Tuesday's Child

4.3
287 Reviews
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Introduction:
**Alternative cover edition for ASIN: B0829DMF98 https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4...**My daughter is dead. My husband and I cling to what’s left of our family, desperate to make sense of the tragedy. But when the sheriff knocks, he delivers news no mother should ever have to hear. Our daughter was murdered. And my son is the prime suspect. When we adopted eleven-year-old Holden, we weren’t wearing rose-colored glasses. But we never could have imagined this. They say you can’t pick your family. But I picked mine. Did I choose my daughter’s murderer? Tuesday’s Child is a gripping domestic suspense. Doubt, desire, and the demise of a once picture-perfect family force Emery, wife to a state senator, to live out a mother’s worst nightmare.
Added on:
July 03 2023
Author:
Anya Mora
Status:
OnGoing
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Tuesday's Child Reviews (287)

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Deb Le

January 02 2020

This is the first novel I've read by this author, and it won't be the last. It's a little dark, but what an amazing book. The character building is so intricate and three dimensional that I was dragged into this story from the first sentence. I loved this portrayal of older child adoption, such a far cry from the saccharine sweet versions I read before, yet oddly uplifting too. Emery is a wonderful protagonist, a real mother with doubts and struggles, who doesn't have a clue what to do some of the time. Sad, poignant yet uplifting too. I adored this book.

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Bandit

June 09 2020

Is there such a thing as a mommy thriller? If not, there should be. An entire subgenre of a subgenre. That is if women thrillers are still a subgenre, there seems to be enough of them to populate their own literary continent by now. But you know how some of them are all about ex wives or mysterious spouses or best friends gone wrong. And some of them, like this book, are driven by the pure mother’ milk, start to finish. The author meant for it too, even her bio lists exclusively her accomplishments as a mother, both birth and adoptive as opposed to her writing credits. So she believes in the power of love, specifically mother’s love, and writes books about it. Ok. Cute. Not at all my thing, though. I don’t really grasp the drive to reproduce, though I admire those who adopt kids. This book is about a woman who did both. Woohoo. Positively heroic. Is that sarcasm, you might ask. Why, yes, it is. Mainly because for all her mommy superpowers I really didn’t like the main character of Emery. When we meet her she has a perfect life, she is a wife of a handsome very wealthy senator and a mother to a lovely 10 year old daughter. Emery has it all, including too much time, since she doesn’t seem to work or have any passion projects. She’s profoundly uninteresting, a sort of cliched vapid housewifing clone. What can Emery do with all her time? What more can Emery do for her daughter, a kid nice but too soft and mercilessly picked on by other children? Well, how about adopting a kid? Seriously, it’s that much of a whim decision, after seeing an adoptable kid advertised in the Tuesday’s Child section, alarmingly much in the same way pets are advertised on petfinder. So basically instead of getting a golden retriever to occupy her time and give her kid a friend and protector, Emery decides to get a kid. And she does, because she has money and that’s how life works for those with money. And the kid turns out to be a nightmare, because he’s already 10 years old and thus has 10 years of accumulated trauma and abuse. The entire thing, in fact, turns out to be a sort of exercise in masochism, although the boy does get along with his adoptive sister as intended. Emery is exhausted, but determined, she won’t listen to reason, she’s plowing though, despite what it’s doing to her and her marriage. And then her beloved daughter ends up dead, murdered, and her adoptive son stands accused of it. The nightmare gets darker. Oh what will Emery do. If only the hunky sheriff Cooper (and of course her first love) who has conveniently just got back to town was there to help, assist, provide a shoulder…and more. So together Coop and Em will get to the bottom of this mystery, because, of course, they are driven by love, both romantic and parental kind. Go team, go. Actually, cutesy as it might seem, this is a by the numbers thriller, so it does have all the prerequisites, including a split time narrative that covers a year prior to the girl’s death, the suspense, the suspects and, of course, the plot twist at the end. The latter of which is actually quite decent and very dark, considering. But the entire affair is so thoroughly covered in mother’s milk cheese, it’s difficult to take it seriously. I’d say it’s a Lifetime movie of the week sort of thing, but that might be a dated reference. There might be other estrogen heavy mommy networks out there providing similar sort of entertainment. So was it entertaining? Well, mildly. Maybe one needs to be a mommy to enjoy this sort of thing. Maybe, like reduced bladder control, it’s just a mommy sort of thing. It had cheese and corn and toward the end it shamelessly milks the audience for tears with its overblown melodramatics and finally love wins the day. So yeah. On the positively note, it was a freebie, seemingly professionally edited and read very quickly.

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Norma's Nook

December 31 2019

Wow! This was one heck of a suspenseful ride! A family in crisis, an adopted child suspected, and a mother that refuses to give up, Tuesday's Child is a domestic mystery that I couldn't put down. The story was intense and intriguing. The characters were so deeply written and the plot moved forward at a wonderful pace. The twists and turns surprised me every single time. I gasped, cried, and even laughed at parts. It's so well written and, if mystery is your thing, you probably be up all night reading like it was. I just couldn't put it down. Such a wonderfully rich story!

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norcalgal

July 05 2020

This novel was alright, but then it went off the rails. It turned bad in an eye-rolling way when the following things happened: <input type="checkbox" class="spoiler__control" aria-label="The following text has been marked spoiler. Toggle checkbox to reveal or hide." onchange="this.labels[0].setAttribute('aria-hidden', !this.checked);" id="ef3eec0f-9bfe-4c95-9cd5-75076de9c3ba" /><label aria-hidden="true" class="spoiler" for="ef3eec0f-9bfe-4c95-9cd5-75076de9c3ba"> <br />1) Mark turned into a cartoon villain who murdered/attempted to murder everyone (Tom, Betsy, Holden, Emery); extra demerit for not laying the groundwork to show Mark's drug-filled past<br />2) Out of ALL the children to adopt, not just in their town, but in the entire world, Emery and Mark just happened to adopt Mark's unbeknownst illegitimate child! <br />3) Emery became THE most fertile woman in the world because she twice became pregnant with Coop's child after one single sexual encounter<br />4) Given all the blood depicted, the fact that Emery went on to have a healthy child beggars belief!<br /><br /></label> If it weren't for all the above - which basically constitutes the entire story - <i>Tuesday's Child</i> would have earned more stars.<br />

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Kim (booked4life)

March 23 2020

I picked TUESDAY’S CHILD up out of the blue and I am so happy I did because I finished it in two days. This book is fast-paced and suspenseful. The chapters are on the shorter side and left me wanting to read more. They also went back and forth between the past and the present, which I love in books! This was a great psychological thriller.

L

Lauren

April 16 2022

Quick read. Unfortunately, the judgmental behavior of those on the outside is probably truthful to how they would act in real life.

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Ines (Bookstaroom)

November 02 2020

Another great story read in November.<br />Gripping and scary at the moments and what I love the most about psychological thrillers? PLOT TWISTS! This novel has a mindblowing twists on almost every page! <br /><br />Has Emery made a mistake to adopt Holden? Has characters revealed their true colours or they're hiding something?<br /><br />Read it to revealed it!

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Cath

January 05 2020

This book brings about the conflict of wondering whether you are to blame for an action you took. The main character is Emery, a mother to a young girl of ten called Betsy, and married to a senator called Mark Gables and they made the decision little over a year before, to adopt a boy called Holden, who was almost the same age as their daughter. At Halloween, their daughter dies in what was first thought to be a simple accident, but soon turns out to have been murder! Only their adopted son is being considered the prime suspect!!!<br /><br />Did they introduce their daughter to the very person that killed her? Their marriage had been on the rocks and somewhat shaky since the official adoption ceremony, with mark staying away in the city as much as possible, leaving Em to deal with Holden and his stubborn behaviour traits on her own. She had already lost her two best friends and was having problems with her daughter being bullied at the prestigious school, from before Holden was on the scene, never mind the problems at school and home once Holden joined their family.<br /><br />I loved the added stress of her former first love, Cooper, now back in the town of Port Windwick as a Deputy Sheriff, being added to the story and the way he works his way back into supporting her life, from a distance. He thinks he has a lot to make up for, but both sides are hiding secrets and some may not be able to be forgiven. There are deep meanings to a lot of this storyline and it makes you wonder how you might react if that had happened to you. A massive shift in family life has led to the worst sort of news a parent could be given. Now, they have the added trauma of their adopted son being held as the person responsible.<br /><br />This book certainly doesn’t leave any rose-tinted lenses on the parts regarding adoption and what affect that can have on the family. The sorts of reactions and behaviour one might expect from a child, traumatised at an early age and then left being bounced about the foster system and what might happen when placed in a bad foster placing. This happens more often than people may realise. We often hear of problems in old people’s homes and bad treatment of the elderly by those who should be caring for them, but not so much about private fostering placements and when things go wrong!<br /><br />This story goes back and forth from present day to the days before and after Holden becomes part of the family and what occurs daily. How Em is coping or not with her new addition to the family and more lately, how Betsy is coping with the fighting between her and Mark and his numerous absences. Adoption is a serious step and many only see the end result, thinking a lost child now has a forever family, not all the steps in-between and the sagas and trauma that it has taken to get to that stage for many. <br /><br />This was a very thought provoking read, not just about a murder, but mainly about adoption and the problems this can bring to those going along this path. The school time bullying, children playing violent video games that are completely unsuitable for their age, all adds to the background and allows you a little view of children growing up in the modern world with mobiles almost as soon as they can walk and social media passing on pressure, snide comments and even online bullying. I received an ARC copy of this book from BookSprout and will certainly be looking for more of this author’s books. They are certainly though provoking and deal with difficult issues. I have freely given my own opinion of the book above. <br />

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Wendy Del Toro

January 18 2020

The author has an exquisite way with words, great metaphors and the inner ruminations by the main character, Emery, seemed credible. Emery as a mother and a person is authentic with all her self-doubts and flaws. The secondary characters are also fully realized, and the interactions and reactions ring true. We got to know the dead child in flashback chapters which is necessary to elicit my sympathy. There was a clue early in the story as to what happened the night of the death <input type="checkbox" class="spoiler__control" aria-label="The following text has been marked spoiler. Toggle checkbox to reveal or hide." onchange="this.labels[0].setAttribute('aria-hidden', !this.checked);" id="12a0bfbb-cdad-4bc0-bc95-868d2c8e6bcb" /><label aria-hidden="true" class="spoiler" for="12a0bfbb-cdad-4bc0-bc95-868d2c8e6bcb"> Holden and Betsy changing costumers</label> that I felt could easily have been left out without my feeling cheated. The reveal of what happened the night of Betsy's death made this a 3-star book, rather than 5. Up to that point the writing was sharp and cerebral, but the reveal was cliched, horribly stale and way over the top and far fetched and changed the tone of the book. It devolved at that point into schlock. I still found the author to be incredibly talented and a good storyteller, but wished she had changed the 'death scene and perpetrator'.

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Hazel Harkins

December 31 2019

This book evoked feelings in me that had been long buried, bringing tears at times but the end evoked the happy tears. This book has an exceptional happy ending. Holden is a child left alone at a young age when his supposed caregiver overdosed and died, with the needle still in her arm. A 6 year old left alone for days not knowing what to do or where to go.<br />I found this book to be tragic, mysterious, revealing, heart warming, heart wrenching and haunting with real life situations like a girls club and Mommy Tribe which to me is the mean girls club only with a snobby name. This book also made me feel angry, sad, confused and intense at times.<br />My favorite thing about this great mystery is that you don't get to know until close to the book, I mean not even really a hint!