The beauty of 'The Jetsetters' lies in how it peels back the layers of family life, showing both the messy and the magical sides of those relationships. At its core, the novel isn’t just about a cruise or a vacation—it’s about what happens when you force people who share DNA but not necessarily hearts to spend time together. The story digs into how past wounds, unspoken resentments, and buried secrets shape the way family members interact. It’s like holding up a mirror to real-life dynamics, where love and frustration exist side by side, and the characters’ journey becomes a way to explore whether those bonds can survive honesty—or if they’re better off staying the same.
What makes 'The Jetsetters' stand out is how relatable it feels. Every family has its own version of the Perkins clan—the overbearing matriarch, the sibling who’s always running away, the one who pretends everything’s fine. The book doesn’t shy away from the uncomfortable moments, like when Charlotte’s meddling clashes with Lee’s desire for independence, or when Cord’s struggles force the others to confront their own flaws. It’s a story that asks whether family is something you’re stuck with or something you choose to rebuild, and that question resonates long after the last page. I finished it feeling like I’d been on that cruise myself, laughing and cringing alongside them, and maybe even understanding my own family a little better.
2026-03-17 17:22:41
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Mommy, Daddy Is A Billionaire!
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Amelie Never thought that her life could get any worse until she was drugged and sent to the bed of the world's richest man by her conniving stepsister and stepmother.
Zacharie LaCroix is the world’s richest man. He has everything that could make a man envious and make women drool. Yet rarely did they know that Zacharie had secretly suffered from a strange illness for years, which leaves him with numerous strange scars all over his body when he has a relapse.
All that changes after a steamy night with Amelie.
Amelie seemed to be the cure for his strange illness. However, Zacharie didn't notice that at that moment.
He walked away from the room without bothering to inquire about her name, leaving her stepmother and stepsister a chance to get rid of her. They tossed her body off a bridge in the middle of the night, believing that they had won...
But Eight years later, Amelie returns with two cute babies and she wants nothing more than revenge.
I caught my husband deep inside my sister on the day i served him divorce papers.
After giving birth to his son, i became the “disgusting fat wife” he could barely look at. While i slept alone, he satisfied every craving with her body.
When i finally tried to leave, he tore the papers apart, grabbed me by the throat and growled:
“You don’t get to leave me, wife. you’re mine until i say otherwise.”
That same night, My father was shot and a killer came after my son.
Now i’m trapped with the man who hates me… and still refuses to let me go.
After finishing work for the day, I checked my phone and realized I had been added to a group chat called "Catch the Thief."
The members were my parents, my brother, Brian Wise, and my sister-in-law, Paulene Wise.
I typed a question mark.
Paulene replied instantly.
[My jewelry is missing. I didn't add you here to accuse you or anything. I just wanted to ask what you think. Honestly, there's no use for other people in our family to take my jewelry, so I've been wondering... I'm not saying you definitely stole it. But if you did, you don't have to deny it. I'm willing to give you a chance to make things right.]
My mother said nothing. She just kept tagging me over and over.
I let out a small laugh and typed back.
[Maybe Brian took it and gave it to his side piece. I'm not saying he definitely has someone else. Just that men his age sometimes start looking around. I'm only guessing here. And if he really did mess up, you could give him a chance to make things right, too.]
Our family is planning a ski trip at a luxury resort. However, my mother gives my snow-view room to my adoptive sister and makes me, her biological daughter, stay in the storage room.
I'm about to protest when my father and brother accuse me of being selfish.
"We've always given Madie the best of everything; she won't be able to sleep in any other room."
"Madie is our family—she's the one who's lived with us this whole time. We're a family, so we have to stay together."
I'm the one who shares their blood, yet they consider me an outsider. If that's the case, they can go on vacation without me.
I board a cruise and travel the world for a month without ever going home.
That's when they panic.
My mom is 71 years old. Thanks to her arthritis acting up, she's in so much pain that she can't descend the stairs at all.
She tentatively calls me and asks if she can rent an apartment that comes with an elevator of its own.
But my wife, Lucy Glaser, brings out the household ledger and points at the red numbers on the pages.
"Last month, you bought yourself a tie, which is 300 dollars beyond our monthly budget. Yet now you're planning on adding another impulsive expense?"
Only then do I realize that I don't even have the freedom to buy myself a tie despite earning an annual salary of tens of millions of dollars.
My mom is still trying to explain herself in a humble tone over the phone.
"Oh, please don't feel troubled about it, Caleb. I was just asking on a whim. I've already grown used to my old home anyway…"
After I end the call, I feel rather stuffy in my chest.
What's there for me to feel troubled about? After all, I'm a partner of a top-tier law firm who earns tens of millions of dollars every year.
The one who keeps standing in my way is Lucy, who's only a mid-level lawyer yet insists on controlling my finances. She also calls herself the best candidate for the household asset allocation.
After my parents get divorced, my twin brother, Archer Sullivan, chooses one parent to live with.
I choose to be with Mom. After the divorce, Mom's mood is at an all-time low. She gambles away all of the money we have, and she begins bringing various men home the moment she runs out of money.
I have to move into a dark and damp apartment with Mom afterward. Lewd sounds keep drifting from her room every now and then.
Every day, I have to secretly take on part-time work in order to earn my living expenses, on top of going to school. Life is very harsh and bitter for me.
That is, until Archer, whom I haven't kept in touch with for a very long time, sends me a link to a streaming website.
"Tap on the link, Adam. It's a surprise for you."
I tap on the link, only to realize that the livestream that's on top of the trending list features… me?
It's a livestream with a split-screen function. One screen shows me finishing my homework under the dim light in a cheap apartment. The other screen shows my parents cuddling with Archer happily while seated on a luxurious couch in a villa.
"Let's see what sort of differences there will be between a pair of twins that are raised differently till they're 18 years old!"
"I suppose the older twin doesn't realize that his parents never got divorced, and that his family is actually very rich! Both parents are still living happily together. Even his younger brother is living a great life."
"That poor twin, though! He's living a very difficult life without three hot meals a day! Isn't this considered abuse?"
"Well, that older twin is more understanding and obedient, isn't he? That's why his parents chose to make him suffer in life."
If you've ever picked up 'The Jetsetters,' you'll know it's this wild, heartfelt family drama that feels like a vacation gone wrong (in the best way). The main characters are the Perkins siblings—Charlotte, Lee, and Regan—and their mom, Cord. Charlotte's the eldest, a divorced mom trying to reinvent herself; Lee's the chaotic, free-spirited middle child; and Regan's the perfectionist youngest who’s secretly crumbling under pressure. Cord, their mom, is this larger-than-life figure who ropes them into a cruise to 'reconnect,' but honestly, it’s a mess of old wounds and new revelations.
What I love is how each character’s flaws are so painfully human. Charlotte’s midlife crisis, Lee’s self-destructive tendencies, Regan’s facade of control—it’s like looking into a dysfunctional family mirror. And Cord? She’s the kind of mom who means well but bulldozes boundaries. The book’s genius is how their individual arcs collide on this absurd cruise, forcing them to confront decades of baggage. It’s hilarious, cringe-y, and weirdly uplifting by the end.