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STARRED REVIEW
March 11, 2025

A mother’s intuition plays a central role in two new thrillers

Clever Little Thing and All the Other Mothers Hate Me examine the triumphs and trials of motherhood.
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It’s no easy feat to write an equally comical and compelling novel about a missing child, but Sarah Harman accomplishes just that in her wild romp of a debut, All the Other Mothers Hate Me

Florence Grimes was once the lead singer in a successful girl band, although those days are long behind this young American single mom. She and her son barely squeak by in London, although 10-year-old Dylan goes to a posh school paid for by her ex-husband. Florence never envisioned a life of “watching reality TV by myself all day, delivering balloon arches and dreaming of a musical comeback.” Everything changes, however, when Dylan’s bully—wealthy Alfie Risby—goes missing on a field trip, and some suspect Dylan is to blame. “If I’d had to choose a boy in Dylan’s class to vanish in broad daylight, Alfie would have been at the top of my list,” Florence confesses.

She soon teams up with another “outsider” mom at Dylan’s school, newly arrived Jenny Choi, a high-powered attorney and single mom to twin boys. Her sons “were a thirty-sixth birthday present to myself,” Jenny tells Flo. “Right after I made partner.” These two characters could hardly be more different, and their determined efforts have something of a Thelma and Louise vibe as they find themselves in increasingly unlikely—and dangerous—situations. 

The success of Harman’s debut derives squarely from her narrative and plotting skills, which propel readers through the many twists and turns of Florence’s sleuthing attempts to figure out what’s happened to Alfie and prove Dylan innocent. Florence can be a hilariously maddening, certainly not always admirable character, but she will keep readers entertained and intrigued. Seasoned mystery readers may pick up on some hints to the case’s solution along the way, but even so, plenty of surprises remain. 

All the Other Mothers Hate Me introduces an unforgettable bumbling detective, and hopefully Florence will find other mysteries to solve. Whatever the case, Sarah Harman is a writer to be watched.

Debut author Sarah Harman proves she’s a writer to watch with her hilarious mystery debut, All the Other Mothers Hate Me.
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There are so many plot twists in Hannah Echlin’s Clever Little Thing that it’s impossible for a synopsis to truly do the story justice—this book will genuinely keep readers guessing, wondering what is a mother’s intuition and what could be perinatal psychosis.

Charlotte knows that her 8-year-old daughter Stella isn’t like other children. Stella can’t stand certain sounds, has sensory issues with tight-fitting or scratchy clothes, and goes into an apocalyptic tantrum Charlotte calls “freak-out mode” when she’s overstimulated. But Stella is also reading vastly above her grade level, and is curious about the world in a way that makes her precocious and unique.

But after Stella’s babysitter, Blanka, quits her job with a vague text message, things begin to change. Charlotte notices her daughter accepts change more readily and even begins to change physically, gaining weight rapidly. Alarmingly, Stella also seems to be regressing in her reading skills and her once avid curiosity is gone.

Teachers, counselors and even Charlotte’s husband, Pete, assure her that Stella is merely changing as she grows, and that she should be happy her daughter is turning into a more typical child. Charlotte isn’t so sure: To her, Stella is an entirely different child, almost like a changeling. As Stella continues to evolve, Charlotte begins to feel like she’s the only one who can see the truth about her daughter. However, she’s also in the midst of a high-risk pregnancy, a situation that others seem to think may be the true source of her anxiety.

The book is entirely narrated from Charlotte’s point of view, and her rising sense of panic and the “wrongness” about her daughter is acutely palpable. Still, Echlin keeps the reader removed enough that they’ll begin to wonder if the pressures of motherhood to a challenging child (Pete is a rather absent father) and a difficult pregnancy are clouding Charlotte’s judgment.

Clever Little Thing is an impressively twisty thriller, but it’s also a testament to a mother’s intuition and her love for her child exactly as she is, not as society wants her to be. Sometimes spooky, sometimes rage-inducing, Clever Little Thing concludes with a truly unexpected, impossible to predict ending.

Clever Little Thing is an impressively twisty thriller, but it’s also a testament to a mother’s intuition and love for her child.

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