Who Wrote The Other Wife Book And When Was It Published?

2025-10-27 15:47:19 331
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8 Answers

Gavin
Gavin
2025-10-30 00:09:03
Short and sweet: there’s no single person who wrote 'The Other Wife' because multiple books exist with that title. To identify which one you mean, find the author name on the cover or the copyright page, or look up the ISBN to get the exact publication year. If a bookshop or online listing shows multiple years, the earliest one with 'First published' is the original release date; other dates might be reprints, translations, or paperback runs. For me, tracking down the original edition feels a bit like detective work—fun and oddly rewarding.
Mckenna
Mckenna
2025-10-30 03:23:31
If you're asking about 'The Other Wife' in the context of recent thrillers, the one most people mean is by Michael Robotham — it was published in 2018.

I loved how Robotham packs psychological tension into every scene: the novel reads like a slow-burn puzzle with characters who keep peeling back layers of their own lies. He’s an Australian writer who knows how to set mood and moral ambiguity against ordinary life, and this book became pretty widely discussed when it came out because it blends domestic drama with genuine suspense. If you’re into twisty, character-driven mysteries in the vein of 'The Girl on the Train' or 'Gone Girl', this is right up that alley. I found the pacing and the emotional stakes really stuck with me for days after finishing it, which is always a sign of a good psychological read.

Bottom line: Michael Robotham wrote 'The Other Wife' and it was released in 2018 — and honestly, it’s one of those attention-grabbers that makes you stay up later than you planned, but in the best way.
Victoria
Victoria
2025-10-30 09:54:48
Titles get recycled a lot in publishing, and 'The Other Wife' is one of those titles that crops up across different genres and eras. That means a single, neat response like 'X wrote it and it was published in Y' doesn't always cover what you might mean. There are psychological thrillers, historical novels, and contemporary dramas that share that exact title, and each will have its own author and publication date.

If you’ve got a physical copy, the quickest route is the copyright page (usually near the front) — it lists the author, the publisher, and the original publication year. If you don’t have the book in hand, searching a library catalog, WorldCat, or a bookseller site with the title plus any other detail you remember (character name, cover image, or publisher) will narrow it down fast. I like checking multiple sources because international editions can have different years stamped on them; for me, hunting down the right edition is half the fun.
Yosef
Yosef
2025-10-30 19:56:11
I dug into this title a few times while recommending reads to friends, and every time I’ve learned the same thing: ‘The Other Wife’ is a title used by multiple writers, so you can’t pin a single author or year to it without more detail. Think of it like a shared name that several creators slapped onto very different books—thriller, domestic drama, and historical romance are all possible genres under that label.

When tracking down the exact author and publication year I look for the publisher’s imprint and the copyright page first, then cross-check with a bibliographic database like Library of Congress or WorldCat. If you only have a digital listing, the ISBN is the golden ticket. If you’re comparing editions, remember that UK and US publication years can differ, and audio editions or reprints will show later dates. I always enjoy the little revelation when the right edition clicks into place, honestly.
Quinn
Quinn
2025-11-01 09:28:12
I flipped through online catalogs and personal stacks the other day when someone asked about 'The Other Wife'—it’s a surprisingly common title. Libraries often index several entries under that name: some are domestic suspense novels from the 2000s and 2010s, others are more literary or historical takes. That means the author and publication year depend entirely on which version you’re talking about.

Practical tip: if you use WorldCat or your local library’s online catalog and search 'The Other Wife' you’ll usually get a list of editions with author names and publication dates right there. ISBN searches are even more precise when available. Publishers’ sites and major retailers will show the edition details too; just watch out for reprints and paperback releases which can have later years listed. I enjoy tracking different editions—each brings a slightly different cover vibe and blurb that tells me a lot about the intended audience.
Brady
Brady
2025-11-02 05:06:44
Here's the short scoop I tell friends: 'The Other Wife' that most readers mean these days was written by Michael Robotham and published in 2018. I bring it up whenever someone wants a tense, character-led thriller that favors slow-burn atmosphere over nonstop action. Robotham has a knack for making everyday settings feel charged and a way of revealing character backstory that tightens the mystery rather than diluting it. I don’t want to spoil anything, but if you like moral complexity wrapped in a suspenseful plot, this 2018 title is a strong pick — it kept me guessing and made me think about how small choices ripple into bigger consequences, which is the kind of book I adore ending an evening with.
Lucas
Lucas
2025-11-02 14:55:58
Late-night book-club chatter brought this up recently, and to keep it simple: the contemporary popular title 'The Other Wife' was written by Michael Robotham and published in 2018.

That said, the title itself has been used by various authors over the years, so context matters — but when people today talk about a psychological thriller called 'The Other Wife', they usually mean Robotham’s novel from 2018. I enjoyed how he balances empathy for flawed characters with plot momentum; it’s not just a series of shocks, it asks why people make desperate choices and how past decisions echo into the present. The prose is clean, the reveals are earned, and there’s an emotional core that keeps the twists from feeling hollow.

If you’re picking between multiple books with the same title, look for Robotham’s by checking the 2018 publication date — that’s the one that landed on bestseller lists and in a lot of reading groups. Personally, I appreciated the moral gray areas more than the pure mechanics of the twist, which made the whole thing linger in my head long after I closed the cover.
Thomas
Thomas
2025-11-02 20:19:23
There isn’t a single fixed author or publication year for 'The Other Wife' because multiple books share that title. To figure out who wrote the specific one you mean, scan the front matter of the book or check the ISBN on a retailer or library site — that will give you the author and the original publication date. Sometimes a paperback or translated edition shows a later date, so if you want the first publication year, look for phrases like 'First published' on the copyright page. Personally, I like comparing covers across editions; it’s oddly satisfying and helps me spot the right listing quickly.
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