“A marvelous study in how much desire lives in memory, in nostalgia and in fantasy.” —The Washington Post
“[An] original love story that paints a compelling and real picture of how our minds pinball through time, seeking in the present some of the thrill and love and validation of old patterns…We would follow Zuzu anywhere.” —Oprah Daily
“Vividly rendered…as a portrait of a biracial, bisexual person’s discomfort in the space society allows them, the novel’s lasting effect is nuanced and thought-provoking.” —The Star Tribune
“Thomas-Kennedy enthralls with this story about a marriage threatened by class tensions and a messy love triangle… Readers won’t want to miss this aching and all-too-real portrayal of a woman’s search for fulfillment.” —Publishers Weekly
“Extraordinary. A story about belonging in liminal spaces, and longing for things seemingly just out of reach. A searing, beautiful book.” —Kiley Reid, New York Times bestselling author of Come and Get It
“A probing, gorgeous novel about the intricacies of desire: for other loves, other lives, other versions of the self…a remarkable debut.” —Kirsten Valdez Quade, author of The Five Wounds
“Humor! Verve! Soul! This novel has it all…The Other Wife sounds and feels both classic and like nothing I’ve encountered before. —Emma Copley Eisenberg, author of Housemates
“Tender, wise, and thoroughly compelling, The Other Wife teems with the complicated pleasures and desolations of longing. Jackie Thomas-Kennedy knows a great deal about the life-shaping strength of desire.” —R. O. Kwon, author of Exhibit
“Captures the dizzy angst of young romance so well that it felt like Jackie Thomas-Kennedy had a surveillance camera in my college dorm room…Following Zuzu over decades as she navigates growing up is a heart-rending, funny and relatable journey. I could not put the book down.
—Jessica Grose, author of Soulmates
“Rich in Zuzu’s lifelike conversations and interiority, Thomas-Kennedy’s debut is a humbly expansive marriage story and a tale of growing older in lockstep with a version of yourself that gets to stay young.” —Booklist