A ghostwriter hired by a charismatic food personality finds herself falling in love.
The well-developed pair of characters at the center of Huntley’s fourth novel are Zara Pines and Jane Bailey, brought together when the recently bereaved, broke, and emotionally drifting Zara is hired to write Jane’s memoir, to be titled I Want You More. The title comes from a signature moment on 30 Bucks Tops, Jane’s cooking show, when she considered the relative merits of two cucumbers—one of many small details of the character (an “edgy cowgirl” in ripped jeans, “like if Debbie Harry used leave-in conditioner") and her repertoire (“maple bacon carrot avocado toast”) that smartly hit the mark. Zara is flown out to the Hamptons to stay at Jane’s estate for the interviews, showing up with her best friend, Diego, part of Jane’s significant gay-male fan base. Zara herself has never even watched the show and is distracted by her budding romance with a lovely woman named Andie that began right before she left California. This resistance won’t last long, as the force that is Jane sucks Zara into her orbit, and certain details of Jane’s background—she lost her parents in a murder-suicide, her first husband died from a fall in the bathroom—disturb Zara less than they do the reader. The thriller plot that unfolds is relatively predictable and familiar, but the window-dressing—the paparazzi and the fans, the married couple who take care of Jane and her estate, the social media, food, and exercise—is all just right. You’ll speed through this one in an afternoon or two at the beach.
Like cinnamon Red Hots, this of-the-moment domestic thriller keeps you sweetly sucking away till it delivers the punch.