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This was a really solid thriller, exactly the kind of story I’ve come to expect from the author. She’s a really great writer, I love her style and combine that with a compelling and intricate plot and a complex mother/daughter relationship and I was hooked. ​This is a character driven story following Cleo and her mom, Kat who are somewhat estranged when Kat goes missing. You hear from Cleo in the present day and Kat in the weeks leading up to her disappearance until everything merges together in a fairly satisfying conclusion. There is definitely a lot of emotional upheaval here due to their strained relationship and I thought the author did a fantastic job at examining their issues. My only small gripe was there were a couple of loose threads in the end that I wish were more resolved but overall a solid read for me.

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Couldn't read this since it expired. If net galley can renew it for me i will give the correct rating. I apologize

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This book is an exhilarating, fast-paced read that had me hooked! By utilizing the perspectives of both the mother and daughter, the intense storyline effectively portrays the intricacy of their relationship. This book is full of suspense, crazy twists, and tons of thrills. If you enjoy Ruth Ware or Alex Finlay and love thrillers, this one will be perfect for you!

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Like Mother, Like Daughter by Kimberly McCreight is about college student Cleo who arrives to have dinner at her mom’s house only to discover her missing. In the before and after timeline, the reader and Cleo discover secrets about her mother’s past.

This book had a lot of things I love in a thriller.

✔️ Before and after timeline
✔️ Multiple POV
✔️ Great unpredictable twists
✔️ Secret pasts
✔️ Mother/daughter relationship

A lot is going on between the multiple points of view, so it took me a bit to get into the book. Once I got everything straight, it was a great story. There were several twists that I absolutely didn’t see coming.

Solid 4 stars. Definitely recommend. Thank you to NetGalley and Knopf for the eARC.

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This book was hard for me to read. The characters were not very likable. The mother had severe control issues, her daughter was a brat who decided everything her mother did was wrong, and her soon-to-be ex-husband was a jerk who made everything her fault. I didn't mind the multiple narratives but the author's writing style did nothing for me. I know there are readers out there who will love this story but it just was not for me.

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Fast paced and twisty! Kat is a fixer for her law firm and she is good at it, in fact she is good at everything she does. She and her film making husband, Aiden, are separated and haven’t told their only college aged daughter, Cleo, yet. When Kat invites her daughter to dinner one night, Cleo walks in and discovers food burning in the kitchen, a bloody shoe, and her mom is nowhere to be found. This mother/daughter relationship is hostile at best but Cleo is immediately flung into the task of finding Kat and will learn she is much more like her mother than she would like to admit. This story starts out with a bang! There are multiple POVs, timelines and side storylines to keep it interesting. I enjoyed the use of legal transcripts, therapy notes, text messages and journal entries to propel the suspense filled plot. There is a lot to keep track of in this story so I had to pay close attention but the pages flipped pretty quickly! Thank you Netgalley, Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage and Anchor, and the author for this eARC in exchange for my honest review. This book will be available for purchase on July 30, 2024

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Many thanks to Netgalley and Knopf for this arc. I received this book in exchange for my honest review. My thoughts are entirely my own.

In this book we are following mother Kat and daughter Cleo. Kat is a fixer at her law firm and on the night her daughter is supposed to have dinner with her Cleo arrives and finds blood and her mother’s favorite shoes. Kat and her husband are getting a divorce after discovering he had an affair with his assistant Bella. Cleo goes next door to Jeanette’s house who her mother is best friends with and who we later find out had been having an affair with her father for years. Kat’s mother gets mixed up in lawsuit involving a drug that caused implications for pregnant women and their children. Kat’s new boyfriend was involved and was later killed for about to come forward about knowing about the effects and not stopping production and taking the product off shelves. Kat is also being blackmailed for killing the assistant professor who helped at the girls home that she lived in for years before being adopted in her teens by an older wealthy woman who left her a large inheritance. Cleo also finds out that her new boyfriend Will is the one blackmailing her mother and was the guy who she supposedly killed but he actually made in and had to leave his university and changed his name. Cleo finds her mom and Will ends up going to jail for what he did. Janine and Aiden end up in a relationship and are seen near Kat’s home a year later. Kat and Cleo mend their relationship and are closer than ever.

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WHEW. This book was A LOT. There were so many red herrings and side plots that made this book really twisty, but also a smidgen overwhelming at times. I loved the dual POVs and timelines. They really added layers of urgency and complexity to the story. This is one you really have to pay attention to. Like I said before, there is a lot happening in this book and a lot of side and background characters and I found them hard to keep straight sometimes. The actual mystery itself was done very well. I didn’t see it coming until right before the reveal and I thought it was a good one. I thought this book was also a good look at the complex relationship between mothers and daughters. There were some moments where I had to suspend my belief in reality for the story to work, but I was certainly never bored! This story absolutely sucked me in right away and I had a pretty great time reading it!
CW: mentions of rape, drug use, violence, infidelity, murder, dementia

Thank you to NetGalley and Knopf for an advanced digital reader’s copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Very good

I enjoyed this book of mother-daughter conflict, marital problems, and bad childhoods. You have a mom who is an attorney but really works as a fixer, who was raised in a bad group home and is in the process of a divorce. She is trying to find out what really happened to a man she had just started dating and who died under suspicious circumstances. Then there is the daughter, a girl who grew up with enough privilege to not really think through her choices. She blames her mom for pretty much everything. But her drug-dealing boyfriend got her involved with his business and she needs help. When she goes to her mom's for dinner and finds broken glass, one shoe, and a lot of blood instead of her mother, she takes it upon herself to find out what happened.

It was fast moving and, while the end was not a big surprise, it was very good.

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Thanks netgalley for the arc! Overall this is a fun summer read, but was overly complicated. I liked the dual povs and timelines, but adding in the diary entries, therapist notes, and litigation articles made it hard to follow sometimes. There were a lot of story lines happening at the same time. Giving this book 3.5 stars for a fun summer thriller. Also posted to my goodreads.

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Oh, this was so good. I absolutely devoured this one!

Kat is a fixer for her lawfirm, and her methods are not always above board. And she’s had to do fixing in her own life as well.

Kat texts her daughter to Cleo to come over for dinner from college, but when Cleo shows up her mom is missing and all that is left behind is one shoe and blood. Cleo calls her dad, but learns that he had moved out.

Told in alternative POV and timelines, this one kept me on my toes from the very first chapter.

HIGHLY RECOMMEND! I’ve also enjoyed Where They Found Her and Reconstructing Amelia by this author. Mark it on your calendar to get this one on July 30th! You can thank me later 😊

Thank you #NetGalley for the complimentary copy of #LikeMotherLikeDaughter in exchange for an honest review.

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Thank you to NetGalley and Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor | Knopf for this ARC! "Like Mother, Like Daughter" by Kimberly McCreight is a compelling and emotionally charged mystery that delves into the complexities of family dynamics and hidden secrets. The story centers on a mother-daughter duo, Kate and Amelia, whose strained relationship becomes the focus of an investigation after Amelia is found dead under suspicious circumstances. McCreight masterfully intertwines past and present, unraveling layers of secrets and lies that reveal the true nature of their bond. Her writing is sharp and evocative, capturing the tension and emotional depth of the characters. The plot is expertly paced, with twists that keep readers engaged and eager to uncover the truth. "Like Mother, Like Daughter" is a gripping and poignant read, perfect for fans of domestic thrillers and anyone who enjoys a well-crafted mystery.

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This is my third book by the author. I read it fairly quickly and it did keep my interest. However, the plot wasn’t my favorite. If you are only going to read one book by this author, read “Reconstructing Amelia”.

This current book is classified as a thriller, but it is more of a mystery. Not super exciting, but enough to keep you going to figure out what happened. Thanks to NetGalley, publishers and author for the ARC!

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3.5 stars. Katrina (Kat), a partner (and actually a “fixer”) in a major NYC law firm, is estranged from her husband Aidan unbeknownst to their daughter Cleo, a student at NYU. While home from school one evening, Cleo finds her mother’s blood-stained shoe, food burning in the oven, but no mother. What has happened to Kat — and why? And so the story begins as Cleo embarks on a quest to find her. Overall, this was an enjoyable read, one that definitely kept me turning pages. And, although I found the ending to be basically satisfying, the major twist that occurs there really requires the willing suspension of disbelief!

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I gave this book 3 stars. It was not the type of book for me. At the very beginning I was frustrated by Kat’s attitude. It gave the vibe that she was better than everyone and didn’t care about her “secret” life.

I found that there was a lot going on in these books and it was a bit difficult to tie everything together in my head with the multiple time lines.

If you like tv shows like house of cards I could see this book being for you! However, it was not the vibe for me.

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This is the first book I've read from this author, but definitely won't be the last. The Story was fast paced with likeable characters and lots of plot twists. I never would have guessed the ending. I am looking forward to reading more from this author!

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Overall I thought this book was good but some things just didn’t personally work for me. The characters were well fleshed out but not likable enough for me to feel fully invested in them or what they were going through. I thought the premise was interesting but for some reason I never felt fully gripped by the story. I thought there was too much going on and the plot was unnecessarily convoluted. There were some mixed media elements throughout (articles, transcripts, text messages, journal entries) but I didn’t feel like they were all really necessary. But overall I think a lot of readers will enjoy this thriller, especially those who like mixed media elements, domestic drama, and complex mother daughter relationships.

*Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an eARC for review!*

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"Like Mother, Like Daughter" presented an interesting premise, and it was quite intriguing for about the first third of the book. The story is intricately written from two different points of view and timelines, one from Katrina, the mother, in the past, and the second from Cleo, the daughter, in the present. While following the two timelines was fine, other elements, like transcribed therapy sessions, text messages, and court documents, felt more distracting than helpful. At times, the numerous subplots and red herrings in the story seemed excessive, making it challenging to stay engaged.

In addition, one of the characters repeatedly made frustrating and unbelievable decisions, which detracted from the overall reading experience. The improbable events almost led to quitting the book. Even though the ending wasn't terrible, it left some subplots unresolved, which was unsatisfying. Unfortunately, "Like Mother, Like Daughter" missed the mark for this reader.

Thank you, NetGalley and the Publisher, for an advanced copy of this story in exchange for an honest review.

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Wow! This is such a twisted read. It had me spinning from the first page to the last. Very suspenseful read. Great storyline and characters. Recommend. I was given an advanced reader copy of this well written book by NetGalley and I am freely sharing my review.

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When I started to write the review for this book, it occurred to me how few I read that are not part of a series. I can't refer to changes in the life of a recurring character or two or compare this one with another or point out inconsistencies. Well, then; it seems I'll have to be straightforward in my approach, which is that I enjoyed the book even though the constant jumps in perspective and time made it a little hard for me to follow without backtracking now and again.

The story begins when a college student named Cleo comes to visit her mother Katrina for dinner, despite the fact that they're close to estranged. When she arrives, she finds the Brooklyn brownstone trashed, blood all around and her mother nowhere to be found. Immediately, she calls the police, setting off an investigation. Readers then learn that Katrina is an attorney at a prominent law firm - one that has taken on a high-profile client in an even higher-profile class action lawsuit - and that she and her husband Aiden are about to split.

Little by little, clues as to what really happened - and what Katrina really does to earn her substantial paycheck - are revealed by way of chapter those aforementioned shifts in perspectives and time frames. There are some notable twists and surprises, though nothing that reached the "blew me away" level. All in all, though, it was an interesting story that held my attention quite well, and I thank the publisher, via NetGalley, for the opportunity to read and review a pre-release copy.

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