
Hello, hello!
You know that old saying, “never judge a book by its cover”? Well, I’ve got another one: “never pick a book just because of the hype.” And yet… that’s exactly what I did. The Perfect Marriage by Jeneva Rose had been sitting on my TBR since January, thanks to all the buzz and its shiny 4-star Goodreads rating.
One weekend later, I closed the final page and thought: wow, I need to talk about this. So here we go, let’s dive in!
The Perfect Marriage – Book Synopsis
The Perfect Marriage – Quick Details

The Perfect Marriage – Trigger Warnings, Sensitive Topics and Age Rating
Before we go any further, I always like to include a quick note on sensitive content. Every reader is different, and some themes in this book might be difficult for certain people.
If you prefer to check content warnings before reading, just click below to reveal the list of trigger warnings, sensitive topics and age ratting.
Plot Overview
The Perfect Marriage is a domestic and psychological thriller with touches of legal drama.
The story follows Sarah Morgan, a highly successful defense attorney, and her husband Adam, a writer. At first, they seem to have it all, money, cars, a dream home, and even a lake house where Adam escapes to work on his books.
However, their picture-perfect life suddenly shatters when a brutal murder takes place at the lake house. The victim turns out to be Adam’s mistress, and as a result, all the evidence points directly to him.
Now, Sarah is forced into an impossible role: the only person who can defend her husband. Meanwhile, as the case unfolds, she must navigate betrayal, secrets, and lies, all while questioning how well she really knows the man she married. Ultimately, the line between truth and deception becomes dangerously blurred.
My Thoughts
Some Book Quotes
“I’ve always felt like Sarah was taking on the world, while I was just struggling to live in it.”
“She was perfect, something I could neither conceive, nor comprehend.”
“I’m always the first to pull away. Someday, we’ll be everything I always knew we would be but someday isn’t today.”
The Perfect Marriage – Full Spoilers Section
The Perfect Marriage – Character List
Character Name 5932_340211-a9> |
Character Role 5932_1bcd43-13> |
---|---|
Adam Morgan 5932_90ac5a-a5> |
A struggling writer and Sarah’s husband; he is central to the plot as the accused in Kelly’s murder, dealing with infidelity, resentment, and his failing career. 5932_7364a3-16> |
Anne 5932_1cd301-3a> |
Sarah’s loyal assistant and friend; she helps with work tasks, travels with Sarah, and provides emotional support, occasionally involved in personal drama. 5932_0ff25f-23> |
Bob Miller 5932_506453-27> |
Sarah’s law partner at the firm; envious of her success, he is unprofessional, argues with her, and plays a key role in the legal and personal twists. 5932_4b0c7c-2d> |
Daniel 5932_f12786-17> |
Adam’s literary agent; he pushes Adam for more writing progress and represents his professional struggles. 5932_877403-0c> |
Eleanor 5932_01e3ef-f9> |
Adam’s over-protective mother (Sarah’s mother-in-law); she blames Sarah for Adam’s issues and sends passive-aggressive notes, adding family tension. 5932_84a9d2-cb> |
Jesse 5932_6fbf1d-02> |
Kelly’s friend; she texts Kelly with apologies and support, appearing briefly in communications related to Kelly’s personal life. 5932_23a85e-43> |
Kelly Summers 5932_ce7638-4e> |
Adam’s mistress and a local waitress; her murder at the lake house drives the central mystery, revealing affairs and conflicts. 5932_4b3bd9-70> |
Kent 5932_c883fc-cc> |
A senior partner at Sarah’s firm; mentioned as someone Sarah consults for time off, representing the professional hierarchy. 5932_0584e2-77> |
Matthew 5932_2e4d40-a1> |
Sarah’s sarcastic friend; he provides comic relief with quips, insults others, and offers commentary on relationships. 5932_44216c-ad> |
Rebecca 5932_e094df-c7> |
A reporter enlisted by Adam; she helps investigate his case, becomes romantically involved briefly, and pushes for a tell-all story. 5932_5ed574-87> |
Sarah Morgan 5932_6c1800-14> |
A successful defense attorney and Adam’s wife; she defends him in court despite his betrayal, embodying ambition and marital strain. 5932_b00103-aa> |
Scott Summers 5932_b47c05-3e> |
Kelly’s abusive husband and a deputy sheriff; jealous and violent, he is involved in the investigation and has motives tied to the murder. 5932_213e58-40> |
Sheriff Stevens 5932_891ea7-c4> |
The lead investigator in Kelly’s murder; he handles the case with conflicts of interest, interacts aggressively with suspects, and uncovers evidence. 5932_3ae17e-ff> |
Summer 5932_d7e102-cb> |
Sarah and Bob’s daughter in the epilogue; named symbolically after Kelly Summers, representing the story’s twisted resolution. 5932_7c424e-36> |
The Perfect Marriage – Book Summary
The Perfect Marriage – Legal, Forensic, and Plot Mistakes
This is something I almost never do, but this time I couldn’t ignore it. While reading The Perfect Marriage, I found so many flaws and far-fetched details that it made me believe the author didn’t do proper research. Since the whole story depends on a trial, a murder investigation, and courtroom drama, these mistakes stand out even more. Below I’ll go through the main issues that broke the book’s credibility for me.
The Perfect Marriage – End Explained
You must be questioning yourself: how does The Perfect Marriage by Jeneva Rose end?
Well, let me break it down. All through the book, you’re led to believe Adam is the guilty one, he’s the unfaithful husband, caught up in an affair with Kelly, and then accused of her brutal murder. His brilliant wife, Sarah, steps in as his defense attorney, and you think she’s fighting tooth and nail to save him.
But here’s the truth: Adam didn’t kill Kelly. Sarah did.
Sarah discovered Adam’s affair long before the murder. Around the same time, her colleague Bob came to her with the information. Years earlier, Kelly had been accused of killing Bob’s brother, Greg. She was acquitted due to lack of evidence, but Bob never forgave her. When he found proof of her affair with Adam, he saw an opportunity for revenge and brought it straight to Sarah.
Instead of falling apart, Sarah and Bob joined forces. Together, they devised the ultimate plan: kill Kelly and frame Adam. On the night of the murder, Sarah slipped roofies into the scotch to drug both Adam and Kelly. When they were unconscious, she drove to the lake house, laid a plastic tarp over Adam, and stabbed Kelly thirty-seven times right next to him. Adam was too drugged to move, forced to “watch” in a dazed state as Sarah carried out the attack.
She staged everything perfectly, the evidence, the alibis, the courtroom performance. Even the mysterious “third DNA” that showed up didn’t matter, Sarah kept it out of the trial to protect herself, because it actually belonged to Sheriff Stevens. In the end, Adam was convicted and sentenced to death.
And Sarah’s reasoning? She saw Kelly not just as “the other woman,” but as a casualty in her war against Adam. Divorce would have cost her half of everything she worked for, and Sarah refused to give him that. Killing Kelly and framing Adam gave her both revenge and freedom.
The most chilling part comes in Sarah’s private confession: she admits she also killed her own mother. Her mother was slowly destroying herself with heroin, and Sarah “helped speed up the process” by injecting her with extra doses. To Sarah, it wasn’t murder, it was control.
By the epilogue, Sarah has moved on, remarried Bob, and is raising their daughter at the same lake house where it all happened.
Let’s Chat!
What about you? Have you read The Perfect Marriage? Were you influenced by the reviews, or did you pick it up for another reason?
I’d love to know your thoughts, so drop a comment below and let’s chat!