Ratings6
Average rating3.2
No husbands allowed
Only minutes after Abbie Elliot and her three best friends step off of a private helicopter, they enter the most luxurious, sumptuous, sensually pampering hotel they have ever been to. Their lavish presidential suite overlooks Monte Carlo, and they surrender: to the sun and pool, to the sashimi and sake, to the Bruno Paillard champagne. For four days they're free to live someone else's life. As the weekend moves into pulsating discos, high-stakes casinos, and beyond, Abbie is transported to the greatest pleasure and release she has ever known.
What happened last night?
In the morning's harsh light, Abbie awakens on a yacht, surrounded by police. Something awful has happened—something impossible, unthinkable. Abbie, Winnie, Serena, and Bryah are arrested and accused of the foulest crime imaginable. And now the vacation of a lifetime becomes the fight of a lifetime & for survival. GUILTY WIVES is the ultimate indulgence, the kind of nonstop joy-ride of excess, friendship, betrayal, and danger that only James Patterson can create.
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This review was originally posted on my blog here: http://knowitnotsomuch.blogspot.com/2012/12/guilty-wives.html
I've complained quite a bit about James Patterson books. I've found that most of the books he co-writes (in which I believe the newbie author writes and he just slaps his name on) to be awful. They are usually full of annoying italics and horrible catch phrases. I pick them up out of habit and I'm usually angry that I wasted my time on them.
This one was much better than the others. Abbie was both likeable and obnoxious at the same time, but no matter, you still respected her.
I finished the book in a couple of hours. Like any Patterson novel it was a super quick read. The only real problem I had was that it starts out 6 weeks into Abbie prison sentence and they call that the ‘Prologue'. After a few chapters they go back in time to the infamous trip to Monte Carlo and then the circus on a trial resulting in the prison scene we saw in the beginning. Throughout the entire trial section I was incredibly bored. I already knew they were going to jail because they revealed that in the first few chapters. Sure, it's a little interesting to see the interrogation part, but really, I couldn't care less about the trial.
So things didn't really get interesting until you caught up with the beginning of the story and even then you're pretty sure you know what happened. Nevertheless, out of the last few co-authored books Patterson has done, this one is probably one of the best.
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