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  • I Can Be A Better You: A shocking psychological thriller
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4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
2,485 global ratings
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I Can Be A Better You: A shocking psychological thriller

I Can Be A Better You: A shocking psychological thriller

byTarryn Fisher
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Top positive review

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Ron K
5.0 out of 5 starsWriting About Fig
Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2018
Bad Mommy by Tarryn Fisher is one of the best psychological thrillers I have read in years of reading psychological thrillers. It is a five-star plus Amazon read which I highly recommend. I didn’t even mind paying the full Amazon price of USD 3.99. It has a very different organizational style which almost makes it three novels in one while still having one easily recognized theme and story. The three parts; The Psychopath, The Sociopath, and The Writer, tell one disturbing and twisted story in fifty-two chapters from three points of view. I liked the title of Chapter fifty-two; Chapter One.

I listened to one-third of the book on Audible.com while traveling to and from work. The narration, by Brittany Pressley, Lance Greenfield, and Carly Robins is superb. But the story was so interesting I switched to reading it because I became impatient with the speed of the narration. I read faster than the narrators speak. Yes, there is a handy little button in Audible that allows me to speed up the reading but then the sound would have been distorted. In the 1x narration speed, the story is creepy.

Fig is the psychopath. She is married to George and they had tried to have a child. She blamed the miscarriage on George. Not that he had anything to do with the miscarriage physically, it just seemed to Fig that he got over it quickly, didn’t want to talk about it, and did not pay attention to Fig’s feelings. Luckily, Fig had a series of therapists to help her get over the tragedy. Her favorite therapist convinced Fig that her baby was alive but in another body. When Fig found her baby, their two souls would recognize each other and Fig would able to reclaim her baby and be the good mother she knew she could be.

Jolene is the writer. She has a cute child named Mercy Moo. Living with husband Darius, she has a vaguely defined marital relationship that might be considered an open marriage. But Jolene doesn’t consider it that way. She doesn’t stray and doesn’t want to. She doesn’t want Darius to stray either. She only demands one thing, the truth. What she doesn’t want to really know, what she might know but does not admit, won’t hurt her. She has an interesting new neighbor with an odd fixation that Jolene is slow to notice and even slower to admit. The neighbor, Fig has one fixation Jolene does not know about. Fig has identified Mercy as her lost child and soulmate.

Darius is the sociopath. He might be able to diagnose himself as one since he is a counselor/therapist/psychologist; his credential is a bit unclear. Darius has no interest in self-diagnosis and would never believe himself to be a sociopath. He is too busy dealing with his sex addiction. Among other things, he must conceal his activities from his wife. Then he must conceal his sexual activities with his patients from investigations by ethics boards and police. Darius recognizes that Fig is a psychopath and a danger to Jolene. But he is also fascinated by Fig and the possibilities that the manipulation of Fig might bring to the satisfaction of his addiction.

This is the second novel I have read/listened to by Tarryn Fisher. The first one I reviewed, The Opportunist, was underwhelming. I couldn’t believe I finished it. In that review, I mentioned that Fisher might be a “pendulum” writer who produced both really good and much less-than-good novels. This novel was so much the polar opposite that my view is confirmed but now I have to go read more from her to see where other of her novels fit on the scale of from mediocre to great. Bad Mommy is great.

There are a couple of plot holes here and there but the overall quality of story and writing make it easy for the reader mind to gloss over minor imperfections. There is probably language that is offensive to some, especially females. I found this interesting since the author is female. Her female characters (not Darius the sex addict) use the forbidden “c***” word. No, this does not refer to a male appendage. But, there are female artists such as Sally Fields who have a very different take on the use of the word. I digress.

The three main characters of the novel offer the reader many surprises. There are action events, such as who is doing what to whom but the real surprises come with the development or degeneration of the thinking and minds of the Sociopath and the Writer. Those two characters are developed very well. Darius seems sort of stuck as far as character development but, again, the excellence of the story via the other two main characters make this a very enjoyable and even addictive (sorry Darius) reading experience. Once I switched from Audible to Kindle print, I didn’t stop reading until the end. And the end is simply clever. Not cerebral, but clever.

On to read more Tarryn Fisher novels.
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50 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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BridgettTop Contributor: Eye Makeup
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
2.0 out of 5 starsSPOILER ALERT! Do not read this review unless you don't mind spoilers.
Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2018
FYI--THIS BOOK USED TO BE TITLED BAD MOMMY.

**There are a few spoilers in this review.**

I admit, I couldn't put this book down. I almost always pick up the subtle undercurrents in stories which often give away twisty plot points in books, but for the life of me, I couldn't figure out the twist in this story. Bad Mommy was all over the place, which ultimately kept me coming back for more. If I can't figure a book out, it tends to get a 4.5/5 star rating.

So,

What was I missing?

Where was the story going?

Would all of these unanswered questions be revealed in the end?

Unfortunately, I wasn't missing much...except three terribly unreliable narrators, three separate stories which didn't mesh together at all, and a conclusion which left me empty. I was being told a story, instead of feeling as though I was part of it all. The reason I couldn't figure out the twist? There wasn't one. Nothing ever came together and felt cohesive. This was the exact same problem I had with Mud Vein. So much build up...and then a big, disappointing fizzle. It's as if Tarryn Fisher focuses so much on the crazy in her books, she forgets to actually tie up her stories. At least with an ending that's reasonable and satisfying.

I felt cheated. The book started with so much potential...but I was left with: wondering where in the heck George came from; questioning whether or not Darius ever loved Jolene...or if it was all just for her home/money; pondering what happened regarding the lawsuits against Darius; trying to figure out why Fig suddenly stopped caring about Mercy...she was barely mentioned in the final 2/3 of the book; wondering what actually happened in Paris that required Fig wiring the Avery family money, and just trying to figure out Jolene, period.

The truth is, I haven't really loved any of Ms. Fisher's novels, and this is probably the sixth or seventh I've read over the years. They're so popular and universally loved, I keep trying, but unfortunately, I think this is the end of the road.
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80 people found this helpful

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From the United States

BridgettTop Contributor: Eye Makeup
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
2.0 out of 5 stars SPOILER ALERT! Do not read this review unless you don't mind spoilers.
Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2018
Verified Purchase
FYI--THIS BOOK USED TO BE TITLED BAD MOMMY.

**There are a few spoilers in this review.**

I admit, I couldn't put this book down. I almost always pick up the subtle undercurrents in stories which often give away twisty plot points in books, but for the life of me, I couldn't figure out the twist in this story. Bad Mommy was all over the place, which ultimately kept me coming back for more. If I can't figure a book out, it tends to get a 4.5/5 star rating.

So,

What was I missing?

Where was the story going?

Would all of these unanswered questions be revealed in the end?

Unfortunately, I wasn't missing much...except three terribly unreliable narrators, three separate stories which didn't mesh together at all, and a conclusion which left me empty. I was being told a story, instead of feeling as though I was part of it all. The reason I couldn't figure out the twist? There wasn't one. Nothing ever came together and felt cohesive. This was the exact same problem I had with Mud Vein. So much build up...and then a big, disappointing fizzle. It's as if Tarryn Fisher focuses so much on the crazy in her books, she forgets to actually tie up her stories. At least with an ending that's reasonable and satisfying.

I felt cheated. The book started with so much potential...but I was left with: wondering where in the heck George came from; questioning whether or not Darius ever loved Jolene...or if it was all just for her home/money; pondering what happened regarding the lawsuits against Darius; trying to figure out why Fig suddenly stopped caring about Mercy...she was barely mentioned in the final 2/3 of the book; wondering what actually happened in Paris that required Fig wiring the Avery family money, and just trying to figure out Jolene, period.

The truth is, I haven't really loved any of Ms. Fisher's novels, and this is probably the sixth or seventh I've read over the years. They're so popular and universally loved, I keep trying, but unfortunately, I think this is the end of the road.
80 people found this helpful
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Ron K
5.0 out of 5 stars Writing About Fig
Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2018
Verified Purchase
Bad Mommy by Tarryn Fisher is one of the best psychological thrillers I have read in years of reading psychological thrillers. It is a five-star plus Amazon read which I highly recommend. I didn’t even mind paying the full Amazon price of USD 3.99. It has a very different organizational style which almost makes it three novels in one while still having one easily recognized theme and story. The three parts; The Psychopath, The Sociopath, and The Writer, tell one disturbing and twisted story in fifty-two chapters from three points of view. I liked the title of Chapter fifty-two; Chapter One.

I listened to one-third of the book on Audible.com while traveling to and from work. The narration, by Brittany Pressley, Lance Greenfield, and Carly Robins is superb. But the story was so interesting I switched to reading it because I became impatient with the speed of the narration. I read faster than the narrators speak. Yes, there is a handy little button in Audible that allows me to speed up the reading but then the sound would have been distorted. In the 1x narration speed, the story is creepy.

Fig is the psychopath. She is married to George and they had tried to have a child. She blamed the miscarriage on George. Not that he had anything to do with the miscarriage physically, it just seemed to Fig that he got over it quickly, didn’t want to talk about it, and did not pay attention to Fig’s feelings. Luckily, Fig had a series of therapists to help her get over the tragedy. Her favorite therapist convinced Fig that her baby was alive but in another body. When Fig found her baby, their two souls would recognize each other and Fig would able to reclaim her baby and be the good mother she knew she could be.

Jolene is the writer. She has a cute child named Mercy Moo. Living with husband Darius, she has a vaguely defined marital relationship that might be considered an open marriage. But Jolene doesn’t consider it that way. She doesn’t stray and doesn’t want to. She doesn’t want Darius to stray either. She only demands one thing, the truth. What she doesn’t want to really know, what she might know but does not admit, won’t hurt her. She has an interesting new neighbor with an odd fixation that Jolene is slow to notice and even slower to admit. The neighbor, Fig has one fixation Jolene does not know about. Fig has identified Mercy as her lost child and soulmate.

Darius is the sociopath. He might be able to diagnose himself as one since he is a counselor/therapist/psychologist; his credential is a bit unclear. Darius has no interest in self-diagnosis and would never believe himself to be a sociopath. He is too busy dealing with his sex addiction. Among other things, he must conceal his activities from his wife. Then he must conceal his sexual activities with his patients from investigations by ethics boards and police. Darius recognizes that Fig is a psychopath and a danger to Jolene. But he is also fascinated by Fig and the possibilities that the manipulation of Fig might bring to the satisfaction of his addiction.

This is the second novel I have read/listened to by Tarryn Fisher. The first one I reviewed, The Opportunist, was underwhelming. I couldn’t believe I finished it. In that review, I mentioned that Fisher might be a “pendulum” writer who produced both really good and much less-than-good novels. This novel was so much the polar opposite that my view is confirmed but now I have to go read more from her to see where other of her novels fit on the scale of from mediocre to great. Bad Mommy is great.

There are a couple of plot holes here and there but the overall quality of story and writing make it easy for the reader mind to gloss over minor imperfections. There is probably language that is offensive to some, especially females. I found this interesting since the author is female. Her female characters (not Darius the sex addict) use the forbidden “c***” word. No, this does not refer to a male appendage. But, there are female artists such as Sally Fields who have a very different take on the use of the word. I digress.

The three main characters of the novel offer the reader many surprises. There are action events, such as who is doing what to whom but the real surprises come with the development or degeneration of the thinking and minds of the Sociopath and the Writer. Those two characters are developed very well. Darius seems sort of stuck as far as character development but, again, the excellence of the story via the other two main characters make this a very enjoyable and even addictive (sorry Darius) reading experience. Once I switched from Audible to Kindle print, I didn’t stop reading until the end. And the end is simply clever. Not cerebral, but clever.

On to read more Tarryn Fisher novels.
50 people found this helpful
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CarlaB
3.0 out of 5 stars Could have been an extraordinary book but......
Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2019
Verified Purchase
There is so much to say about this book. I nearly fell in love with it, thought it was awesome -loved the characters esp Jolene.
I found her intriguing mystfying. As I read on I found the book to be more than a little bizarre. It was like one person had written the first half, and someone else, the second.

This was more than a twist, it was a 180° U-turn. Don't want to reveal too much so I'll avoid specifics. One thing I found odd, was the little girl, Mercy, the premise for the whole story.
After the first chapter or two she virtually vanished from the story, mentioned here and there in passing. Secondly, Fig- the main char was supposedly married and it was assumed they had split up. Then the ex appears out of nowhere many chapters later almost at the end- was.not once mentioned in the body of the story as an active character. Like a walk-in who only served one purpose- played his part and then exited the book.
To me, there's a big problem if characters are presented as main characters and then kind if disappear or reappear at the author's convenience. Another troubling thing was Jolene's character. I loved her character to the point that I couldn't wait to find out who she was at her core.
So the story was moving along nicely and then.............wtf happened??
It wasn't the twist- I love twists in stories. This was beyond a twist, more like a spiral spinning out of control. It was strange, and not in a good way.
Don't know much about this author. She has tremendous potential, very talented. So I don't understand how/why this would happen?! Have never run across this before. So it was interesting on more than one level.
Anyway, the characters were true to life, story started out normally kept you glued, interesting plot, big twist, ending nothing to write home about. Personally, I was disappointed.
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Amazon Customer
2.0 out of 5 stars Still confused ...NO SPOILERS
Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2019
Verified Purchase
I got addicted within the first two chapters....then just confused. Kept thinking I missed some part( maybe read while falling asleep?) No not at all. After going back and 're- reading it became apparent that it was a POV novel. (But there is no notation , besides part 1,2,3) and during part one TONS of "lost time" that I suppose the author thought was filled in in part two or three...it was not. STILL HAVE SO MANY UNANSWERED QUESTIONS.
The original obsession never gets acknowledged, just transferred. And unfortunately that is not dealt with either.
Then the fact that characters are introduced in 'part one' show a bit in 'part two' then never heard from again.

I will not say not to buy. It is a somewhat good read. I just felt it lost the plot from where it started.

And if you do read this and have read the book.....hmmmm where was George?
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Paris Hansen
5.0 out of 5 stars Totally crazy and amazing.
Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2017
Verified Purchase
You’d think after reading all of the other books that Tarryn Fisher has written that I would be ready for the crazy ride that she’s known for. But I wasn’t. I wasn’t ready for Bad Mommy. God I love the way she still surprises me with the depths of the weirdness that she seems to know a lot about. I love that her characters are always flawed, but this time their flawed and absolutely nuts. I loved it.

I love that we got to see things from the points of view of three different characters. I love how absolutely different each of their views of the situations were. Talk about unreliable narrators….at least for the most part. It’s weird to say that I liked them all especially given how totally crazy they could be. While reading one POV, you want to hate one character and love another. While reading another POV you learn who someone truly is and it’s a bit mind-blowing. And then we get to the final POV and some things finally make a bit of sense, but you’re still left wondering what the F just happened.

I couldn’t put this book down. I needed to know what the heck was going on. I started reading while eating breakfast and then ended up putting off all of the things I had to do today because I needed to finish this. It won’t be for everyone, but it’s one heck of a read and I highly recommend it. I can’t wait to see what she writes next.
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Clementine
1.0 out of 5 stars Not a cohesive story
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2018
Verified Purchase
I have absolutely no idea why this book has so many 5 star reviews. It's not cohesive at all. Every character is unlikable in some way but 2 of our main characters are just downright vile! Maybe this just isn't my type of book. I didn't find any of Fig's little snarky comments or thoughts, that funny. I guess it was interesting that there was no happy ending but also, nothing was really resolved in any meaningful way. I honest-to-God thought that Fig's husband was dead but he suddenly turned up near the end of the book. The whole thing just felt like a hot mess!
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Kindle Customer
2.0 out of 5 stars I am shocked....but not in a good way.
Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2020
Verified Purchase
**spoiler alert**

This is the second book I've read from this author. I read The Wives and thought it brilliant, so I was excited coming into this story. I liked how Fig started out, her thinking process, funny and a bit twisted. And then suddenly there was story chaos and the end of her perspective. We moved on to Darius point of view and then on to Jolene's. So. Many. Loopholes. Tidbits of information dropped that went nowhere. 3 perspectives that did nothing to tell a complete story that made any sense. The discovery that George was still in the picture wasn't enlightening, but confusing. Bad Mommy/Mercy, this plot seemed dropped early on and then suddenly resurrected at the very end. For me this story was choppy and did not flow well wrapping up the story.
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W. Michael King, Ph.D.
2.0 out of 5 stars AWKWARD READ, disappointed
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2020
Verified Purchase
The book is a dialogue of mind-sets, first told by psychopath in her pushing into a relationship that includes two others, then told by a sociopath, one of those in the relationship, and then by a "normal" person who was psychologically damaged by the two others. My view for first character (about 1/3rd of the book) that IMHO this was one of the worst books I've purchased: ever. I managed to get though this by leap-frogging from one chapter to another because reading one or two pages of each chapter was all I could handle. For the second character the read was more interesting, and ditto for the third.
If you have the stamina and endurance to "listen into" the minds of each character, learn their mental thoughts in extravagant detail for all of the experiences as told by each of the three in the same mutual relationship and encounters, you will learn points about the frailty and guises of human nature.
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Kindle Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Crazy calls to crazy
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2017
Verified Purchase
Damn. I guess what they say is true, crazy calls to crazy. This was an interesting book for TF because it didn't really feal like her usual work, it was almost more comical? That probably sounds horrible considering it is about a crazy lady trying to steal someone's life but I found myself almost laughing at times. Maybe it was more of an "I can't believe that people are actually this crazy!" kind of laugh.

Fig. You are one crazy chick but I am not going to lie, I loved it! I would probably not be a fan if I was the one being stalked but...

The first thing I did when I walked inside my house was get naked. Pants were for losers.

She just gets it! Unless she's being crazy. Which is really just a part of her appeal as a book character.

I found Jolene to be an interesting character. Maybe I will fig out on her because that girl's style sounded pretty rad lol. Yeah I know, I used lol in a review. I stayed up too late reading last night and I don't even care. But seriously, Jolene is worth figging over. She's the cool mom you want to be...

The POVs from Fig and Darius were just perfect. They were so crazy! Like, made for each other kind of crazy. A crazy psychologist is interesting too. Is he self-aware of is he so crazy he can talk himself out of actually thinking anything is wrong?! I must know more!

The book felt more like a venting kind of story, almost like a journal. The author had something to get off of her chest and she used her art to do so. This book, while not my favorite (because come on, Marrow?! You can't top that!), was still a good book! 4 stars out of 5! What did you guys think?! Let's talk crazy talk!

and just because I have to share my most favorite quote from the book!

“Yikes, not a Harry Potter fan. You lose all cool points for that.”
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BarbDeBlois
3.0 out of 5 stars First book by this author, and it was.....interesting..
Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2021
Verified Purchase
Well, I’ve had this book for awhile, and finally got around to reading it. I’ve read good things about this author and the reviews were mostly positive. I do know she writes other types of books, but this was supposed to be suspenseful and a thriller....but I wouldn’t agree. I did enjoy her writing style, but If you are not into sexual situations, and very descriptive sexual language, this might not be the book for you. As I said, it is described as a psychological thriller, which I didn’t see much of. My favorite genre is psychological thrillers and I’ve read hundreds, but this book didn’t really thrill me and all of the sexually descriptive language was wayyyy too much for me. I stay away from erotica and honestly this was borderline if not completely raunchy at times. I don’t consider myself a prude, but it was over the top from my perspective....I just don’t understand the need for so much sexually descriptive language if it is supposed to be a thriller and I don’t think it adds anything to the story, but that’s my opinion. The book was told from the perspective of three different individuals, all of which were pretty unlikable, and at times the perspectives were very confusing and had me scratching my head, and I didn’t think there was any resolution made. Again, my opinion. All in all, I have to say, it wasn’t for me.
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