3.5 star

Review: No one Needs to Know by Lindsay Cameron

When an anonymous neighborhood forum gets hacked, the darkest secrets of New Yorkโ€™s wealthiest residents come to lightโ€”including some worth killing forโ€”in this gripping suspense novel from the author of Just One Look.

It was all confidential. Right up to the moment when it wasnโ€™t.

UrbanMyth: It was lauded as an alternative to the performative, show-your-best-self platformsโ€”an anonymous discussion board grouped by zip code. The residents of Manhattanโ€™s exclusive Upper East Side disclosed it all, things they would never share with their friends or their spouses: secret bank accounts, steamy affairs, tidbits of juicy gossip. These are the same parents who would go to astonishing lengths to ensure their children gain admission to the most prestigious boarding schools and universities. So when a โ€œhacktivistโ€ group breaks into the forum and exposes the real identity behind each poster, the repercussions resound down Park Avenue with a force none could have anticipated.

And someone will end up dead.

Will it be Heather, the outsider who would do anything to get her daughter into the eliteโ€™s good graces and into even better schools? Norah, the high-powered suit failing to balance work and the emotional responsibilities of motherhood? Or Poppy, perfect on the outside but hiding more than her share of secrets?

Each of them has something to hide. Each of them will do anything to keep their secrets hidden. And each of them just might kill to protect their own.



This is another one of those books that I picked up just on a spree at the library, trying to fill my reading roster for the next while. The popular books of course always have a long wait, so this was one of the books that I picked up in the meantime to fill the time. The premise was definitely interesting, though I think in the end it wasn’t exactly what I expected. I’m not entirely sure whether that’s a good or bad thing though.

No One Needs to Know revolves around a couple of POVs of a rich society in the Upper East Side. If you’re immediately thinking Gossip Girl, you’re really not that far off. An anonymous website called UrbanMyth holds the neighbourhoods’ elites’ secrets. Alls fair in love and war, especially when it’s anonymousโ€”right? Of course, when a hack releases everyone’s identity, just what will be revealed? And on top of that, someone is dead.

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top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I Meant to Read in 2023

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.


Do you ever plan out your TBR for the year and think youโ€™ll follow through on it? Iโ€™m not of a planner (100% mood reader here), but there are some books I always think Iโ€™ll read because I anticipate them so highlyโ€ฆand end up not reading it.

These are books I didnโ€™t follow through reading in 2023 but perhaps I will this year.

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discussion

Let’s Talk Bookish – Seeing the Real World Through Books

Aria @ Book Nook Bitsย is the new host for Letโ€™s Talk Bookish! If you arenโ€™t following her yet, good check out her blog and give her a follow!

January 19: Seeing the Real World Through Books

Prompts: Many fiction books have messages about social issues, current events, and more. Some are underlying themes, and others are much more overt. Are you more drawn to books that dive into these serious topics, or do you prefer to have fiction be more of an escape from the world? What are some novels that have impacted you? What do you think are the most effective ways for authors to get their messages across?

Welcome to another week of LTB here at DTRH, everyone! It is cold, cold, cooold, where I am, and I’m not in the coldest part of the country (-50 degrees elsewhere, what?!). Ignoring all that, today’s topic is about the “real world” as seen through books, and the messages authors can send. Is this a good or bad thing?

For me, I am definitely drawn to books that dive into serious or even less serious topics. At the same time, I also read books to escape from the real world almost every time, sticking to fiction over non-fiction. So how can these two be reconciled?

I think the easiest way to explain would probably be to say what I tend to avoid. First, non-fiction, and the true stories that are often just more tragic than tragic, and have the even more devastating blow of being actually real. Particularly with the hard topics, I find these super hard to digest, and even when I do, it feels just particularly heavy. In that sense, I think I’d rather just watch the news or listen to a lecture, rather than be pulled so deeply into a book. I personally find it rather troubling and not too productive.

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