She said the quiet part out loud. Then her son disappeared. Nell Bradshaw is the internet's favorite honest mom. With over two hundred thousand followers, she's built a brand on saying what every exhausted mother thinks but never posts - the mess, the guilt, the raw confession that motherhood is not always beautiful. One Tuesday night, sitting on her bathroom floor at midnight, she writes a caption that will change everything: "I love my children but I wasn't built for this.
Some days I want to walk out the front door and keep walking."The post goes viral. Sixty thousand shares. Then a hundred thousand. The internet splits into two camps - those who call her brave, and those who call her dangerous. A parenting expert writes a public takedown. A petition demands she apologize. Strangers debate whether her children should be removed from her home. Three days later, on a Saturday afternoon, her seven-year-old son Cass walks into their fenced backyard and does not walk back out.
His red shoes sit on the patio. The gate - too high for him to reach - is open. He is gone. Within hours, the screenshot resurfaces. The hashtag #SheSaidSheWantedToWalkAway trends nationwide. Nell is no longer a relatable mom who went viral. She is the mother who wanted to leave - and now her child is missing. As the police investigation tightens around her, as her marriage fractures under the pressure, as the media and the public try her in real time, Nell must fight to find her son while the world she built online becomes the evidence used against her.
Every post she ever wrote is dissected. Every caption becomes a confession. Every honest word she shared is weaponized by strangers who have already decided she is guilty. But the truth about Cass's disappearance is more devastating than any headline - because it was never about a predator, or a crime, or a mother who failed. It was about a quiet, brilliant boy who needed the one thing his mother's platform could never give him: the right to exist unseen.
I Love My Children But is a searing psychological thriller about motherhood in the age of surveillance, the violence of viral shame, and the unbearable cost of living your life out loud. For readers who loved The Perfect Mother, Big Little Lies, and Such a Fun Age.
She said the quiet part out loud. Then her son disappeared. Nell Bradshaw is the internet's favorite honest mom. With over two hundred thousand followers, she's built a brand on saying what every exhausted mother thinks but never posts - the mess, the guilt, the raw confession that motherhood is not always beautiful. One Tuesday night, sitting on her bathroom floor at midnight, she writes a caption that will change everything: "I love my children but I wasn't built for this.
Some days I want to walk out the front door and keep walking."The post goes viral. Sixty thousand shares. Then a hundred thousand. The internet splits into two camps - those who call her brave, and those who call her dangerous. A parenting expert writes a public takedown. A petition demands she apologize. Strangers debate whether her children should be removed from her home. Three days later, on a Saturday afternoon, her seven-year-old son Cass walks into their fenced backyard and does not walk back out.
His red shoes sit on the patio. The gate - too high for him to reach - is open. He is gone. Within hours, the screenshot resurfaces. The hashtag #SheSaidSheWantedToWalkAway trends nationwide. Nell is no longer a relatable mom who went viral. She is the mother who wanted to leave - and now her child is missing. As the police investigation tightens around her, as her marriage fractures under the pressure, as the media and the public try her in real time, Nell must fight to find her son while the world she built online becomes the evidence used against her.
Every post she ever wrote is dissected. Every caption becomes a confession. Every honest word she shared is weaponized by strangers who have already decided she is guilty. But the truth about Cass's disappearance is more devastating than any headline - because it was never about a predator, or a crime, or a mother who failed. It was about a quiet, brilliant boy who needed the one thing his mother's platform could never give him: the right to exist unseen.
I Love My Children But is a searing psychological thriller about motherhood in the age of surveillance, the violence of viral shame, and the unbearable cost of living your life out loud. For readers who loved The Perfect Mother, Big Little Lies, and Such a Fun Age.