The Divorce
Freida McFadden's The Divorce takes a woman scorned and lets her curdle, slowly, into something dangerous. Naomi loses the house, the husband, the whole storybook life she built. Then she skips grief entirely and starts watching the new girlfriend. A domestic thriller about obsession that keeps tightening the noose around its own narrator until quitting costs more than continuing.
From the review
The setup is almost cruel in how tidy it is: a woman who followed the love-story playbook to the letter and got thrown out anyway. McFadden opens on that humiliation and sits in it longer than you'd expect. The drained accounts. The lawyers the ex can afford and Naomi can't. The younger woman who has already moved into her life. What makes these early chapters work is that Naomi refuses to behave. She won't take the dingy apartment and the day job and the quiet dignity of starting over. She starts watching instead. That slide from grief to surveillance to something uglier is the engine of the book, and McFadden times it well, letting curiosity tip into fixation before Naomi herself seems to clock it.
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