The Last to Drown by Noelle W. Ihli
This thriller broke my heart before sucking me in and absoulutely refusing to let me catch my breath. Instead of a rafting trip down the River at the End of the World with her husband, Kaia has switched her non-refundable ticket to a trip for women. They'll be sleeping on the same beach where a rafting group was savagely butchered seven years earlier and some of her travel companions are more excited about the true crime experience than the white water rapids. The killer is dead and buried. That's been confirmed after a made for TV movie stirred up a bunch of rumors. The only danger should be from the river itself....but it's not. I've read a few of this author's other books and liked them well enough, but this one absolutely blew me away. I'm off to download her backlist.
Scary Movie Night by Miranda Smith
Tippi is celebrating her birthday at her grandmother's estate, along with her best friends, who have gone all out to make it a night to remember. Everyone is in costume. There's a spread of great food. Classic horror movies are set up in the cinema upstairs. And, along with the gifts she was expecting, there are handwritten birthday cards from someone who wasn't invited. This is a fun locked room mystery (you'll just have to accept that no one drove to the party and there's no phone at the house so they can't leave or call for help.) Excerpts from Tippi's book, What Hitch Taught Me About Life help, keep the movie references going after the first murder stops the festivities and there are lots more movie references if you're paying attention.
Trad Wife by Carrie Hughes
This is my favorite of the many "trad wife" thrillers I've read so far. Faith, with her five children and daily sourdough bakes, is exactly what you'd expect a succesful influencer to be. Melissa, a social media manager with a podcast, want to get access to the perfect family so that she can expose their secrets. Which is pretty much the formula I've seen in these books so far -- except this time it works extremely well. There are layers of twists and revelations I didn't see coming. It doesn't start with the usual immediate premise that tradwives are to be despised (or at least disapproved of.) Instead, after a prologue that provides just a glimpse of how bad things are going to get, it gives us a look at Faith and her life and some chances to see her facade slip just a bit. And it builds from there.