Review: Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham
18 August 2025
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Books, fiction, Forget Me Not, Review, Stacy Willingham, Thriller
My Five Word TL:DR Review: Willingham’s Best Book to Date
Stacy Willingham has swiftly become one of my ‘go to’ authors and Forget Me Not is my favourite so far. I found this so easy to sink into. To be fair, the start of the story takes a little time to find it’s feet but even with this slightly slow kick off I found myself totally absorbed. I think the writing style and the narrator worked really well, there was tension, fear, mystery and twists that I absolutely did not see coming. In fact, apart from a little nagging voice at the back of my head that kept trying to insinuate itself regarding one specific element, I had this all wrong. Well done SW.
Claire Campbell is a journalist, living in New York since she graduated. She left her traumatic past behind and never looked back but a combination of poor work outcomes and her mother having a bad fall have finally forced her hand. Twenty two years ago Claire’s older sister Natalie went missing. The family fractured and Claire has had very little contact with her parents since. To say her return isn’t lovingly embraced is an understatement and soon enough Claire finds herself taking up a strange offer of work, with accommodation, that promises to help tide her over.
I’m not going to elaborate further on the story because it would be so easy to give away spoilers and this book has such a lot of secrets to deliver that I don’t want to be the one who gives the game away.
What I really liked.
Seriously, I loved the writing. It just worked for me, perhaps I was in the right headspace for this type of mystery, but I loved reading this and even with the little bit of set up – which be patient because it is all necessary – I couldn’t read this quickly enough.
The setting was really good. South Carolina, the sweltering heat, the hazy days and then the setting of Galloway Farm with its isolation and strange and secretive inhabitants. The place pretty soon begins to give off unsettling vibes, as do the people living there and added to that is a secret diary that Claire has discovered and is adding to her already enhanced (journalist) curiosity. I will say that there was one particular part of the story that I felt like throttling Claire as she was taking such terrible risks and my heart was in my throat! And, pretty much from that point forward the tension was palpable.
I also really enjoyed that we jump back and forth in history as Claire delves into the secret diary she discovered. I am a sucker for this form of storytelling so particularly enjoyed this element.
Overall, this was well written and atmospheric, I liked the main character who was intelligent and plucky (and scared me with her risks), I loved the story and the way it twists unexpectedly and the ending has definitely stayed with me since I put the book down.
I really enjoyed this.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 5 of 5 stars
Friday Face Off: Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham
23 May 2025
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Forget Me Not, Friday Face off, Stacy Willingham

Today I’m returning to the Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy). I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner. This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers. Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite. If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.
This week I’ve chosen a book that I’ve not read yet but I’m really looking forward to, Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham.
Here are the covers:
My favourite this week:
I like both covers to be honest. But, I like that at first glance I barely Noticed the car grill and headlight amongst the greenery.
Which is your favourite?
Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.
Can’t Wait Wednesday: Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham
26 March 2025
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Can't wait Wednesday, Forget Me Not, Stacy Willingham, Wishful Endings

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine. Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for. If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to. This week my book is: Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham. I’m really enjoying this author’s work – check out the cover and description below:
A pulse-pounding new Southern thriller from the author of the runaway bestseller A Flicker in the Dark.
Twenty-two years ago, Claire Campbell’s older sister, Natalie, disappeared shortly after her eighteenth birthday. Days later, her blood was found in a car, a man was arrested, and the case was swiftly closed. In the decades since, Claire has attempted to forget her traumatic past by moving to the city and climbing the ranks as an investigative journalist… until an unexpected call from her father forces her to come back home and face it all anew.
With the entire summer now looming ahead—a summer spent with nothing to do in her childhood home, with her estranged mother—Claire decides on a whim to accept a seasonal job at Galloway Farm, a muscadine vineyard in coastal South Carolina less than an hour away from where she grew up. At first glance, Galloway is an idyllic escape for Claire. A scenic retreat full of slow-paced nostalgia, as well as a place where her sister seemed truly happy in that last summer before she vanished, it feels like the perfect plan to pass the time. However, as soon as Claire starts to settle in, she stumbles across an old diary written by one of the vineyard’s owners, and what at first seems like a story of young rebellion and love turns into something much more sinister as it begins to describe details of various unsolved crimes. As the days stretch on, Claire finds herself becoming more and more secluded as she starts to obsess over the diary’s contents… as well as the lingering feeling that her own sister’s disappearance may be somehow tied to it all.
Galloway was supposed to be a place to help her move forward, but instead, Claire quickly finds herself immersed in her own dark and dangerous past.
Expected publication: August 2025
Friday Face Off : All The Dangerous Things
9 February 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: A Flicker in the Dark, All the Dangerous Things, Book Review, Books, Friday Face Of, Only If You're Luck, reading, Stacy Willingham

Today I’m returning to the Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy). I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner. This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers. Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite. If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.
This week I decided to look back at a book I read some time ago by an author that I really like. All The Dangerous Things was the second book I picked up by Stacy Willingham (A Flicker in the Dark being the first) and my review for her latest book (Only If You’re Lucky) can be found here.
This week my favourite is:

I quite like all the covers to be honest but I chose the above cover because I like the solitary feel to the central character and it fits with the story.
Which is your favourite?
Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.
Only If You’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham
8 February 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Review, Only If you're Lucky, Stacy Willingham
My Five Word TL:DR Review : Dark Academia meets Female Obsession

Stacy Willingham is an author that I’m really enjoying at the moment. She fulfills my need for psychological and suspenseful stories and in that regard Only If You’re Lucky is another very readable story with plenty of twists.
I would mention upfront that this story has a somewhat different feel to the previous two books I’ve read by this author and so at first I felt myself holding back a little, it almost borders on YA/NA due to the age of the characters and the academic setting but, ultimately, I became invested in the mystery and the slow unravelling of events that took place over an almost idyllic summer that ended with murder.
To set the scene a little, Margot is our pov character and she gradually tells her story using both past and present chapters. Margot and Eliza were best friends. They spent all their time together in what can only be considered a very privileged lifestyle, they even planned to attend the same college after school. Then tragedy struck and Eliza died in a horrible accident. Margot, dazed and depressed was determined to follow through on their plans, attending the college they chose together. Her first year is almost a grey blur of despair and sadness. She roommates with a young girl called Maggie but by the end of the year another student seems to have captured her attention. Lucy. Lucy is one of those beautiful and enigmatic characters that attracts people like moths to a flame and so when she suddenly, and quite unexpectedly, bestows her unwavering attention on Margot inviting her to move into her off campus house along with two other girls (Lucy’s constant companions during the first year), well, Margot is captivated.
The story, as mentioned above, is told in a dual timeline so you immediately know that things have gone to hell in a handcart in some way or another, you just don’t know exactly how or why. The girls have spent an almost idyllic summer together but the start of the a academic year and the return to a busy campus is about to change things drastically.
What I enjoyed about this.
The writing is really good. Willingham knows how to set the scene and easily draw you in. She writes her characters with deceptive ease. To be fair, this isn’t the first time I’ve read this kind of story where female obsession and the desperate need to fit in drive the plot, but in a way, that familiarity brought a certain amount of ease to the read which, and maybe this is a bit of laziness on my part, but I really enjoyed the way I was able to quickly run with the story. Also, honestly, when you’re reading a story of this nature not only is the narrator constantly dropping hints of what is yet to come, she’s actually also sharing with you definite spoilers. You know without a doubt that some of these characters are not going to see the year out and this mystery and the basic ‘need to know’ side of my nature makes this a compelling read.
The characters. Okay, realistically, Lucy stole the show – which is much as you would expect. Margot is a very ‘wall flower(ish) type of person. She is the sidekick. Her childhood friend Eliza was the life and soul of the party and Lucy is now her new leading lady. Margot, although the narrator, is almost like a walk-on character. Forgettable and difficult to describe. Which isn’t to say I didn’t like Margot. I liked the way she told her story and at the end of the day not everyone wants to be the life and soul of the party. Margot was fascinated by Lucy and enjoyed her new status hanging with the ‘popular’ girls but all of them were keeping secrets – all of them. Little resentments were building, and, having a house full of boys next door was only adding to the tension – particularly when a newcomer joined the campus, a blast from the past in the form of Eliza’s boyfriend.
The mystery is intriguing, we keep jumping back to Eliza, and although Margot would have you originally believe that theirs was a perfect friendship, you soon start to discover that that wasn’t always the case. Cracks were appearing, minor at first, but slowly developing into larger, more damaging resentments. Similarly, with Lucy, not everything is at first as it appears but Margot is almost relentlessly determined to protect and defend her. Personally, I had a few shots at second guessing the outcome but I wasn’t really successful – although, with the eventual twists revealed I found it interesting to go back and rethink some of the interactions which then showed themselves in a whole new light.
The following may be a little bit of a tease and could potentially be a spoiler in some ways – but, what I really liked about this is that after the reveal – you can see the characters in a new light and appreciate the way the author has deceptively drawn you into making assumptions.
In conclusion. I enjoyed this, it was a different style of story than the previous two books I’ve read by Willingham but it was still very entertaining, a little slow in parts but with a crazy finale that I really didn’t see coming. If you’re a stickler for procedures and such then this might be a little too OTT for you but it worked well for me and I also think I enjoyed that Willingham took a slightly different direction, if feels like it shakes things up a little and makes me wonder what to expect next.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 3.5 (rounded to 4) of 5 stars








