
Two strangers – a Black woman and a white woman – who discover that each has a husband she’d be better off without, find their lives entangled in increasingly sinister ways following one fateful encounter, leading to a shocking and violent conclusion.
Tasha and Madison may live in different parts of the country and have different everyday realities, but they have one thing in common: marriages they need out of. Tasha and Madison want to help each other, but they have very different ideas of what that means…The women are on a collision course that will end in the case files of the D.C. MPD homicide unit. Unravelling the truth of what really happened may be impossible…and futile. Because what has the truth ever done for women like Tasha and Madison?
Combining dark humour with classic domestic thriller tropes, Not So Perfect Strangers offers a fresh take on a classic story, in a brilliantly updated homage to Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train. Featuring a cast of diverse female leads living in modern America, L.S. Stratton’s latest release delves into pressing contemporary issues regarding feminism, gender dynamics, racism, and the white saviour complex.
Fans of Lucy Foley’s The Guest List and Oyinkan Braithwaite’s My Sister the Serial Killer are sure to enjoy this highly anticipated domestic thriller.
Writing under numerous pen names, L.S. Stratton is an NAACP Image Award-nominated author who has written dozens of books across multiple genres from romance to thrillers.

L.S. Stratton is a NAACP Image Award-nominated author and former crime newspaper reporter. She is a member of the Crime Writers of Color organization founded by Kellye Garrett, Walter Mosley, and Gigi Pandian and has written more than a dozen books under different pen names. Her writing varies from thrillers to romance to historical fiction – she enjoys writing just about every genre. She currently lives in Maryland with her husband, their daughter, and their tuxedo cat.
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My thoughts: I really enjoyed this clever thriller, with its unhinged murderer, Madison, Tasha – who really doesn’t want to be involved in Madison’s craziness, and the twists that come out of nowhere and that ending, excellently done.
After a row with her husband, Madison gets in Tasha’s car and begs for a lift. Tasha, already in her own crisis, agrees and sets in motion a chain of events she just can’t seem to stop.
Madison wants to trade their husbands’ deaths, Strangers on a Train style, only Tasha isn’t a killer. And when she doesn’t hold up her end of their “bargain”, Madison becomes threatening. Tasha’s also worried about her son – could be become an abuser like his dad?
But as she tries to warn people about Madison, no one believes her, her life starts to fall apart and she needs to prove that Madison killed her husband. Tasha’s doing everything she can, if only she’d thrown the crazy woman out of her car. One good turn leads nowhere nice it seems.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own