
Strangers by Belle Burden is a memoir told in four parts, tracing the life of Belle Burden and her marriage to James. What begins as a love story slowly unravels into something unrecognizable. Set during COVID, the book opens at the breaking point and then walks us through the beginning, the middle, the cracks, and finally the aftermath of a relationship that once felt certain.
💭 My Reading Experience
This was such an easy but intense read. I finished it in about four hours, and not because it was light, but because I genuinely could not put it down. It pulls you in quietly at first, then suddenly you are fully inside it, feeling everything with her. There is something about the pacing and the honesty that keeps you turning pages even when parts of it feel uncomfortable.
Strangers By Burden – The Review
Belle’s story does not ease you in. It starts at the end.
In the middle of COVID, Belle receives a voicemail that completely shifts her reality. The message is from a man telling her that her husband, James, is having an affair with his wife. It already feels unreal, but what follows is even more jarring. By the next day, James does not just admit to it; he emotionally checks out of the marriage entirely. Just like that, the life she thought she knew is gone.
What makes this story gripping is not just the betrayal, but the way it unfolds. On the surface, it almost sounds like a familiar story. A long marriage, a successful husband, an affair, a sudden exit. You think you know where it is going. But the way Belle tells it makes it feel different. It feels personal, introspective, and very revealing
She writes like someone trying to understand something that no longer makes sense. She goes back to the beginning, to the early days of love, to how they met, to what felt right. Then she moves through the middle of the marriage, the routines, the sacrifices, the quiet compromises that did not feel like compromises at the time. And slowly, you begin to see how things shifted, even if they were not obvious to her in the moment.
One of the strongest parts of the book is how self-aware she is. She does not write as someone trying to win sympathy. If anything, she questions herself more than anyone else. She points out her own shortcomings, the moments she ignored her instincts, the ways she may have made herself smaller within the relationship. There is something very honest about that. It does not feel polished or defensive; it is just stated as it is.
There were so many moments while reading where I caught myself reacting out loud. The kind of moments where you want to step into the story and say, no, do not do that. Especially when she talks about the choices she made for love. Giving up parts of her independence, adjusting her life around the marriage, and most especially her financial decisions, the whole time trusting that it would all be worth it in the end. It is frustrating, but also very relatable in a quiet way.
And that is really what stayed with me. No one enters a marriage expecting it to end. You are in love, you are committed, you believe in what you are building. You are not thinking about exit strategies or preparing for a version of your life without that person. This book gently challenges that idea. Not in a cynical way, but in a way that reminds you to stay aware, to stay present, and not to lose yourself completely in the process of loving someone else.
Another thing I found interesting is how she navigates life after the breakup. The emotional side is expected: the grief, the confusion, the anger. But there is also the social side. The way people respond, the subtle shifts in how she is perceived, the quiet pressure to either say nothing or say the “right” thing. It adds another layer to the story that makes it feel even more real.
What makes Strangers stand out is not that the story is completely unique, it is that it is told with such clarity and restraint. She is not overly bitter, even when you feel like she has every right to be. She is not trying to paint James as a villain in the simplest sense, even though his actions are hard to ignore. Instead, she is trying to understand, and in doing that, she makes you reflect too.
By the end, it does feel like a shift has happened. Not in a dramatic, everything-is-fixed kind of way, but in a quieter sense of reclaiming herself. Like she is no longer just the person the story happened to, but someone who has stepped outside of it and is beginning again.
Strangers By Belle Burden Blurb
It was a great love story, one for the ages. The speed of our beginning and the speed of our ending felt like matching bookends. They both came out of nowhere. He wanted it, he wanted me. And then he didn’t.
In March 2020, Belle Burden was safe and secure with her family at their house on Martha’s Vineyard, navigating the early days of the pandemic together—building fires in the late afternoons, drinking whisky sours, making roast chicken. Then, with no warning or explanation, her husband of twenty years announced that he was leaving her. Overnight, her caring, steady partner became a man she hardly recognized. He exited his life with her like an actor shrugging off a costume.
In Strangers, Burden revisits her marriage, searching for clues that her husband was not who she always thought he was. As she examines her relationship through a new lens, she reckons with her own family history and the lessons she intuited about how a woman is expected to behave in the face of betrayal. Through all of it, she is transformed. The discreet, compliant woman she once was—someone nicknamed “Belle the Good”—gives way to someone braver, someone determined to use her voice.
With unflinching honesty and profound grace, Burden charts a path through heartbreak to show the power of a woman who refuses to give up on love. Strangers is a stunning, deeply moving, compulsively readable memoir heralding the arrival of a thrilling new literary talent.

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