The next Mrs. Parrish A novel

Liv Constantine

Book - 2024

"Daphne and Amber Parrish are thrust back into one another's lives upon the resurgence of a long-forgotten threat, forcing a vicious game of cat and mouse where everything is on the line, in this thrilling sequel to the million-copy-bestselling Reese's Book Club Pick The Last Mrs. Parrish. Amber Patterson Parrish has come a long way from being an invisible wallflower. Her hard work and immaculate planning have paid off now that she's a prominent socialite, but that doesn't mean she's had it easy along the way. Less than a year since her husband Jackson's tax evasion scandal, Amber is still at the top of the Bishops Harbor community pecking order, free to do as she wishes while Jackson sits in prison. But t...hat freedom is quickly coming to an end. With Jackson getting released from prison, Amber's time-and money-is vanishing. Meanwhile, Daphne Parrish left Bishops Harbor after her divorce from Jackson Parrish, swearing she would never go back. But when her daughter, Tallulah, runs away from home, desperate to see her father, Daphne agrees to return for the summer to allow him supervised visits. Once out of prison, Jackson swears he's a changed man but Daphne knows all too well that Jackson can't be trusted. When a ghost from Amber's past emerges looking for revenge, the three of them find unlikely allies in one another, but who is playing who? When all is said and done, they'll have to fight tooth and nail for everything they have left in this zero-sum game. With shocking turns and entertaining characters, The Next Mrs. Parrish will make you rethink everything you thought you knew about duplicity and betrayal"--

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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Constant Liv (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 23, 2024
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Subjects
Genres
Psychological fiction
Suspense fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Novels
Published
New York : Bantam [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Liv Constantine (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
322 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593599921
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This installment, following The Last Mrs. Parrish (2017), in the Parrish domestic psychodrama series from sisters Lynne and Valerie Constantine sees Amber Patterson plotting her exit from her marriage to the diabolically manipulative Jackson Parrish. Jackson is soon to be released from prison for his financial crimes, and Amber is packing her bags, thanks to her discovery of a trove of diamonds hidden aboard Jackson's yacht. But when Jackson shows up earlier than expected, Amber's plans tumble. Rude and repulsive, with a jackal's canny, calculating ruthlessness, Jackson wants out of the marriage as much as Amber so as to woo back his ex-wife Daphne. The doomed duo strikes a Faustian bargain, one that involves sabotaging Amber's other nemesis, Daisy Ann, the entrepreneurial daughter of her previous husband, Jake. Both Amber and Jackson are sociopaths of the first degree, and their scorching dance of mutual destruction is dastardly. All the hallmarks of a pulse-pounding psychological thriller are here. Despicable antagonists and gaslighting emotional warfare are augmented by a frisson of The Hamptons-Dallas glitz thrown in as juicy counterpoint.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this wicked sequel to The Last Mrs. Parrish, bestseller Constantine (the pseudonym of sisters Lynne and Valerie Constantine) resumes the scandalous story of Jackson Parrish, his scheming second wife, Amber, and his ex-wife, Daphne. At the outset, Jackson is completing a prison term for tax evasion, but he's yet to answer for his darker deeds, including fraudulently committing Daphne to a mental asylum. Daphne has found peace after divorcing Jackson and fleeing across the country, but when her children insist on seeing their father, she's forced to return to ritzy Bishops Harbor, Long Island. There, she readies herself to confront Amber, her ruthless replacement as Jackson's wife. Meanwhile, Daisy Ann Briscoe, the daughter of one of Amber's prior conquests, launches a revenge campaign after running into Amber at a New York City trunk show. Daisy Ann's rampage poses trouble for Jackson and Daphne as well, locking them and Amber in an uneasy alliance that's inevitably threatened by a slew of double-crossings. Constantine lays the glamour and nastiness on thick, resulting in an acidic thriller that delights with every twist of the knife. Fans of the first book will eat this up. Agent: Jenny Bent, Bent Agency. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The bitch is back! After four intervening novels of varying success, the sisters who write as Constantine have returned to the well, bringing back the craven sociopathic hussy we loved to hate in their breakout debut, The Last Mrs. Parrish (2017). The good news is, Amber Patterson Parrish, a.k.a. Lana Crump, is worse than ever. As the novel opens, she's visiting her handsome, deeply horrible husband, Jackson, at Camp Fed, where he's soon to wrap up his sentence and return to Amber's loathing arms. "Amber had worried at first that the scandal would make her per-sona non grata in Bishops Harbor, but apparently tax evasion was a crime that didn't garner much antipathy among the one-percenters." Each of them has plans to dump the other just as soon as they can get through the welcome home party, and each has their own evil scheme for what happens after that. His: to get back the first Mrs. Parrish--sweet, confused, abused Daphne, who took the girls and moved to California after the divorce, where she divides her time between much-needed therapy and her cystic fibrosis nonprofit. Hers: to rob him blind and fly the coop, dumping little Jackson Junior with the nanny. I mean, he's cute, but...you gotta do what you gotta do. What Amber doesn't know is that Daisy Ann Briscoe, whose father was so briefly married to Amber that Daisy Ann didn't even know Amber existed before he died "in a hunting accident," has alternate plans for her former stepmother. She just has to find a way to prove what actually happened out in those Colorado woods. There's no manipulative unreliable narrator, no contrived backstory shoehorned in at the eleventh hour, and the over-the-topness--like Amber meeting a shady diamond dealer named Mr. Stones--reads as funny and intentional. You go, ladies. The timeless battle between good and evil has never been trashier. Hooray. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

- 1 - Amber Amber Patterson Parrish hated visiting her husband at Camp Fed. Jackson had been living at the correctional facility for the past seven months. Fortunately for her, he didn't expect her to stay long, just long enough to give him the maximum allowable cash, thirty dollars, and time to bitch to her about the conditions he was forced to endure--the crap food, the flooding and ceiling leaks every time it rained, and the unending noise boomeranging off metal and concrete inside the grimy old building. Sometimes the visits went smoothly, other times the guards did something to screw with you. Last week, she'd been sent home. Told that her outfit was too revealing. It was bullshit. She was proud of how great her toned abs and long legs looked in her Alex Perry jumpsuit, but what did the guards know about fashion? The only thing revealing about her outfit was what it brought out in their character. One of the other inmates' wives suggested Amber run over to Walmart and get a sweater to wear on top. Please. At least it had given her a chance to skip the visit that week. She despised sitting in the overcrowded room with the masses; unkempt, rude women who elbowed their way past her to grab seats first. The smells of cheap perfume and sweat that made her want to hold her breath. Everything about it was disgusting--the long rows of hard plastic chairs bolted together, the cold linoleum floor and stark white walls with prison regulations posted everywhere, the random pat searches that weren't at all random. She was pretty sure Jackson hated the visits as much as she did because he couldn't stand for Amber to witness him being vulnerable--wearing orange instead of his normal designer attire, at the mercy of the prison guards barking orders at him. He was no longer the all-powerful mogul, now just another inmate, no more special than anyone else. Thankfully it was only a forty-five-minute drive to Danbury, Connecticut, so she didn't have to waste her entire day. Amber had worried at first that the scandal would make her persona non grata in Bishops Harbor, but apparently tax evasion was a crime that didn't garner much antipathy among the one-percenters. They were likely counting their blessings that they had avoided getting caught themselves. Besides, anyone who knew Jackson knew that he'd soon be back on top and didn't want to risk alienating him by shunning his wife. Thus, Amber was still able to enjoy her days at the country club, her weekly tennis matches, and a board position with the Bishops Harbor Historical Society. Her days passed pleasantly enough, especially with no demanding husband at home to please. There were a few, the old guard, who turned up their noses at her, but then again, they'd rebuffed her from the beginning. She'd get them back when the time was right. The one fly in the ointment was that funds were running very low, and she'd had to let some of the household staff go. For the past month, she'd had to cook her own meals and drive herself everywhere. Plus, she hadn't bought a new outfit in over two months. If she didn't get an influx of cash soon, the nanny and housekeeper would have to be let go, she would have to forgo her salon visits and even let their club membership lapse. There were no secrets in Bishops Harbor. Word at the club would spread like wildfire. She wasn't about to let that happen. Amber had a plan, though. She'd sell the boat. She knew the sixty-five-foot Hatteras was worth at least a million and a half, maybe more, so she'd put an ad in Boat Trader and on Boats.com. She already had three interested parties. Pretty soon their bank account would be overflowing once more, and she could go back to the life she'd become accustomed to. Well, almost. Jackson would be home in a month, but she wasn't afraid of him anymore--not since she had laid the trap that gave her something to hold over his head. A few months after their marriage, when he'd found out that there was an outstanding warrant for her arrest in Missouri, he'd used that as leverage and became verbally abusive and debasing in the bedroom. She could have left him and owned up to what she'd been arrested for back home. She'd probably serve only a year or two for jury tampering, perjury, and bail jumping, but she'd sooner be dead than go back to the small-minded town she'd grown up in. She would not eat crow. It was far easier to put up with Jackson. His first wife had silently borne all his cruelty, but Amber was no Daphne. She smiled, remembering the night she'd provoked him. It was the first time he hadn't been able to sustain an erection. She'd laughed and told him he was part of the Viagra crowd now, that maybe she should hire a new pool boy. He'd been furious. Furious enough to make the mistake of pushing her down on the bed and choking her, spewing obscenities. She'd recorded it all from the camera she'd hidden on the nightstand. That was the night she found equal footing. Jackson cared much more about his reputation than he did about having the upper hand. So, he'd wisely agreed to her terms: a marriage in name only, no more sex, no more demands. He'd have the arm candy he wanted, she the lifestyle, and their lives would go on. But that didn't mean she was looking forward to seeing him every day. She sat in the drab waiting room now, impatient for them to bring Jackson in so she could get the visit over with. She looked up as the door opened and he walked in. She conceded that he looked none the worse for wear. In fact, he looked very fit, like he'd been working out. But then again, federal prison wasn't exactly Attica. He gave her a sardonic smile and when he sat down, she noticed that his thick dark hair was a little longer than he normally wore it. She had to admit that even in his prison garb, Jackson looked more like a movie star playing a role than a real inmate. "How's my devoted wife today?" She returned a smile--her sweetest--and shrugged. "Missing you, of course. But only one more month, and you'll be home." "I'm sure you're counting the days." He leaned forward and clasped his hands together. "On that note, I want you to throw a party for my release. It's important that we get in front of this. Let everyone know I'm back and ready to start something new. I've met an investment broker who has some great contacts. We're developing a new business plan." Amber wondered what the banker was in for. "Here's the guest list." He slid a piece of paper across the table. Amber glanced at it. Was he serious? "Jackson, there's only fifty thousand left in our accounts. That barely covers our monthly expenses. I told you I've already had to let Edgar and Margarita go. There's not enough to throw you an elaborate party. I'm having to cut corners all over the place. I'm tired of making sacrifices." His eyes blazed. "Only fifty? There was close to half a million between both accounts when I came here. Where the hell did it go?" "Come on. You can't have forgotten what things cost. It's been seven months; the money's running out." She leaned back and appraised him. "But I do have an idea. If we sell the boat, we can get at least a million and a half for it. Not to mention saving ten thousand a month in slip fees, electricity, maintenance, and insurance. Besides, it's seven years old. When you're back on top, you can buy a bigger one." And one that was named after her, and not his ex-wife and kids, she thought. Jackson's face turned white. "Absolutely not!" "Why not? It's not like anyone's using it. What's your attachment to a seven-year-old boat? We need the money." He leaned in closer, giving her a piercing look. "Listen to me. Under no circumstances are you to sell the boat. Do you understand me? I promise you, there'll be plenty of money when I get out, but I need that boat." "You must be dreaming. The company's gone; all that money went to pay back the IRS. The only assets we have are the house and that boat. Do you have a job waiting for you when you're released?" "Look, I can't get into it here." He glanced up at the corner of the room where a camera was positioned, then back at her. "Just trust me on this. We'll be fine once I'm out. But not if you get rid of the boat." Interesting, she thought. What did the boat have to do with it? "Okay, okay. I get it. It's your good luck charm. Fine. I won't sell it. But I certainly hope you're not lying to me. I've got my eye on the new Oscar de la Renta coming out in a few weeks." He blew out a breath. "You'll have everything your greedy little heart desires. Just hold out for one more month. Got it?" "If you say so. I'd better get going. Tennis at three." She smiled. "See you next week." "Hold on. You said you'd bring pictures of my son with you." Excerpted from The Next Mrs. Parrish: A Novel by Liv Constantine All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.