
Published February 29th, 2024 by Hutchinson Heinmann
Thriller, Mystery, Suspense, Crime Fiction
Welcome to my review for the SquadPod Book Club book for March. Thank you Hutchinson Heinmann for sending me a proof copy.
********
SYNOPSIS:
‘I was hooked right through to the shocking end’ BERNARDINE EVARISTO
‘An excellent read’ GUARDIAN
‘Beautifully written, immersive, thought-provoking’ MARIAN KEYES
‘Obsessed’ KERRY WASHINGTON
‘A shimmering success’ DIANA EVANS
THE PERFECT WIFE. THE PERFECT MURDER.
Nicole Oruwari has the perfect life: a handsome husband, a palatial house in the heart of Lagos and a glamorous group of friends. She left London and a troubled family past behind to become part of a community of expat wives.
But when Nicole disappears without a trace after a boat trip, the cracks in her so-called perfect life start to show. As the investigation turns up nothing but dead ends, her aunt Claudine flies to Nigeria to take matters into her own hands. As she digs into her niece’s life, she uncovers a hidden truth. But the more she finds out about Nicole, the more Claudine’s own buried history threatens to come to light.
********
MY REVIEW:
“Shine your eyes. Nothing here is as it seems”
Nicole Oruwari left London to live in Nigeria with her husband, Tonye, and their two young sons. The glamorous couple seem to have it all and enjoy a privileged life until Nicole disappears one day following a boat trip. When the investigation provides no answers her estranged aunt, Claudine, flies to Lagos to search for the niece she raised like a daughter. But with the Oruwari family and their friends more concerned about their reputations than helping find Nicole, Claudine faces an uphill battle for answers.
The SquadPod Book Club book this month transports us to the sandy shores of Lagos, immersing us in a compelling dual timeline mystery that is scattered with secrets and brimming with suspense. Multifaceted, rich with detail, and well-written, Vanessa Walters has drawn on her own experiences to offer us a glimpse inside the lives of the wealthy Nigerwives and exposes the murky world that lies beneath the glitz and glamour of the Nigerian elite. An ominous prologue sets the tense and forbidding tone of the story. But don’t expect quick answers as Walters makes the reader sweat, keeping them on tenterhooks from start to finish. I could never be sure where things were heading and every time I thought I knew she would surprise me with a curveball that took it in an unexpected direction. And that ending! OMG. I was NOT prepared.
“You may not set out to end up disempowered, but perhaps one day you just wake up, and it’s too late; you’ve already got nothing.”
The story is narrated by Nicole and Claudine, moving seamlessly between multiple timelines as it dives deeper into their lives and unearths the secrets hidden there. We discover lives affected by trauma that left scars but also built resilience. Their emotions leap from the pages, with Claudine’s story being particularly powerful and moving. Walters also examines a number of different issues such as marriage, infidelity, motherhood, privilege, cultural isolation, post colonialism, trauma, racism and female agency. These are told through a lens I knew nothing about and it was fascinating to see these issues from a new perspective and learn more about life and cultural expectations in Nigeria. We all need a support network, so I understood why the foreign wives created theirs. The Nigerwives become almost like a surrogate family for one another, helping the women through everything from adjusting to their new home to escaping their husbands if they are abused, and being away from their own family the women are particularly vulnerable to domestic abuse.
“Lagos was a strange place where friends and even family members lied about travel plans in case it led to them being kidnapped. Sometimes people concealed pregnancies or other exciting news for fear of spiritual sabotage. Also, keeping up appearances was paramount. People performed fake happiness on social media with loving photos and captions, showing off their holidays and material possessions. Didn’t she do the same thing?”
The setting for this story is so important that it is like a character in its own right. Life in Lagos is unique and completely different to what we know here in England. It is a conservative and Muslim country where single women are viewed with distrust, marriage gives you automatic respect, where the battle for women is feminism not racism, and the fear of kidnapping is very real. Walters explores this patriarchal and misogynistic society in detail, helping the reader understand the challenges faced by not only Nicole and Claudine, but even men such as Tonye, who live their lives constrained by tradition and fear of shame no matter their privilege. For me, these obstacles only made Claudine’s actions braver as she refused to acquiesce to their attempts at hushing up Nicole’s disappearance or stop searching for answers and I was rooting for her at every step.
A fascinating, intelligent and thought-provoking debut that I’d recommend. Add this to your TBR now!
Rating: ✮✮✮✮✰
********
MEET THE AUTHOR:

Vanessa Walters was born and raised in London and has a background in international journalism and playwriting and is a Tin House resident and a Millay Colony resident. She is the author of two previous YA books and The Nigerwife.
She currently lives in Brooklyn.
********
BUY THE BOOK:
Waterstones* | Bookshop.org* | Amazon*
*These are affiliate links
********
Thanks for reading Bibliophiles xxxx
