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Apples Never Fall

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#1 New York Times Bestseller
A Peacock Original TV Series–Streaming Soon

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Liane Moriarty comes a novel that looks at marriage, siblings, and how the people we love the most can hurt us the deepest

The Delaney family love one another dearly—it’s just that sometimes they want to murder each other . . .

If your mother was missing, would you tell the police? Even if the most obvious suspect was your father?

This is the dilemma facing the four grown Delaney siblings.

The Delaneys are fixtures in their community. The parents, Stan and Joy, are the envy of all of their friends. They’re killers on the tennis court, and off it their chemistry is palpable. But after fifty years of marriage, they’ve finally sold their famed tennis academy and are ready to start what should be the golden years of their lives. So why are Stan and Joy so miserable?

The four Delaney children—Amy, Logan, Troy, and Brooke—were tennis stars in their own right, yet as their father will tell you, none of them had what it took to go all the way. But that’s okay, now that they’re all successful grown-ups and there is the wonderful possibility of grandchildren on the horizon.

One night a stranger named Savannah knocks on Stan and Joy’s door, bleeding after a fight with her boyfriend. The Delaneys are more than happy to give her the small kindness she sorely needs. If only that was all she wanted.

Later, when Joy goes missing, and Savannah is nowhere to be found, the police question the one person who remains: Stan. But for someone who claims to be innocent, he, like many spouses, seems to have a lot to hide. Two of the Delaney children think their father is innocent, two are not so sure—but as the two sides square off against each other in perhaps their biggest match ever, all of the Delaneys will start to reexamine their shared family history in a very new light.

467 pages, Hardcover

First published September 14, 2021

31.3k people are currently reading
260k people want to read

About the author

Liane Moriarty

56 books72.6k followers
Liane Moriarty is the author of the #1 New York Times bestsellers Big Little Lies, The Husband’s Secret, and Truly Madly Guilty; the New York Times bestsellers Apples Never Fall, Nine Perfect Strangers, What Alice Forgot, and The Last Anniversary; The Hypnotist’s Love Story; and Three Wishes. She lives in Sydney, Australia, with her husband and two children.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 32,925 reviews
Profile Image for Yun.
602 reviews32.8k followers
December 29, 2021
I've got to hand it to Liane Moriarty. Just when I think I've seen it all, she comes along and completely surprises me with this sparkling and startling gem of a tale.

Joy Delaney, beloved wife and mother of four, has disappeared. Her adult children are rightfully aghast, but they're reluctant to report her missing. Because they know the prime suspect will be their father, and they're not really sure of his innocence. When the police start asking questions, it quickly becomes clear everyone in the family has stories to tell and secrets to hide. And before it's all over, everything will be revealed and laid bare.

I've really been enjoying stories about dysfunctional families lately, and this is such a superb one. The four siblings are all trying to figure out if their father could've really murdered their mother, and if so, which side would they be on? It's a fascinating premise, and the progression of the story captures all of the nuanced facets that this dilemma would bring to the family.

What I've always admired about Moriarty's writing is her sharp and astute observations of people and their flaws. She has this ability to peel back the layers of family relationships and what it means to be human, and to expose everything ugly and beautiful within, while injecting just that right dose of humor. This book hits upon tender subjects that everyone would recognize as familiar, yet instead of making me cry, it made me laugh.

Needless to say, I found this whole thing to be utterly riveting and unputdownable. The characters are memorable, the strife feels all too real, and the dialogue is snappy. I devoured it in just a few days. While the mystery isn't the core of this book, there were still plenty of revelations along the way that kept me surprised and delighted.

Liane Moriarty is back! This seemingly simple tale of dysfunctional families and relationships, of people's flaws and the messiness of their lives, of unmet expectations and unspoken dreams, hit all the right notes for me. It feels like Moriarty's last two books have been a little bit off of her true form. But with this one, she again returns to the pinnacle of her craft.

My heartfelt thanks for the advance copy that was provided for my honest and unbiased review.
Profile Image for Regina.
1,139 reviews4,414 followers
September 20, 2021
Do you like apples?

Well I got my favorite author back. How do you like them apples?

My relationship with Liane Moriarty has felt a little one-sided in recent years. I became smitten with her when I read The Husband’s Secret but really fell hard for Big Little Lies. I went back and read most of her previous catalog but then… Truly Madly Guilty and Nine Perfect Strangers. (AKA Truly Madly OMG-pleasestopsayingatthebarbecue and Nine Perfect WTH-isthisactuallyhappeningamIondrugs.)

I really needed a winner from my dear Liane or I was going to have to consider a breakup, and I’m over the moon that she delivered.

Apples Never Fall follows the tennis-obsessed Delaney family, which includes two recently-retired parents and their four adult children. Matriarch Joy has gone missing, so there is an intriguing “what happened to mum?” plot to keep the pages turning. The thing that Liane Moriarty absolutely excels at is characterization. She must be the most keen observer of the human condition, because she nails insightful - and accurate - idiosyncrasies that make each of her fictional creations feel truly real.

Fair warning though that there is a lot of tennis in this book. A LOT. You don’t have to like tennis to like the book, but if you love it… you’ll love it. And because you know I can't resist a little wordplay, I’ll end with this: Liane Moriarty is back in form and serving aces once again.

Blog: https://www.confettibookshelf.com/
Profile Image for Holly  B (slower pace!).
923 reviews2,661 followers
October 4, 2021
2.5 STARS / I was going to give it a 3, but the end ruined it

Meh

Read 467 pages and also listened to much of it...

*Length: 18 hrs and 3 mins
*Unabridged Audiobook
*Narrated by: Caroline Lee

This was a long time to invest in characters and a story. What started as a mystery of a missing mother became a bit of a slog with lots of repetition, dialogue and nothing happening (tennis references, migraines, anxiety, food, more tennis). There were a few moments of humor, but not enough to make this one very enjoyable.

The entire storyline was anticlimatic and unconvincing. I kept waiting for everything to make sense, it didn't (how can these smart people be so foolish)? I kept waiting for some kind of revelation (not worth it). I kept waiting for the explosive ending, never happened (You want me to believe that happened?). I won't even go into the COVID chapter (what was that)?

I don't mind slow burns if the story holds my interest, but this one became frustrating and was definitely overwritten. I missed the fun and craziness her books usually deliver. It was just okay, I didn't love it.

Oh well.....moving on.....

Audible credit/ Library loan/ Read in October 2021
Profile Image for JanB.
1,299 reviews4,044 followers
October 4, 2021
The real tragedy here? I will never get the hours and hours back that I wasted reading this. I’m a DNF Queen but I kept listening when I hated everything about it. I’ve seen the glowing reviews and knew it would SURELY get better if I just listened a little longer.

Tedious, plodding, boring, and pointless. Plus, at 467 pages, it was at least 150 pages too long. I typically love slow-burn character studies as well as dysfunctional families, but not this time.

When I finally waded through nearly the entire book to find out the resolution to the "riveting" mystery of what happened to Joy and who the mystery girl was, the book firmly sealed its fate as the worst book I have read this year. The ending made the book WORSE, not better. The turd on top of this steaming pile was a stupid pandemic chapter.

Because I like to find at least one positive thing about a book, I will say there were flashes of humor that I enjoyed but they were too few and far between to make it worth slogging through such a long book. My time would have been better spent watching paint dry.
Profile Image for Lisa of Troy.
843 reviews7,280 followers
August 18, 2024
Jokes 5/5, Storytelling 2/5, Editing 1/5

Stan and Joy have been married FOREVER and have recently retired from their Tennis School. As boredom sets in, they hear a knock on the door late one night. A mysterious girl is on their porch. Then, Joy goes missing. What happened to Joy? Is she alive or dead? And who is responsible?

This book was quite funny; however, it was really, really long. Additionally, as a mystery, it could have been formatted in a much more compelling way. There was so much backstory on this that I even forgot that Joy was missing for a good portion of the book. Applies Never Fall tried to touch on way too many things all at once: the pandemic, all different kinds of relationships, Troy's views, Polly Perkins, migraines, depression, and more. It tried to cover everything and the kitchen sink. Truthfully, I would have enjoyed this book more if it was edited down to half of its length.

Overall, a book which is funny at times but too long.

2025 Reading Schedule
Jan A Town Like Alice
Feb Birdsong
Mar Captain Corelli's Mandolin - Louis De Berniere
Apr War and Peace
May The Woman in White
Jun Atonement
Jul The Shadow of the Wind
Aug Jude the Obscure
Sep Ulysses
Oct Vanity Fair
Nov A Fine Balance
Dec Germinal

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Profile Image for Holly.
1,513 reviews1,534 followers
September 22, 2021
This was good I guess? I think I would have rated it higher if it wasn't for the ending. The explanation of the whole "what happened to Joy" thing was just stupid. And then the author decided we all needed to be reminded about the pandemic and that gets suddenly included at the end and I'm actually still kind of mad about that. If it had made sense to include it, like it was an integral part of the plot, I could have been ok with it, but this was just in there for no seemingly no rhyme or reason. Especially since I felt the book should have already ended before that point considering the mystery was already solved. So yeah, those two things made me drop this down to three stars.
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,910 reviews56.9k followers
March 8, 2022
The Delaney family saga’s entire story truly matches with proverbial saying: apple never falls from the tree!

This is well written, interesting reading written by one of my all time favorite author’s dry and dark sense of witty humor !

There’s big mystery about a mother’s abrupt, sudden disappearance but as the story moves back and forth between past and present with multi POVs of Delaney members: we realize how their decisions, choices, misdemeanors, regrets, secrets in the past shaped their future : the author perfectly reflected the connection between last fall when a young named Savannah suddenly appeared at their parents’ house door and the progression of Joy Delaney’s sudden disappearance.

What’s the main connection with two incidents? How children cope with the their mother’s disappearance? As two of them think their father must be involved with this incident ( including police officers because there are scratch marks on Stan’s face and everything he tells about how his wife got missing seems like a big lie) and two of them still thinks he’s innocent!

I wanted to give you more information about the family’s background story so you can visualize a clear picture on your mind ( or maybe you start match actors with characters because I’m so sure we’re gonna see this book’s adaptation into the series just like the other scandalously delicious work of the author and interestingly !

By the way I couldn’t help myself so as a part of occupation, I already made a cast for the book ( or its possible future adaptation and of course I only thought brilliant Aussie actors)
I thought Rose Bryne as Brooke and Rebel Wilson as Amy, Jai Courtney as Troy and Ryan Kwanten as Logan and here’s my Aussie couple suggestion : Joy must be played by Jacki Weaver and my ideal Stan candidate is John Noble! Oh, Savannah could be played by Margot Robbie ( even though I got sick of seeing her face at 10 different movies lately. )

Okay, let’s get back to the story;
Delaneys always attract the attention of the community with their enormous heights and their obsession with tennis! Joy and Stan married for fifty years, ran a tennis school for a long time to coach adult children and raise future tennis stars! They also pushed their four children to become future tennis stars but unfortunately none of them pursued a career by following their parents’ footsteps even though they were talented enough and the obvious rivalry between them pushed their limits but at the end : their life didn’t turn into something they’ve dreamt of. And now they still hide so many secrets, dealing with their own insecurities.

Joy and Stan finally sells their tennis house but without reflecting their all energy to the business, they feel lost. Then a perfect stranger named Savannah who seems shaken, beaten knocks their door, needing help to spend the night away from abusing boyfriend. So the couple ( at least Joy) welcomes her with open arms. As the time passes, Savannah becomes a member of the house and four children of Delaneys five different reactions to the forced addition to their family.

The four children already deal with different problems. Eldest one Amy shows signs of suffering from bipolar: in her early forties she doesn’t have regular job, living with roommates ( mostly returns back to her parents’ house) , no boyfriend, no particular dream for life, trying too hard to look tough.

Brooke with e is also about to lose her physiotherapy place she’s invested, taking break from longtime boyfriend, trying too hard to look as the most mature one but she struggles because of her insecurities.

Logan also has regrets about not accepting the tennis scholarships in Chicago which could have changed his entire life but now his girlfriend left him and he’s not so full filled with his teaching job at community college and Troy also acts like superior as he feels more inferior, struggling with his job!

None of them happy and none of them has any intention to share those secrets with each other!

Overall: I loved the interception of past and present time events and I loved the contribution of random people’s POVs to the story ( waitress who try to get orders from siblings, gossiping customers at hair dresser, noisy taxi driver etc.) and that WTH ending was truly unexpected!

This is not my most favorite book of the author but it is still so enjoyable. Her dry humor and fantastic storytelling skills gave us enough reason to get hooked up by Delaney family saga from the beginning!

Looking forward to read next works of the author! ( probably we will see this book’s adaptation on streaming services)

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Profile Image for Paromjit.
3,080 reviews26k followers
August 8, 2021
Liane Moriarty's latest offering is an Aussie family drama featuring the renowned tennis obsessed Delaney family, the tall, handsome Stan, tennis coach extraordinaire, and his wife, Joy, the force behind their tennis business. They have 4 adult children, the unable to settle and plagued with mental health issues, Amy, the solid, reliable, handyman and business communications teacher, Logan, the slick wealthy divorced trader, Troy, and the migraine troubled physiotherapist, Brooke, struggling to make ends meet with her business. Joy and Stan have retired, having sold their tennis business, but retirement does not sit well with a couple who have led such active and busy lives, their long and happy marriage of 50 years is beginning to show signs of strain.

The 69 year old Joy is desperately repressing her resentments and desire for grandchildren, placing her hopes on Logan and his partner, Indira, and Brooke's 10 year marriage to Grant, in expectation of them having a child soon. The only problem is that Indira has left Logan, and Grant has separated from Brooke, and neither Logan nor Brooke are keen on sharing this news with their parents. The story begins with the adult children discussing their missing mother, Joy had sent them all a text saying she was going off grid for a while. The only thing is that it is so unlike their mother to go off on her own, she left no note behind, and their father's face has what looks to be nail scratches, all of which has them worried, should they report Joy missing to the police? The narrative goes back and forth from the previous September and the present, the arrival of a strange woman, Savannah, turning up on Joy and Stan's doorstep, claiming to have been abused by her boyfriend. She is welcomed by Joy and Stan, taking up residence with them, but who exactly is she?

There are many aspects of this novel that I enjoyed, particularly the complicated relationships between the adult Delaney siblings and their relationship with tennis, and the closer examination of Stan and Joy's perfect marriage and the flaws that come to be exposed, all of which lead the police to believe that Stan may be guilty of murder. I have loved all the Liane Moriarty books I have read previously, but I struggled with this one more, all the pieces were there, but the overlong story and the characters she created didn't capture my interest as much. I missed the bizarre and offbeat touches and the magical spark that usually lift her novels failed to ignite for me. What spurred me on to complete the novel was that I wanted to know what happened to Joy and to discover the truth behind the sudden appearance of Savannah in the Delaney family. I am sure there will be many readers who will love this more than me, so do please check other reviews of this book. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.
Profile Image for MarilynW.
1,700 reviews4,013 followers
October 17, 2021
Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty (Author), Caroline Lee (Narrator)

This story looked so interesting but several of my friends started and didn't finish the book so I was apprehensive about giving the audiobook a try because it comes in at 18 hours at normal speed. I always finish a book so I'd be in for a long slog if I didn't like it. The not finishing a book is why I'm very careful about the books I accept or check out from the library.

Once I started the audiobook, I wondered if I could stand so much of Joy yakking out loud and in her head while her husband, Stan, did his silent, surly thing. And the narrator's voice could be so squeaky at times, or a lot, actually, And then, Savannah showed up and silly Joy and Stan let her in and allow her to just STAY!?!?!? (My inner voice just squeaked on the word stay, now that I have the narrator stuck in my head). I became hooked on the story but also fell in love with the narration. It was so dramatic and sometimes silly and I adored it. We get to be there in everybody's head and also we get to eavesdrop on all the gossip and guessing about what is going on and what has gone on in the past. People thinking things that you'd never say out loud although they sometimes do say them out loud and it was so funny.

Yes, yes, I felt bad for laughing when sixty nine year old Joy is missing and she might have been murdered by grumpy old seventy year old Stan. We get the story in two timelines, "now" and "specific times in the past six months". We get to know Joy and Stan's four adult children, all adversely affected by their parents relationship and their dedication to the sport of tennis. But the damage didn't start with Joy and Stan, they each had their rough upbringings that affected the way the reacted to the world around them and the expectations they had for themselves and their children. The story and the situations are very serious but still, life, what we think about life, and what we think about ourselves and others, can be funny and Caroline Lee did such a good job with her dramatic narration. I began to love every single squeak.

I do wish I had some answers. At the end, as the author figuratively walks away from the book, there I was in the back of the room, waving my arms wildly, trying to get her attention because I had questions! I want to know things! But shucks, I didn't get the answers to my questions so I'm going to pout a little bit. I slept on this story because I finished it so late at night and woke up liking it even more this morning.

Published September 14, 2021 by Macmillan Audio
Profile Image for Marialyce .
2,144 reviews685 followers
October 3, 2021
This was horribly dull and frankly ridiculous! 🙄 Too long, too many unbelievable moments, too many phone pick ups(650 is my estimate), but a great story to nap/sleep! 🤦‍♀️to.
Profile Image for seb.
3 reviews
October 11, 2021
***MASSIVE SPOILERS AHEAD***

Gotta talk about the reveal. How absolutely ridiculous, every single thing wrapped up perfectly. Joy decided on a whim to go on a three week retreat with a scam artist? She texted her kids about it without her glasses on? The note was held up by a poorly designed magnet and then it was eaten by the dog? The suspicious rolled up carpet taken to the car in the dead of night by her husband was because he wanted to surprise her with new timber flooring?? Her beloved shirt was innocently used to clean up blood then it was stolen from the bin by a cat?? Then the cat buried it in the woods behind their house???? Oh and some dude stole her bike and then died in a car accident?????? Like what. C'mon. It was so perfect I actually thought maybe when the cops came to arrest Stan that "Joy" was in fact Savannah, impersonating her after Stan killed Joy -- maybe Savannah was taking cash to cover it up, since they looked like mother/daughter and Savannah was apparently a savant at picking up mannerisms or whatever? Bah. What a joke. And what the heck was going on with the whole Haddad family!? And why were the two grandmothers stressed so much?? And who gives a fuck if Grant is domineering and Claire wants a baby? I could barely keep these kids and the partners straight. Literally there were so many unnecessary characters: a guy Joy kissed 20 years ago, one kid's ex-wife's mum, the Uber driver, the child of the friend from Denmark or something. And for the love of God, I don't read fiction to hear more about COVID.


Whew. That was longer than I meant it to be. Sorry.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for L.A..
677 reviews295 followers
April 19, 2022
The Australian writer, Liane Moriarty, captured the family dynamics how we love and hurt the people closest to us. With complex relationships, flawed personalities, secrets, sibling rivalries and mainly regrets, we are harvested into this household through decades of their mistakes and failures. What could-have-been, what should-have-been and what is, reveals to us each decision they made had an outcome on their life. Brilliantly written with the best uncanny, snarky humor residing in every chapter, I could not stop until the last minute played, as I listened to Caroline Lee read the best rendition of these characters, I hung onto every word and character's life as if they were my neighbors and I was across the white picket fence eavesdropping.

These characters are truly embodied into people we have probably grown up with. I can't wait to see this as a Netflix series and who would be typecast. The family finds themselves in a dilemma when the mother has "gone off grid" per her text to her adult children. Suspiciously, her phone is found underneath the bed, her bicycle is missing and her glasses found on the table. The opening chapter are the siblings discussing her mysterious disappearance at a local restaurant and whether the father is to blame. The waitress eavesdropping is just one of the many characters sprinkled throughout given insight to their opinion.

"Apples never fall too far from the tree." Apples for an apple crumble pie...4 apples in the bicycle missing...4 children for every apple...🤔

With 4 children all different personalities but unable to maintain a relationship, Amy, Logan, Troy and Brooke share their idea, thoughts and views of growing up in their home and how their dad is capable of such a crime. Dad has scratches on his face and differs on the mention to call the police and report her missing. With the catalyst of clues, it is sure to be their father...don't they always look at the husband first as a suspect?

Missing is the mother, Joy Delaney, 69 years old, who delivers a whimsical, "overly" helpful, June Cleaver image and "stay at home" parent who can be heard as the woman in the Geico commercial calling her son with a conversation about the squirrels in the attic while he fights off bad guys...gets me every time..clueless to what is outside her home, but don't let her fool you. She has secrets of her own.

The father, Stan Delaney, a retired outstanding tennis coach developed a tennis empire with his wife and clearly has an obsession for talent... driving his children outside their realm of normalcy. His deadpan character displays gnomic and sarcastic canter that he constantly brings to center front with bitterness, his one time tennis pro student Harry Haddad. The children loathed hearing his name when they were compared to his strength in tennis to their own weaknesses. He reminded them quite often none of them had talent, causing a fury of resentment and instability in their lives.

Then there is a stand alone character, Savannah, a stranger to them showing up on their doorstep beaten and bruised by an abusive boyfriend. The house was picked randomingly or was it? She becomes a mainstay earning her right to live with them cooking and cleaning while spending their money. The children soon become envious of her ease into their parents life and begin an investigation of their own before their mother disappeared. Savannah has disappeared too...The story not only develops what happened a year ago with transfers of present time, but gives you a lifetime of their experiences.

The ending wasn't perfect, but how do I say it was perfectly woven in? I saw the side of COVID most of us were thinking, but told through the eyes of a clueless Joy. I laughed throughout this story, but on edge for the truth and baring my own soul in the process...We are a delightfully weird species put into perspective by this awesome author.

Thanks NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for this incredible ARC in exchange for my honest opinion and review.
Profile Image for Liz.
2,630 reviews3,552 followers
August 17, 2021
Liane Moriarty does it again! Joy Delaney has gone missing under mysterious circumstances. She’s left a cryptic message for her four children. And Stan, her husband, is acting very weird. The four children are loath to notify the police, because won’t suspicion fall on their dad? What does it say about the family that that’s the first thing they worry about?
We hear from Joy, 69 years old, recently retired after selling their tennis academy, six months before she vanishes. Because out of the blue, a young woman arrives on their doorstep one night, after a fight with her boyfriend.
I just loved the snarky humor of this story. The way Moriarty uses various people overhearing conversations between the siblings to move the story forward is just pitch perfect. The book really gripped me from the get go. We learn that each of the family members has their own secrets. I totally got the family dynamics, about who has to be called in what order, whose nose gets bent out of shape over what, who has what role. It just all rang true.
But the book has a lot of depth to it as well. It has so much to say about how we perceive things, about choices made, about what we give up for others.
While she’s a minor character, I adored Christina, the detective assigned to investigate Joy’s disappearance. There’s a bit about why her own parents divorced that had me laughing out loud and reading it to my husband (who was smart enough to understand).
As the book progresses, the twists start to come fast and furious. I was constantly caught off guard, as I hadn’t anticipated most of them. This is truly a story for which Chekhov’s theory about a gun in act one being used in act two holds particularly true. Everything is tied up nicely here. And I sure didn’t anticipate that ending. One of those endings that just has you going what the h***…
Like all of Moriarty’s works, this begs to be made into a mini-series. It’s got it all, the perfect mix of drama and humor, the fully formed characters, a story that has multiple layers.
I received this book as a Goodreads giveaway. My thanks to the publisher, Henry Holt and Company.
Profile Image for Emma Roberts.
194 reviews108 followers
September 5, 2021
1.5 stars. This book. Was so boring. 464 tedious pages and very little happened. Like, it felt dull and slow the entire time, and then towards the end you find out — surprise! — even LESS happened than you were led to believe. What a twist!

The characters/relationships didn’t feel believable at all to me, the timeline jumping around served no apparent purpose, the tennis stuff was tedious, the commentary on traditional marriage roles felt forced, the end was way too tidy, the last few chapters haphazardly talked about COVID because… idk, just because. And then the final chapter was wild. Over the top, but at least it was interesting.

I’d advise not wasting your time on this one like I unfortunately did. But a lot of these other reviews are somehow positive, so who knows — maybe you’ll like it more than me! 🤞🏼

Thanks to Henry Holt and Co. for sending me an advance copy of this book, I really was excited about it!
Profile Image for Barbara .
1,699 reviews1,331 followers
December 28, 2021
Moriarty is back with “Apples Never Fall”. I think this is one of her better works. What makes her special is her witty everyday observations:

“He had bushy old-man eyebrows and good, honest, taxpaying eyes.”

“Stan Delaney was not the sort of man to sit in a gutter. He was far too tall.”

“The words were not startling, but it felt somehow as if they were witnessing a startlingly
intimate conversation.”

Open any page and you will find Moriarty at her height of her career. She is a master of wordcraft.

As the story opens four adult siblings are at a café puzzling over their missing mother. They all received a curious text from her stating that she’s going off the grid for a while. Yet, no further explanation is provided. Plus, the text itself is questionable. It seems as though auto-correct might have blurred the information.

Similar to previous works, Moriarty tells the tale in two timelines. She begins with the missing mother and then jumps to where it all began. And that would be the last September when a mysterious woman just knocks on their parent’s door, stating that she’s a victim of domestic abuse. The Delaneys (the parents) are winding down for the night when this woman, Savannah (or is that her real name?) infiltrates their lives. From the start, it seemed that there was something fishy about Savannah and her story, yet the Delaney parents are fully charmed by their new boarder. Of course, Savannah works diligently in the Delaney household, creating beautiful dinners, thoughtful cinnamon toast, and minestrone soup. The parents are awed and in love. Of course they create room in their empty-nest home. From the start, the children found Savannah suspect. There is unease with this woman staying with their elderly parents…just out of the blue! The difficulty though is that Savannah brings them such happiness.

The Delaney’s have just sold their tennis academy, so both are struggling to find purpose. Joy, the wife, wants to be a grandmother. Stan, the father, is obsessed with a former student who is making a comeback in tennis and writing a memoir. This student quit the Delaney academy right before he rose to Grand Slam fame. Stan never got over Harry’s betrayal of leaving Stan for another coach. Because of their retirement from tennis, there is a bit of idle time finding the elder Delaneys. They are in a rut and primed for an astute interloper.

Once Joy goes missing, Stan looks mighty guilty. Through the tossing back and forth between timelines, the reader learns of Stan and Joy’s marriage, and their partnership in the academy. We learn about the four Delaney children, both past and present failures and successes. We learn of Joy’s concern for her children, Stan’s total consumption with the game of tennis. Moriarty superbly brings each character to vivid life. And she creates such a story with some red herrings and deflections that forces the reader to be on their toes. With Moriarty, subtle clues are peppered throughout the story.

Moriarty also adds a few extraneous characters who may or may not be a part of the mystery. Each character does provide something to the story, whether that character holds a tiny piece of the mystery answer, or, the character adds dimension and humor. There are layers of family drama. All characters are more than they initially seem.

My only criticism is that it is a bit too long. The last 30-40 pages could have been whittled down. Yet, I still fully endorse this story. Her insights into family dynamics and the complexities of the years of relationships makes her stories relatable. I found Joy’s inner thoughts and feelings a treat to read because it is all so real. As a wife and mother, Joy resonated with me.
Profile Image for Melissa (Semi-hiatus for Work).
5,020 reviews2,915 followers
August 11, 2021
I was thrilled to be approved for an advance listening copy of this book, and also excited to see that the narrator was Caroline Lee, who narrated the other Liane Moriarty books I've listened to previously. She gives the perfect voices to the entire Australian Delaney family and kept me completely invested in the story.

This is a sweeping family saga featuring Joy and Stan, who have been married for fifty years and have four adult children--Amy, Brooke, Troy, and Logan. The family's "claim to fame" is that they have all been competitive tennis players in the past and Stan and Joy ran a tennis school and coached. One day, Joy turns up missing and suspicion turns to Stan. Even the children wonder if he might be guilty. The tale is told from two main directions--in the past leading up to Joy going missing and the present-day going forward with the investigation into her whereabouts. A mysterious visitor named Savannah factors in heavily. Sprinkled throughout are moments from the distant past and the shaping of the Delaney family's lives.

I adore family sagas and this one absolutely did not disappoint. I don't have any knowledge or interest in tennis, but that doesn't matter at all. It's more the story of what has happened within their family and each of the siblings' lives. The characters are so well-drawn and full of life that I will honestly miss them--faults (ha tennis joke) and all--now that I'm finished with the book. Readers get a real sense of each of the Delaneys and Savannah and can both sympathize and empathize with them as various things are revealed.

There is humor throughout the story and Joy often reminded me of my mother-in-law with her stream of consciousness talking, and yet she also reminded me of myself and the things women take on as wives and mothers that we would never expect men to take on. The mystery of what happened to Joy compelled me to keep going to discover the answer, but overall the answer isn't as important as the journey to get there. I also loved the portrayal of a 50 year marriage with its ups and downs and even the mundane middle ground.

The ending of this book was a bit of a jaw-dropper because I was absolutely not expecting it, and yet it seemed so perfect to give closure to everything that happened.

Moriarty's books are unique and this one is no exception. It's a much more straightforward story than her last book (Nine Perfect Strangers) and I'm so glad for that. The combination of family drama with mystery, sprinkled with humor and touching moments is a winner.

I voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Dem.
1,245 reviews1,376 followers
December 1, 2021
Much Ado about nothing comes to mind on finishing this one.

A novel about family and the ties that bind....
For me this was a big investment (time wise) and it really didn't pay off.
This is a long winded novel with a little mystery to it. The characters are dis-likable which I normally enjoy, however these characters were dull and the story became monotonous. I really didn't like the ending either, just too forced and ridiculous.

This is my fourth novel by this author and the only one I really enjoyed was Big Little Lies.
I purchased this book on reading the blurb which I found really interesting. If you mother was missing would you tell the police? Even it the most obvious suspect was your father?

The book was 480 pages and it was repetitive and way too drawn-out. By the end of the story I really couldn't care less what happened to any of them.

I did finish the novel but I can't recommend it and its defiantly not one for my real life book shelf.
Profile Image for Sandysbookaday .
2,451 reviews2,386 followers
December 6, 2023
EXCERPT: The waitress approached the table . . . noting how they each sat in the same distinctive way, with their ankles locked around the front legs of their chairs, as if to prevent them from sliding away.

'Excuse me?'

They didn't hear her. They were all talking at once, their voices overlapping. They were definitely related. They even sounded similar: low,deep, husky-edged voices. People with sore throats and secrets.

'She's not technically missing. She sent us that text.'

'I just can't believe she's not answering her phone. She always answers.'

'Dad mentioned her new bike is gone.'

'What? That's bizarre.'

'So . . . she just cycled off down the street and into the sunset?'

'But she didn't take her helmet. Which I find very weird.'

'I think it's time we reported her missing.'

'It's over a week now. That's too long.'

'Like I said, she's not technically -'

'She is the very definition of missing because we don't know where she is.'

The waitress raised her voice to the point where it was perilously close to rude. 'Are you ready to order yet?'

They didn't hear her.

'Has anyone been over to the house yet?'

'Dad told me please don't come over. He's "very busy".'

'Very busy? What's he so busy doing?'

The waitress shuffled alongside them, in between the chairs and the wall, so that one of them might see her.

'You know what could happen if we reported her missing?' The better looking of the two men spoke. He wore a long sleeved linen shirt rolled up to the elbows; shorts and shoes without socks. He was in his early thirties, the waitress guessed, with a goatee and the low-level charismatic charm of a reality star or a real estate agent. 'They'd suspect Dad.'

'Suspect Dad of what?' asked the other man, a shabbier, chunkier, cheaper version of the first. Instead of a goatee, he just needed a shave.

'That he . . . you know.' The expensive version brother drew his finger across his neck.

The waitress went very still. This was the best conversation she'd overheard since she'd started waitressing.

'Jesus, Troy.' The cheaper version brother exhaled. 'That's not funny.'

The other man shrugged. 'The police will ask if they argued. Dad said they did argue.'

'But surely - '

'Maybe Dad did have something to do with it,' said the youngest of the four, a woman wearing a short orange dress dotted with white daisies over a swimsuit knotted at the neck. Her hair was dyed blue (the waitress coveted that exact shade), and it was tied back in a sticky, wet, tangled knot at her neck. There was a fine sheen of sandy sunscreen on her arms as if she'd just that moment walked off the beach, even though they were at least a forty minute drive from the coast. 'Maybe he snapped. Maybe he finally snapped.'

ABOUT 'APPLES NEVER FALL': The Delaney family love one another dearly—it’s just that sometimes they want to murder each other . . .

If your mother was missing, would you tell the police? Even if the most obvious suspect was your father?

This is the dilemma facing the four grown Delaney siblings.

The Delaneys are fixtures in their community. The parents, Stan and Joy, are the envy of all of their friends. They’re killers on the tennis court, and off it their chemistry is palpable. But after fifty years of marriage, they’ve finally sold their famed tennis academy and are ready to start what should be the golden years of their lives. So why are Stan and Joy so miserable?

The four Delaney children—Amy, Logan, Troy, and Brooke—were tennis stars in their own right, yet as their father will tell you, none of them had what it took to go all the way. But that’s okay, now that they’re all successful grown-ups and there is the wonderful possibility of grandchildren on the horizon.

One night a stranger named Savannah knocks on Stan and Joy’s door, bleeding after a fight with her boyfriend. The Delaneys are more than happy to give her the small kindness she sorely needs. If only that was all she wanted.

Later, when Joy goes missing, and Savannah is nowhere to be found, the police question the one person who remains: Stan. But for someone who claims to be innocent, he, like many spouses, seems to have a lot to hide. Two of the Delaney children think their father is innocent, two are not so sure—but as the two sides square off against each other in perhaps their biggest match ever, all of the Delaneys will start to reexamine their shared family history in a very new light.

MY THOUGHTS: Apples Never Fall is an excellent family drama/mystery that delves into family dynamics with disarming honesty and more than a little humour. I laughed as I recognized shades of myself and my three brothers in these conversations. Even Savannah was startlingly familiar. Though the cuckoo in our nest was called Sharilyn, and she was far more benign than Savannah.

Moriarty has a definite talent for characterisation. Her characters are vibrant and alive, and tend to leap off the page and move into your life for the duration of the book. This, combined with her devious mind which conjures up intriguing mysteries, guarantees a read that just can't be put down.

Like an onion, the layers of the Delaney family are peeled back one by one, revealing their insecurities, their resentments, their petty jealousies, their disappointments, their fears. Like most families, they have wallpapered over the cracks in their lives, given up on their dreams, settled for second best, all the time telling themselves that it's just life, that this is the reality of adulthood. But when Savannah intrudes and Joy goes missing, the plasters are ripped off, the wounds and battle scars exposed for all to see. There are some shocking revelations and surprises!

Although the mystery of Joy's disappearance is always there, it is not the main focus of the story. It is merely a vehicle for the dissection of a family unit under pressure; an examination of their values, their loyalties, their coping strategies. I would be interested to learn if Brooke ever has another migraine.

Apples Never Fall had me laughing and, at one point, snivelling into a fistful of tissues. Moriarty put my emotions through the wringer. Apples Never Fall is an irresistible read. It's charming, and surprising, just what I have come to expect from one of my favourite authors.

What I wasn't expecting was that final chapter. Stunning!

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

#ApplesNeverFall #NetGalley

I: #lianemoriarty @macmillanaus

T: #LianeMoriarty @MacmillanAus


#fivestarread #contemporaryfiction #familydrama #mystery

THE AUTHOR: She lives in Sydney with her husband, son and daughter. When she’s not writing she can be found reading, demanding coffee, being taken for a brisk walk by her Labrador, skiing like she’s thirty years younger than she is, recovering from skiing injuries, talking to old friends about getting old, and begging her children for help with technology.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Pan Macmillan Australia via Netgalley for providing a digital ARC of Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

For an explanation of my rating system please refer to my Goodreads.com profile page or the about page on sandysbookaday.wordpress.com

This review is also published on Twitter, Amazon, Instagram and my webpage https://sandysbookaday.wordpress.com/...
Profile Image for Julie .
4,206 reviews38.1k followers
November 17, 2021
Apples Never Fall by Lianne Moriarty is a 2021 Henry Holt and Co. Publication.

This one had my name on it!

The Delaney family was destined to be a tennis dynasty of sorts. Joy and Stan ran a tennis school, but while all their children played tennis, none of them made it into the pros...

The children are all grown now, with various occupations, and riddled with various life challenges, but everything comes to a crashing halt when Joy goes missing.

Switching back and forth in time, we learn that once Joy is left with an empty nest, a chance encounter with a troubled young woman named Savannah, morphs into a full-fledged bond for Joy, bordering on a mother/daughter type relationship between the women.

We also learn of Stan’s massive career disappointments, mainly being dropped as the coach for a student who went on to massive success in the tennis world.

Each of the Delaney children are given a voice, and each is as different as night and day, except that each harbors resentments, disappointments, and suffer from relationship woes. Each responds differently to their mother’s sudden disappearance.

We also get an up close and personal glimpse inside Joy and Stan’s marriage. To anyone who knows them, the couple is the epitome of a perfect marriage- on and off the tennis court. Of course, everything is not always as it seems…

I really liked this book and for anyone who knows me, that will come as no surprise. I’m always up for a good family saga and it’s even better if there’s a mystery involved in there somewhere, too.

The story, for those who are looking primarily for a thriller, goes much deeper than what is on the surface. Joy’s disappearance is a catalyst for the Delaney’s, as memories surface cataloguing the many familial resentments, misunderstanding, and secrets - past and present - that bubble up to the surface.

The mystery, the ‘gotcha’ moment, which sort of made me laugh, since I already had my suspicions, might be too much for some- and I get that- but the mystery, in my opinion, was mainly a means to an end.

At the heart of the story is the character study of a family, and life.

Moriarty nails family and human dynamics- even if our lives are nothing like the Delaney’s, there’s recognition in there, all the same.

While the criminal element is quirky, and perhaps the weakest link in the story, overall, I think the author is going for something deeper here.

I thought the story was brilliant- smart, clever, thought provoking and entertaining.

4 stars
Profile Image for Phrynne.
3,839 reviews2,588 followers
September 22, 2021
Another excellent novel from this talented Australian author. She really knows how to delve into relationships, and expose all the secrets between families and friends. At the same time she writes a good story which keeps the reader engaged and hanging out for each new page to see what happens next.

Apples Never Fall is a family saga centering around the Delaney family. Joy and Stan, the parents, are still married after fifty years, and are still playing up a storm on the tennis court at 69 and 70. Their four children Amy, Brooke, Troy and Logan, are all adults who have a bit of growing up still to do. There are a lot of childhood grievances hanging around and affecting their relationships and lives.

Things come to a head when a family member disappears, another is suspected of murder and the others begin to take sides. It is a well designed mystery plot which continues throughout the book and kept me turning the pages until very late at night. There is a surprise ending which rounds everything up beautifully.

I only had one criticism - the book does not stop at what was for me the obvious high point. It meanders along for several more chapters, like an epilogue, telling me all sorts of things which were nice to know but meant the book wound down to a stop instead stopping at the crescendo. Sometimes I think not everything needs to be explained. It's a small point though and lots of people probably will like the added details.

Altogether this is an excellent book and just as enjoyable as all her others.

Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this book.
Profile Image for Baba.
3,940 reviews1,394 followers
January 30, 2024
Joy Delaney, one-time very successful tennis school and trainer with her husband, with four grown up kids and now in her seventies, has gone missing, leaving zero trace or trail of where she has gone , or indeed of any foul play. This story shares the tales of the family members as memories and incidences are brought up in the police investigation of her disappearance.

From the wrote that gave me the gem that is comes another beautiful layered and graduated read set in Urban middle-class Australia, with multiple interesting characters and character journeys tied to numerous mysteries that all feed into the core 'mum is missing' story. Some of the sub-arcs feature characters pondering whether a damaging negative trait of a forebear will pass on to them, hence the the book title.

I am fast becoming a fan of Lianne Moriarty's modern mystery-dramas with her near perfect take on interpersonal and intrafamily relationships, as well as between the sexes. This book has a pretty cool take on sibling rivalry as well. She also give great dialogue; that expertly uses speech and human interactions to tell the reader as much as descriptive chapters do in other books. On top of this all, she has a great sense of humour that is deftly used throughout this compelling with a hint of farce or satire. A recommend writer and book, I gave this one a firm 8 out of 12, Four Stars.

2024 read
Profile Image for NILTON TEIXEIRA.
1,205 reviews540 followers
November 21, 2021
Book = 467 pages totalling 144k words.
Number of times a word appears:
Mother = 494
Father = 271
Dad = 253
Tennis = 244
Girl = 237
Love = 217
Parents = 176
Mum = 152
Body = 65
Migraine = 57
Hate= 51
Apple = 44
Crumble = 27…

71 chapters.

Average reading time: 11 to 12 hours (less than 8 for me).

Audiobook: 18.1 hours (at normal speed)

I know that I’m bored when I start counting words.

Anyways… this book started very well and I thought that I was in for a good ride.
Although I enjoyed the writing, the humour and the book structure, I did find it a bit boring and pointless. I did not even feel that entertained. I do think that it could have been reduced by 150 pages.
I like reading stories around dysfunctional families, but here I thought that everything was too shallow. The fact that I wasn’t connected with any of the characters was not a problem, but I wish that I was able to feel something instead of numbness.
I also tried the audiobook (borrowed from the public library) narrated by Caroline Lee, but unfortunately her voice is too squeaky for my ears and I couldn’t stand it.
As for the conclusion, the author added a small section that includes the current pandemic, perhaps to make this book more current, but I don’t think that it was necessary, as it added nothing to the drama. Then we have the solution of the mystery, which wasn’t what I expected.
So, why 3 stars?
Because of her writing.
There is a quality that I can’t ignore and it’s also so unpretentious, just the way I like.
Profile Image for PattyMacDotComma.
1,720 reviews1,013 followers
August 24, 2021
3.5★
“She would say, Here is one possible motive and here is another, because any marriage of that many years has multiple motives for murder. Every police officer and hairdresser knows that.”


There used to be an ad for hair colouring that said “only her hairdresser knows for sure”. Well, this is what Joy’s hairdresser said after Joy went missing.

Moriarty is great at putting together an ensemble of players with identifiable voices and characteristics. The Delaneys are a family of six, parents Joy and Stan with their two sons and two daughters, all independent adults. The parents met playing tennis and have only just retired from their successful tennis coaching business. The kids played at different levels, and if you’re a tennis fan, you’ll probably appreciate the background.

Another character, Savannah, is introduced early in the piece, and she is something else again. She arrives on a rainy night, out of the blue, knocks on the senior Delaneys’ front door, and with an empty nest, Joy welcomes her in. Joy has been worried about her memory and wonders if she's supposed to know this girl and has forgotten her.

“She was only familiar in the way everyone seemed familiar these days. They’d just let a stranger into the house. She checked for signs of criminal tendencies and found none, although she wasn’t exactly sure how those tendencies would manifest themselves. The nose stud was really quite pretty.”

Joy dives right in, cleans her up with a special bubble bath, finds some of Amy’s old clothes for her, and settles her in “Amy’s” room.

“Amy, their eldest, their ‘free spirit’ as Joy liked to call her, their ‘problem child’ as Stan liked to call her, was turning forty next year, and she hadn’t officially lived at home for two decades, but she still used her old bedroom as a kind of permanent storage unit, because she never seemed to settle at one address long enough to properly relocate her possessions.”

Amy also has blue hair and lives in a share house. Sister Brooke is a physiotherapist who goes to sports days secretly hoping for injured players she can recruit for treatment. Their brothers, Troy (financially successful trader in NYC) and Logan (fit, always employed locally), gather together with their sisters to try to figure out where their mother has gone.

And who is this Savannah person who seems to have been living with their parents, doing all the cooking? The parents obviously loved having her there for a long time, but she's gone, too.

We hear about Amy’s alternative lifestyle, Brooke’s migraines (and physio work), Troy’s expensive tastes and flashy cars and life in New York, and a bit about Logan’s rather quiet life in their hometown. He’s a decent man, often wearing rough work clothes.

“He was a big, solid guy and he knew he should dress more respectably because women sometimes crossed to the other side of the street if they saw him walking behind them at night. He always wanted to shout out his apologies.”

I do feel for these fellows who seem scary for no fault of their own. But as much as I enjoyed the individual characters and the last 25% or so of the story, the first three-quarters was so slow and (I hate to say it) boring that if it hadn’t been Liane Moriarty writing, I’d have abandoned it before the story picked up. I kept thinking (hoping, hoping!) something would happen that would explain why the beginning was so uninspiring.

Having said that, I can see this easily being the basis for another mini-series. The cast possibilities are endless, and I reckon a good script with more suspense and bite could easily be developed from this. The premise is good and the ending is good. It's just way too slow getting there.

Thanks to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan for the copy for review. I’ll still look forward to her next one.
Profile Image for Lucy.
510 reviews122 followers
September 28, 2021
What a tangled story ... and I loved it all!

The Delaneys are a flawed, complicated, and extremely close family. Add to that Savannah, with her own faults, issues, and shady agenda. Together, they are quite an unforgettable group of characters.

This is an intricate character-driven story full of surprises. I was hooked by the mystery and revelations, and really felt I got to know all the characters. Told in alternating timelines (Then and Now) and multiple POVs (main characters and community), it's a well rounded and captivating story. I loved the humor and perspective the story offered, while tackling some serious issues.

I've read every book Liane Moriarty has written, and this one's now my favorite. I highly recommend the audiobook. As usual, Caroline Lee did a fantastic job bringing another one of the author's books to life.
Profile Image for chan ☆.
1,245 reviews58.6k followers
October 31, 2021
kind of makes me laugh that i was bitching about middle aged couples and their portrayal in thrillers and then this book comes along
Profile Image for Jennifer ~ TarHeelReader.
2,567 reviews31.7k followers
September 20, 2021
Do you have a favorite Liane Moriarty book? I’m a fan, and I think this one is mine, but then I always think her latest book is my favorite! 😍

Apples Never Fall is the story of the Delaney family. They are peas in a pod, those Delaneys. One day the mother, Joy, goes missing, and the Delaney father, Stan, is the prime suspect in her disappearance. Married for over fifty years, they seem like the perfect power couple ready to enjoy a new stage of life together. That said, they are beyond unhappy. The Delaneys have four adult children together.

A stranger named Savannah appears one night, and the Delaneys allow her to stay. That’s when Joy goes missing, and only Stan is left holding the bag when his wife (and Savannah) are gone. Two children side with Stan in his innocence, but the other two aren’t so sure. Who do you believe?

This is a juicy little mystery with a WOW ending I never saw coming. Lots of family drama in these pages, and a well-written, engaging story to boot. I already have hopes we’ll see it on the small screen one day. Well-done!

I received a gifted copy.

Many of my reviews can also be found on my blog: www.jennifertarheelreader.com and instagram: www.instagram.com/tarheelreader
Profile Image for Kelly (and the Book Boar).
2,759 reviews9,302 followers
October 6, 2021
“The police might be calling it a missing persons investigation, but anyone with a brain knows they’re treating it as a murder investigation.”

Family drama, a random stranger appearing at the family home in the night, a missing woman and a husband who probably did it???? I mean this sounds like my cup of tea. Oh AND it’s by Liane Moriarty. What’s not to love?

Now where did I leave that Tina Belcher gif????? Oh yeah, here it is . . . . .



This was a huge hit for all of my friends, but I’m sad to report it missed the mark a bit – okay a lot – for me. For as much of a fan I am of family dysfunction I should have been falling all over myself. And I was …. right up to the point where I got my hands on a copy. At first I placed the blame on our air conditioning shooting craps in an Autumn that refuses to not be 90+ outside every day. So I put it aside and waited until the repairman worked his magic and I was no longer a fat, sweaty, whiny baby. But unfortunately I still didn’t connect. The pacing here was slooooooooow and could have easily been dropped by 100 pages. And for as much time as I had to spend with each of the characters i felt like I really didn’t get to know them beyond their flaws and medical ailments. I predicted the first big reveal nearly immediately because …. well, duh and had to wait what seemed like an eternity for confirmation my guess was correct. Moriarity did perform her typical magic trip of weaving together random nuggets dropped throughout the story into an ending that tied everything up in a big bow. That should have redeemed some of my grumblings, but still - soooooooo many pages getting to the good stuff and then 50+ more at the end rather than just wrapping things up. Whyyyyyyy? Not to mention those “random nuggets” I’m a fan of? Turns out I’m not so much of a fan when I’m beaten over the head with reminders about them over and over again. Kind of takes the fun out of the big reveal when you’re just waiting for that magnet to come back into play somewhere. And pleeeeeeaaaaase stop with all new books containing some sort of “shoutout” to the pandemic. Most of us read to escape the real world so this shit has already gotten old.

Moriarty’s books have worked great as limited run series adaptations. They are full of quality characters and developments and action that keeps you tuning in each week. There’s zero chance this could keep my attention for more than a two hour film, if that, and this is one time where the Lifetime channel quality plot wasn’t enough to satisfy me : (

2.5 Stars
Profile Image for Denise.
509 reviews411 followers
July 23, 2021
Ahh it doesn't get much better than a family which loves one another dearly - so much in fact, that they just want to murder each other sometimes, and may have done just that. I must admit, I was not a big fan of Liane Moriarty's previous two books, but this one reminded me of why Moriarty has been one of my go-to authors for years!

The Delaney family is the envy of their Australian community - everyone knows them and loves this tennis-obsessed family. Not only did parents, Stan and Joy, once run a successful school where they coached renowned tennis players, including their four now-adult children; they still successfully compete in doubles tournaments in their golden years. All appears to be perfect until one night a stranger named Savannah knocks on Stan and Joy’s door, and life changes for them all. Fast forward less than a year later, and Joy Delaney disappears, and Stan's suspicious behavior places him as suspect numero uno, and even their children have doubts. Once Joy disappears, everyone speculates what exactly went on in the Delaney household after Savannah entered their lives, and the Delaney children begin evaluating their parents’ marriage and their family history with fresh, suspicious eyes.

Interestingly, although the storyline focuses largely on a missing woman and a husband accused, it really isn't the focal point of the book. It is more about complex family relationships and rivalries, and is part contemporary fiction, part mystery. I love Moriarty's use of wry humor, even in an intense family drama. I also found it very clever how past and present day were weaved together in alternating chapters, not only with the main characters, but also with random secondary characters - it added an interesting touch to the back stories. Although this one doesn't contain the shocking, fantastical moments that some of her other books do, in signature Moriarty fashion, the plot takes numerous twist and turns, and the characters become more relatable with every chapter. I couldn't put it down, as I needed to find out what happened to Joy.

The one thing I will say is that it is a LONG book, and I felt like it could have been a hundred pages shorter without taking anything away from the plot. I also thought that the sudden jump to COVID-world at the very end of the book felt out of place and forced - it just wasn't necessary. Overall, though, I found this to be a gripping family drama that deftly explores how parental expectation, even unintended, can become toxic to an entire family. 4 stars.
Profile Image for Deanna .
734 reviews13.2k followers
November 20, 2021

I love Liane Moriarty and was excited to read this even before I knew what it was about. After reading the synopsis I really couldn't wait to get my hands on it. I was super hyped. Then of course I started to worry that I was going to be let down.

Nope! I LOVED it. I was gripped right from the start and while I was curious to find out how it was going to end, I was sad when it was over. I've seen some mixed reviews (obviously we're not all going to love all the books) but for me, this was a hit.

Really hope we don't have to wait to long for the next Liane Moriarty novel!

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