The Perfect Child, by Author Lucinda Berry: A Well Read Woman Book Review

“For eager adoptive parents, getting what they always wanted has chilling consequences.”

Synopsis:

A Washington Post and Amazon Charts bestseller.

A page-turning debut of suspense about a young couple desperate to have a child of their own―and the unsettling consequences of getting what they always wanted.

Christopher and Hannah are a happily married surgeon and nurse with picture-perfect lives. All that’s missing is a child. When Janie, an abandoned six-year-old, turns up at their hospital, Christopher forms an instant connection with her, and he convinces Hannah they should take her home as their own.

But Janie is no ordinary child, and her damaged psyche proves to be more than her new parents were expecting. Janie is fiercely devoted to Christopher, but she acts out in increasingly disturbing ways, directing all her rage at Hannah. Unable to bond with Janie, Hannah is drowning under the pressure, and Christopher refuses to see Janie’s true nature.

Hannah knows that Janie is manipulating Christopher and isolating him from her, despite Hannah’s attempts to bring them all together. But as Janie’s behavior threatens to tear Christopher and Hannah apart, the truth behind Janie’s past may be enough to push them all over the edge.

Goodreads: Add to your TBR
📸 @aprillwoodauthor Hannah Bauer Book 2, the Sequel to The Perfect Child 🎈

Genre:

  • Psychological Thriller
  • Thriller
  • Suspense
  • Mystery
  • Horror

Tropes & Themes:

  • Foster-to-Adopt
  • Buyer’s Remorse
  • Orthopedic Surgeon & ER Nurse 💕
  • Adoption Paradox
  • Adoption Hero
  • Expectation versus Reality
  • Department of Child Disservices
  • Trigger Warnings: Child Abuse/Neglect; Animal Abuse

“No one would ever see Janie through my eyes.”

Rating: 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟

The Perfect Child, a psychological thriller by Author and Trauma Psychologist, Dr. Lucinda Berry, is a novel about Ortho-Surgeon, Dr. Christopher Bauer, and his wife Hannah, an ER Nurse, who seemingly have it all, but are desperate for the one thing they want most: a baby.

Just as the Bauers are considering adoption after several failed IVF rounds, a young girl with substantial injuries and a dog collar on her neck is rushed by ambulance with a police escort into the emergency department, after the little girl was found wandering in a parking lot.

“… it’s a lost kid or something, and she’s in really bad shape. Ambulance is bringing her in with a police escort.”

The timing of the young girl, (Janie’s), arrival at the hospital where the Bauers worked, while they were nearly desperate for a baby, were the makings of a perfect storm (and the perfect psychological thriller!) While Hannah avoids Janie at first to protect her own heart, (injured kids are the most difficult cases, especially for a woman who’s only wish is to raise a child) Christopher and Janie instantly connect and share a special bond, made stronger after he performs Janie’s orthopedic surgery.

Christopher, believing it’s fate that Janie be placed with them, enthusiastically convinces Hannah that Janie, a traumatized six year old, could be their “baby”.

I felt like Christopher, while likeable, had a bit of a hero complex. His refusal to see the truth was not just because he believed that girls are made of sugar and spice and everything nice, it was also because it threatened the facade that Janie was a regular young girl and he “fixed” her, in my opinion. He did a lot alongside Hannah to get Janie help, like therapy, but it was more “parenting class” (with a Dr. who diagnosed Janie with reactive-attachment-disorder and wouldn’t budge) than it was “psychotherapy session”. Both Hannah and Christopher made choices that frustrated me, in their attempts to control and alter Janie’s behavior: THE CAT, REALLY? I gritted my teeth and just waited for the worst.

Hannah was more of a realist when it came to Janie but unfortunately her husband, Christopher thought Janie could do no wrong.

Unaware of Janie’s disturbing past, they foster-to-adopt her and are assigned to DCF caseworker, Piper, who oversteps the boundaries far more than she knows she should. Janie never discusses her mother (who was found deceased in a trailer park) leaving me wondering what on earth happened to Janie and why doesn’t she mention anything from her past? The dog collar, fused and broken bones — all a mystery. The suspense and final reveal is an absolute shocker. I loved the ominous ending.

There are three alternating POVs: Christopher’s, Hannah’s, and Piper’s. I loved having the perspective of the DCF social worker too. I appreciate multiple POVs, especially with a complex story like The Perfect Child.

Hannah was my favorite character, partly because she saw through Janie’s manipulative tactics, and there were quite a few. I felt terrible for Hannah as I saw her slowly losing herself, her dream became a nightmare. A surprise pregnancy further overwhelms her and Janie’s regression, aggression, and violence reach new levels, while Christopher is off in fairytale land, his head in the clouds. Hannah, the primary caregiver, is at her wit’s end.

The Perfect Child is a page-turner. I absolutely loved this dark read. I’ve watched documentaries on feral children and severely abused and neglected children and find the psychology and stories like this that are built from real cases morbidly fascinating as well as horrific and shocking. Janie reminded me of a young German girl who was labeled as a sociopath at an extremely young age. She was downright frightening, much like little Janie, and said terrifying things in the sweetest voice while she batted her big beautiful blue eyes.

“She’s just a girl. There’s nothing to be afraid of.”

About the Author

Dr. Lucinda Berry is a former clinical psychologist and leading researcher in childhood trauma. Now, she spends her days writing full-time where she uses her clinical experience to blur the line between fiction and nonfiction. She enjoys taking her readers on a journey through the dark recesses of the human psyche. Her work has been optioned for film and translated into multiple languages.If Berry isn’t chasing after her son, you can find her running through Los Angeles, prepping for her next marathon. To hear about her upcoming release The Secrets of Us, visit her on Facebook or sign up for her newsletter at https://www.lucindaberry.com/

A Welcome Reunion 💅 by Lucinda Berry: A Well Read Woman Blog Book Review

Could a child be born bad? And if so— if there really was such a thing as a bad seed— could you turn them good?”

A Welcome Reunion

A Well Read Woman Blog: Book Review

by, April The Word Witch @aprillwoodauthor

  • A Welcome Reunion: A Short Story by Clinical Psychologist and Author, Lucinda Berry
  • Cover design by Olga Grlic
  • Cover image: © mia takahara / plainpicture
  • Published by Amazon Original Stories, Seattle www.apub.com August 15, 2023
  • Series: Hannah Bauer 1.5
  • My Rating: ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐

Genre:

  • Horror
  • Mystery
  • Psychological Thriller
  • Suspense

Blurb:

From the bestselling author of The Perfect Child comes a short thriller about a couple faced with the terrifying return of a girl they once called their own who threatens everything they hold dear.

Janie is the last person Hannah and Christopher Bauer want to see again. But Janie’s moved back to Clarksville. She’s no longer the frail child Hannah and Christopher adopted over eleven years ago. The child who destroyed their lives.

Now Janie is out of juvenile detention—a beautiful, confident young adult—and publicly promoting her new tell-all memoir. At just eighteen, Janie has a violent and tragic story to share, brimming with grisly details. Details the public can’t get enough of…and that the Bauers can’t bear to relive. Janie has taken a new name and claims to have reformed her sociopathic ways. She’s ready to make amends. But when the Bauers refuse to meet with her, she takes matters into her own hands.

After the social worker formerly assigned to the case makes disturbing revelations about Janie’s calculated behavior, the Bauers brace for Janie’s next move, determined to protect their family—at any cost.

Tropes & Themes:

  • Trauma Bond
  • The Bad Seed
  • Adoption Remorse
  • Found Family
  • “Department of Child Disservices”
  • Good versus Evil
  • Tragic Backstory
  • Sociopathy and Psychopathy
  • Action Mom

✨ ⚠ ⚡🔫 Trigger Warning: Childhood Abuse and Neglect ✨ ⚠ ⚡🔫

She’d been the worst case of child abuse and neglect I’d ever seen. Still to this day. That part was fact, and she described it vividly— tied with zip ties in a dark closet, a dog collar around her neck to shock her into submission or sometimes just to toy with her for fun, barely fed, never let into the outside world. Kept in filth and rot. And on and on it went. Her Adverse Childhood Experience score was off the charts. It was why Christopher had fallen head over heels in love with her when the police and paramedics brought her into the hospital where he worked. Why Hannah had given up her dreams of having a baby.”

A Welcome Reunion

A Welcome Reunion, by Clinical Psychologist and Author Lucinda Berry, is a coming of rage tale about an eighteen year old woman exiting “the system”, changing her name from Janie to Hope, and telling her story to the world, writing a memoir about her tragic experiences as a child and then with the Bauers–who she says gave up on her after welcoming her into their home as a family member. Rejected again, she became institutionalized, and eleven years later, Janie “Hope” is back in her old hometown, where her former adoptive parents live.

Hannah, Janie’s adoptive mother and a seasoned and decorated social worker, disagrees with most of her former daughter’s narrative. She and her husband, Christopher were good to Janie, she felt, but no amount of mothering would save her. It was true that Janie had been abused and neglected by her cruel biological family, but that no longer garnered any sympathy from Hannah; especially not after the absolute Hell Janie put her family through.

Whatever was wrong with her, you could no longer fix it, and I didn’t feel sorry for her, even if everyone else did.”

A Welcome Reunion

…when they first discovered her in a Walmart parking lot all those years ago wearing only a diaper and a dog collar. She’d been filthy, covered in scars and blood. Her body told a painful tale of years ravaged by abuse and neglect….”

A Welcome Reunion

I liked the trauma-bond dynamic between Christopher and Hannah. Their marriage was held together tentatively by strings that would wind tighter than wild Ivy during a tragic circumstance.

We didn’t talk about the Janie days in the same way veterans didn’t talk about their war days.”

A Welcome Reunion

With Janie back in town, spinning a wild web of all the abuse she suffered before and during her time in a juvenile justice program, Hannah and Christopher’s character is dragged through the mud in her tell-all memoir and during a TV interview, stirring feelings of anger. When Hannah catches wind of the behind the scenes master manipulation of someone who means everything to her, Hannah rages, her blood boiling as dark thoughts churn within her brain.

In A Welcome Reunion we also get the pov from Piper, a social worker who failed to follow up and blames herself for everything that has gone wrong in Janie’s short life. She’s friendly with Hannah and Christopher and is following Janie’s every move, offering them private info that could cost her her job, or worse, someone’s life.

I really liked this suspenseful read, especially because of it’s inclusion of childhood sociopathic behavior — an extreme psychological rarity. I love reads that offer a differing perspective, one that you might not expect.

I had no idea that this short is part of a series, starting with The Perfect Child. You wouldn’t imagine my excitement about getting to read more about “the beginning” and the origins of how it all came to be. I look forward to reading The Perfect Child!

📸 Goodreads

Overall, A Welcome Reunion is a well-crafted horror short about a young, violent girl, who had been failed many times in life, and the absolute havoc of terror she brings with her everywhere she goes. Now grown up, she’s back and seemingly more sociopathic than ever. Hannah won’t be deceived again, nor will her family — no matter what it takes to ensure that. I liked the decision she made but would have liked to see the aftermath and known Hannah’s fate. Even so, this was such a good read and I’d recommend it to anyone not triggered by the themes of child abuse, and to those who find it fascinating to read about psychological issues and personality disorders. 5 stars, without a doubt.

Add to your Goodreads TBR

About the Author:

Home