
Spoilers for The Briar Club Below
The Briar Club was my friend’s book club book for this month. As usual, I waited till the last minute to read the book and read 200 pages the day before we met. I try hard not to do that, but something about having a deadline worked in this case. I had high hopes for The Briar Club since the average rating of this book is 4.31 stars which is pretty high for a book on Goodreads. Suffice it to say, I will not be rating this book the same as average readers and I’m excited to get into it.
Washington D.C. 1954. Briarwood House has new energy when Grace March moves in. Grace has a way of getting the other residents to open up and many of the women have grown to like her. Four years later, detectives are at Briarwood House investigating two murders. Who was responsible and what secrets led up to the deaths of these two people?
When reading The Briar Club, I liked reading about the perspectives of those who lived at Briarwood House. If I had to pick my favorites, I loved Nora and Fliss’s points of view. Nora was in an abusive relationship which caused distance from her family. Nora meets Xavier, a man with ties to organized crime. Xavier kills the man who hurt Nora and goes to prison for it. Nora breaks up with him in prison because she doesn’t want to be associated with him. I loved seeing Nora sticking up for herself. Fliss is a young mom and her husband is overseas at the height of the Korean War. Fliss sees herself as a bad mom because she’s struggling and when her husband brings up in a letter that he wants baby number #2, Fliss is stressed. Reading about Fliss’s struggles with motherhood felt authentic, especially with women in that period. I thought her perspective was genuine and something many would relate to.
The twist in this book was interesting. The twist relates to Grace March, the character everyone interacts with. It’s revealed that Grace was a Russian spy who defected when she moved to America. I didn’t expect the book to go in this direction, so I was pleasantly surprised. When this was revealed, I started to think about certain sections and things made sense about how Grace acted. The murders are Grace’s fake American husband who was also a spy and a senator who was in the wrong place at the wrong time. While I think things wrapped up too neatly at the end, I can’t help but be enthralled with Grace’s back story.
While there were things I liked about The Briar Club, I HATED how this book was structured. Each perspective was one long chapter and there were no chapter breaks. I read The Briar Club on my Kindle and seeing my Kindle reminding me that it would take me an hour and a half to read the chapter, oh hell no. Why wouldn’t there be chapter breaks?? It would have been so easy to do. This book isn’t even that long, but it dragged on. I’m not sure if Kate Quinn’s books are like this, but if so, I’m not a fan.
The Briar Club was interesting and I’m glad I read it. For the love of everything, please don’t have long chapters. Long chapters are the worst and are a book pet peeve of mine. I rated The Briar Club three stars on Goodreads.