Member Reviews
Join Zach, Cara, and their troubled daughter, Alexa, as they escape to a fancy resort in the Maldives for some much-needed family time. Amidst the beautiful setting, they encounter a cast of secretive guests, giving off vibes similar to classic mystery stories. As the plot unfolds, suspense builds, leaving readers eager for more. Special thanks to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for providing an early look at this intriguing tale.
I'm a longtime fan of Nikki Smith, but I think THE GUESTS is her best yet - the setting is divine and perfect for reading on a gray London day.
Huge thanks to the publishers for the advanced copy.
For fans of Alex Michaelides and Ruth Ware! Great story that draws you in and makes you feel you are there with all these awful people, with the sun burning your back, the sand hot on your feet and the luxury of the rooms making you want to be rich enough to afford to go there.
A gripping and tense story set in the beautiful Maldives, very much reminded me of a darker White Lotus. A great, well paced plot with well developed characters and full of twists and topical commentary on wealth and privilege. I'll definitely be looking to read more by Nikki Smith.
Many thanks to the author, publisher and Netgalley for providing an ARC of this book in exchange for an unbiased review.
Luxury holiday location and edge of your seat thriller is usually my favourite winning combo but unfortunately this hit the mark.
I didn't warm to any of the characters which I find so important and it just didn't flow well for me. I especially didn't like the ending as I felt as well as it being extremely unbelievable I was slightly confused about 1 particularly thing. Why would those 2 people be together on screen? I must've missed something I guess? It just seemed odd. I hadn't realised it was the second of series either which I think would help you but not essential as it is explained, just a little too late for me.
Thank you #NetGalley for the copy. A generous 2.5 rounded up to 3 stars for the beautifully described location
Thank you to Net Galley and Penguin UK for the ARC. This review is voluntary.
Luxurious family getaway turned nightmare! We all dream about jetting off to the Maldives and escaping all our problems at least 5 times a day right? But for the Hamiltons some dirty laundry just can't be hidden away no matter how much money you throw at it.
I went into this book completely blind and I'm glad I did as I had actually no idea where it was going to go! The amount of twists and turns had me guessing all the way through and I did struggle to put it down at times. I think some discoveries were a little more anticlimactic than others, (maybe that's because nothing shocks me in this world anymore🤭) but I was still hooked and enjoyed the book all the same.
Nikki's writing well and truly transported me to the exotic and picturesque white sandy beaches. The perfect destination thriller to soak up on your summer holiday.
Get whisked away to a tropical eco-paradise where nothing is too much trouble for the obliging and overworked staff, on call 24 hours a day, under the management of permanently stressed Marc.
On the exclusive island getaway are Zach, Cara and their daughter Alexa, plus influencer Skye, and a scattering of other guests. Zach and Cara are trying to reconnect with Alexa, but Zach seems more concerned with his work emails and business deals than spending time with his wife and daughter. Cara and Alexa are overcoming something that has severely affected their relationship and their confidence, and Alexa would much rather be at home partying with her friends than stuck in the middle of nowhere with her family.
The book opens with a child innocently digging up a severed head in the sand- so you know you are in for some dark scenes ahead. We then meet all of the island's guests as they journey to the island and start to learn more about what their expectations and intentions for their holiday.
As we've come to expect from Nikki Smith, not everyone is who they seem on the surface, and as the story develops, we start to see what's underneath- and of course, they're not at all as squeaky clean as they'd first claimed. Its a race to see who can keep their lies going for long enough to reach the next milestone, or will the truth come out before they get there?
Fabulous escapist summer reading, pick it up asap
This destination thriller was absolutely fantastic! Secrets, lies, and crime in a luxury resort in the Maldives - what could possibly go wrong? I read this in one sitting and kept me guessing the whole way through with plenty of twists.
Thank you to NetGallery and the publisher for this eARC in exchange for my honest review.
The Guests is an exotic destination thriller set in The Maldives in the luxury eco-resort of Asana Fushi.
Arriving there is depressed Cara Hamilton, her extremely wealthy eco businessman. Zack and their spoilt teenage daughter Alexa. The whole family want to relax and recover following the twin traumatic events of Cara accidentally running over Alexa in the car and a break-in at the family home.
The prologue appears to set a chilling scene as you are aware that something horrific may have happened to one of the characters. On the subject of characters, apart from the Hamiltons, there is a collection of other guests and Asana Fushi staff. It becomes apparent that a great deal of ill will is felt towards Zach by literally everyone gathered there. Each chapter is prefaced by a countdown clock which gives the reader a sense of impending doom.
In a book of this type, there has to be a suspension of belief as we need to buy into the fact that a whole lot of people who don’t who have multifarious reasons for disliking Zach both in the present and historically, have managed to gather together on an extremely small island at exactly the same time as him.
Unfortunately, even taking this into account, there is a lot of the story that doesn’t ring true and even grates. None of the characters have any redeeming qualities at all. They are all entitled and selfish and they are only united by their motivation to harm. This is a trope that is often done, but, in order for it to work, the characterisation has to be spot on. In The Guests,, they all end up as 2D cartoon villains rather than properly worked-through and fleshed-out characters. There are also continuous references to designer brands to reinforce the sense of luxury, and to social media sites to reinforce being relevant. These really got on my nerves.
Even worse, were the constant plugs for the author’s previous book. I hate it when authors do this and it makes the story totally cringeworthy.
All this and despite the countdown clock building constant tension, it ends up going nowhere, and instead we get a completely lame ending.
My thanks to NetGalley, Penguin and Nikki Smith for the ARC in exchange for an open and honest review, but I can only give this 2 stars at best.
This one was okay, took me a while to get in to it. But I definitely did get into it and liked it. However I’ve gave it 3 stars as it took me a while to get through and I just didn’t enjoy it as much as others like this.
I absolutely loved my first book by Nikki Smith. I expected a standard beach read but this was something else. I read it in one sitting and was hooked all the way through to the fantastic ending. I can't say I really liked any of the characters. I thought they all deserved everything they got. But oh wow!! the twists and turns on the way we're a joy! I'm delighted to recommend The Guests as a 5* read.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read an advance copy. All opinions are my own.
This book wasn't what I expected at all. I really enjoyed it, but found myself wondering who I was rooting for. The characters all have different agendas and I found myself drawn to the characters I wouldn't necessarily have expected to. I am still questioning the ending and running it over in my mind and that is always the sign of a good book! I now really want to read more by this author.
I read and enjoyed The Beach Party and was looking forward to this book. Fantastic, luxurious holiday destination in the Maldives is the setting for this novel. There is a large of generally unlikeable characters with hardly a redeeming feature between them. The chapters count down to quite an unsatisfactory ending which feels like the set up for a sequel. I also feel the prologue would work better as an epilogue. Easy beach read.
I was so looking forward to this book. As a lucky one time visitor to the Maldives I was looking forward to reminiscing about my own experience. I had also read the authors previous book The Beach Party and enjoyed that.
However!! This book takes the tangent of fluffy prose (constant naming of designer labels anyone? Always a pet hate of mine in books) and flaky plot and 2D characters. I tried to get past this as I had had a positive experience with this author as I said, and hoped it would improve. BUT the straw that broke the camels back was the shameless plugging of her OWN book at 11% through;
“She slides them open to find her mother stretched out on the hammock by the plunge pool, a copy of The Beach Party in her hand, the paperback bestseller she’d picked up in W. H. Smith at Heathrow.”
What??? Really????
If I didn’t value my kindle I’d have thrown it out of the window at this point.
Thank you to Netgalley for the ARC, but this really was pants.
The resort of their dreams. A destination to die for….
I really enjoyed this thriller, it had plenty of twists and an interesting plot. It focuses on the Hamilton family on their holiday in the Maldives, an idyllic and unlikely setting for the events that unfold. Zach, his wife Cara and their daughter Alexa, all hold secrets of their own and the back story comes out as you read on.
This is a great holiday read, nice and easy to read and set on the beach. 5 out of 5 stars. Thank you to the publisher and Net Galley for providing an advance copy in return for my honest opinion. I have also published this review on Goodreads.
📚 BOOK REVIEW 📚
The Guests @nikkismith_author
The author of this book is the most loveliest lady. She reached out to me as soon as she knew that I was reading this book as a buddy read. I thought this was so kind.
I was lucky enough to receive an early arc copy of this book from @netgalley and it was a great and gripping read.
I loved the descriptions of the setting of this book. I've never been to the Maldives but it sounds dreamlike but I wouldn't want to be there with the characters in this book.
Right from the get go of the prologue we know something terrible has happened but we are unsure what. Each chapter in this book is titled with a countdown and it really adds to the drama of the book. There are secrets, lies and twists and turns at every opportunity. You're never quite sure who to trust and as the book is told from different point of views, you're never sure if the narrators are reliable. The characters are not very likeable but it didn't matter as I needed to know where the story was going.
I also thought that the author tackled an important subject in being more environmentally friendly in the world. This helped to keep the book fresh and current and makes it stand on its own in a genre that is often written about. Who doesn't love a destination thriller?
I can't really say anymore as I want to keep this spoiler free. But it's a great and thrilling read and one I enjoyed very much. An addictive page turner.
#theguests #destinationthriller #kindlereader
#kindleread #gripping #thrilling #jamieskindlereads #jamieslibrary #jamiesreads #alwaysreading #readingeveryday #lovetoread
Thank you SO much to Netgalley and the publisher for an ARC of this book.
I absolutely loved this!! Such great characters and a great storyline.
My full review is to follow in a few days.....
A white lotus style book set in a luxury resort and with a family full of secrets, lots of twists and turns and a very easy gripping read
A very good book and would recommend to anyone that enjoys psychological thriller,
Thank you for letting me read and review this book on Netgalley.
'The Guests' is a solid thriller novel set in a luxury eco-resort in the Maldives. the book focusses on the Hamilton family - Zach, Cara, and their teenage daughter Alexa - as they attempt a relaxing family holiday after some issues at home. Based on the blurb of the book, and the fact that I really enjoyed Smith's last book (The Beach Party) I should have absolutely loved this, but I didn't. I did like it, but for me, there were a couple of things that just weren't quite right.
First was the prologue, and I love a good prologue. This time, it felt out of place. By the end of the book I'd forgotten it was there and had to go back and re-read it to make sure I hadn't missed anything. I hadn't. For me, it would have worked so much better as an epilogue, where I'd have been left on a higher note at the end of the book, wanting to know what happened next. With it at the beginning, I didn't get that sense of wonder, and the ending left me feeling a bit flat.
Second was the setting. Whereas I felt immersed in the location in The Beach Party, that immersion was lacking in The Guests, to the point where I wondered whether the author had actually been to the Maldives, or had just done a lot of research. There was a lot of emphasis on heat and sand and coral (all true) but nothing that really sold the location to me. A couple more details here and there would have worked wonders, but they could have been staying on any island anywhere warm. There was no real sense of the Maldives in the book.
Third was the characters. A good cast fulfilling a range of required roles in the book. They were all highly flawed, which is great, but I just didn't like any of them and therefore didn't really care about what happened to them. I don't think any of the characters had any redeeming qualities at all; they were all very selfish, happy to walk over anyone else (including their own family) to get what they wanted. I need my characters to have something that makes me root for them, just one of them will do, so that I'm a little more invested in what I'm reading.
I hate to give any book less than five stars because I know how much work goes into writing one. If there had just been one thing that wasn't quite right, I could happily give a four, but for me this one is a three. Saying that, I'll still read what Smith publishes next, because I know how good her books can be, even if this one falls a little short.