insightful novel about women who build beautiful lives over compromises and buried truths — and what happens when the ground finally shifts beneath them.

In Palm Beach, a family can look flawless from the outside and still be coming apart behind the hedges. The trick is knowing how to smile through it, where to sit, what to wear and which rumors to pretend not to hear. Lucinda Barrows has spent decades perfecting that art. In Susannah Marren’s Palm Beach Confidential, the fourth book in her Palm Beach Novels series, Lucinda has money, influence, a thriving family business and the kind of social position that must be defended almost hourly. What she also has is a secret from Kesgrave, the Panhandle town she left behind — and that secret is no longer willing to stay buried.

The novel opens with Lucinda’s youngest daughter, Raleigh, far from Palm Beach and in a state of emotional freefall. She is separated from her husband, Alex, and is selling painted shells in Kesgrave, trying to outrun the consequences of her affair with Samuel, the late husband of her eldest sister, Maribelle. Raleigh’s son, Caleb, is back in Palm Beach, and Alex is preparing to fight for custody and alimony. Raleigh may be grieving the life she ruined, but Lucinda has a more practical concern: Raleigh needs to come home before she loses the divorce and damages the Barrows family brand in the process.

That brand matters to Lucinda. Her sixtieth birthday celebrations are approaching, and she wants her family arranged as beautifully as the flowers, menus and table settings. Maribelle, now living in California, must return and play the loyal daughter. Caroline, the dutiful middle sister and CEO of Barrows, must help keep everyone in line. Raleigh and Maribelle must stop behaving like women who have a very real reason not to speak. In Lucinda’s world, a broken family is bad enough. A visibly broken family is intolerable.

The Past Comes Calling

Then the letters begin to arrive. Addressed to Lucinda by her old name, they arrive like little bombs from the past, forcing her to remember her hometown friends Ruth-Ann and Bryant, her first husband Reed, Bryant’s boyfriend and Ruth-Ann’s brother Bud Humphreys, and the murky origins of the Barrows fortune. The letters seem to come from someone who knows a secret Lucinda thought she had buried long ago in Kesgrave. These are not simple blackmail notes, though. They read like testimony from someone who has carried too much for too long. Each one chips away at Lucinda’s composure, and Marren uses them to give the novel a steady undertow: the sense that Lucinda’s past is about to undermine her present.

The plot moves between present-day Palm Beach and flashbacks to Lucinda’s earlier life; it’s a contrast that chronicles Lucinda’s transformation from poverty and obscurity to wealth and social standing. Marren knows the codes of the island — the clubs, charity boards, locker-room gossip, dress expectations, birthday luncheons and unspoken hierarchies. But she also understands that such details are not merely decorative. They are the rules of a social game Lucinda believes she has won. When those rules start to shift against her, her panic becomes visceral.

The Cost of Keeping Up Appearances

What elevates Palm Beach Confidential above a standard family-secrets novel is that Lucinda is not written as a simple villain. She can be controlling, vain and shockingly unsentimental, especially with her daughters. Yet she is also a woman who remembers what it meant to have no money, no leverage and no clean exit. Her obsession with status is ugly, but it comes as much from fear as from vanity. Her decisions come from a place of constriction, whether due to gender or class. Marren does not ask readers to forgive Lucinda so much as to understand the machinery inside her.

The daughters are caught in that machinery too. Raleigh is fragile, self-involved and genuinely wounded. Maribelle has every right to be furious, but anger has become part of how she survives. Caroline, seemingly the steady one, is tired of managing everyone else’s crises while pretending the family company and family itself are still under control. Their sisterhood is messy in a way that feels recognizable: affection curdled by ingrained family roles, rivalry sharpened by proximity, loyalty that can disappear when pain gets too specific.

Bryant may be the novel’s quietest complication. Her bond with Lucinda has lasted since girlhood, but it is not an innocent friendship. It contains devotion, envy, silence and a long history of looking away. Through Bryant and Ruth-Ann, the novel widens its focus beyond mothers and daughters to the bargains women make with one another — the secrets they keep to survive, and the damage done when keeping them becomes a way of life.

The Reveal That Rewrites Everything

By the time the truth finally comes into view, the revelation does more than explain what happened in Kesgrave. It recasts the family’s rise, Lucinda’s terror, Bryant’s sorrow, Ruth-Ann’s absence and Raleigh’s dangerous new romance in a sharper, sadder light. The ending does not offer easy justice. Instead, it shows how one decision can become an inheritance, passed from mother to daughters until someone is forced to look directly at what everyone else has tried to stage around.

All in all, Palm Beach Confidential is a sharp, insightful novel about women who build beautiful lives over compromises and buried truths — and what happens when the ground finally shifts beneath them.


About Susannah Marren

Susannah Marren is the author of Between the Tides, A Palm Beach Wife, A Palm Beach Scandal, and Maribelle’s Shadow and the pseudonym for Susan Shapiro Barash, who has written fourteen nonfiction books. Those titles include Estranged: How Strained Female Friendships Are Mended or Ended, Tripping the Prom Queen, You’re Grounded Forever but First Let’s Go Shopping, and A Passion for More. For over 20 years, she taught gender studies in the Writing Department at Marymount Manhattan College and has guest-taught creative nonfiction at The Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence College. Susan’s books focus on the gender divide, how women are positioned in our society, and their innermost feelings about themselves as daughters, mothers, sisters, friends, wives, mothers-in-law, daughters-in-law, rivals, colleagues, and lovers.

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Palm Beach Confidential by Susannah Marren
Publish Date: June 2, 2026
Genre: Fiction
Author: Susannah Marren
Page Count: 300 pages
Publisher: Meridian Editions
ISBN: 9781959170334
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