Member Reviews
3.50 - Had potential, was interesting, more than one twist. Reminded me of Freida McFadden books (not just the name). Ending felt a little rushed. Check trigger warnings.
Unfortunately the writing style was not for me.
I believe the story could have been better. I knew 2 of the twists almost immediately, but there was another that threw me. The thought of coming face-to-face with your attacker from 25 years ago is terrible, the fact he is making your life unbearable is terrible, the fact you choose to stay employed with him is atrocious (why wouldn’t you just quit, you met him on day 1). The story was a tad slow, picking up in the middle and then just getting messy and over the top at the end. I understand this is fiction, I had hoped though that it would be a little more believable.
This book started out great but the last third really lost me. The ending didn't make sense considering the rest of the story and it was disappointing and also repetitive.
I loved this story and I didn't want to put it down. My blood was boiling for how much Emmett got away with everything by being considered this "could do no wrong" character. Everyone thinks Nelly is crazy and making things up. I felt so outraged for her, just wanted to scream at the characters...for any of them, to believe her!
I enjoyed the ending and it got quite intense. Some of it might not have been the most realistic, but it's just a book and it didn't take away from the story.
There were times that I wanted to yell at Nelly to just give up and leave, but then I remember...why should she? The whole point was for her to not give up.
Tina also upset me, but it was sad what happened to her in the end. I hated the way Tina's husband talked to Nelly but I was proud of her for defending herself. Always love when an fmc takes her power back and stops letting everyone walk all over her.
I recommend this book but I do realize this story could be triggering since this book revolves around a childhood S.A. experience.
I was hooked right from the first page I read of this book, and my goodness it was a rollercoaster of a read.
Nelly is just divorced and has moved away to start again, however soon her past comes back to haunt her as she is faced with the man who attempted to rape her (Marshall). He now goes by a different name “” and in everyone’s eyes he cannot do no wrong.
Given that she is new to the area and no one knows her, but everyone knows Emmett, Nelly keeps her cards close to her chest and doesn’t say anything to anyone. She is however aware that strange things have started to happen to her in both her personal and professional life, slashed tires and missing lesson plans to name a couple.
Nelly reports what has happened to her but the local sheriff brushes her off as Nelly is new to the area and it seems she’s making a big deal over little things. So for now it looks as though Nelly is on her own for now and she is determined to get to bottom and find whoever it is that is making her life very difficult.
I enjoyed the majority of this book, it was fast paced, had me hooked from the start with plenty of twists and turns to keep you interested, however at times I did find it a little predictable, and occasionally far fetched. I also had a few unanswered questions left after I had finished the book, but all in all a good read.
Thank you to NetGalley, the publisher and the author for an advance copy of this book in exchange for this review.
This was a solid, middle-of-the-road thriller, not a great literary work of art but, then again, that was not what I was looking for when I picked it up to read while on vacation. Here is what I wanted: a fast paced book that kept me reading that did not require a level of energy that I didn't have and this fit the bill, as did the previous novel of his that I read. I do admit that I am a sucker for any book that is about a teacher, because I am one, that this didn't hurt either. It was a world I was familiar with, although admittedly, the school in this book was in a small town where everyone knew everyone else, which made it easier to write a suspense thriller about it.
Nelly, a teacher from a big city school, comes to this school in a small town with a checkered past. This establishes her as, quite possibly, an unreliable narrator, which I think is absolutely necessary. Nelly meets Emmett Moore, the Assistant Principal, who bears an uncanny resemblance to a man that tried to sexually assault her as a teenager. She quickly comes to believe that Emmett Moore, who is much beloved in this town, is that young man. Meanwhile, things start to seriously go south for Nelly and she believes she is being gaslighted because Emmett or Marshall, whomever he is, is afraid of being discovered as the almost rapist she believes him to be and threatens to disrupt his life.
Is he actually Marshall, the man who attacked her as a teenager or Emmett Moore, the Assistant Principal, or both or neither? The book, establishes the narrator as one who may not be worthy of belief, but gives us enough details to wonder whether her story is actually true. You will need to read the book itself to determine this because I am no spoiler.
Thanks to NetGalley and Inkubator Books for providing me with an advance reading copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
The Good Teacher... Nelly knows in her heart that she is a good teacher, but when her life is upended and she has to start over, her life becomes a wild ride. Is she paranoid or delusional or is someone messing with her head?
This story is filled with gaslight, manipulation, crime, and uncertainty. As a teacher myself, I was on the edge of my seat as this story unfolded, knowing how things can be twisted unfairly against a teacher. Nelly is a strong character, who has faced adversity and has a determination about her that has the reader rooting for her to the very end.
After my last read, I couldn't give this one 5 stars. This is a very good read and absolutely worth the read, but I found the ending slightly rushed and anti-climactic. It would have been nice to have some backstory from the other characters, even secretly, which would've made it more thrilling in the end.
Thank you to NetGalley and Inkubator books for this ARC!
Thank you Netgalley, Brian O'Rourke, and Inkubator Books for the ebook! This was a fast paced read that had me feeling like I was going crazy! I just couldn't believe the scenario but at the end it all came together and made more sense as to how they got there!!
I loved this book, a bit of a slow start and felt the end was rushed however I would still recommend nonetheless. Gripping mystery!
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Oh My Gosh!! I could not put “The Teacher” down! Every time I said one more chapter, it ended on a cliff-hanger and I just had to find out what was going on. I started it earlier tonight and finished it at two o’clock am reading it in one sitting. I’m totally exhausted today but it was so worth it.
This was my first book by Brian O’Rourke but it won't be my last. Many thanks to the author, Inkubator Books and NetGalley for a complimentary copy of the book. The opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own.
WOW! I finished this book in a few hours. I devoured these pages! This book wrecked my nerves! My anxiety was through the roof wanting to know2 what was going to happen. I was engrossed and on the edge of my seat the entire time. If manipulation and gaslighting were a person! I wasn’t sure what to think. Was Nelly delusional or was she correct in her thoughts? I flip flopped on the answer to that question so many times while reading this book.
The characters were well developed and I felt that I got to know them throughout the story, especially Nelly, the female main character. The writing flowed in away that kept you flipping the pages. I just had to know what was going to happen. There was action and drama the whole way through, and I loved the short chapters. There were unexpected twists and turns throughout the story, and I liked the flashbacks to the past sprinkled in along the way. It helped me understand the characters better and gave depth to who Nelly was as a person. Theo Baxter has quickly moved to my “auto-buy authors” list!
Thank you NetGalley and Inkubator Books for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
I received an arc copy of this book from Net Galley in exchange for my honest opinion of it. This is the first book I have read by this author and I really enjoyed it. Nelly begins a new teaching jobs and immediately recognizes another teacher as the boy who tried to rape her when she was 13. Even though he goes by the name Emmett instead of Marshall, Nelly is positive it is him. Emmett is popular with everyone in the small town and comes across as an awesome guy. When Nelly starts accusing him of making her life miserable as a teacher by strange things happening and going to the police and accusing Emmett of these things, you start to wonder is all of this true or is she just unstable?
Was this the most riveting psychological thriller I've ever read? Not particularly. It had slow moments but I was still glued to the pages as I really wanted to find out how Nelly got herself out of this mess AND why things went sideways for her in California. It was really registering a 3 star until the twist at the end that I found to be unexpected although I did believe someone else was involved. I would have liked to see the aftermath fleshed out a bit more but over all a solid 3.5-4 star story.
#TheGoodTeacher #NetGalley
Overall, a solid read. The book totally sucked me in and I was hooked for the first 3/4 of the book. However, the last 1/4 of the book I wasn't buying even if it was free. Again, not everything needs to be wrapped up with a beautiful bow when a story ends. There can be more mystery and unanswered questions which will add to people talking about the book and (hopefully) make it a popular pick with readers.
The last quarter of the book was pretty unbelievable and had me lose respect for the main character (Nelly). She seemed so much stronger than the ending written for her.
There were tons of lose ends that didn't come together at the later part of the book (i.e. Vanessa and Emmett's relationship, Tina's husband situation and demise).
I do appreciate the author painting a realistic picture of sexual assault and victim blaming. This is very real and was handled with care.
Good Teacher = Good Read (but forgettable)
First by this author but i liked the book itself.
The Domestic teacher take on this was original but still completely fast paced. There were twists in the book and i loved reading this. Sometimes i found it to be repetitive but over all was a good read.
Would recommend.
Thanks NetGalley for letting me read and review.
Being a longtime former teacher as well as a voracious mystery fan, this book title and description appealed to me. As I began reading, I became quickly invested in teacher Nelly’s story- up to a point. The situation of coming upon her teenage attacker after twenty years seemed improbable, but not impossible. At first the cat-and mouse suspense built adequately; however some of the school situations targeting Nelly were ridiculous, and the action became formulaic and repetitive. Then about three-quarters through the ordeal, all kinds of new and unlikely details emerged, some unnecessary and confusing, several not adequately developed or resolved. And the wrap-up scene at school?? 🤦♀️ The writer certainly is unfamiliar with school hierarchy and policies. (I did enjoy the believable character of Nelly’s fellow teacher, Beck.) I had not read any Brian R. O’Rourke before, but after completing The Good Teacher, I looked at his other titles to find that he previously published three other “psychological thrillers” to Kindle —all within 6 months. Hence the formulaic aspect. As other reviewers have also noted, similarities to Freida McFadden’s style were evident (but in my opinion, not as successful.) 2.5 stars rounded up.
The Good teacher starts off with Nelly accepting a teaching job in a small community similar to the one she grew up in. On the first day of meeting teachers she is left reeling seeing a man that looks disturbingly look the guy that tried to assault her so many years ago. The book takes you back and forth to reveal why Nelly thinks this person is the one that hurt her so many years ago. There are many twists and throughout the book, you start to doubt Nelly’s memory if she has been mistaken. The book covers some thoughts, beliefs on the metoo movement that makes you question from either side of the coin.
This book was fast paced and kept you guessing the entire time. I have to admit it was an a slow start however once you get into the middle of the book it flys by quickly only.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and would read another book by this author again.
What an original take on a teacher domestic noir! Completely original, fast paved with some trully shocking twists. I loved every second of this one. It was so easy to read and flowed so naturally. The characters were well developed and it was a tad repetitive with some of the themes but I loved it
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The Good Teacher by Brian O'Rourke was an intense, nerve-wracking, blood-boiling psychological thriller! The twist... I am not even talking about the twist.
This book is a masterpiece of manipulation and gaslighting! If someone said they guest the twist, they are lying!
After a difficult divorce, teacher Nelly decides to change her life and move to a small town. She is excited to start her new job in the new school but there is someone that reminds her her past nightmare.
PTSD is a real thing but can this mess up your brain?
If someone looks like you know them...do you actually know them?
Nelly starts to second-guess everything and every new day comes with a new disaster!
Thank you NetGalley and publisher for this copy|!
Traditional format (digital). When I saw the cover for the book it gave off vibes of another best selling teacher themed thriller so I decided to give it a read.
This is a psychological thriller about a teacher who was sexually assaulted as a teen and decades later shows up to teach at a new school to discover that the perpetrator is a teacher at the same school. The plot revolves around the female teacher taking her revenge and trying to out the man who committed the crime.
What I liked
🍎 fast paced quick read
🍎 characters were developed in a way that allowed me to feel their personalities (for example the main male character gave me the creeps)
🍎 lots of twists and turns which kept me guessing
What I didn’t like
🍎 many parts of the book were super predictable
🍎 lots of repetition of things throughout the book that made some of the twists super obvious
🍎further to the point above the me too theme was way overdone in this book (too much repetition)
🍎 the ended had a lot of information left unsaid and had a lot of holes in it which was a big letdown
Overall to me this book was average. I did enjoy most of the book except the ending which needed a lot more work. I give this a 3/5.
Thank you Net Galley and Inkubator Books for a digital ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review.