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Prom Mom

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i really didn’t care for this and at a lot of points it seemed very predictable, cheesy, and full of cliches which is a shame because the premise was very interesting!

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This started off with such a traumatic and difficult event that really set the tone for the book. Amber returns to her hometown of Baltimore to face her past and build a future. Fear of always being know as Prom Mom, the girl who killed her baby on Prom Night, Amber has kept tabs on her now apparently happily married prom date Joe Simpson, the guy who had left her that night to chase the girl he really liked. Amber served time in juvenile detention and Joe escaped the brunt of the scandal because, well he was a really good guy and just a kid at the time.
With dual timelines and POV, this takes you back to the prom in the 90's to the Pandemic in 2020. The story was a slow build to Joe and Amber coming face to face for the first time in over 20 years. The connection of their youth has transcended time. And Joe asks for Amber's help once again. This was slow moving and character driven. You could feel the undercurrent and knew there were things at play that had yet to be revealed. I found myself confused throughout the book as to what Amber was ultimately looking for from Joe, and how she really felt about him. And even as the plot came to its climax with its twists and revelations, I was still confused.
Thank you NetGalley and William Morrow Books for my arc.

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This story is such a slow burn that you aren't even sure you're reading a thriller until you get close to the end, but it is as well written, carefully crafted and astute as any Laura Lippman book, and when the twists come, they are stunning.
In 1997, Amber Glass gave birth and allegedly killed her baby in a hotel bathroom during prom, earning her the tabloid nickname "Prom Mom". After she was released from juvenile detention at age 18, she left Baltimore and has built a life for herself in New Orleans, but still pines over the baby's father, Joe Simpson, even though he is now happily married to his soulmate, Meredith. When Amber returns to Baltimore to deal with her step-father's estate, she decides to stay and open an art gallery, telling herself she is curious whether she can re-establish a life in her hometown untainted by her infamy as Prom Mom. Her path crosses Joe's, and as the COVID-19 pandemic hits the U.S., they feel out a friendship that Joe hides from his wife, adding to the number of "balls" he has to juggle. That's all I'm going to say about the plot because I don't want to spoil it for anyone! Told from the perspectives of Amber, Joe, and Meredith, this is a strong, character-driven story that held my interest from start to finish.

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4.5 stars! This novel had me totally confused until the very end and I loved every minute of it. This is an ultimate revenge book. 20 years ago, Amber Glass gave birth to a baby she didn't know she was carrying. In a hotel room. At her junior prom. She was charged with the baby's murder but as a minor (and because the baby was only 25 weeks), Amber ended up serving time as a juvenile and then getting the hell out of Baltimore. "Prom Mom" is her new moniker and it's not something she can easily outrun.
Her date, Joe Simpson, known as "Cad Dad" got off much better with the press and society. Throughout the book, is the refrain, Joe is a good guy. But is he? His wife thinks so, His mistress certainly thinks so. And even Amber, after everything, thinks Joe is great.
The way Lippman weaves this story together is thoughtful with many meandering turns. You'll probably wonder where this whole story is going, but you're definitely going to want to stick with it. As a Baltimore native, I love Lippman's work and can always picture the places she sets her scenes. It's even more fun reading her work as a Marylander.

*Special thanks to NetGalley and William Morrow for this e-arc.*

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This book was weird. I’m kind of indifferent about it? It was very slow and very character driven, which is normally not what I like. I found the first half of the book to be slightly boring, and I’m not a fan of COVID in books. I lived it, I don’t want to read about it either. The politics also seemed out of place? I was really sure why it was super relevant that Joe is racist and voted for Trump? We understood her was a piece of shit person without that? It just felt like too many “pop culture “ references at one time.

I found none of the characters to be enjoyable nor did I root for any of them. I was actually actively hoping for the demise of them all. It’s hard to be really interested in a novel where not one character is worth rooting for.

The book did make me feel uneasy for the majority of it, as you can sense a cat and mouse game going on but you’re not sure what the outcome will be. There was an underlying suspense and waiting for the next shoe to drop. I did feel like it took too long to get to the “action.” The ending was interesting, but in my opinion too quick. I would’ve liked more explanation, for it to be fleshed out a little more.

It was just okay. I can see some people loving this, but it definitely will not be for everyone.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC

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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Prom Mom
Author: Laura Lippman
Source: NetGalley
Publish Date: July 25, 2023

We lost power recently and I decided to pick one of my NetGalley reads to wait it out in the heat. I picked Prom Mom by Laura Lippman and I assure you this book was a surprise…a good surprise. I think people are going to read this and think of a variety of genres, but I would actually call this a thriller, crime, or mystery novel. Regardless, it’s pretty damn good. We start off with a VERY naïve high school tutor, Amber, getting talked into s-e-x by the handsome Joe who has recently broken up with his girlfriend. Amber subsequently talks Joe into taking her to their high school prom since she has been putting out the goods and he doesn’t have a better option. It pretty much goes south from there. I won’t disclose the story because I want you to enjoy the suspense and shock. Years later, Amber (gorgeous but still carting around that scarlet letter) returns to her hometown and reconnects with Joe who is married yet still a player. I read this book in a hasty one-day blur because I was hooked. I really liked it and this coming from someone who ditched her boyfriend at prom many moons ago. Things could have been worse for me. It’s pretty rough for Amber. Read this! #PromMom #thriller #fiction #mystery #shame #crime ##suspense #adultfiction #contemporary @lauramlippman @netgalley @williammorrowbooks
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I received a complimentary copy of this ARC. The opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own. Thank you to William Morrow, NetGalley, and the author for the opportunity to read this novel. Pub. Date: July 25, 2023.
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This book is a very slow burn. And I mean VERY slow. If you like that, then continue reading my review. If you don't, then this book might not be for you.

The main characters here are Amber, Joe, Meredith and Jordan. Amber and Joe went to prom together and it turned out to be a tragic night for which Amber paid the price. Meredith and Joe are married and have been for 20 years. Jordan is Joe's current mistress. These four spend about 90% of the book circling each other and playing cat and mouse games. But who's playing who exactly and to what end you won't get to find out until about 95% of the way through. For me, that's too long to wait for the pay off and it was over too quick. I did enjoy the process of trying to figure out exactly what was going on and why some of the smaller details were important, but overall this moved a little too slow for me to give a great rating.

I found the four main people quite interesting. Amber, Joe and Meredith get the most time in the book and they are all about evenly fleshed out. Even though they've all done questionable things in the past, you do find yourself feeling sympathy for them, particularly Amber. Meredith made too many assumptions about her parents and then lived her life according to them, which I found a little irritating. And there were many times when Joe was a spineless idiot and I wanted to smack him.

Then there's Jordan. There was not one thing about this character that I liked. She was the cliche of a needy annoying mistress. I really didn't get what she was trying to do.

Overall, this is an interesting read, especially if you like character driven stories where there's not a ton of plot. I did like the ending, but as I said it took too long to come and was over too fast. I didn't really get to savor it.

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Laura Lippman is a favorite writer of mine, ever since the Tess Monaghan series was first published. I've read most of her other novels along the way and this is one of my favorites. I promise that you do not have to be familiar with Baltimore to appreciate it as a character all its own when Lippman uses her her hometown as the backdrop to a novel. She makes you want to do a Lippman tour of Baltimore. And my favorite museum ever places a small role in this (The American Visionary Arts Museum, AVAM). But I digress... In Prom Mom, Amber Glass goes to the Towson High School prom with Joe Simpson, a guy she tutored in French. At his house. Often when his parents were not home. Joe has spent all of senior year mourning being dumped by his girlfriend, Katilyn. Things take an unexpected turn when Amber, who becomes violently ill at prom, goes to her hotel room and gives birth to a baby who dies. She is accused of killing the baby. Joe is a "cad" for not checking on her before he took off with his ex and Prom Mom and Cad Dad go as viral as you could get before the Internet took off. (Think tabloids). Now, of course, their past can be found easily when you google them.

Now, over 20 years later Amber has returned to Baltimore from her home in New Orleans, where she works in a gallery, to settle her stepfather's estate. She's curious about Joe but not sure whether she wants to meet him. She has taken an interest in "outsider art," collecting and selling it on Etsy. Much of her collection is by prison inmates. She decides to stay in Baltimore awhile and to open a gallery in an odd place, a strip mall near her childhood home. We also meet Joe, also back in Baltimore, with his plastic surgeon wife Meredith. The are, from their own accounts, happily married, intentionally childless and living in a veritable mansion because Joe got it for a bargain at an auction. I cannot give more information on the plot because of spoilers, but I will mention how much fun Lippmann's take on people during COVID-19 shutdowns was. She captures the mood of the six foot social distancing, the avoidance of restaurants, the playing tennis in cold weather, the paper goods wars, vaccination frenzy. Good characters, if not super likable in a few cases. Joe Simpson is morally flawed and beloved by many. He spends lots of time thinking about how great he is and making excuses for himself and how he really needs to do better, but..., there's always a but. Amber Glass is smart, creative, somewhat vulnerable and interesting. Meredith is kind of two dimensional but on purpose, so she's also a great character. A side character in Louisiana, Amber's boss/friend Miss Margaret is fun.

Now, over 20 years later Amber has returned to Baltimore from her home in New Orleans, where she works in a gallery, to settle her stepfather's estate. She's curious about Joe but not sure whether she wants to meet him. She has taken an interest in "outsider art," collecting and selling it on Etsy. Much of her collection is by prison inmates. She decides to stay in Baltimore awhile and to open a gallery in an odd place, a strip mall near her childhood home. We also meet Joe, also back in Baltimore, with his plastic surgeon wife Meredith. The are, from their own accounts, happily married, intentionally childless and living in a veritable mansion because Joe got it for a bargain at an auction. I cannot give more information on the plot because of spoilers, but I will mention how much fun Lippmann's take on people during COVID-19 shutdowns was. She captures the mood of the six foot social distancing, the avoidance of restaurants, the playing tennis in cold weather, the paper goods wars, vaccination frenzy. Good characters, if not super likable in a few cases. Joe Simpson is morally flawed and beloved by many. He spends lots of time thinking about how great he is and making excuses for himself and how he really needs to do better, but..., there's always a but. Amber Glass is smart, creative, somewhat vulnerable and interesting. Meredith is kind of two dimensional but on purpose, so she's also a great character. A side character in Louisiana, Amber's boss/friend Miss Margaret is fun.

Now, over 20 years later Amber has returned to Baltimore from her home in New Orleans, where she works in a gallery, to settle her stepfather's estate. She's curious about Joe but not sure whether she wants to meet him. She has taken an interest in "outsider art," collecting and selling it on Etsy. Much of her collection is by prison inmates. She decides to stay in Baltimore awhile and to open a gallery in an odd place, a strip mall near her childhood home. We also meet Joe, also back in Baltimore, with his plastic surgeon wife Meredith. The are, from their own accounts, happily married, intentionally childless and living in a veritable mansion because Joe got it for a bargain at an auction. I cannot give more information on the plot because of spoilers, but I will mention how much fun Lippmann's take on people during COVID-19 shutdowns was. She captures the mood of the six foot social distancing, the avoidance of restaurants, the playing tennis in cold weather, the paper goods wars, vaccination frenzy. Good characters, if not super likable in a few cases. Joe Simpson is morally flawed and beloved by many. He spends lots of time thinking about how great he is and making excuses for himself and how he really needs to do better, but..., there's always a but. Amber Glass is smart, creative, somewhat vulnerable and interesting. Meredith is kind of two dimensional but on purpose, so she's also a great character. A side character in Louisiana, Amber's boss/friend Miss Margaret is fun. I thoroughly enjoyed Prom Mom from start to finish. Highly recommend.

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Laura Lippman is already an auto buy author for me. Her books are guaranteed to be uniquely twisty. Prom Mom is no exception. I had no idea that the ending was about to happen until it was happening. It was seemingly out of nowhere until I put all the tiny breadcrumbs of hints together as I read the ending.
Thank you to Netgalley and William Morrow for the opportunity to read this in exchange for my honest opinion!

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While the title sets the premise for the story, this book does not focus much on teenage Amber, who gave birth at prom and served time for allegedly killing her newborn. Instead, the story focuses on adult Amber who moves back to her hometown and picks back up with the father of that baby, Joe, who continues to treat Amber poorly. While Amber may now be older and more insightful, her relationship with Joe is still unhealthy and he uses her to get what he needs. This story is high on toxic relationships and low on thrill but will still draw in fans of Lippman’s work.

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I enjoyed the beginning but had a hard time sticking with it in the middle. There was a lot of back and forth timewise. It also would suddenly switch characters and I was confused at times. My favorite part of the story was that it took place in my college town, Towson, Maryland. There were so many locale areas that I recognized and it was a trip down memory lane for me.

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This was really good! No spoilers, but I was thinking something like what happened would happen. I DID NOT see it coming, though, HOW it happened!! Prom Mom is a slow-burn, character driven story that will keep you on the edge. The current events and using actual places in Baltimore made it so I could see and feel the places and things that were happening. I enjoyed reading this book and I highly recommend it. Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for letting me read this ARC in exchange for my honest review.

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WOW! From the opening chapter this book doesn't let up and tells a story I haven't seen before. Flashing between present day and 1997, we learn how Amber received the nickname "Prom Mom" after giving birth and allegedly killing her baby at the prom. Secret pregnancies were a real thing in the late 90s and this is the first book I've read that explores that phenomenon. How Prom Mom got to that moment and everything that comes after is compulsively readable. Will keep you up turning the pages all night!

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📚: Prom Mom by Laura Lippman (@lauramlippman)
⭐️: 4/5

Whoa. What did I just read?

Dark and revenge driven, this book left my jaw on the floor by the end. (In a very good way.)

Amber Glass has returned home to Baltimore after running from city to city, state to state, trying to put her teenage reputation as the “Prom Mom” behind her. The trick to doing so? Avoiding Joe, the “Cad Dad” as the tabloids nicknamed him after their baby is found dead on prom night. (Is this plot out there? Yeah.)

Set in very current times, the second half of this book takes place in 2020-2021, with COVID times as the backdrop. It’s (maybe?) the first book I’ve read with this setting, and sent me back mentally to the days of toilet paper hoarding and vaccine reservation struggles. I know it’s been years, but minus one star for sending me back to that time. (Also a 4 star rating for an ending that, while incredibly twisty, leaves a couple unanswered questions that I would have loved just one more chapter to flesh out.)

Big thanks to @williammorrowbooks via @netgalley for the digital ARC in exchange for an honest review. Prom Mom is out next week on July 25th!

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Although I love mysteries, I’m usually not a huge fan of thrillers/suspense novels. I think this is because in a mystery, the crime usually comes at the beginning and I haven’t developed a relationship with any of the characters, especially the victim. In a thriller, the evil act generally comes at the end, by which time I have generally come to know both the victim(s) and the perpetrator(s). I hate reading an entire book thinking that something bad may be done by or to any of the characters I’ve come to know and even like.

The three main characters, “Prom Mom” Amber, “Cad Dad” Joe, and his wife Meredith, were so well written that I liked and/or identified with all three of them at various points in the novel.The Covid-era setting provided just enough sympathetic detail to pull me further into the plot. So, although I was worried about the ending, about who was going to hurt whom and how—it was fine. A satisfying ending that didn’t make me cringe. And for me that is the mark of good suspense.

Highly recommended, even for hesitant readers of suspense like me!

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with a copy of this novel to read and review.

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3.5 stars

The start of this feels straight out of a tabloid story, a teen gives birth at prom and then kills her baby. But that's only the beginning of the story--this is much more about Amber and Joe, the "couple" (in quotes because he refused to call her his girlfriend) from prom, and their lives twenty years later. Are their lives now what they seem? Was that night what it seemed?
*
The premise and the first half or so of this book really drew me in. I loved getting the perspectives of Amber, Joe, and Joe's wife Meredith 20 years after that fateful prom. It ended up being much more character-driven than I expected and I really liked it. I also liked how interspersed into the more present-day chapters were chapters that gave more set-up on the prom itself - the dress, the corsage, the limo.
*
But at some point, the book seemed to change very dramatically. All of a sudden, those flashback chapters stopped, and it became all about the pandemic (you kinda see it coming, it's set in late 2019 and jumps forward a couple months every chapter). And then there ends up being a good amount of space dedicated to talk about politics...but why? It did nothing to advance the story, and honestly just felt like filler.
*
The ending is great (and bumped up my rating a half star), with a series of twists I didn't expect...although I also wasn't looking for twists because I was largely trying to get through this.
*
This had a lot of potential, but ultimately felt like it was two different books smashed together. I think if it had focused on the prom and the aftermath, it would have been great, and all that extra stuff really didn't need to be there.

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This was an incredibly slow burn and I’m not sure the ending was worth it. My favorite parts were the references to all the Baltimore locations, other than that, this is a forgettable thriller.

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While this book wasn't fast paced at all, I was still intrigued and wanted to know where it was going. I am not sure if it was supposed to be a suspense or thriller or just plain fiction - it was such a slow burn. But the chapters read quick and there was just enough for me to want to keep reading. The characters were interesting - not the most likeable, but I really did want to know more about them. Thank you NetGalley and William Morrow for a digital arc of this title.

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I have been reading Laura Lippman's books since the 90s and I am a fan.

This one was interesting. It was a verrrrrrryy slow burn book, so slow burn that I almost didn't realize it was suspense at all. I truly thought she had switched to writing straight fiction, and that is really most of the story: two people, tied together by a tragedy, then reunited, then coping with the pandemic. And then, oh yeah, there is some stuff at the end.

I think a lot of people will find this maddenly slow. I didn't mind it!

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Read This Book If…you loved Rock Paper Scissors by Alice Feeney!

Please note: this was an ARC provided to me by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

Genre: suspense
Spice Level: 1/5🌶, closed door
Setting: Baltimore
POV: multiple, 3rd person, past tense

What I Thought: I literally don’t know how to talk about this book…It’s like contemporary fiction meets suspenseful thriller? Either way, it was an easy read with a ton of fun, flawed characters. This is very character-heavy and light on suspense, so it would be perfect for someone who wants to give thrillers a try!

Memorable Quote: “You had to love the flaw. People were not flawed; they simply had them. Everyone could be improved.”

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