
The Family Secret
Charlotte Harper seems to have it all – a beautiful home in the Cheshire countryside, a loving husband, and a young son she adores. But when she collapses on a night out, doctors discover she has a rare blood disorder. Without a bone marrow transplant, she will die.
Then comes a revelation: Charlotte had a brother, John, given up for adoption at birth. Miraculously, John is a perfect donor – and he agrees to save her.
But when John moves into Charlotte’s home to recover from the painful procedure, her perfect world begins to shift. Strange visitors arrive at odd hours. Whispered phone calls. Veiled threats. Her peaceful home becomes a place of fear and stress.
As his terrifying agenda becomes clear, Charlotte realises that the price of John’s gift may be more than she can bear.
Because John didn’t just give Charlotte a life. He came to take one back.
The Family Secret – the chilling psychological thriller by the bestselling author of The Wrong Neighbour.
ISBN: 9781837566976
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Reader Reviews
6 ratings
Gail C.
Charlotte becomes ill and needs a bone marrow transplant. A full sibling would be the best possibility for a match. She believes she's an only child, until her father admits on his deathbed that she has an older brother, John. She searches for him and finds him. John eventually agrees to donate his bone marrow. Charlotte is thrilled to be given a second chance at life and a brother she didn't know existed. But, with her brother comes a family secret and a whole lot of trouble. Loved it!
C.S. D.
The Family Secret is a well-written, tightly paced psychological thriller that pulls you in quickly and keeps the tension building throughout. There’s a steady sense of unease that builds as the story unfolds, and it’s done in a way that feels both believable and unsettling.
The dynamic between Charlotte and her brother adds an extra layer of tension, and the way things gradually shift from normal to something much darker is handled really well. If you enjoy suspense that leans into psychological tension and creeping dread, this one is definitely worth picking up.
Crystal O.
Charlotte, Martin, and Bobby are a close knit family. Charlotte is ill and needs a bone marrow transplant, only child and none of her friends are a match. Her mother died when she was two weeks old and her father is on Hospice. Her father wants the best for his daughter and confesses that she has a brother that was given up for adoption. Will she find this brother and if so, will he be everything she needs?
Tracy W.
Karen B.
~Caleb Crowe
“It feels more like infection than inheritance.”
Charlotte and Martin Harper have the kind of life that looks solid from the outside. She’s an architect, he’s a writer, they live in a home she designed, and they’re raising their seven-year-old son, Bobby. It’s the sort of setup that feels intentional, planned, and safe. Which is probably why the first cracks hit so hard. Charlotte’s exhaustion starts small, the kind you explain away with busy schedules and parenthood, until dizziness and fatigue force a doctor’s visit that reroutes everything. The diagnosis, aplastic anemia, lands like a dropped plate in a quiet kitchen. Rare. Deadly. Urgent.
The only viable treatment is a bone marrow transplant, preferably from a sibling. Charlotte, raised as an only child by a single father whose own health is failing, assumes the math doesn’t work in her favor. Then comes the deathbed confession. A brother. Given up for adoption when her parents were teenagers and decisions were made by other people with louder voices. Suddenly survival hinges on tracking down a stranger who shares her blood.
Once John is found and the transplant is completed, the story takes its sharp left turn. John develops complications, and Charlotte brings him into her home to recover. It’s a choice that feels compassionate, familial, and reasonable. It’s also the moment where unease quietly moves in, kicks off its shoes, and makes itself comfortable. What Charlotte believes she’s offering is care and connection. What she doesn’t yet understand is that she’s opened the door to something far more complicated.
Crowe absolutely sticks the landing with this one. The characters feel lived-in, like people you might know or at least recognize. Their emotions aren’t tidy. Anguish sits next to love, resentment tangles with obligation, and rage simmers just beneath otherwise calm conversations. I found myself reacting to scenes the way you do during tense family gatherings, that internal wince when you know a line has been crossed but no one’s going to say it out loud. Each character carries distinct traits and flaws, and those layers deepen as the story progresses, especially when morality starts getting blurry and the “right” choice becomes harder to define.
The Family Secret starts as a deliberate slow burn, taking its time to ground the reader in relationships and history, but once it accelerates, it doesn’t let up. The pacing tightens, the stakes sharpen, and suddenly you’re in full page-turner mode, telling yourself “one more chapter” and not meaning it. Crowe’s world-building is subtle but effective, immersing you in the day-to-day rhythms of the characters’ lives so completely that it feels less like observing and more like accompanying them. The descriptive details do real work here, enhancing the atmosphere without ever weighing it down.
If you've been looking for that next edge-of-your seat, WTF is gonna happen next, psychological thriller that will take up space in your head for a while then add The Family Secret to your TBR. Release date has not been set yet, but it is looking at a potential date in February so keep your eyes peeled for that pre-order option and grab it straight away. This is one you don't want to miss!
I would like to thank Caleb Crowe and NetGalley for the opportunity to Alpha/Beta/ARC for The Family Secret. As always, all opinions and reviews are of my own volition. I have not been promised any compensation, current or future by the author or publisher for a fair and honest review.
Rachel B.


















