Ever stumbled upon a book that grips you from the first chapter? 'A Good Idea' did that for me. It's a dark, twisty psychological thriller about Finley and
betty, two best friends whose bond is tested when Betty vanishes without a trace. Finley refuses to believe her friend just ran away, especially after Betty's boyfriend, Serena, seems suspiciously calm about it all. The story unfolds in dual timelines, alternating between Finley's relentless search in the present and flashbacks revealing Betty's growing unease before her disappearance. The small-town setting adds this claustrophobic tension—everyone knows everyone, yet no one’s talking. What really got me was how the author plays with perception; you’re never quite sure who to
trust, not even Finley. By the end, the lines between victim, villain, and vigilante blur in a way that left me staring at the ceiling for hours.
One detail that stuck with me? The recurring motif of water—pools, rain, rivers—it’s everywhere, almost like a silent character symbolizing buried secrets and the inevitability of truth surfacing. The climax isn’t just about 'whodunit'; it’s a raw exploration of how far grief
and love can push someone. And that final twist? I audibly gasped. It’s the kind of book that makes you question how well you truly know the people closest to you.