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The Housemaid is Watching
(Review, Book Summary & Spoilers)

By Freida McFadden



Book review, full book summary and synopsis for The Housemaid is Watching by Freida McFadden, the third installment in Freida McFadden's Housemaid mystery thriller series.

Synopsis

The Housemaid Is Watching by Freida McFadden is the third novel in her bestselling The Housemaid mystery-thriller series.

This time around, it has been many many years since Millie's housemaid days. Instead, she's now a social worker. She, her husband Enzo and their two kids have just moved into a home in the suburbs, located on a cul-de-sac with two other homes.

But their neighbors are odd and nosy. And there's a housemaid that works for her neighbor who Millie finds unsettling. Millie starts to wonder if there's more going on beneath the surface in this seemingly quaint and serene neighborhood...

(The Full Plot Summary is also available, below)

Full Plot Summary

Chapter-by-Chapter Summary
See the Chapter-by-Chapter Summary of The Housemaid is Watching
Quick Plot Summary

Three-paragraph version: 13 years after the events of The Housemaid's Secret, Millie is now a social worker. She and Enzo, a landscaper, are married with two kids -- Nico, 9, and Ada, 11. They've just moved into a new house, and their neighbor flirty Suzette asks Enzo to help with her backyard. They hire Suzette's housemaid Martha to clean for them as well. Suzette and Enzo spend a lot of time together. When money goes missing from Millie and Enzo's joint account, Millie starts to suspect Enzo is cheating on her. Soon, Suzette's husband Jonathan winds up dead with his throat slit. Enzo denies that it was him, saying that the missing money had to do with helping Martha escape her abusive husband.

The police suspect Enzo since he went to at Suzette's house two hours before the murder. They get a search warrant and find a pocket knife at Millie's house that has traces of Jonathan's blood on it. When he learns this, Enzo admits to Millie that he killed Jonathan. However, after Enzo is arrested, Millie's daughter Ada then says that she was the one who killed Jonathan and that Enzo is covering for her. It's revealed that Ada found out that Nico had been acting out because Mr. Lowell had been forcing him to go over to their house to "play" in a hidden room. Ada went to confront Mr. Lowell and when he wouldn't let her leave, she stabbed him with a pocket knife that Enzo had given her for protection.

Millie learns about this, and an NYPD detective friend of hers, Benito, also tells her that the DNA of a local boy who went missing was also found in the Lowell home. Millie and Benito confront Suzette and force her to admit to murdering her husband (saying she found out about his misdeeds) or Benito is going to come after her for the murder of the missing boy, since her DNA was found in the hidden room as well. Suzette confesses to killing her husband. In the Epilogue, it's revealed that even though Ada stabbed Jonathan, it was actually Martha, who had happened to come back to steal a few things, who finished him off by slicing his throat.


In Part I, 13 years after the events of The Housemaid's Secret, Millie is now a social worker, and she and Enzo are married with two kids -- Nico, 9, and Ada, 11. They've just moved into a house on a cul-de-sac with two neighbors nearby.

Janice is a single mother with a son, Spencer, who is in Nico's class. Janice is nosey and a little unpleasant. Suzette and Jonathan Lowell are a well-off couple, who offer to help Enzo promote his landscaping business to people they know or work with. They have a housemaid, Martha, who Enzo ends up hiring to come clean for them twice a month. Millie finds Martha odd and dislikes how Suzette flirts brazenly with Enzo.

When Millie catches Martha stealing a necklace from her jewelry box, she fires Martha. Meanwhile, Millie has been hearing a scratching noise coming from the house. They end up finding a small hidden room in the house, and Millie asks Enzo to seal it up. Soon, Nico gets into a fight at school and also while playing little league, so Millie plans to send Nico to see a therapist.

As Suzette and Enzo spend more and more time together, Millie gets increasingly convinced that Enzo is cheating non her. She also finds out Enzo has secretly withdrawn $1,000 from their joint account. One day, Millie comes home and Enzo isn't around. She goes looking for him at Suzette's place, but instead she finds Jonathan Lowell lying dead on the ground with his throat slit.

In Part II, the police investigate and suspect Enzo. Suzette had recently increased her life insurance payout, and Janice has told them about how often Enzo was going over to Suzette's house. Janice also says Enzo had gone over two hours before Jonathan's death and that she was the one who called the police when she heard yelling coming from Suzette's house.

When confronted, Enzo tells Millie that the missing money and a motel stay that the police have found out about were because he was helping Martha. Enzo says that Martha's husband is abusive and controls their money. Martha has been stealing in order to get money to be able to leave him. Enzo used the $1,000 to purchase a gun for Martha. Enzo didn't tell Millie because her blood pressure has been high and she's been stressed out, and he didn't want her to have more stress.

Millie reaches out to Benito Rodriguez (from Book #2), a NYPD detective who they have become close friends with. Benito reaches out to a public defender who turns out to be Cecelia Winchester (the little girl from Book #1), who remembers them and wants to help them. As they talk to Cecelia, Enzo admits that he used to work for Dario Fontana, a mobster, when he was in Italy. Dario married his sister Antonia, but Dario was abusive to her, so Enzo killed him, which is why he left Italy.

when the police search their house, they find what they believe to be the murder weapon, and they go to arrest Enzo. Enzo then admits that he killed Jonathan. However, after Enzo is arrested, Millie's daughter Ada then says that she was the one who killed Jonathan and that Enzo is covering for her.

In Part III, it's revealed that Ada found out that Nico has been acting out because Mr. Lowell had been forcing him to go over to their house to "play". Ada went to confront Mr. Lowell, but found a room filled with toys and a creepy cot with stained sheets. Mr. Lowell found her there, and when he wouldn't let her leave, she stabbed him with a pocket knife that Enzo had given her for protection.

In Part IV, Ada reveals all of this to Millie who understands that Enzo must've realized it was Ada because of the pocket knife, and he must've admitted to the murder to protect Ada. When Enzo calls, she pleads with him not to confess to the police, since Ada is unlikely to be convicted for this.

Benito then tells Millie that Suzette's DNA was also found in the Lowell's hidden room, as well as DNA and blood from a boy a few towns over who went missing. Millie and Benito go to see Suzette. They present her two two options: either (falsely) confess to murdering her husband (saying she found out about his misdeeds), or Benito is going to come after her for the murder of the missing boy, since it's clear from her DNA all over that room that she was involved as well.

Suzette confesses to killing her husband. In the Epilogue, it's revealed that even though Ada stabbed Jonathan in the stomach, it was actually Martha, who had happened to come back to steal a few things, who finished Jonathan off by slicing his throat.

For more detail, see the full Chapter-by-Chapter Summary.

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Book Review

The Housemaid is Watching by Freida McFadden is the third and final book of the Housemaid series, with the first two books being The Housemaid and The Housemaid’s Secret. It’s set to be published in a few weeks, on June 11, and it’s a book I was very, very excited to get my hands on early.

(You can find a full series recap of the Housemaid Series here, if you want to get caught up or want a refresher.)

The Housemaid is Watching picks up thirteen years after the events of The Housemaid’s Secret (which means it’s seventeen years after the events of The Housemaid).

By now, Millie’s life is drastically different. Whereas in the first two books she was working as a housemaid, now she’s a social worker. Millie and Enzo (the gardener from the first book) are now married, and they have two kids, Nico and Ada. They’ve also just purchased a small but quaint home on a cul-de-sac that houses two other homes. However, their neighbors seem to be strangely intrusive. And one of their neighbors employs a housekeeper whose odd demeanor makes Millie uncomfortable…

The Review

The plot progresses from there as Millie and Enzo raise their children and Enzo works on building up his landscaping business.

Unfortunately, this book is easily the weakest out of the three Housemaid books. The story is not particularly compelling — they’re just living in the suburbs and their neighbors are odd in various ways — and twists aren’t as good. And like all of Freida McFadden’s books, the writing itself is merely functional.

That said, I still enjoyed it, and I definitely enjoyed revisiting these characters.

I think the main reason to read this is if you liked the first two books and you want to revisit the characters and see what happened to them. There is a cute cameo in this book of a character that I thought was kind of charming.

You should definitely read the first two books before reading this one. The book will still make sense if you haven’t, but there’s a lot about Millie’s motivations or thoughts that lack context if you haven’t read the first two books.

Read it or Skip it?

The Housemaid is Watching is probably only worth reading if you liked the first two books and are eager to revisit the characters from it. I liked the first two books, and so I enjoyed reading this for the most part, so I guess that’s sort of a recommendation, but a very weak one. The book is okay.

It was nice to see how Millie’s story ended. I was less enthralled with it as a mystery or thriller. It helps that, like all of Freida McFadden’s books, it moves pretty quickly so it didn’t feel like a big time sink to find out how things conclude in this story.

To be very clear, this book and this whole series really is only for people who don’t care that much about the quality of writing or plausibility in a mystery-thriller. It’s all about fast plot and entertaining plot twists. If that’s what you’re looking for, you might enjoy this series and this book. If not, definitely look elsewhere.

See The Housemaid is Watching on Amazon.

The Housemaid is Watching Audiobook

Narrator: Lauryn Allman, Ina Marie Smith
Length: 11 hrs and 42 mins

See The Housemaid is Watching audiobook on Audible.

Book Excerpt

Read the first pages of The Housemaid is Watching



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