Elin Hilderbrand’s latest offering, The Five-Star Weekend, promises the perfect girls’ getaway but delivers something far more complex—a tangled web of secrets, betrayals, and the messy realities that lurk beneath Instagram-worthy moments. What begins as food blogger Hollis Shaw’s attempt to gather her best friends from each life phase quickly transforms into a weekend where long-buried truths surface like shells after a storm.
The Premise: A Recipe for Connection or Chaos?
After her husband Matthew’s tragic death in a car accident, Hollis Shaw finds herself grappling with more than grief. Her picture-perfect life—complete with a successful food blog, Hungry with Hollis, and a seemingly idyllic marriage to a heart surgeon—has cracked open to reveal uncomfortable truths. When she learns about the concept of a “Five-Star Weekend,” where a woman invites her best friend from each major life phase, Hollis sees an opportunity for healing and connection.
The cast assembled at her Nantucket retreat includes Tatum, her childhood friend facing her own health crisis; Dru-Ann, her sharp-tongued college roommate whose career as a sports agent has just imploded spectacularly; Brooke, her insecure friend from her thirties struggling with her husband’s repeated infidelities; and Gigi, a mysterious airline pilot who connected with Hollis through her blog. What could possibly go wrong?
Character Studies: Five Women, Five Different Shades of Complicated
Hilderbrand’s greatest strength lies in her ability to create distinct, flawed women who feel authentically real rather than aspirational. Hollis Shaw emerges as a surprisingly complex protagonist—not the typical “perfect blogger wife” archetype, but a woman whose composure masks deep insecurities and unexamined assumptions about her own life.
Tatum carries the weight of both potential illness and class resentment with a sharp tongue that cuts through pretense. Her working-class background creates natural friction with the more privileged women, yet Hilderbrand avoids making her simply the “salt-of-the-earth” character. She’s prickly, defensive, and entirely human.
Dru-Ann’s fall from grace—triggered by misunderstood comments about mental health—provides a timely exploration of cancel culture and public shaming. However, her character occasionally veers into caricature, embodying every stereotype of the high-powered, emotionally stunted career woman.
Brooke’s journey toward self-acceptance and sexual identity feels both necessary and somewhat rushed. While her realization about her sexuality provides genuine emotional resonance, the pacing of her character development feels compressed within the weekend timeline.
Then there’s Gigi—enigmatic, elegant, and harboring the book’s central secret. Hilderbrand crafts her carefully, dropping hints without telegraphing the eventual revelation that transforms the entire narrative.
The Nantucket Setting: More Than Scenic Backdrop
Hilderbrand’s intimate knowledge of Nantucket shines through every page, creating a setting that feels lived-in rather than merely picturesque. The island becomes almost a sixth character, with its exclusive restaurants, pristine beaches, and the ever-present community of observers who chronicle every social interaction. The author’s use of the island’s small-town dynamics—where everyone knows everyone’s business—amplifies the claustrophobic tension as secrets begin to unravel.
The Central Twist: When Trust Shatters
Without revealing too much, the book’s major revelation involves a betrayal so intimate and shocking that it recasts everything that came before. Hilderbrand plants seeds throughout the narrative—Gigi’s unexplained knowledge of Matthew’s preferences, her careful questions about Hollis’s marriage, her mysterious past relationship with an unnamed man who died. When the truth emerges, it feels both surprising and inevitable.
This twist elevates what could have been a simple “women reconnecting” narrative into something more psychologically complex. The question becomes not just whether friendships can survive secrets, but whether forgiveness is possible when trust has been so thoroughly violated.
Writing Style: Comfort Food for the Soul
Hilderbrand’s prose maintains her signature accessibility—warm, conversational, and immediately engaging. She has a particular gift for capturing the rhythms of female friendship, complete with unfinished sentences, shared understanding, and the comfortable brutality that only comes with genuine intimacy. Her descriptions of food and domestic details create an almost sensory reading experience, making the Nantucket setting feel tangible.
However, the author occasionally relies too heavily on coincidence to drive plot points forward. Electra’s convenient appearance at the restaurant to reveal Gigi’s secret feels particularly contrived, relying on chance rather than character-driven narrative momentum.
Areas Where the Stars Don’t Quite Align
While The Five-Star Weekend succeeds in many areas, it stumbles in others. The pacing feels uneven—rushing through some emotional developments while lingering perhaps too long on domestic details. Some character arcs, particularly Brooke’s sexual awakening and Dru-Ann’s career crisis, feel like they need more space to develop authentically.
The book also struggles with tonal consistency. Moments of genuine emotional weight are sometimes undercut by lighter, almost comedic interludes that feel jarring rather than providing relief. The ending, while satisfying in its way, wraps up complex emotional threads perhaps too neatly for a story dealing with such significant betrayal.
The Verdict: A Solid Addition to Summer Reading
Despite its flaws, The Five-Star Weekend succeeds as an engaging exploration of female friendship in all its messy complexity. Hilderbrand refuses to idealize her characters or their relationships, instead presenting women who are simultaneously supportive and competitive, loving and resentful, loyal and capable of profound betrayal.
The book works best when it embraces its darker impulses—the moments when friendships strain under the weight of unspoken resentments and hidden truths. It’s less successful when it attempts to resolve these conflicts too quickly or cleanly.
For Readers Who Enjoyed
If you appreciated the emotional complexity of:
“Beach Read” by Emily Henry – for its exploration of unexpected connections and personal growth
“The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” by Taylor Jenkins Reid – for secrets that reshape everything you thought you knew
“Apples Never Fall” by Liane Moriarty – for the way ordinary suburban lives can hide extraordinary drama
“I Would Die For You” by Sandie Jones – for psychological tension between women
“The Women” by Kristin Hannah – for lifelong female friendships tested by time and secrets
Final Thoughts: When Five Stars Might Be Four
The Five-Star Weekend represents Hilderbrand at her most ambitious—tackling heavier themes than some of her earlier works while maintaining the accessible charm that has made her a summer reading staple. While it doesn’t achieve complete success in balancing its various narrative threads, it offers enough genuine insight into female relationships to satisfy readers looking for substance beneath the surface.
The book raises important questions about forgiveness, the stories we tell ourselves about our lives, and whether true friendship can survive the revelation of fundamental deceptions. In a literary landscape often focused on perfect Instagram moments, Hilderbrand’s willingness to explore the messier aspects of women’s lives feels both refreshing and necessary.
For longtime Hilderbrand fans, this novel shows growth and complexity while delivering the Nantucket atmosphere and relationship dynamics they’ve come to expect. For newcomers, it provides an accessible entry point into stories about women navigating the complicated terrain of modern friendship and identity.
The Five-Star Weekend may not earn a perfect five-star rating, but it offers enough emotional truth and page-turning momentum to justify a spot in your beach bag this summer.