Review: Yours Always by Corinne Sullivan

Title: Yours Always
Author: Corinne Sullivan
Publication Date: April 1, 2026
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Format Read: Kindle e-ARC
Genre: Mystery & Thriller

Cover design by James Iacobelli

A woman giving the man who broke her heart a second chance and then learning he’s the prime suspect behind his other ex’s disappearance? I thought I was going in for a semi-predictable thriller when I chose to read Yours Always by Corinne Sullivan. But I was only half correct. It was a wild ride getting there, with several other theories popping up along the way. There were enough of them to make me doubt the initial one.

As you’ve surmised from above, Talia has reunited with the man she once caught in bed with another woman. Her friend and coworker at the high-end dating app she works for, Meera, distrusts him, but Talia is sure he has changed. They’ve only been reunited a short time when it’s discovered that the woman he cheated on Talia with has gone missing. Meera and the ex’s sister Kaitlyn both naturally suspect him. But they’ve all got secrets.

The characters in this story are a delightful mess. They’re all so relatable until you learn more about their oddities later in the book. I really understood their motivations until they took things one, or a million, steps too far. They’re not flawless at any point, and I respected their genuineness even when they’d do something highly unadvisable or just plain stupid.

The author alternates narrators by chapter, keeping things psychological and intimate by allowing the narration to sit very close to each of their inner thoughts and fears. The prose is clean and modern, nothing flowery at all. In short, the style is tight, psychological, and quietly unsettling, with that creeping feeling growing stronger as the tale progresses. It relies on simple language and repetition to build mental tension instead of heavy description. I found it to be effective.

I can sum the story up with two simple words, really: obsessive spiral. Picture a tornado, with the obsessions starting broad and gradually narrowing until they reach their most destructive point. Yours Always is great for fans of Gillian Flynn and Ruth Ware. You may be able to predict pieces of the outcome, but you’re going to have a ton of fun on your way to it.

Nerd Rating: 🤓🤓🤓🤓 — Unreliable narrator chaos

Let’s Discuss

Would you trust someone again if they were the prime suspect in a disappearance?

Find out more about Yours Always and Corinne Sullivan here.

I read a digital copy made available by Thomas & Mercer through NetGalley, and this review reflects my honest opinion.

Leave a Reply