
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo
by Taylor Jenkins Reid
4.2/5
1 book reviewed · 4.2 avg
Taylor Jenkins Reid's Hollywood epic succeeds through masterful character development and honest exploration of ambition's costs, despite occasional pacing issues and coincidence-heavy plotting.
What works
• Brilliant narrative structure using an extended interview format that creates intimacy while maintaining the larger-than-life quality of Hollywood fiction
• Clean, direct prose that avoids overwrought melodrama and allows characters to shine without competing for attention
• Authentic dialogue that feels true to each historical era while remaining accessible to contemporary readers
• Complex, well-developed protagonist in Evelyn Hugo who emerges as neither villain nor victim but a nuanced woman shaped by industry demands
• Impressive restraint in historical detail, providing enough context to ground each era without overwhelming readers with research
What doesn't
• The review appears to be incomplete, cutting off mid-sentence when describing the evolution of Evelyn and Monique's relationship
• No specific weaknesses are explicitly mentioned in the available portion of the review