
We first meet Judith as an assistant in a London art house, but despite her education and passion for art, her superiors are unimpressed thanks to her socioeconomic background. Frustrated with her outsider status, Judith works to improve her situation through deception and violence. Thus the comparisons to Gone Girl‘s Amy Dunn, but Amy was the kind of insider that Judith envies. Instead, Judith has more in common with American Psycho‘s Patrick Bateman, including his lists of clothing designers and frequent mentions of brand names and prices.
However, the closer Judith gets to being accepted by “in crowd,” the more desperate her actions become: forgoing her passion for art, selling a forged painting, abandoning her relationships and any sense of compassion she may have once had. Despite her moral ambiguity, Judith is a compelling and oddly relatable narrator. The challenges she faces as an outsider trying to break in are near-universal, particularly since she battles a male-dominated field and works against her own socioeconomic background.
Maestra is uncharted territory for Hilton, whose earlier work includes several biographies and works of historical fiction. Here, she’s crafted a taut, meaty thriller that’s certainly on par with those bestselling “girls” in terms of intrigue, surprising twists, and unputdownableness, while Judith Rashleigh’s single-minded and self-centered quest for wealth and acceptance could well be the most compelling since Patrick Bateman’s.
FICTION
Maestra by LS Hilton
G.P. Putnam’s Sons
April 19, 2016
ISBN 9780399184260