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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
500 global ratings
5 star
46%
4 star
35%
3 star
12%
2 star
4%
1 star
2%
The Housemate

The Housemate

bySarah Bailey
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Top positive review

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Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 starsTale of a crusading Melbourne journo
Reviewed in Australia on 1 December 2021
I’ve just read three Australian crime novels in quick succession and this was by far the best. It was also the longest. It concerns Oli Grove, a journalist in her late thirties who 10 years previously covered the murder of a university housemate. One housemate disappeared. The third was charged and did jail time, but there’s always been a question about her guilt. Ten years later, the case comes to public notice again as new developments come to light. Oli is asked (told) to work with Cooper Ng, a chatty tech whizz kid who at first tries her patience, and who comes up with the idea of making a true crime podcast - this being the digital era when traditional print news is dying. The novel flips back and forth between the two time periods and we learn that Oli had a tempestuous affair with a married man - a high flyer - who was married to a detective on the original case. That woman was later killed and Oli is now his fiancée and uncomfortable stepmother to his twin girls. The case ends up being bigger than Ben Hur against a backdrop of extreme corruption from the former Victorian premier.

Regardless of the believability of the plot, Bailey does an extremely good job of showing us how journalists work. It says something about our political cynicism that stories of extreme corruption at high levels have us barely turning a hair. Personally, I think the book would have worked just as well if it hadn’t been so extensive. The interplay between police and media is also well done. Where Bailey shines in comparison with other authors is in her creation of complex characters: there’s no problem believing in them as real people. Oli’s fiancé, for example, comes across as showing a few signs of incipient abusiveness. There is a big denouement, which would play well were this a movie. There’s only one point where I thought Oli’s deductions were a forced plot linkage. All In all, Bailey is clearly one of our better thriller writers and in this long book there’s plenty to get your teeth into.
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Top critical review

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Amazon Customer
3.0 out of 5 starsA little fraught
Reviewed in Australia on 10 February 2022
Enjoyed because it is a Australian and in Melbourne but found the lead character a little exhausting, but neatly tied up
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500 total ratings, 13 with reviews

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From Australia

Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars Tale of a crusading Melbourne journo
Reviewed in Australia on 1 December 2021
Verified Purchase
I’ve just read three Australian crime novels in quick succession and this was by far the best. It was also the longest. It concerns Oli Grove, a journalist in her late thirties who 10 years previously covered the murder of a university housemate. One housemate disappeared. The third was charged and did jail time, but there’s always been a question about her guilt. Ten years later, the case comes to public notice again as new developments come to light. Oli is asked (told) to work with Cooper Ng, a chatty tech whizz kid who at first tries her patience, and who comes up with the idea of making a true crime podcast - this being the digital era when traditional print news is dying. The novel flips back and forth between the two time periods and we learn that Oli had a tempestuous affair with a married man - a high flyer - who was married to a detective on the original case. That woman was later killed and Oli is now his fiancée and uncomfortable stepmother to his twin girls. The case ends up being bigger than Ben Hur against a backdrop of extreme corruption from the former Victorian premier.

Regardless of the believability of the plot, Bailey does an extremely good job of showing us how journalists work. It says something about our political cynicism that stories of extreme corruption at high levels have us barely turning a hair. Personally, I think the book would have worked just as well if it hadn’t been so extensive. The interplay between police and media is also well done. Where Bailey shines in comparison with other authors is in her creation of complex characters: there’s no problem believing in them as real people. Oli’s fiancé, for example, comes across as showing a few signs of incipient abusiveness. There is a big denouement, which would play well were this a movie. There’s only one point where I thought Oli’s deductions were a forced plot linkage. All In all, Bailey is clearly one of our better thriller writers and in this long book there’s plenty to get your teeth into.
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Gary Hart
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars twists and more twists into a riveting climax
Reviewed in Australia on 16 April 2022
Verified Purchase
It took a little while to work my way into this book, it’s the writing style in current tense/third person, and flitting backwards and forwards from different perspectives over a ten year period. Yet, it worked, as the intrigue grew, building into a frenzy and an outcome. Well worth the read, and the familiarity of Melbourne added something!
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VikkiP
5.0 out of 5 stars What a page turner!
Reviewed in Australia on 3 January 2022
Verified Purchase
Sarah Bailey is master of the art of creating suspense. She takes the reader into the frenetic world of journalism where journalist Oli Groves is determined to solve the mystery of the Housemate Murder from a decade earlier. Oli is juggling a relationship that she thought was perfect as she faces the changing nature of her job. I read is book in a couple of sittings. Loved it.
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Bob Howe
5.0 out of 5 stars Review of The Housemates
Reviewed in Australia on 12 September 2021
Verified Purchase
Very tricky twists and turns but because you got to know the primary people it flowed excellently. Very hard to stop reading as you got to the last 25% as it was intriguing and compelling.
Well worth a read
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Lisa Bacon-Hall
4.0 out of 5 stars Slow burn
Reviewed in Australia on 15 February 2022
Verified Purchase
This story was satisfying and held my interest. Good characters and well drawn. I found the protagonist a bit hard to like. Towards the end it became unbelievable and I’m over corrupt police in these crime novels. Most of the story was engaging.
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Margie Johansson
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and twists and turns!
Reviewed in Australia on 8 November 2021
Verified Purchase
Loved your novel, brilliantly written with a lot of twists and turns, leaving me gob-smacked at the end. Well done Sarah Bailey. Great read.
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Amazon Customer
3.0 out of 5 stars A little fraught
Reviewed in Australia on 10 February 2022
Verified Purchase
Enjoyed because it is a Australian and in Melbourne but found the lead character a little exhausting, but neatly tied up
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Kate
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping until the end
Reviewed in Australia on 4 January 2022
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Sensational read! So many twists and turns. It’s a real page turner and doesn’t give it away until the very end. Highly recommend
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Mandy White (mandylovestoread)
TOP 50 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars cast of great characters and a story that could be ripped straight from the newspapers today
Reviewed in Australia on 5 September 2021
Sarah Bailey is one of my very favourite Australian writers. Her Gemma Woodstock crime series is firmly up there in my all time favourite series. The Housemate is a standalone crime novel and it is fantastic. I found it very hard to put down, needing to know what would happen next. It is full of twists and surprises so even though you might think you have it all worked out you will most likely be wrong. A cast of great characters and a story that could be ripped straight from the newspapers today, Sarah has another hit on her hands.

The Housemate is told from the point of view of Olive Groves, an investigative journalist in Melbourne. 9 years ago she worked on The Housemates Homicide as it was dubbed by the papers. 3 women sharing a house in St Kilda - one murdered, one missing. Now, almost a decade later, the missing housemate is found dead on a property in rural Victoria. Olive has been obsessed with the case this whole time and now she gets the chance to write about it again. Her paper throws her together with Cooper Ng, who is working on a podcast on the case, something she is not happy about but they make a great team.

I loved the character of Copper. He is was funny and smart and liked to wind Oli up. He is the future of news reporting and Oli just wants to stick with print media. Their relationship was really enjoyable. As they dig deeper, all is not as it first seemed and things get dangerous for all concerned.

It is hard to express just how great this story is. There is alot that I can't say without spoiling it so you are just going to have to get yourself a copy of The Housemate on August 31st to read for yourself. And while you are at it, grab the Gemma Woodstock series if you haven't already. I promise that you will not be disappointed.
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Rina P
4.0 out of 5 stars A surprising new favourite set in Melbourne!
Reviewed in Australia on 15 February 2022
I picked up this book just because it was 'new' and the cover looked intriguing, plus it was set in Melbourne and all the suburbs and street names were familiar. Little did I know that I was in for a treat!

This was an amazingly written mystery/thriller! I loved the characters, both in the 'past' chapters and 'present' (side note: there were so many dual timeline books I read recently). Each character was written distinctly, and since I was alternating reading the book and listening to the audiobook, I managed to enjoy the superb job that the narrator did at differentiating the voices. Cooper was, of course, an instant favourite to me.

I really liked how the mystery elements were layered. There were a lot of interchangeable unknowns both in the 'past' and 'present', and I was really hooked. Ollie (Olive) had to figure out how the events of the past connected to the present in her journo job, while sorting out her own personal problems with her fiance, Dean. All these added an enjoyable complexity to the story, and before I realised it, I reached the end of the book. Not to mention those heart-wrenching chapters! (if you've read the book, you know which ones I meant).

Oh, and the 'housemate' is not the one you think.

Now I have to go check out what else Sarah Bailey has written!
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