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The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid Review: A Compulsively Readable Old Hollywood Drama
Taylor Jenkins Reid's historical drama novel constructs a fictional Old Hollywood legend whose seven marriages serve as the scaffolding for a far deeper story — one of ambition, sacrifice, bisexuality, and a decades-long love for actress Celia St. James that Evelyn Hugo spent a lifetime concealing from the world.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Readers who love character-driven historical fiction and want a propulsive, emotionally layered story about ambition, identity, and the cost of the closet set against the glamour and machinery of Old Hollywood.
Worth it if
The structural puzzle of Evelyn's seven marriages, the promise of a voice that controls its own myth while slowly dismantling it, and genuine emotional stakes built around bisexuality and a hidden lifelong love are what you're looking for in commercial historical fiction.
Skip if
Readers who want meticulous period research over atmospheric backdrop, or who prefer character development that unfolds gradually rather than through strategically engineered revelations, may find the construction too calculated — and Monique Grant's present-day frame noticeably underdeveloped.
What readers & critics say
Kirkus Reviews calls it "a thoughtful and pensive tale with intelligent characters and a satisfying romance," praising Reid's heroine as one who "reveals her darkest secrets as if she were wiping off makeup at the end of the night." A student reviewer at the University of Arizona Wildcat highlights the novel's dual-universe format and its embedded newspaper clippings and gossip columns as details that make Evelyn Hugo feel like a real historical figure.
“A thoughtful and pensive tale with intelligent characters and a satisfying romance.”
— Kirkus Reviews“Reid's heroine reveals her darkest secrets as if she were wiping off makeup at the end of the night.”
— Kirkus Reviews“Newspaper clippings and gossip columns made the novel feel like it was written about an actual person.”
— Arizona Daily Wildcat“Reid includes small details hinting to a larger mystery hidden behind the main plot, turning the page as quickly as possible.”
— Lighthouse WritersIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Novel Is and What Actually Happens
- The Source Material Behind Evelyn Hugo
- Strengths: Character, Structure, and Emotional Stakes
- Limitations and Who May Find It Frustrating
- Readership and Cultural Reach
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- The seven-part structure, with each section named after a husband using a revealing adjective, is a distinctive and effective device for organizing decades of a character's life
- Evelyn Hugo's voice — controlling, retrospective, and strategically unreliable — is the engine of the novel, praised by Miranda Beverly-Whittemore as featuring 'several unexpected twists and a dazzling, ambitious movie star'
- The novel's central revelation — that Evelyn's true lifelong love was her co-star Celia St. James, not any of her seven husbands — gives the story emotional stakes that extend well beyond glamour
- Loosely grounded in real Old Hollywood figures (Elizabeth Taylor and Ava Gardner), the novel earns its historical atmosphere through recognizable mythology
- Its cultural longevity is remarkable for commercial fiction: translated into more than two dozen languages and still generating wide readership years after its 2017 debut
What Doesn't
- Monique Grant's present-day narrative arc receives considerably less development than Evelyn's, leaving the frame story feeling underserved relative to the main confession
- The plotting is engineered around strategic revelations, which may feel more calculated than organic to readers who prefer gradually unfolding character development over structured disclosure
What the Novel Is and What Actually Happens

The Source Material Behind Evelyn Hugo
Strengths: Character, Structure, and Emotional Stakes
Limitations and Who May Find It Frustrating
Readership and Cultural Reach
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
- 1
en.wikipedia.org
- 2
- Further reading
- 3
Taylor Jenkins Reid, Wikipedia
- 4
taylorjenkinsreid.com
- 5
readsandcompany.com
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
shesbecomingbookish.com
- 10
floweringpages.com
- 11
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