Monday, October 27, 2025

THE PERFECT HOSTS

 Welcome to my showcase for  THE PERFECT HOSTS which is been hosted by Park Row Books, Hanover Square Press, MIRA Books , HarperCollinsPublishers | Harlequin Trade Publishing



The Perfect Hosts

Heather Gudenkauf

On Sale Date: November 4, 2025

9780778360049, 0778360040

Trade Paperback

$18.99 USD, $24.99 CAD

Fiction / Thrillers / Suspense

320 pages

Buy Links:

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Perfect-Hosts-Novel

-Heather-Gudenkauf-ebook/dp/B0DQQ9BRLR 


Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-perfect-hosts-heather-

gudenkauf/1146709766?ean=9780778360049 


Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-perfect-hosts-original-heather

gudenkauf/22162822?ean=9780778360049&next=t 


Libro.fm: https://libro.fm/audiobooks/9781488236150

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Books-A-Million: https://www.booksamillion.com/p/Perfect-Hosts/Heather-

Gudenkauf/9780778360049 


Target: https://www.target.com/p/the-perfect-hosts-by-heather-

gudenkauf/-/A-94483956?preselect=94481317#lnk=sametab 


Indigo: https://www.indigo.ca/en-ca/otherwise-engaged-a-novel/9780778387268.html  


Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-perfect-hosts?sId=7c9b6427-

a9f0-4dbf-824b-e63babdb3880 

AppleBooks: https://books.apple.com/us/book/the-perfect-hosts/id6739534386 




MADELINE “Madeline,” comes Wes’s voice, tinny and faraway-sounding. “Are you okay?” She is lying flat on her back, the air still hazy with smoke. Is she? Is she okay? The ringing in her ears is fading, and she can hear again. In the distance she can hear sirens. Help is coming. Madeline does a mental scan of her body. Nothing seems broken, but her head is pounding. She touches her hairline, expecting her fingers to come back with blood, but instead they find an egg- sized lump. She tries to remember exactly what happened. Wes pulled the trigger, and the truck exploded. An explosion, that’s what it was. Something had gone wrong with the reveal. The baby. Oh God, is the baby okay? She presses her palms against her belly. “Madeline, Madeline,” comes Wes’s voice again, this time more insistent. His frantic face comes into view. “Shhh,” Madeline orders. “Please be quiet.” She needs to lie completely still, has to concentrate so she can feel the baby move. She. The baby is a girl, Madeline thinks, remembering the wisps of pink smoke she saw among the fiery black cloud. Her little girl will kick her in the bladder, one of her favorite moves, any second now. There is nothing. No cartwheels or wiggles. Nothing. Wes kneels beside her and slips his hand into hers. “Help is coming. Stay put. Don’t move.” Madeline nods as hot tears roll down her cheeks. “What happened?” “It must have been the truck,” Wes says. “It must have triggered a bigger explosion.” “But how?” Madeline asks. “You said it was safe . . . Is anyone hurt?” “It was. It was supposed to be.” He shakes his head, be- wildered. “I don’t know what happened.” Madeline struggles into a sitting position and looks around. Charred lumber litters the lawn. The canopy over the dining tables has collapsed and is covered in dancing flames that a handful of guests and waitstaff are trying to smother with what- ever is handy: cowboy hats, table linens, an old horse blanket. Other guests are gathered in small, tight clusters, holding on to one another. Some sit in the grass crying, others stand slack- faced, as if in shock. Through the smoke a rodeo clown appears, his brightly colored clothing now blackened with soot and his makeup running down his sweaty face. The clown is helping the photographer, who is bleeding from the head. But it is the old storage barn that Madeline finds herself fixated on. Huge f lames shoot from the hayloft window and the roof. Someone pulls a hose from one of the horse barns, and suddenly buckets and containers of all sizes appear. Others, including Johanna’s husband, Dalton, are running toward the burning barn and tossing water onto the structure. They know that one wayward spark could ignite the house or, worse, the barns filled with her beloved horses. “Can you walk?” Wes asks. “We have to get you away from here.” Madeline nods, and Wes helps her to her feet. She is barefoot. The blast had lifted her in the air and knocked her flip-flops clear off her feet. Madeline, leaning against Wes, winces with each step, the rough ground pricking at the soles of her feet. He leads her to the meadow, a safe distance from the burning barn, but still close enough for her to see what’s happening. Some of Madeline’s earlier numbness is beginning to wear away, and the enormity of what has happened begins to descend. “Go,” Madeline says, knowing they need as many hands as possible. Wes shakes his head. “No,” he says. “I’m not leaving you.” “I’m fine,” she says, but is she? She fell hard, and still the baby hasn’t moved. Madeline scans the crowd. “Where’s Johanna?” she asks. “Have you seen her?” “I haven’t,” Wes says. “But I’m sure she’s around here somewhere. Have you seen Dix?” “No,” Madeline says. The last she saw Dix was just before he handed the microphone to Wes. “Go,” Madeline repeats. “Really, I’m fine. I just have to get my bearings,” she assures him when he turns his gaze to her doubtfully. “Go help, find your brother. And check on the horses.” “You wait here,” Wes says. “Don’t move from this spot, and I’ll come back and find you.” He squeezes her hand and kisses her cheek before darting away and disappearing into a cloud of black smoke. Madeline continues to eye the property for any sign of Johanna’s long dark braid, her suede skirt. In the distance the wail of sirens grows closer. Help is coming. The meadow to the left of the house was being used as a makeshift parking lot for the guests’ vehicles. One wayward spark from the fire landing on the stubbled field could set off a chain reaction where upward of a hundred cars and trucks, tanks filled with gasoline and diesel, sit idly. The air is filled with inky smoke blotting out the face of the mountain and the setting sun. A fire truck pulls through the side yard, crushing Madeline’s lavender and Russian sage, its massive tires carving deep ruts in the soil. Madeline barely notices—it’s what she sees as a group of guests part to let the truck through that causes her breath to lodge in her throat. A woman lies on the ground, her arm thrown over her face, while someone presses a blood-soaked cloth to her abdomen. One by one, Madeline registers the carnage. Someone is doing CPR on Gary Wilson, the president of the bank that holds their mortgage. One of her equestrian students is wandering aimlessly through the smoke, tears running down her face. A fifteen-hundred- pound bull has escaped the rodeo paddock and is trotting toward the mountains. She sees Mellie, the young waitress, running and screaming, fire dancing up the front of her legs. A partygoer tackles her, smothering the flames with his body. This is bad. So very bad. Madeline fights the urge to vomit. She wants to help. But how? Water, Madeline thinks. She can pass out bottles of water, try and keep the guests calm and reassure them that help is here, that everything is going to be okay. On unsteady feet she moves toward the party barn, where she knows there is plenty of bottled water, but someone grabs her arm. Mia. “Have you seen Sully?” she asks tearfully, her arm hanging at an odd angle. “I can’t find him.” Madeline shakes her head. “I’ll help look for him,” she promises. “You’re hurt. Sit down.” Mia shakes her head. “I need Sully,” she says thickly and stumbles away. There are too many injured and not enough emergency personnel. The fire truck has come to an abrupt stop. Two firefighters are urging those guests who jumped in to try to put out the fire to move away from the blaze. With machinelike efficiency, they unroll the hoses. Madeline is mesmerized by the flames that roll across the roof of the barn, the dense cloud of smoke, the roar of lumber being eaten by the flames. She moves closer, unnoticed by the firefighters, her face growing pink from the heat. Madeline vaguely becomes aware of more sirens and shouts of “Over here” and “Please help!” More help has arrived. The spray of water hisses and snarls as it strikes flames and wood. The barn turns into a living thing then, twisting and groaning until it collapses in on itself, turning to a big heap of charred lumber with sooty farm equipment peeking out here and there. Excerpted from The Perfect Hosts by Heather Gudenkauf, Copyright © 2025 by Heather Gudenkauf. Published by Park Row Books




About the Book:

A couple’s gender reveal party turns deadly and everyone is a suspect in this

gripping thriller from the New York Times bestselling author of 

The Overnight Guest.

Is it a boy or a girl? They would die to know…

Madeline and Wes Drake have invited two hundred of their closest friends and

family to their sprawling horse ranch for the most anticipated event of the year: a

“pistols and pearls” gender reveal party so sensational it is sure to make headlines.

But the party descends into chaos when the celebratory explosive misfires,

leaving one woman dead

and a trail of secrets.

As the aftershocks of the bloody party ripple across the small town, Agent Jamie

Saldano is

brought on the scene to investigate. Battling his own demons from the past,

Saldano

unearths a web of deceit spun around the Drakes. The appearance of some unexpected

houseguests only deepens the mystery. And as tensions mount, it becomes clear that the

explosion wasn’t just an unlucky accident. But who was the target, and why? As the

shadow of a killer looms, the happy parents-to-be must unravel the truth before it’s too late.








About the Author:

Heather Gudenkauf is the critically acclaimed author of several novels, including the New York Times bestsellers The Weight of Silence, The Overnight Guest and Everyone Is Watching. She lives in Iowa with her husband and children. 


Social Links:

Website: https://heathergudenkauf.com/ 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Heather-Gudenkaufs-Books-259685275092/ 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathergudenkauf/ 

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/hgudenkauf/ 

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/heather-gudenkauf 

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THE PERFECT HOSTS

 Welcome to my showcase for  THE PERFECT HOSTS which is been hosted by Park Row Books, Hanover Square Press, MIRA Books , HarperCollinsPubli...