Stepford Wives meets Big Little Lies in this twisty thriller that uncovers the untruths, petty grievances, and local school politics underneath a seemingly quaint small town.
Hamilton, Massachusetts is one of those suburban towns that appears untouched by the outside world where stay-at-home moms wear 2ct diamond studs to the playground, where a million-dollar property is “affordable,” and where the Parent Teacher Organization is a hotbed of controversy. Sure, some people struggle to make ends meet, but residents would say discussing such ugly matters is impolite. Hamilton has been like this forever, and everyone likes it that way. almost everyone.
It's not that Anna Plummer doesn't like Hamilton, but she never thought she'd be married with two young kids, comfortable, complacent…and growing more bored by the minute. So, when she realizes her second grader won't be able to attend the "Ziti with Your Sweetie" school dance because she didn’t pay for a “Premium” membership, she snaps. She sends an email to the terrifying president of the PTO—and all hell breaks loose.
One year later, Anna is found dead in the frozen Ipswich River. Left to pick up the pieces, her husband, Denny, is shaken to his core. He's no expert, but he's seen enough Dateline to know that the police think he's the main suspect. If they aren't going to get justice for Anna, he will. Told through the alternating perspectives of Anna and Denny exactly one year apart, and with a shocking concluding twist, Valley of the Moms is a gripping look at the underpinnings of grief, the social structures of wealth, and the secrets people keep—even among friends and loved ones.
Hannah Selinger is a James Beard Award-nominated lifestyle writer and mother of two based in Boxford, MA. Her print and digital work has appeared in the New YorkTimes Magazine, the Boston Globe, the Washington Post, Eater, Travel + Leisure, Food & Wine, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and elsewhere. Her 2021 Bon Appétit essay, "In My Childhood Kitchen, I Learned Both Fear and Love," is anthologized in the 2022 Best American Food Writing collection, published by HarperCollins and edited by Sohla El-Waylly.
A suspenseful, dual timeline/dual POV rich people suburban mommie mystery/thriller that provides plenty of drama. A promising debut novel for fans of Lisa Jewell, Sarah Pekkanen and Heather Gudenkauf.
Anna was found strangled and killed near the river in her snowy northern Massachusetts town. And the primary suspect is her husband, Denny. Just a year ago, she ruffled some feathers with her criticism of the PTO's "pay to play" type of "premium membership" for elementary school activities. It is a worthy endeavor, shouldn't all kids- especially in a public school, have equal access? As Anna dives deeper into the Hamilton culture, she learns that this is so much bigger than just early access to the school dance- it is access to nearly everything.
I found this novel to be reminiscent of Big Little Lies and other suburban thrillers- there is an underlying theme of the entitlement of the haves vs. the have nots. The POV alternates between Anna, a year earlier, as she criticizes and infiltrates the rich mom culture of their town; and Denny, her husband, falsely accused of her murder as he tries to piece together the last few months of her life and who is responsible for her death. It is a really gripping story with a few well developed characters, not only Anna and Denny, but also her best and oldest friend Di and the queen bee Mimi. The setting is haunting and the cover art seems perfect to describe the overall vibes of Hamilton, Massachusetts. The themes are timely and relatable.
I would have liked to see more character development of the children and more description of the grief that the family goes through losing Anna in such a violent way. The plot focused more on the secrets and solving the crime itself. I was guessing until the last chapter! So many secrets~
Thank you to NetGalley, Little Brown/Mulholland and author Hannah Selinger for the ARC. Book to be published June 16, 2026
When Anna’s lifetime best friend, Di, convinces her to move to small town Hamilton, she never would’ve imagined uncovering all of the town’s terrible secrets. A group of mean moms control the PTO and whatever they want, they get. It is Anna who unravels a dark secret, and it may have cost her her life. The story goes back & forth between Anna & her husband, and we piece together what was going on in Anna’s life while Anna was alive and then through her husband’s perspective after her death. I was quite enraptured with this story and found myself so infuriated with the behaviors of these mean moms. It had all the small town feels of a community where they don’t like outsiders coming in and disrupting the norm.
Thank you to NetGalley & Mulholland Books for the opportunity to read an eARC of this book in exchange for my honest opinions.
Thank you to NetGalley for this ARC - love a good “rich moms” story and this had it all. Secrets to kill for 🤫 I loved how this entire storyline ran its course. Definitely figured out a major part very early on, but it may just be the sleuth in me vs any twist giveaways.
Pleasantly surprised with this one. Requested this ARC on a whim from Net Galley and it turned out to be a pretty good suburban mom drama And an easy read. The ending left something to be desired for me but I enjoyed the pacing and was interested to find out exactly what happened.
Thank you to Netgallery for the early access! Valley of the Moms is a mystery that takes place in an affluent town and all that goes along with it. The author had me sucked in right away! I enjoyed the writing style and was invested! Some of the characters could have been developed a bit more but this was a solid book and loved the different POV! I loved reading about all the places in the book as I live near where the book takes place! Would recommend!
Anna wants to make her kids school a better place by running for PTO President. During her campaign, she uncovers secrets, lies and sinister sisterhood that could be deadly. Thank you net galley for this ARC!
Thank you, Little, Brown for the ARC! This murder mystery, set in affluent Massachusetts, has all the juicy tidbits in it that I wanted - petty moms, dangerous secrets, just the right number of Dunkin’ references, pool club culture, and a befuddled husband. Did I mention the TWIST? No spoilers here, but it was absolutely not what I expected, just as I thought I’d figured it all out.
Which really made this summer read a satisfying one to chew over long after I finished it. As a Massachusetts resident of the northern Boston ‘burbs myself, I can confirm all the regional details rang true, but I think anyone will find relatable elements in here, no matter where you’re from - the way some of the characters are wrestling with status and fitting in, like the married-with-kids version of high school’s cool club. Selinger really nails that, and whether or not you see the surprise coming at the end, you’ll love the ride. I predict this will be one of those summer novels EVERYONE is reading and talking about.
Thank you to Net Galley and Little, Brown and Company for the ARC of this title. I went into this book not really knowing what to expect. It started off kind of slow with the dual timeline of Anna and her husband Denny. We know from the beginning that Anna has been murdered but why? These women who called themselves Anna’s friend must be at fault, right? This was a very slow thriller, mystery. The ending was also a bit unsatisfying for me. I did really love Anna’s husband, Dennys character. This was a three star read for me. Just okay.
So...no. I went into this story expecting it to be a quick, breezy read about rich people with first-world problems, and it certainly is most of that. But it's ultimately a frustrating disappointment. Anna lives in a wealthy suburb of Hamilton and doesn't fit in with the rest of the pretentious residents. When she dares to disagree with the president of the PTO over their elitist ways, it all hits the fan. That's the narrative told in the past by Anna; there's also one from her husband Denny's perspective after her body is found in the river about a year or so after her narrative begins. So the reader is learning what she was dealing with that Denny knew nothing about, and we wait to see if he'll be able to figure out what really happened to her and get justice for his wife.
SPOILER ALERT
He eventually figures it all out and doesn't do a damn thing about it. Let's not waste any time pretending we don't know who's responsible for Anna's death. It's quite obvious from the start, especially when the author drops a way too obvious clue early on that was referenced so transparently as a possible murder weapon, that I thought it was a red herring for those who picked up on it. No. It wasn't. It was really just that obvious. If that wasn't frustrating enough, it's also clear who she can't trust, and even her husband picks up on that sooner than she did.
The most frustrating part is not just the ridiculousness of so many criminals essentially running the town of Hamilton, but that no one ever stops them. Denny easily could have turned them in with everything he learned, and he chooses not to. For no reason other than his children are settled in their home there. ?? In the town where his wife was killed. By people living IN THAT TOWN. And he wants to make a life there. What on earth was the author thinking? How deplorable are these characters supposed to be? The perpetrators are never challenged by anyone. People just live in this town knowing it's run by crooked people in positions of power and... a PTO president. That's just hilarious. Where on earth would such a pathetic volunteer position be wielded with the same power as, say, a mayor or a senator? I could see if this was a satire, but I swear, it's supposed to be taken seriously. SO again...no.
I didn't love this... and maybe didn't even like it? The first half felt extremely slow, I guessed one of the perpetrators about a quarter of the way through, and much of the read was very anticlimactic. It needed more complexity and I was hoping for a more satisfying ending. 2.5 stars rounded up.
Thank you to NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company for an ARC of this novel.
Thank you to the author for sharing an ARC with me! This was a rollicking mystery that kept me rapt as I sped through it. The narration choice of one chapter present day, the next chapter a year-ish earlier, worked well to unspool the suburban secrets bit by bit. Definitely enjoyed it.
Thank you to Net Galley and Little, Brown and Company for an ARC of “Valley Moms” by Hannah Selinger.
“I don’t make the rules, I just loosely obey them.”
In most cases when a wife goes missing and is later found murdered, the husband is almost always the suspect. But what if he was framed? What if there was something entirely more sinister lurking among a well to do community?
“Valley Moms” is a dual timeline POV slow burn mystery novel that takes place in an affluent New England town. Everyone appears to be damn near perfect with their fancy clothes and even fancier houses. Things are not always what they appear to be and when someone from the outside of the circle begins asking questions and pointing out discrepancies, that’s where things begin to get dicey. Sometimes people are willing to do whatever it takes to keep things quiet and if it involves murder, so be it.
Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC, but woof. The whole thing was boring and I found myself skipping through the pages. Not one character had any redeeming qualities and they were all very forgetful.
Valley of the Moms by Hannah Selinger is an incisive and compulsively readable summer novel, one in which intrigue seeps through the manicured lawns of an affluent Massachusetts town obsessed with designer labels, curated appearances, and the quiet tyranny of social rank. Selinger deftly captures a community where status is currency and exclusion is normalized, shaping the culture of the town as much as its wealth does.
Anna Plummer arrives in this rarefied environment at the urging of a childhood friend, yet from the outset she is deeply uneasy with the unspoken rules that govern daily life. The novel opens with the startling revelation of Anna’s death, a narrative choice that immediately casts a shadow over the events that follow. From there, Selinger traces the seemingly minor catalyst that sets everything in motion: an elementary school dance whose advance-ticket system sells out almost instantly, effectively dividing families into social insiders and outsiders. What might have been a trivial inconvenience elsewhere becomes, in this setting, a flashpoint for resentment and moral outrage.
Anna’s decision to challenge the long-entrenched leadership of the parent-teacher organization exposes the brittle foundations of the town’s social order. Her refusal to accept exclusion as inevitable turns her into both a disruptor and a threat, and once she declares her candidacy for PTO president, the veneer of civility cracks. Alliances fray, secrets surface, and the community’s polished self-image begins to unravel.
The novel unfolds through alternating chapters narrated by Anna and her husband, Denny. Anna’s chapters chart her growing disillusionment and the pressures that mount in the lead-up to her death, while Denny’s chapters are set in the aftermath, grappling with loss and attempting to piece together how events spiraled so disastrously. This dual perspective underscores one of the book’s central themes: how little even intimate partners may truly know about one another.
At its core, Valley of the Moms is a sharp commentary on wealth inequality, social ambition, and the quiet cruelties embedded in ostensibly progressive communities. Selinger uses the microcosm of a school and its parents to explore broader questions of power, belonging, and moral compromise. The pacing accelerates in the final third, with tension mounting steadily toward a conclusion that is both surprising and thematically resonant. The ending feels earned rather than sensational, bringing the novel’s social critique into chilling focus.
Smart, pointed, and unsettling beneath its glossy surface, Valley of the Moms is an engaging read that lingers well beyond the last page.
Valley of the Moms pulls you in with that glossy suburban facade before slowly revealing what's rotting underneath. Hamilton, Massachusetts looks picture-perfect—designer playground moms, immaculate homes, a school system that operates more like an exclusive club. But something feels wrong from the very first pages, and when Anna Plummer starts asking uncomfortable questions, everything begins to crack.
The story splits between two timelines: Anna's voice in the year before her death, and her husband Denny's perspective a year after, as he wades through grief and a nagging sense that the truth about what happened to her is being covered up. I really loved this approach. Anna's chapters carry this ache of inevitability, while Denny's feel heavy with loss and quiet resolve. Knowing where things are headed makes every small moment land harder, every argument sting more.
The atmosphere is what really shines here. The book nails that suffocating energy of wealthy communities where image trumps fairness and social power can be just as ruthless as money. The PTO drama, the whispered rivalries, the unwritten rules—it all feels uncomfortably familiar, turning ordinary interactions into minefields. Anna makes for a compelling protagonist: flawed, restless, and gutsy enough to push back when staying quiet would be so much easier. Her frustration and loneliness make sense, even when her choices had me wanting to yell at her through the page.
That said, while the emotional arc landed for me, the mystery itself didn't always pack the punch I was hoping for. Some twists felt more expected than shocking, and a few character decisions left me wishing for a bit more depth. The pacing drags in places when the story dips too deep into internal reflection, softening the tension right when it needed an edge. Still, the way it explores marriage, motherhood, and the cost of going it alone gives the book real weight beyond just the central crime.
Ultimately, Valley of the Moms is a thoughtful, unsettling look at grief, privilege, and the dangerous narratives people construct to protect their worlds. It may not completely catch you off guard, but it stays with you—especially the questions it raises about what justice actually looks like and who gets to define it.
Big thanks to NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company / Mulholland Books for the digital review copy in exchange for my honest thoughts.
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I really enjoyed this book and found it more haunting and deep than the synopsis would infer. It centers on Anna, who is married and raising her 2 kids in a small, affluent town that seems to be run by a group of mean moms in the Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) who value exclusivity over equity. Anna takes exception to this and challenges them head-on by running for PTO president herself. Anna then ends up dead, and the story alternates between the months leading up to her demise in her POV, and the following months, in her husband Denny's POV.
I really enjoyed the alternating timelines and all of Anna's chapters gave me a sense of foreboding, as you know going in what is going to happen but you don't know exactly how it's going to happen. This sense of suspense kept me reading far too late into the night. There are some surprising twists even though the reader already knows the gist of the outcome. While the book uncovers the dynamics between both close and distant relationships between women and all the ways women can let each other down, it also delves pretty deeply into marriage dynamics and how both sides of a marriage can see things differently, as well as the sacrifices people make (whether they actually need to or not!) to keep their relationships copacetic. Anna wasn't perfect but she was absolutely relatable, and I thought the author did a fantastic job at providing deep characterization without spending a whole lot of time providing background information. I also loved the references to things that happened in my own 1980s childhood! It's a sad story overall, but you know that going in. I can't say I loved the ending of the book, as I was disappointed in some of the events that occurred (like a major decision that Denny made), but I also felt that the ending worked perfectly with the rest of the book.
Overall, I thought this was a great read and I already know it's going to stick with me, even if it's kind of in a sad way. It manages to cover multiple layers of family and friendship dynamics, an underlying rottenness in a small town, and a suspenseful mystery all in one punch. Thanks to Netgalley for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
From the outset this book had me giggling thanks to some PTO experience of my own. I liked that Anna called out ridiculous policies and chose to run for PTO President to try to turn things around, but instead fell into a sinister plot full of secrets and ethical dishonesty. The whole book was a easy-reading page-turner in a palate cleansing way for me, but I found myself struggling to suspend disbelief too many times and the end was too rushed for me. I expected the Epilogue to clarify things further, but it didn't.
One of my biggest beefs was yes, this is rich people behaving badly and I appreciated the nod to some semi-recent news stories (no not politics-related). However, it was unbelievable that this PTO was at a public school versus private. I did try to suspend disbelief many times, but just couldn't. An example of this is a premium PTO membership to gain access to all school events. If you didn't have this, your kiddo was likely to be excluded from a dance. There is NO way inequity would fly in a public school setting. A private school setting would have been much more appropriate, yet I can see how there was likely a desire for Selinger to deviate from the norm in that regard. There were also points where this book was reading like a thriller and others where it was more domestic fiction. One particular POV struggled with this throughout the novel so it did impact the pacing at times.
Despite those criticisms, Valley of the Moms was a good read...it will be perfect beach reading for the summer. The dual timeline and POV was easy to follow as it was told by husband Denny in the present aftermath of Anna's death. Anna's POV shed light on the events that led up to her death. It was a solid début from Hannah Selinger and I look forward to what she comes out with next. Had the ending been less rushed and more...redemptive (trying not to spoil anything), it would have been easier for me to round up to 4 stars.
Thank you to Hannah Selinger, Mulholland Books, and NetGalley for the e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
“Valley of the Moms,” by Hannah Salinger is a murder mystery in which Anna Plummer, a wife and mother of two small children, is found murdered on the frozen banks of a river in an exclusive community in Northern Massachusetts. The book features two POVs. The first is Denny, Anna’s husband, who tries to solve his wife’s murder while trying to raise two children on his own and grapple with his grief. The second is Anna herself, seen through flashbacks to the past and the events leading up to her murder.
At its heart the book is about the adult version of privileged “mean girls,” which consists of the President of the Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) and her minions. Although the book got off to a good start with the discovery of Anna’s body in an almost poetic prologue, the rest of the book was a disappointment. Although there was some tension regarding Anna’s fears that she is being targeted through a hate campaign of virulent e-mails and social media attacks, the majority of the book seems to be long, meandering passages detailing the internal monologues of the two main characters.
In the last 25% of the book, the husband finally pieces all the clues together, clues which had been there all along, but he was too mired in grief to discover. The somewhat outlandish ending, told through Anna’s eyes on the evening of her death, finally reveals the mystery surrounding her murder.
I don’t mind a slow-paced, character driven mystery if the characters and their actions are compelling enough to compensate for the lack of tension in the narrative. This was not the case in “Valley of the Moms,” which had somewhat one dimensional characters in mostly boring situations (e.g., swimming pools, PTO campaign meetings, jogging etc.) The final element which further detracted from my enjoyment of the book was a graphic description of a dead pet.
Thank you to NetGalley and Mulholland Books for providing me an ARC of the novel in exchange for my honest review.
Valley of the Moms takes place in tony Hamilton, Massachusetts - wealthy, white, and proud of it. Anna Plummer moved there at the behest of her lifelong best friend, Diana Maguire. Anna can afford to be a Hamilton mom, but isn't impressed by the typical trappings (i.e. 2.5 ctw diamond earrings, $2,000 Moncler jackets, etc.) nor does she want to perpetuate the classist behavior that surrounds her. After missing an opportunity to bring her daughter to the public school dance because of an elite ticketing system, Anna decides it's time for change in Hamilton.
Also, we know pretty early in the story that Anna is dead. Her husband, Denny, is determined to find out what happened to her. The book shifts back and forth between present-day Denny and past-tense Anna, pummeling forward to solving the mystery in the former and the build-up to Anna's death in the former.
This book was, at times, bitingly funny. It's easy to imagine these moms, or 'mommies' as Selinger differentiates in their bougie town with their bougie attitudes. The stereotype is tangible and well-written. And in other ways, it's a tragic story--what will people do to ensure their kids have access to ivy league colleges? Or even not to have to attend jury duty? And of course, money is at the center of it all: Valley of the Moms reminds us that you can buy your way out of nearly anything.
I loved the book. The mystery was a solid cat-and-mouse chase that didn't become clear till almost the very end. It's easy reading. The one thing that felt missing for me was the grief of Anna and Denny's children. Denny was clearly gutted by Anna's death, but the kids seem to be plugging along. It doesn't take from the story, but it felt like a miss to me. Overall, highly recommended. This is a great beach/airplane/snow day trash read. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Valley of the Moms follows a married couple, Anna and Denny, both of whom serve as first-person narrators. The story is told through alternating POVs and multiple timelines, with very little guidance beyond seasonal markers, so readers will need to pay close attention to keep everything straight.
Anna’s POV takes place during the year leading up to her death. She is a suburban mother of two who becomes outraged when she’s unable to secure a ticket for her seven-year-old daughter to an elementary school dance. She later learns that parents who upgraded to premium PTO memberships were given presale access. Anna strongly believes that events at a public school shouldn’t be influenced by how much money a family can contribute, and she voices her frustration to Mimi, the PTO president. From that moment on, Anna finds herself positioned as an enemy within her tight-knit community. Even her lifelong best friend, Di, appears largely indifferent.
Feeling powerless to make change from the outside, Anna decides to run for PTO president herself—and this is where the story really gains momentum. It begins to look like she might actually win, but it quickly becomes clear that more than just the current PTO leadership is working against her.
Denny’s POV unfolds in the year after Anna’s murder. He is largely unaware of how deeply his wife was entangled in the PTO conflict until after her death, when a police detective begins to view him as a potential suspect.
The novel is suspenseful and definitely a page-turner, but it does require the reader to suspend disbelief and simply go along for the ride. While I was engaged throughout, I found the ending less than satisfying—it wrapped up very quickly and didn’t fully deliver on the buildup.
Because of the rushed conclusion, I ultimately rated this book **three stars**. Thanks to NetGalley and Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books for this ARC.
I received a temporary digital copy of Valley of the Moms from NetGalley, Mulholland Books and the author in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own. Do not continue reading unless you want the entirety of this book ruined for you.
Anna Plummer tries to sign up for her daughter's second grade dance; however, the event is sold out due to a pre-sale for “Premium” members. Furious, Anna confronts the PTO President. Realizing this is a lost cause, she decides to run for President and is soon found dead in the Ipswich River.
I was extremely excited for Valley of the Moms, but was continuously let down while reading. So many pieces of this made no sense. First and foremost, no matter how wealthy the district is, no PUBLIC school system would have a tiered PTO, leave elementary school students out of an event, or have a singular PTO President for every school within the district. So I just found those aspects difficult to follow. If this was a private school system K-12, the premise of this novel would have made much more sense to me. The motivation. Wealthy suburban moms are willing to commit murder so that their PUBLIC SCHOOL ELEMENTARY student gets into Harvard? The same moms who let the woman go who had a list of names of people within the group and went to federal police? But no, they murder the mom who said she would move away, who didn't have even half of the story, nor the list of names? Make this make sense! THEN the husband figures out who the murderers were and he decides to continue to live in the same town and do nothing? The same man who experienced his breaks being cut and his dog being murdered. He does...nothing...because his ONLINE business is doing well? The more I think about this I may drop it to one star. I highly recommend Selinger edits this before it goes to print because it is a mess.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
*thank you to NetGalley and Little, Brown and Co for a copy of this eARC*
Hannah Selinger's debut novel Valley of the Moms is a literary thriller following Anna and her family's move to Hamilton, Massachusetts, a town rich in wealth and status, and ruled by the moms of the PTO. Anna, an opinionated and justice-driven mom of two, finds herself at odds with the preppy, cookie-cutter moms who insist on elite membership to the PTO for access to school dances and special opportunities. Emboldened by the inequality, Anna decides to run for PTO president against Mimi Marr, the multi-year incumbent and vicious leader of the PTO moms. A separate point of view follows Denny, Anna's husband, a year after Anna begins her campaign for PTO president, beginning with a knock on his door from police officers who have come to inform Denny that Anna is dead. Denny's POV deals with raising his young children alone, being the lead-suspect in his wife's death, and his obsession with catching her true murderer. As Anna's POV approaches her death and Denny's approaches the truth, both spouses and their year of detective work uncover secrets that make perfect Hamilton appear much more sinister.
I really enjoyed the first three-quarters of this novel, and was hooked by Anna's sense of justice and Denny's desperation. But as the novel progressed, the reveal became more and more obvious, and by the climactic showdown I had already predicted every move. I think this was a strong first novel from Selinger following her bestselling memoir, and I hope to see more books from her in the future with tighter endings and more shocking reveals. Great book for fans of Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty or the show Dead to Me.
Told through alternating timelines and perspectives—those of Anna and her husband, Denny—Valley of Moms examines the events leading up to Anna’s death and the aftermath of her murder, as Denny works to uncover the truth behind what happened to his wife.
While this was not an easy novel for me to read, it is undeniably compelling; I found myself continuing on, driven by the need to understand how the story would ultimately unfold. In the insular, status-conscious town of Hamilton, Anna’s decision to run for PTO president places her squarely at odds with a powerful and unwelcoming group of mothers who seem to quietly control the community. Motivated by a sincere desire for fairness and equity among both parents and children, Anna’s efforts earn her more enemies than allies.
When Anna fails to return home one night, suspicion swiftly turns to Denny—an all-too-familiar narrative, as the husband becomes the most convenient target for law enforcement. As pressure mounts and scrutiny intensifies, Denny must navigate grief, suspicion, and fear, all while trying to protect his children and piece together the truth.
Valley of Moms offers a tense and unsettling exploration of privilege, perception, and the corrosive nature of power within a close-knit community. Though challenging at times, it is a thought-provoking story that lingers, rewarding readers who are willing to stay with it until the end.
Thanks to the Publisher and NetGalley for the chance to read and review this ARC.
First, don't judge a book by its prologue. I don't think it does the book any justice other than reference to Ophelia (and not being a Shakespearian with several references in the book, I had to look it up - she drowns, but the Millais painting matches my mental image of the prologue).
Second, whodunit isn't super hard to figure out - most anyone can at least partly guess.
But what I definitely liked and what earned an extra star was how the author used the POVs of Anna and Denny and the timelines of both. What happened to Anna comes together with her working forward and him backward in time. I thought it was well done and intriguing. Other reviewers used the words "unsettling" and "foreboding" which are quite apt. Later in the book the author uses "insidious" - also apt.
A few quotes describe the story and stuck with me. "Parting with dreams: not so hard. Parting with the notion of everyone getting the same shake: much harder." "[Anna] hated people who failed to use their power to change the world." "To kill: that was the ultimate wielding of power." I think Anna would have been an interesting person to meet and meet at the Honeycomb.
PTO mom drama in an upscale neighborhood goes awry. This book was so addicting to read. I especially liked all of the references to places around MA and NH as I live in the area and it brought back memories! We love our Dunkin around here :). I don't always love books with alternating POV's but this one works really well in getting the story told from a before/after perspective. I wouldn't say the ending was shocking but I still really enjoyed the story to get there. One thing that kept throwing me off was the mention of the kids but the book never really says much about the kids and how they are coping with the loss of their mother which seemed odd to me. If the book did mention it, I totally missed it.
This one is being compared to Big Little Lies which I somewhat disagree with, but if you are going for a rich neighborhood mom vibe with one feeling like an outsider then maybe. I think this book is going to be hit or miss with people and I think if people are from the MA area, they will have a tendency to like it just a tad more because of all of the references. I really enjoyed this one and read it pretty quickly.
Thank you NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company for access to the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Valley of the Moms by Hannah Selinger is a sharp, satirical character-driven thriller that peels back the glossy veneer of suburban perfection to reveal the simmering tensions, secrets, and power struggles lurking beneath.
This novel thrives on contradiction - on the surface, Hamilton, Massachusetts is the epitome of affluent suburban bliss: manicured lawns, and overpriced homes casually labeled “affordable.” Yet Selinger quickly dismantles this façade, exposing a community where the Parent Teacher Organization becomes a battleground, and where politeness masks exclusion, resentment, and the desperation.
At the heart of the novel is Anna Plummer, a woman who never imagined herself as a complacent suburban mother. Her growing boredom and disillusionment serve as the perfect lens through which readers witness Hamilton’s carefully curated image unravel. Selinger’s prose captures the absurdity of social hierarchies while acknowledging the very real anxieties of motherhood, marriage, friendship, loyalty and identity.
This book has been described as Stepford Wives meets Big Little Lies, and that comparison is apt. Like those cultural touchstones, Valley of the Moms blends domestic drama with psychological suspense, creating a narrative that is equal parts entertaining and unsettling. The tension doesn’t come from grand conspiracies or violent crime but from the everyday politics of privilege, gossip, and exclusion—an arena where reputations can be destroyed with a PTA vote or a whispered rumor.
Valley of the Moms is a witty, unsettling exploration of suburban motherhood and the politics of privilege, perfect for readers who enjoy thrillers that trade car chases for whispered betrayals. Selinger’s novel is less about shocking twists and more about the slow burn of realizing that the real danger isn’t lurking outside the gates of Hamilton—it’s sitting across the PTA table.
Thanks to Netgalley/Little Brown for the Advanced Reader Copy.
It's early in the year, but this is already a book that lingers, I can tell. A biting commentary on societal wealth that toggles between dual POVs and timelines, this slow burn of a thriller was an ode not only to its well-rendered characters, but also to a deeply defined place (in this case, a deeply articulated New England backdrop that I found myself instantly drawn to). Some of the twists were, to my mind, red herrings; others were complete surprises, including a final twist that I certainly did not see coming. The pacing builds up to a swift and cunning ending that left me thinking--and I mean that in the best possible way.
Unlike some more popular books within the genre, this book is squarely literary. The writer has chops, the characters have dimension, and the humor is everywhere. Satirical? Maybe, but, in the end, this is a book about what lives beneath the surface, about wealth and its permutations, and I was there for every minute of it.
Pub Date: June 16, 2026 ARC from: NetGalley for my review
Hamilton, Massachusetts- where the rich get richer and are in control of the whole town. Anna decides to run for PTO president after her daughter can't score a ticket to the Valentine dance (2nd grade is hardcore). Anna wants to make a change and cut back on the favoritism and favors given to those who pay the exuberant membership fees for the PTO privileges. The problem is that Anna winds up dead. This story is told in dual POV - from Anna the year leading up to her death and then her husband in the year after her death.
The story started out a little slow for me, but after a few chapters, I really got into it. I did see the twist coming from pretty early on. The ending was a little bit of a letdown to me. I don't know - I think I was just expecting more. I'm not sure what exactly. The ending is what brought this down to a 4-star read for me.
This is Hannah's debut novel, and I would definitely read more of her books in the future.
Valley of the Moms (I love this title) follows a dual timeline, presenting the months leading up to Anna’s murder from Anna’s perspective, as well as the year after her murder from her husband’s POV. Rich people problems, school politics, and petty moms abound! I loved it. Although, to be fair, the town described in this book deeply resonated with me as it reminded me of the town I currently live in. Having done some volunteer work with our local PTA, I know firsthand how cliquish moms can be and how those school politics can play out (thankfully, on a much, much smaller scale than what we saw in the book). In short, I ate this up. What I didn’t love was the ending, which I found dissatisfying and implausible. But what I DID love was the writing, which I found quite lovely. While the book does have a slower pace, the writing resonated with me in a way that compelled me to read just one more page and I flew through this book. I’ll definitely be checking out future books from this author.
Many thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for the ARC.