{SPOILERS IN THIS REVIEW!}
What a deliciously odd debut novel, reminiscent of Patricia Highsmith’s work for how it places a neurotic outsider at the heart of an unlikely murder investigation. George March is a popular author whose latest novel stars Johanna, a prostitute so ugly that men feel sorry for her and can’t bear to sleep with her. Meanwhile, the news cycle is consumed with the strangling of a young woman named Sylvia Gibbler in Gentry, Maine, where George goes on hunting trips with his editor. Mrs. March takes two misconceptions – that George modeled Johanna on her, and that he was somehow involved in Sylvia’s death because he kept newspaper clippings about it on his desk – and runs with them, to catastrophic effect.
Mrs. March’s usual milieu is the New York City apartment she shares with George and their son, Jonathan. Martha, the housekeeper, keeps the daily details under control, leaving Mrs. March with little to do. She doesn’t seem very interested in her son, and resents George. Each morning she walks to the bakery to buy olive bread. Every so often she’ll host an extravagant dinner party. But there is plenty of time in between to fill with flashbacks to shameful memories (having an imaginary friend, wetting the bed, her mother’s favoritism towards her sister, being raped in Cádiz) and hallucinations (a dead pigeon in the bathtub, cockroaches scuttling around the apartment). She decides to travel to Maine herself to investigate Sylvia’s death; it’s not what she finds there but what she returns to that changes things forever.

There are so many intriguing factors. One is the nebulous time period: what with Mrs. March’s fur coat and head scarf, the train cars and payphone calls, it could be the 1950s; but then there are more modern references (a washing machine, holiday flights) that made me inclined to point to the 1980s. It couldn’t be the present day unless Feito is deliberately setting the story in an alternative world without much tech. As in Highsmith, we get mistaken identity and disguises. Feito really ramps up the psychological elements, interrogating how trauma, paranoia and extreme body issues may have led to dissociation in her protagonist. Mrs. March is both obsessed with and repulsed by bodily realities. It’s only through other characters’ reactions, though, that we see just how mentally disturbed she is. Worryingly, patterns seem to be repeating with her son, who is suspended for ‘doing something’ to a girl.
I can see how this would be a divisive read: the characters are thoroughly unlikable and it can be difficult to decide what is real and what is not. Incidents I took at face value may well be symbolic, or psychological manifestations of trauma. But I found it morbidly fascinating. I never knew what was going to happen next. (Public library/NetGalley) 
The main question we ask about the books we read for Literary Wives is:
What does this book say about wives or about the experience of being a wife?
In terms of Literary Wives reads, this reminded me most of The Harpy by Megan Hunter because of its eventual focus on adultery and revenge. Notably, until the very last sentence, we only know Mrs. March’s identity through her relationship to her husband. (Her first name is finally revealed to be Agatha, which of course made me think of Agatha Christie and detection, but its meaning is “good” or “honorable” – there was a martyred saint by the name.) What I took from that is that defining oneself primarily through marriage is dangerous because personality and control can be lost. This character was in need of a wider purpose to take her outside of her home and family – though those would always be her refuge to return to. Even setting Mrs. March’s mental problems aside, it is frighteningly easy to indulge in delusions about oneself or one’s spouse, so getting a reality check via communication is key.
See Kay’s and Naomi’s reviews, too!
We’ve recently acquired a new member – welcome to Kate of Books Are My Favourite and Best! – and chosen our books for the next two and a bit years. Anyone is welcome to join us in reading them. Here’s the club page on Kay’s blog, and our schedule through the end of 2026:
June 2024 Recipe for a Perfect Marriage by Karma Brown
Sept. 2024 Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
Dec. 2024 Euphoria by Elin Culhed
March 2025 Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus
June 2025 The Constant Wife by W. Somerset Maugham
Sept. 2025 Novel about My Wife by Emily Perkins
Dec. 2025 The Soul of Kindness by Elizabeth Taylor
March 2026 Mrs. Bridge by Evan S. Connell
June 2025 Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri
Sept. 2026 Family Family by Laurie Frankel
Dec. 2026 The Eden Test by Adam Sternbergh
I loved this one. It was one of my books of the year on 2022.
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A lot of people likened it to Moshfegh and I can see that (Eileen, anyway).
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I loved this one too.
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Wickedly fun and disorienting in the best way.
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Sounds like this is a completely different kind of book from what I thought it was from the cover!
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Both the US and the UK covers emphasize a retro/kitsch style. I like the cockroach here for how it suggests something wrong with a perfectly curated appearance. But it’s a difficult book to sum up briefly!
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Ah I did not spot the cockroach!
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I loved this book, too.
For some reason, I had completely forgotten about the Gibbler murder part of the book by the time I wrote my thoughts. Would the Johanna betrayal alone have been enough to send her over the edge? I think so.
In the end, we came to the same conclusion – that Mrs. March needed a life and identity outside of her marriage. I felt so sorry for her! And poor Jonathan!
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She seems like she was a ticking time bomb; anything could have caused a breakdown. I was maybe a little disappointed that George turned out to just be having an affair, because that’s such a cliche (and especially in the books we read for LW!). But the novel was so original up to that point that I didn’t really mind.
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You’re right. That was just a small annoyance for me, too.
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Hmm, this sounded an intriguing but not necessarily a good read from my point of view. But then all your commenters loved it! There are no fewer than 16 copies in our (admittedly county wide) library service, though none in my branch. Let’s see if one comes my way.
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It’s a decidedly weird book!
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I loved this book, falling in love with that brilliant cover when I saw it on social media. Such a great choice for the Literary Wives Club.
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I liked it even more than I expected to!
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Good point about the time period, although my family had a washing machine from the 50’s, and we weren’t rich. But you’re right that only my dad flew for business at that time (although my grandparents, who were well off, flew to Spain, Hawaii, and other places for pleasure). I just assumed it was the 50’s or maybe the early 60’s. You also make a good point about defining oneself through marriage.
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I was trying all through the book to figure out when exactly it was supposed to be set! I think Feito deliberately kept it vague, though it was definitely before the present day.
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Yes, it was a mystery!
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I just read the last paragraph to avoid your spoilers (thanks for the warning!) and some of the comments; it sounds like a great read for a group. And the other books you’ve chosen look like a great mix too.
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Yeah, really looking forward to the upcoming reads! And there was lots to think and talk about in this one, though I think many book club members might struggle because of the sheer unlikability of the characters.
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[…] Psycho by Virginia Feito [13 Feb., Fourth Estate; Feb. 4, Liveright]: Feito’s debut, Mrs March, was deliciously odd, and I love the (U.S.) cover for this one. It sounds like a bonkers horror […]
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[…] of the year – for the bonkers blurb but also because of how much I’d enjoyed Feito’s debut, Mrs. March. Both novels go deep with mentally disturbed protagonists. The first channeled Patricia Highsmith […]
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