What's The Worst Rated Reese's Book Club Pick Of All Time?
Reese Witherspoon told The New York Times that she wanted to "bring the book club out of your grandma's living room and online." Since launching in 2017, Reese's Book Club has redefined the publishing landscape. By 2022, more than 30 of the club's 54 picks had landed on The New York Times bestseller list (via TIME). When 2023 rolled around, the newspaper reported that her selections had sold over two million print copies, outpacing the efforts of more traditional tastemakers like Oprah's Book Club and Jenna Bush-Hager's Read With Jenna.
Today, Reese's Book Club is a digital collective with three million Instagram followers and counting. Each month, fans log on to discover the latest selection, often devouring it in tandem across social media comment sections. Some selections soar. Kristin Hannah's "The Nightingale" remains the highest-rated Reese's Book Club pick of all time. But, not every novel lands with such force. Ana Reyes' "The House in the Pines" holds the dubious honor of being the club's lowest-rated pick on Goodreads, averaging just 3.10 stars from over 179,000 readers. Even in a cherry-picked ecosystem, this is proof that not every story finds its audience.
The House in the Pines left readers pining for a better book
Ana Reyes' "The House in the Pines" had the star-studded endorsement, the glossy cover, and the marketing push. It also had a narrator in freefall. Maya is gripped by a memory she can't quite trust. Years after witnessing her best friend collapse and die under mysterious circumstances tied to her then-boyfriend, she stumbles across a video that mirrors the moment almost exactly — a woman dying in an eerily similar fashion. As a result, she's dragged back to the town and the man she's spent years trying to forget, and a feverish, looping search for truth follows.
Reese Witherspoon picked Reyes' debut as her January 2023 selection, calling it "a wild ride that had me flying through chapter after chapter" (Reese's Book Club). For many readers, that ride felt more like a confusing detour. Even the most loyal members of Reese's Book Club were left scratching their heads, struggling to connect with a novel that promised psychological thrills only for its potential to get lost in the woods.
The reviews on Goodreads were frank. "Reese, girl... you sure you liked this?" asked one reader. Others were more detailed in their disappointment, citing "choppy" writing, uneven pacing, and an ending that "felt like the author just pulled it out of a hat!" One review wrote, "Cannot express how disappointing this book was," echoing the general sense of letdown. The most brutal assessment came in just two words: "womp womp."