Member Reviews
This book was such a fun and wild ride!! I was on the edge of my seat the entire time trying to guess what was going on. The characters, setting and overall story were written very well. I will be recommending this one to all my friends who enjoy thrillers.
Thank you Netgalley for the ARC. This book was quite a pageturner. The beginning had definite Verity vibes, but by the middle of the book went in a completely different direction. I do have to say that none of these characters were particularly likable, which was hard for me. Where were theee people’s morals??? But overall, 3 1/2 stars.
Loved this book! An easy read with a lot of twists and turns. I was sucked in right from the beginning.
Anna is trying to make it in LA, doing whatever she can to move forward. She takes on a job as Kara's companion, an invalid with a dark past.
Is Anna up for the challenge of taking her on? How far will she go to land her dream role? Who is causing mischief around the house to scare her?
Jo Crow’s The Companion is a gripping psychological thriller that dives deep into ambition, betrayal, and the murky waters of human morality. The story follows Anna, an aspiring actor, who lands a unique job as a companion to Kara, a once-rising starlet whose career was cut short by a tragic accident.
The novel starts at a slower pace, carefully laying the groundwork for the complex relationships and layered backstories. While the beginning requires patience, the payoff is worth it. Around the halfway point, the tension ramps up significantly, and the book becomes impossible to put down. Crow’s expertly timed twists and vivid characterizations make the second half a rollercoaster of emotions and revelations.Anna’s perspective adds an engaging layer of intrigue as she navigates the glamorous yet shadowy world Kara once thrived in.
If you enjoy thrillers with slow-burn beginnings and explosive, twist-filled endings, The Companion is well worth the read. It’s a haunting reminder that the price of ambition can sometimes be too high.
Mind over Matter
'The Companion' by Jo Crow is a modern thriller with an interesting take on the lengths people will go to to become successful in Hollywood. Anna is a voice actress with no work and nowhere to live. On the recommendation of her father, and for the added perk of being able to use the home sound studio, she takes a job as a companion to Colin Harrington's wife who has very little mobility after an accident. However, it seems as though only Colin wants her there, which is fine with her, because she wants Colin. Whilst she fights to keep her job with the Harringtons, she uncovers the deadly secrets they are hiding, while trying to keep her own undiscovered.
I enjoyed reading this thriller and read it in only a few days. The twists and turns were surprising, and the few I guessed, were mainly due to them being seeded in the novel. The novel is a page-turner, but more plot-driven. The characterisation is pretty superficial and the main character doesn't really change in any significant way. Anna wasn't really a sympathetic character until she was put in jeopardy.
Themes of domestic abuse shown through gaslighting, control presented as love, violence and other forms of manipulation are clear and were given a fresh take in relation to life coaching and self-improvement. More could have been done with some of the secrets, especially in their relation to some of the more recent Hollywood scandals, but I thought it was a fun read. I think it would be a good read on holiday or on a commute.
Thank you to Relay Publishing and Netgalley for making this eArc available for review.
Anna lands a job as a companion for a former actor and the wife of celebrity podcaster, Colin. Colin's wife, Kara, was in a terrible accident and is largely unresponsive. Anna's job is to be there for Kara, so she doesn't feel so alone. Anna is excited because the job pays well and she has somewhere to live. Plus, the beautiful house also has a sound studio, which provides the perfect chance for Anna to jumpstart her career as a voice actor. However, as time goes on, the gig doesn't seem so great. Caring for Kara (no pun intended) is harder than Anna imagined. Plus, she keeps hearing noises in the night and feels like she is being watched. Although, Colin is pretty easy on the eyes...but, as time goes on, Anna discovers a few secrets buried in the house. And someone wants to keep those secrets hidden.
This book reminded me of The Wife Upstairs by Freida McFadden and The Nurse by Jenna Kernan. If you have read either of these books, then this one may feel a bit too familiar. I will say that the ending was very twisted and well done! It is a super quick and easy read. Some parts were a bit predictable (maybe because I have read some similar books) but the final twist was really good and surprising!
Thank you Relay Publishing and NetGalley for the advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
Landing a job caring for the unresponsive wife of celebrity podcaster Colin Harrington could be the best thing that’s happened to me in a long time. I get a place to live, a paycheck and a way to salvage my comatose career.....
Yes, it is reminiscent of Verity and The Wife Upstairs, so we've seen this plot before - creepy wife upstairs not talking, needs a companion/home help......however, this was just, better. Unsettling, well developed characters and well thought out. A prime example of a thriller done right. While the general plot may be familiar, this was the best of the bunch for me.
It was well written, some good twists and an ever developing storyline. I liked the backstories, the hidden tapes, the meddling nurse, how unnerving Kara was and the ending was wrapped up nicely. Anna was fabulous, a wanna be actress who would seemingly do anything to make it in Hollywood, however her strong morals and loyalty surprised me.
A great read, can't wait to read more from Jo Crow.
Jo Crow’s The Companion delivers a gripping and twisted narrative that keeps readers guessing at every turn. From the very beginning, Anna’s journey plunges her into a web of unexpected challenges and dark revelations. The sense of foreboding grows with every page, and as the plot unfolds, the twists come in unexpected yet satisfying ways.
What stands out is Crow’s ability to mislead her audience—just when you think the story might take one direction, it surprises you with an entirely different path. The resolution is particularly rewarding, tying up loose ends in a way that feels both shocking and satisfying.
This novel has it all: tension, psychological depth, and a sense of unease that lingers long after the final page. For fans of suspenseful and layered storytelling, The Companion is a must-read.
PSA: I'm calling all the readers who thought Verity by CoHo could have been a great book, yet somehow it wasn’t, and you ended up disappointed and didn't understand what all the hype was about.
This book is everything that Verity wasn’t. It’s well-told, it’s well-written, the plot is great, the characters are great, all the loose ends were tied up nicely, and – the plot twists were REAL twists. Despite the main storyline going in the exact direction those types of stories go, there still were so, so many unexpected twists, and then the ending was so, so satisfying!
I know it’s not exactly fair to begin a book review by comparing it to another book. I know. I know it’s a meh thing to do. Yet somehow that was exactly what I kept thinking as I was reading it. Almost all 400 pages of it.
I spoke to a friend about the book, and we jokingly labeled it “Fake Verity”, but now I think this label wasn’t really the most suitable. It’s not fake. The storyline isn’t exactly that unique and it’s been used before (and after) Verity, just that one book somehow made it. It can retire now. A way better version of the same storyline is here now. This one is the best take on the age-old storyline I have read.
It made me look into what other books this unknown to me author had written before she wrote this one.
My personal favorite here? The characters. The flawed ones, the seemingly dumb ones. Their development, and their morphing into likable/unlikable, into smart/dumb. And then, the depiction of friendships. The depth it goes, even after one of the friends is long gone. The human connections that are formed within the book.
Did I say I’m super glad I got to read this one and found a new to me author who has written this? Yeah, seriously. Go check this one out. And tell all the others, mkay?
Thank you NetGalley and Relay Publishing for this eCopy to review
The Companion is a gripping psychological thriller that kept me hooked from start to finish. The blend of psychological tension and suspense kept me on the edge of my seat, making it hard to put the book down.
Landing the job as a companion for Colin Harrington’s unresponsive wife, Kara, felt like a lifeline. Megan was desperate to revive her faltering career and this opportunity seemed perfect. The Harrington mansion, with its high-tech features and eerie atmosphere, was both a sanctuary and a prison. Shadows seemed to move on their own, and Megan couldn’t shake the feeling of being constantly watched.
Colin, a celebrity podcaster, was a man haunted by his past. His wife’s accident had left him in a state of perpetual mourning, but Megan couldn’t help but feel drawn to him. Maybe she could be the one to help him move on. However, as Megan settled into her role, she discovered a cassette tape that revealed a shocking truth. Someone in the house had a dark secret, and they were willing to do anything to protect it. But Megan wasn’t entirely innocent either; she had her own secrets to keep.
The plot twists kept me on the edge of my seat, and the characters were well-developed and intriguing. The eerie setting added to the overall sense of dread and anticipation
Complex psychological mystery, accidents that aren't accidents, secrets at every turn, and not everything is as is appears. Closed cast give it a rather claustrophobic feel and increases the tension as the story develops. Not everyone is guilty, and not everyone is innocent ...
I really enjoyed this as a psychological thriller novel, it had characters that I cared about and enjoyed the way they were written. The plot worked and had that suspenseful atmosphere that I was looking for. Jo Crow has a strong writing style and was glad I got to read this.
"Truthfully, I didn’t care about what I might find. There was nothing I could discover that would scare me away from this job."
"Kara continued to ignore me, focusing instead on a potted plant in the corner of the room. That plant would most likely have been a better conversationalist. But there was also an underlying tension. Like a coiled toy ready to bounce. Kara’s sudden, jerky movements always had me on edge, certain she would knock something over. Kara was a jump scare waiting to happen."
Fast-paced domestic psychological thriller.
Anna - a young and ambitious woman with a sordid past employed to be a companion for a rich podcaster's sick wife.
Colin -the husband, thinking his wife is getting so bored pent up in her room, decided to hire someone young and lively to keep her wife, Karra, company. 'To share infectious Joie de Vivre and inspire rapid recovery.'
Mary- first wife who died from suicide
Well thought-out plot and character development..The characters are mysterious and well-written. Kept me second guessing all throughout. Included POVs from Mary and Karra through recorded cassette tapes to help piece it all together.
Thank you to NetGalley for the arc.🖤
3.75✨
Published on Goodreads 11/16/2024
Rating: 😐/2
Review: This book had a great start and sucked me in for the first 15% but then it just dragged. Anna’s character went from mysterious to annoying and made dumb decisions. Story didn’t flow and a lot of detail threads didn’t get pulled on enough and others dragged. Very much Verity vibes.
Format: 👩🏻💻
Source: #netgalley
WANTED: Companion for sick wife.’ Wow! What a wild ride! This book had some really crazy twists that I did not see coming!! The story was very interesting! It had great suspense, intriguing, murder, mystery, great characters and some chilling moments! I highly recommend reading this book! Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for sharing this book with me!