Cul-de-sac: A Novel
Cul-de-sac: A Novel book cover

Cul-de-sac: A Novel

Hardcover – Big Book, August 10, 2021

Price
$15.01
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1984820259
Dimensions
6.4 x 1.26 x 9.55 inches
Weight
1.29 pounds

Description

“Set within an upscale neighborhood brimming with dark secrets,xa0this captivating thriller thrums with delicious foreboding on every page. I was entranced by thexa0gifted storytellingxa0andxa0magnetic characters, whose twisted paths converge in axa0shocking, explosivexa0climax. Cul-de-sac proves once again thatxa0Joy Fielding is an ingenious master of domestic suspense.” —Samantha M. Bailey, USA Today and #1 national bestselling author of Woman on the Edge “In the residents of an ordinary-looking cul-de-sac, [Joy] Fielding has created some of her strongest, most compelling charactersxa0. . .xa0An outstanding thriller and a perfect beach read.” — Booklist (starred review) Praise for Joy Fielding “We can always count onxa0Joy Fieldingxa0to turn out a well-dressed, well-developed psychological suspense novel.” — The Globe and Mail “Fielding has made the woman-in-jeopardy genre her own.” — People “[Fielding] takes domestic situations that everyone faces and combines them with chilling suspense.” — Richmond Times-Dispatch “Gripping . . . As Fielding slowly reveals each character’s secrets, she nicely upsets readers’ perceptions and expectations as they try to figure out who will be the first to snap—and who will die. Suspense fans will be well rewarded.” — Publishers Weekly Joy Fielding is the New York Times bestselling author of All the Wrong Places, The Bad Daughter, She’s Not There, Someone Is Watching, Charley’s Web, Heartstopper, Mad River Road, See Jane Run, and other acclaimed novels. She divides her time between Toronto and Palm Beach, Florida. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One It’s early May, a couple of months before the fatal events of that sultry summer night, and the clock radio in Maggie McKay’s bedroom wakes her up at six a.m., as it has every weekday morning since the school year began. She reaches across the empty half of the king-xadsize bed to the nightstand and silences the cloying strains of “Oh, what a beautiful morning” with a decisive slap of her hand before the refrain can repeat.Probably she should move the radio to the nightstand on her side of the bed so she won’t have to stretch so far. At the very least, she should reprogram the alarm to play another tune. She’s come to hate that stupid song. She doesn’t need reminding that Florida is the land of beautiful mornings. She hates it anyway.But she doesn’t move the radio and she doesn’t reprogram the tune. And she probably won’t. Because there have been enough changes in her life lately. Too many.The music was Craig’s idea. A gentler way to wake them up each morning than the shrill beeping jolting them into consciousness. Her nerves were frayed enough as it was, he reminded her unnecessarily. What she needed, he said, was less stress. What he needed, he didn’t say—xadmaybe wasn’t even aware of at the time—xadwas less Maggie.Not that she blamed him for their marriage falling apart, at least not entirely. The move to Palm Beach Gardens had been her idea. A new beginning, she’d told him when she first championed the idea of uprooting their family, abandoning their home, leaving their friends and their careers behind in Los Angeles, and moving across the country. It would be a fresh start. A new beginning. Better for everyone.Virtually the same words Craig used when he’d packed up his personal belongings and moved out three months ago. “I’m sorry, Maggie,” he added, managing to look as if he meant it. “I just can’t do it anymore.”“F*** you,” she mutters now, pretty much the first words out of her mouth every morning since he left. “F***ing coward.” She rolls back to her side of the bed, the sheets cool beneath the flimsy cotton of her pajamas, and opens the top drawer of the mirrored nightstand beside the pillow. Her hand feels for the cold, smooth surface of the compact Glock 19, secreted beneath a chiffon swirl of multicolored scarves. The 9mm handgun is by far the most popular handgun in the United States, due to its size and reliability. Or so said the salesman who sold it to her the same afternoon that Craig moved out.Craig had been adamant about not having a gun in the house, despite everything that had happened. Despite, God forbid, everything that could happen, and probably would happen the minute they became too complacent, she’d argued to no avail. If you’d really wanted to reduce my stress level, she thinks as she lifts the relatively lightweight gun into her hands, this little guy would have done a much better job of relaxing me than that stupid song from an old Broadway musical.But it’s a classic, she can hear him say.“F*** you,” she says in return, refusing to be charmed and returning the gun to the drawer. She swivels out of bed, her bare feet padding across the mock-xadhardwood floor of the narrow hallway toward the bedrooms of her two children. “Erin,” she calls out, knocking on her daughter’s door before opening it, hearing the teenager moan beneath her mountain of covers. “Time to get up, sweetie.”“Go away,” comes the muffled response.Maggie backs into the hall, understanding there’s no point arguing. Erin will stay in bed until she can no longer tolerate the sound of her mother’s exhortations and only then will she deign to get up and dressed. She will spend the next twenty to thirty minutes in the bathroom, fixing her hair and makeup. She will refuse to have anything for breakfast. She will decline to engage in anything resembling a conversation with either her mother or younger brother. She will check her phone, toss her hair, and roll her eyes more times than Maggie can count. And after finally climbing into the black SUV beside her mother, she will remember that she has forgotten something of vital importance—xadoccasionally the homework she hasn’t completed, usually the cellphone she left in the powder room while doing a final check of her appearance—xadthereby delaying them further. She may or may not remember to reset the house alarm, in which case Maggie will have to get out of the car to do it herself. Maggie will then chauffeur the kids to their respective schools, dropping Leo off first, then Erin, who will exit the car without a backward glance just as the bell is sounding.“This could all be avoided, you know,” she hears Erin say. “All you have to do is—xad”“You’re not getting your own car.”“Why not? Dad could probably get me a good deal.xa0.xa0.xa0.”“You’re not getting your own car.”“What’s the point of having my license if you won’t let me drive? Besides, if I have my own car, you won’t have to drive us back and forth to school every day. You could get a job, get a lifexa0.xa0.xa0.”“I have a life.”“You had a life. You threw it away.”“Okay, that’s enough.”“I think you enjoy playing martyr.xa0.xa0.xa0.”“I said, enough!”And enough of that, Maggie decides, banishing the unpleasant thoughts as she enters her son’s room. She touches him xadgently on the shoulder. “Leo, honey. Time to wake up.”The shy eight-xadyear-xadold flips onto his back and opens the deep blue eyes he inherited from his father. “What day is it?”“It’s Wednesday. Why?”“So we’re having dinner with Dad?”“That’s right.”“And he’ll pick us up after school?”Maggie nods. “If he’s not there when you get out, you call me immediately.”Leo tosses off his Star Wars blanket without further prompting and climbs out of bed, his favorite stuffed Super Mario toy in hand, heading for the bathroom he shares with his sister, experience having taught him that he’d better get in there while he has the chance.Maggie returns to her bedroom. She takes a quick shower in the small en suite bathroom, then throws on a T-xadshirt and a pair of shorts before fluffing out her chin-xadlength, mousy brown hair, hair that used to be lush and shoulder-xadlength. Used to be, she thinks, mindful of all the things she once was: employed, confident, married. “Don’t forget pretty,” she says out loud, staring at the defeated-xadlooking stranger in the full-xadlength mirror on the inside of her closet door. “Who are you?” she whispers. “What have you done with Maggie McKay?”“Erin!” she calls as she heads down the stairs, eyes on the alert for anything that looks even vaguely out of place. “Time to get up.” She does a quick check of the downstairs rooms—xadthe combined living-xaddining room to one side of the stairs, the kitchen, powder room, and den to the other—xadbefore turning off the burglar alarm to the right of the front door.She knows she’s being silly—xadCraig would use the word “paranoid,” had, in fact, used it on more than one occasion—xadthat there’s no need to check every room in the house, as she’s done every morning since they moved in eighteen months ago, that no one could circumvent the state-xadof-xadthe-xadart alarm system she insisted they install despite its prohibitive cost, and that even if someone did, surely she would hear his footsteps on the stairs, stairs she’s deliberately left uncarpeted for that very reason.She opens the front door, her eyes doing a quick pan of the small cul-xadde-xadsac as she bends down to retrieve the morning paper. Hers is the house at the street’s rounded tip, a location that gives her a clear view of the two houses on both sides. The yellow school bus is already parked in front of the house to her immediate right, waiting to transport Tyler and Ben Wilson to their tony private school in North Palm Beach. Maggie acknowledges the bus driver’s nod with an uneasy wave of her fingers and a sigh of relief. It’s the same man who’s been picking them up for the last four months. No reason to panic, as she did after the last driver retired and this much younger one appeared. She’d even called The Benjamin School for confirmation they’d hired someone new, then questioned his references.“I’m sorry. Who are you?” the school receptionist asked.“You’re being paranoid,” Craig told her.“Okay, so I’m paranoid,” Maggie mutters to herself now, retreating into the house. Better paranoid than dead. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A shooting lays bare the secrets harbored by five families in a sleepy suburban cul-de-sac in this riveting psychological thriller from the
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • All the Wrong Places
  • .“
  • Cul-de-sac
  • proves once again that Joy Fielding is an ingenious master of domestic suspense.”—Samantha M. Bailey,
  • USA Today
  • and #1 national bestselling author of
  • Woman on the Edge
  • Someone on this quiet, unassuming cul-de-sac will be shot dead in the middle of a sultry July night.Will it be Maggie, the perfectionist wife, or Craig, the husband who can’t quite live up to her expectations? They’ve packed up their two children and fled their life in California, hoping for a fresh start in Florida, only to find the demons of the past hovering on their doorstep.Maybe it will be Nick, a highly respected oncologist, or his wife, Dani, a successful dentist, both with well-kept secrets of their own.Or perhaps the victim will be Julia, an elderly widow, whose troubled grandson has recently moved in with her, introducing unsavory habits and even more unsavory acquaintances into her formerly quiet existence.Then there’s Olivia and her husband, Sean. Having lost his job at a prestigious advertising agency, Sean is depressed, resentful of his working wife, and drinking heavily. He is also prone to increasingly violent fantasies.And what of the newlyweds, Aiden and Heidi, whose marriage is already on the rocks, due to Aiden’s reluctance to stand up to his intrusive mother? Matters aren’t helped when Heidi befriends Julia’s grandson, setting the stage for a major blowup.A diverse group of neighbors, to be sure. Yet all harbor secrets. All bear scars. And all have access to guns.Not all will survive the night.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(566)
★★★★
25%
(472)
★★★
15%
(283)
★★
7%
(132)
23%
(433)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Cul de sac was a "dead end" for me.

Normally I do like Joy Fielding's thoughtful thrillers. Unfortunately this latest offering lacked thrills, truly likable characters and could have been reinvented from a discarded chapter from Peyton Place. Consider the cast of "poor unfortunate souls". There is a couple recently separated over the wife's exaggerated paranoia over her testimony in a trial, another couple of two professional doctors beset by internal strife, a couple in which the wife is the breadwinner, a newly married couple in which the husband struggles both with PTSD and an over bearing mother and a widowed senior citizen with a drug using grandson and her pompous son who periodically parades a new trophy wife. The ultimate conclusion will be that a gun will go off in one of these households and there will be a casualty. By the time the book concludes, I guarantee that readers will not care and will wish to be put out of their misery as quick as possible . The dialogue is surprisingly pedestrian and chock full of objectionable language which is a rarity for this author. Domestic issues are ineptly pantomimed and even any semblance of passion has all the appeal of a teenagers amorous escapade in a drive in. There are certain characters who do confront their own desperate reality with some degree of success. However, in the surroundings of this spacious and exclusive neighborhood, "Cul de Sac" is an intended frothy soap opera that is woefully submerged in tepid water.
8 people found this helpful
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Another great novel by Fielding

This is definitely a book that is hard to put down. There are a lot of intersecting stories, but Fielding paints each character with such uniqueness and personality that they all draw you in. From the beginning of the book, you know someone is going to be killed, so the question is who is the victim and who is the murderer. It doesn’t take long to figure out what’s probably going to happen, but it’s still a compelling page-turner none-the-less. Ever since I read my first Joy Fielding novel, See Jane Run, I have been a huge fan. She really knows how to tell a story and keep readers engrossed.
8 people found this helpful
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Great read!

A Cul de Sac is supposed to be a quiet safe place to live. Five couples live on the Cul de Sac and all have secrets they're hiding. Nothing is as it seems. A neighborhood celebration ends in tragedy. Why? I love all the different characters each with their own personalities. The story is well written and keeps you turning the pages. Definitely recommend!
7 people found this helpful
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Great read

I have always enjoyed reading her books, and this one does not disappoint. Good story and an easy read.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

So Good!!

Grabbed me from the get go!! Absolutely loved every page. So sad it ended!
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Intense, but disjointed and contrived

This book had such an intense storyline and I really really wanted to like it. To my disappointment, the book got extremely tedious to read after awhile.

Each chapter being centered around a different family on the cul-de-sac made the individual storylines hard to follow. I couldn't get a good grasp of the characters and get a good feel for them because what I was reading kept switching between everyone so quickly. I think this would have been structured better by giving the book 6 sections, one for each of the families and one to wrap everything up.

As far as the resolution, I thought it was anticlimactic. It was pretty much a guarantee who was going to get killed by the end so I wasn't really surprised. The character that got killed seemed to devolve really quickly in the end and it made the ending seem a bit contrived.

Overall, the plot for the book was intense, and I loved the whodunit style. I think that the book could've been a homerun had it been executed a bit better.
3 people found this helpful
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IT'S NORMALLY SUCH A QUIET STREET

CUL-DE-SAC

What a fun book! Full of questions, surprises, drama, suspense, this book has it all!

There are five cookie cutter houses on this small cul-de-sac, but none of the neighbors really socialize; they pretty much keep to themselves. But that doesn't mean that they don't watch each other, wonder about each other, and keep checking up on what is going on in the neighborhood.

But that all changes one day when an impromptu game of catch takes place and everyone comes out front to chat, catch up, and as a result, some friendships start to form. But mostly questions...

The five families that live on the cul de sac are all so different from each other and live with different circumstances. Tensions build, neighbors become confidants, secrets are being exposed. What goes on behind closed doors; you don't know. But you will find out....

This was a great read! I loved every word of this book. It was hard to figure out what was going to happen to these characters. All of the characters are so different and unique and fleshed-out.

There are scenes of abuse that may be disturbing to some, but it is a huge and vital part of the story.

I can highly recommend this book to you!
2 people found this helpful
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Psychological Thriller with Some Spousal Abuse

In the prologue of this psychological thriller we are introduced to the families who live in the five houses on Carlyle Terrace, a cul-de-sac in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. We are also told there will be a shooting one night in July. The story then goes back to early May and we learn about what’s going on in those five houses. As we discover each family’s secrets, we wonder if they are the one who will be involved in the shooting. The author does a great job of keeping us guessing until the very end.

My main complaint with the book was that the story of one family involved spousal abuse, both physical and emotional. It was was quite graphic and it seemed like there was a lot of it. The emotional abuse extended to a child at times, so be prepared. Also, everything was so neatly wrapped up at the end, all that was missing was the bow.

My thanks to the the author, the publisher, and NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this book.
2 people found this helpful
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Not one of her best

I am a longtime fan of Joy Fielding’s work, but I have to say I was disappointed in her latest book. The characters, although basically likeable for the most part, were not well-developed and the story lacked the psychological edge the author is well known for. It was well-written with a interesting plot, but not up to the usual level of Fielding’s work. I look forward to her next book.
2 people found this helpful
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This is a uniquely written story

This is a cleverly written story that takes you through the lives of the residents of a quiet little cul-de-sac in Florida. The story starts you right off with a BANG, literally. The residents hear a gunshot in the middle of a muggy July night and someone isn’t coming out of this story alive.
In this story, you meet quite a few characters. Maggie and Craig are the parents of two children. They are currently separated due to Maggie's… issues. Olivia and Sean are having their own issues. The biggest being Sean’s loss of job and current situation. He’s depressed, day drinking, and lying up a storm. Aiden and Heidi, the newlyweds are adorable! Well, they sure would be if his mother wasn’t the woman in the middle. Then there is the dentist Dani and her oncologist husband Nick. They have a few secrets of their own as well. Last there is the elderly widow Julia. Her grandson, who is having a lot of trouble figuring himself out, has recently moved in with her and things aren’t exactly as they seem.
Well, I suppose saying things aren’t exactly as they seem could apply to any of these families and the thing is, they all have guns. Meaning, any one of them could be the one that fired that shot you heard in the opening of the book. This is way better than I’m making it sound but I don’t want to give anything away.
This book is just a lot of fun. Well, some of it isn’t fun. There are some topics that are very hard to read as they happen but for the most part the way this book is written is fun. It’s so well written I couldn’t put it down. I just wanted to know everything about everyone (I seriously felt like a nosey neighbor!) and I couldn’t wait to find out who was going to meet their bitter end. I know who I wanted it to be so I was on the edge of my seat hoping.
This is also a book where the epilogue was terrific. It really wrapped up everyone's story so perfectly. It gave you closure and just gave a terrific finish to everyone’s life. I definitely recommend giving this a chance. It’s a fun fast read that plays out nicely in the end.
2 people found this helpful