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The Trad Wife's Secret by Liane Child

  • Writer: Book Blogging Mama
    Book Blogging Mama
  • May 22
  • 2 min read

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🌟🌟🌟🌟 An Addictively Twisted Look Behind the Apron Strings

The Trad Wife’s Secret by Liane Child is a deliciously dark dive into the carefully curated domestic bliss and the sinister truths that can lurk beneath the surface of a seemingly perfect Instagram influencer. This is a compelling, twist-filled thriller that is chillingly relevant based in the influencer culture, gender stereotypical beliefs of the trad-con movement, and the pressures of being viewed as “perfect” online. Child takes the glossy veneer of the tradwife culture and shreds it completely into ribbons.

 

On the surface, Madison March is the embodiment of tradwife chic living the American dream-homesteading in rural Montana, baking from scratch, homeschooling her kids, smiling sweetly, and posting sun-drenched photos of farm life for her millions of loyal social media followers. But behind the filtered reels of her idyllic life of sourdough starters, dresses, and a feed-friendly façade is a woman walking a razor-thin line trying to hide the dark, disturbing truth of her secret-filled life and Child makes sure the reader feels every wobble.

 

This is not your average domestic thriller. Child dials up the tension fast and doesn’t let up. Just when you think you’ve uncovered Madison’s biggest secret, Child peels back another layer with one more well-timed twist—some shocking, some gasp-worthy, and a few genuinely disturbing. Madison is absolutely fascinating: equal parts calculating, trapped, and complicit. I was never quite sure whether to root for her, fear her, or pity her. With a plot that is stacked with betrayals, manipulations, and unpredictable turns and a protagonist caught somewhere between empowered and entrapped this book has a truly addictive pull.

 

That being said, there is one nagging flaw: the use of British English when Madison is supposed to be an ultra-American, trad-con Montana homemaker with a massive U.S.-based following. It felt jarring to read words like mum, snug, and windscreen, and see the alternative spellings of words like tyre, colour, and favourite disrupting the otherwise immersive narrative and pulling me out of the story breaking the illusion of Madison as an authentically American character.


Despite this, The Trad Wife’s Secret still delivers in spades with its juicy, knife-sharp exploration of curated identity, power, and control. If you’re drawn to stylish, smart thrillers with a wicked edge, there is plenty to feast on here. Just don’t be fooled by the flaky pie crusts and fake smiles—the truth is anything but wholesome.

 
 
 

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