Judy Collins's Reviews > The Housekeeper

The Housekeeper by Joy Fielding
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
11063006
's review

it was amazing
bookshelves: 2022-ng-group-challenge, 2022-releases, joy-fielding, netgalley-arc, books-read-in-2022

Joy Fielding is back following Cul-de-sac (2021) with her thirtieth novel, THE HOUSEKEEPER —a sixty-two-year-old femme fatale wreaks havoc on an entire family in this wicked and witty devious game of cat-and-mouse.

With twisty thrills and seduction by the minute, from gaslighting, manipulation, and blackmail to murder. Your head will be spinning as to who will wind up dead next!

In the end, I have only myself to blame. I'm the one who let her in.

Meet Jodi, married to Harrison. Jodi is a real estate agent and a high producer at her father's real estate company. She is the breadwinner and makes the money. She is married to Harrison, an author (writing teacher) who has not produced anything recently. Jodi wants to be an interior designer.

He whines and complains about everything, including taking care of the two kids (Daphne and Sam) and anytime she has a showing. She also thinks he is having an affair (which he is). She needs to dump him. He also complains about her spending too much time caring for her aging parents, particularly her mom with Parkinson's. Her dad cannot be bothered.

Jodi is getting tired of Harrison, and because she thinks he is having an affair, she has a little fling herself with a man she recently showed a condo to. But that will turn out as not a chance meeting. She later discovers this man is an accomplice and will wind up blackmailing her. Very funny at the dinner party with the connection.

In light of this, she finally talks her father into hiring a live-in Housekeeper to take care of her father's household and her mother. The mom put up with abuse from her dad their entire life. Neither are very warm and caring parents. The father is demanding, unfaithful, abusive, and controlling. They also have money and prestige, and their home is worth millions. The father is in his late seventies and does not have the patience to deal with his wife's Parkinson's.

Jodi is the younger of the sisters, and Tracy is the eldest. Tracy is worthless. She is only good at spending money and buying designer clothes. But she is funny. The dad pays all her bills, including her credit cards. She does want to be an inspiring writer but, as of yet, has not produced anything, but that may change if her money goes away.

Enter Elyse Woodley. The new housekeeper. A young looking sixty-two, tall, slender, muscular, short blond hair and an engaging smile and manner. She had personal references (which turned out to be fake) and knew the right thing to say. However, the devil in disguise.

She says she has a son about Jodi's page who lives in California. Is he her son? The jury is out on this one. She appears to be able to cook and entertain and steal things. (that would be jewelry, people, and money).

In the blink of an eye, the spider has made her move. She is sleeping with the father, wearing the mother's jewelry and clothes, and not caring for the mother. Elyse and the dad try and keep Jodi and Tracy away. No one is safe in this house. The gold digger is out for the money, and soon, the girls will be cut out of the will entirely, and she is already pursuing selling the house.

Frantic, Jodi tries everything from going to the police to the attorney. What is wrong with her dad? Can he not see what she is doing, but he is crazy about her, and soon the wife ends up dead, and the father and new housekeeper run off to Niagra Falls and marry with no prenup. Is her dad crazy?

Then the blackmail starts, but at this point, Jodi does not care. Then Evelyn starts drugging her dad with pills in his food, wants to change the will, and starts changing doctors and attorneys. She tries to keep them away, and they cannot get rid of her. Her dad is spellbound.

Later the dad seems to be afraid, hiding, making calls during the night to Jodi. From gaslighting, manipulation, lies, and deceit. Who will wind up dead next?

I loved the ending- two years later! Priceless. Jodi and Tracy are hilarious and by the end you like them both.

Witty, wacky, smart, twisty, comic, and surprising! I laughed out loud and thought this book was hilarious. Joy is a pro when it comes to plotting, domestic suspense with colorful characters both flawed and believable.

A few things- my take First, this is the wrong cover for the book. Does not do the book justice. It needs to be WOW, funny, and dangerous. Secondly, I disagree with the reference from the Library Journal blurb. I have read every Mary Kubica and Ruth Ware book, and for me, this one is a standout comic/satire and reads like a funny Sally Hepworth, Kaira Rouda, Ellen Meister, and Elle Cosimano's Finlay Donovan novels— full of dark humor, flawed characters, mixed with some devilish wicked fun and games with everyday life issues.

Pick this one up and get some laughs! I love Joy's books and must go back and read Cul de sac, which I missed.

Thank you to #RandomHouse and #NetGalley for an ARC to read, review, and enjoy.

Blog Review Posted @
www.JudithDCollins.com
@JudithDCollins |#JDCMustReadBooks
My Rating: 5 Stars ✨✨✨✨✨
Pub Date: Aug 16, 2022
Aug 2022 Must-Read Books
27 likes · flag

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read The Housekeeper.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

May 30, 2022 – Shelved as: to-read
May 30, 2022 – Shelved
July 25, 2022 – Shelved as: 2022-ng-group-challenge
July 25, 2022 – Shelved as: 2022-releases
July 25, 2022 – Shelved as: joy-fielding
July 25, 2022 – Shelved as: netgalley-arc
July 26, 2022 – Started Reading
July 27, 2022 – Shelved as: books-read-in-2022
July 27, 2022 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

dateUp arrow    newest »

Grace Convertino I loved this one too! Great review, Judy!! 🥰


Judy Collins Thanks, Grace! Have you read The Senator's Wife? Reminds me a lot of this one with the gaslighting! 😎


Grace Convertino Not yet, but I’ve read the synopsis and some reviews on GR, so it’s definitely on my TBR (I lived it, though, for many years—until I found the courage to leave and file for divorce). Some gaslighting books make me angry, some aggravate me, some make me roll my eyes, and some feel all too real. Your review here was so astute—I loved it! 🥰


Judy Collins Thanks, Grace, I lived through it too! I hear you. Finally, l left and moved from NC to GA and then to FL many years ago. Sorry, you had to go through it too! I have loved being happily single since. He was my second husband, so thank goodness no children with him. My two sons are from my first husband. 😍


back to top