

Perfect Child: A Thriller : Berry, Lucinda: desertcart.in: Books Review: Disturbingly and hauntingly interesting - This is my first book by Lucinda. It was a crazy addictive ride. I couldn't keep it down and read it in one go. I didn't sleep trying to finish the book, and the ending doesn't help still. I'll be haunted by the story for weeks. Review: Gripper of a book - Dont normally write reviews, but this was a good book, very good book. Read it in one go, wished it had a better ending though.
| Best Sellers Rank | #103,158 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #3,291 in Thrillers and Suspense |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 91,174 Reviews |
A**R
Disturbingly and hauntingly interesting
This is my first book by Lucinda. It was a crazy addictive ride. I couldn't keep it down and read it in one go. I didn't sleep trying to finish the book, and the ending doesn't help still. I'll be haunted by the story for weeks.
P**R
Gripper of a book
Dont normally write reviews, but this was a good book, very good book. Read it in one go, wished it had a better ending though.
A**E
Riveting piece of work!
This book got me out of my reading slump! You go through a rollercoaster of emotions with this one. Unputdownable!
M**M
Review of The Perfect Child by Lucinda Berry
***CONTAINS SPOILERS*** This book was deeply disturbing and painfully thought-provoking. Right from the start, you're pulled into an emotionally complex situation that leaves you unsettled and confused—in a good way. Lucinda Berry does an excellent job portraying how manipulative behavior can quietly unravel relationships. The way Janie pits Christopher and Hannah against each other is chilling, and it builds a constant tension that kept me turning pages. What stood out the most was how the story slowly revealed the failures of the system—how children in distress are handled, how social services intervene (or don’t), and how those failures have ripple effects that destroy lives. It doesn't place the blame squarely on anyone—not Janie, not the parents—but instead emphasizes how the system failed everyone involved. But that made me ask: if the system failed, who do we hold accountable? When a child is clearly displaying signs of deep trauma and potential violence, shouldn't the priority be immediate psychological help and separation for the safety of everyone? As a reader, I was frustrated watching this play out. I understand it's different for people inside such situations, but from a third-person perspective, it was maddening that no one acted fast enough. Christopher’s character really got under my skin. I understand his bond with Janie and how that love blinded him—but he had responsibilities as both a doctor and a husband. When Hannah repeatedly said she didn’t feel safe, he should’ve done something. Instead, he stood on his moral high ground and defended Janie at Hannah’s expense. If he truly loved her, he wouldn't have let her suffer like that. This book also brought up another powerful theme: the invisibility of a mother’s pain. So often, when a new child arrives, all attention shifts to the baby—and while that’s understandable, it shouldn't come at the cost of the mother's mental health. Women aren’t just baby-making machines. We deserve to be seen, heard, and cared for after childbirth, not just during it. Postpartum mental health should be a priority. No one should have to suffer in silence like Hannah did. The Perfect Child is not an easy read, but it’s an important one. It shines a harsh light on the realities of trauma, adoption, and systemic failure. It left me feeling heartbroken, frustrated, and reflective—and that, I believe, is what good fiction should do.
C**R
Very interesting but abrupt ending
I don't know may be i wanted to read more about what happened to Janie, Hannah and Christopher.. the story was very interesting with lots of twists and yet it keeps one hooked but ending is something that just happened very abrupt. Its not that there should have been a happy ending but it just felt incomplete..
S**.
"I like hurting people. Do you?"
My first psychotic thriller read by Lucinda Berry and man i better be in shock. Crazy and disturbing but in a good way. At some point Christopher's blinded love annoyed me a lot, and some scenes made my inside scream out of disgust. So many scenes made my face cringe, petrifying what more new kind of "sickening twist" i will come across next. . This book kept me up at night demanding to be read. Absolutely loved this book and i would love to tag this book as one of the "Hidden Jwells" of KU. . Lucinda Berry is my new favourite thriller author after Riley Sager.
B**)
"Our life was forever marked in a before/after sequence. Life before Janie and life after"
This book messed me up. My skin crawled, my brain twisted, and by the end, I just sat there, staring into the void, questioning everything. Every single character was wired so weirdly—there wasn’t a single one I liked, and yet, I could not stop reading. It was like watching a train wreck in slow motion—horrifying, but I had to see how it played out. I binge-read it over the weekend, completely consumed, flipping pages like my life depended on it. Told through three POVs, the story constantly kept me on edge, making me doubt every character’s intentions. It disturbed me in ways I didn’t even know were possible. So why the five stars? Because while some people read for therapy, I read books that might just land me in therapy one day. Trigger Warnings - Child abuse (physical, emotional, psychological) - Infertility & miscarriage - Animal cruelty - Gaslighting & manipulation - Domestic violence - Death & grief This book is dark and disturbing, so proceed with caution if any of these topics might be triggering for you!
K**R
Gripping
Gripping. Finished it in one 3hr long flight. Revealing and unfolding the plot slowly yet ensuring it captures interest has been done masterfully
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