Trad Wife by Sarah Langan
320 pages, Hardcover
Expected publication: September 29, 2026 by Atria Books
OUT NOW in the UK!
One of the benefits of getting to interview our favorite authors, is towards the end of the interviews, you get to ask the question “What are you working on?” For the moment, Sarah said I am working on a novel called Trad Wife I was almost sweating, wanting to pick that up.
Let's talk about the elephant in the room, there are two novels released this year with this title, and even more that explore the right-wing Trad Wife trend like Yesteryear. There are several real-life horror stories, but fairly Langan has pointed out that she didn't want to pick on the women who choose this life.
Langan released two truly fantastic speculative novels in a row, so honestly, I was not expecting a return to horror, but we got a taste in this year’s Stoker Award-nominated Pam Kowalski is a Monster. In a long-standing genre tradition, the novella felt like a warm-up for Trad Wife.
I want to talk about the last two novels, Good Neighbors and A Better World. They are entirely the reason I invited Sarah to be a guest of honor at PKD fest this summer. Twilight Zone might be a more obvious influence on Good Neighbors, but A Better World was Dickian to me. While it might be horror, Trad Wife takes on reality slippage. I think readers are catching that, but many are missing, and that is Dickian in a great way.
Jenny Kaplan is a canceled journalist whose career went sideways when she wrote an article about an abortion she had. Fired from the magazine she was writing for, she is offered a chance to redeem herself in the editor’s eyes ( and more importantly, the bean counters) by doing a Freaky Friday-style article where she switches places with a trad wife influencer, Mia Wright.
Mia has chosen her to open up to, something that makes Jenny nervous.
“Mia Wright.
Though she looked twenty years old, she was forty-two. According to her bio, she grew up in rural Maryland and went to a small community college there, where she studied library technology. She met her husband, Steadman Wright, on an Amtrak ride from Baltimore to
Philly. They were seatmates who got to talking, drank too much cheap wine, and got silly. Mia characterized it as love, pinot grigio style.”
She seems perfect, a brood of kids, a business. The perfect submissive trad wife. She is popular, and her videos go viral. She has a strange presence. For Jenny, it gets creepy.
“What had just happened? Had Mia Wright known her name through the screen? Had she made the lights flicker?”
Like Mia is calling to her. Like she knows her.
Now, for those of you who don’t want the slight clue, this is a good time to stop reading the review, as I am going to explore the themes. Langan is an author who excels in unified themes that could be best described as a domestic/suburban black mirror. From the climate change update of Monsters Are Due on Maple Street in Good Neighbors. To the techno utopian burbs of A Better World. Trad Wife does mock women who choose this life, but it is a theme about how motherhood, with all the struggles inherent, can consume anyone.
It starts with cleaning, cooking, and looking after the kids, and after a couple of days, Jenny loses herself.
“There were four wet towels on the floor, and the toilet was unflushed. Dried toothpaste crusted the sink. Homemade deodorants and soaps were out of their drawers. Someone had pulled all the snarled clumps of hair from the combs and brushes and thrown them on the floor like human tumbleweeds. She decided to help Mia and cleaned what she could, gathered the towels, wiped the toothpaste from the sink and mirror.
When she got back to her room, she locked the door like she locked it every night.
Three days down.”
The reality slippage becomes more and more real as the role takes over. Mia falls apart slowly, and Jenny not only steps into her role but also sees Mia in the mirror, and the number of people who mistake her for Mia grows. Rosemary’s Baby comparison keeps being made for these Trad Wife novels, but what separates Langan’s novel is that the structure is built entirely around my two favorite storytelling pillars. Parallel and reversals. Reality never snaps away; it simply bends, mutates. IT slips in subtle and frightening ways. IT is the building dread that makes this an effective horror novel. It is not about motherhood, but motherhood meeting the ideals of those who watch and judge. It is about a monster, who becomes that because she lives life in the spotlight, and two women who experience the spotlight in different ways exchange places. In this way, this novel fits thematically with Isabel Kim’s soon to be released novel Subliminal.
Langan set a high bar with the last three books, and if there is any negative, it is that I knew the ending was coming pretty early on. The references to Freaky Friday might have been needed for some readers, but I thought it telegraphed the end a bit. It is silly to nitpick such a good novel; also, it is Okay because that feeling of knowing a crash is coming can help build the dread. Trad Wife is another argument for Sarah Langan being one of the best voices in genre.





