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Truly madly guilty  Cover Image Book Book

Truly madly guilty / Liane Moriarty.

Moriarty, Liane, (author.).

Summary:

"The new novel from Liane Moriarty, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Husband's Secret, Big Little Lies, and What Alice Forgot, about how sometimes we don't appreciate how extraordinary our ordinary lives are until it's too late. "What a wonderful writer--smart, wise, funny." --Anne Lamott Six responsible adults. Three cute kids. One small dog. It's just a normal weekend. What could possibly go wrong? In Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty turns her unique, razor-sharp eye towards three seemingly happy families. Sam and Clementine have a wonderful, albeit, busy life: they have two little girls, Sam has just started a new dream job and Clementine, a cellist, is busy preparing for the audition of a lifetime. If there's anything they can count on, it's each other. Clementine and Erika are each other's oldest friends. A single look between them can convey an entire conversation. But theirs is a complicated relationship, so when Erika mentions a last minute invitation to a barbecue with her neighbors, Tiffany and Vid, Clementine and Sam don't hesitate. Having Tiffany and Vid's larger than life personalities there will be a welcome respite. Two months later, it won't stop raining, and Clementine and Sam can't stop asking themselves the question: What if we hadn't gone? In Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty takes on the foundations our lives: marriage, sex, parenthood, and friendship. She shows how guilt can expose the fault lines in the most seemingly strong relationships, how what we don't say can be more powerful than what we do, and how sometimes it is the most innocent of moments that can do the greatest harm"-- Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250069795 :
  • ISBN: 1250069793 :
  • Physical Description: 418 pages ; 25 cm
  • Edition: First U.S. edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Flatiron Books, 2016.
Subject: Couples > Fiction.
Friendship > Fiction.
Female Friendship > Fiction
Male-Female Romance > Fiction
Marriage > Fiction
Family > Fiction
FICTION / Family Life.
FICTION / Contemporary Women.
FICTION / Psychological.
Genre: Domestic fiction.

Available copies

  • 43 of 49 copies available at Sitka.
  • 1 of 1 copy available at McBride & District Public Library. (Show preferred library)

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
McBride Fic Gen-Fic Mor (Text) 35191000273728 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Beaver Valley Public Library F MOR (Text) 35144000156492 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Bibliothèque Ste-Anne Library FIC MOR (Text) 31511010022958 English Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Bowen Island Public Library F MOR (Text) 30947000493334 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Bren Del Win Centennial Library F Moriarty (Text) 36320000332460 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Burns Lake Public Library AF MOR (Text) 35198000596404 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Castlegar Public Library FIC MOR (Text) 35146001987015 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Chetwynd Public Library FIC MOR (Text) 35222000946128 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Creston Public Library FIC MOR (Text)
Acquisition Type: New
35140100008898 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Dawson Creek Municipal Public Library F MOR (Text) DCL156677 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2016 October #1
    A spontaneous barbecue upends the lives of three couples in suburban Sydney. Awkward, bookish Erika and her loving nerd of a husband, Oliver, plan a quiet dinner with her childhood best friend, cellist Clementine, and her husband, Sam. They have something important to talk about, away from their adorable but nosy children. The plans go awry, though, when their loud, affable neighbor, Vid, invites them for a barbecue, and, sure, why not, bring Clementine and Sam and the kids, too. An awkward afternoon turns more serious and affects each couple in different, deep ways. Moriarty plays with the timeline, only revealing bits of the fateful barbecue as Clementine fights for her marriage, Erika deals with her own family drama, and all of Sydney is drenched by weeks of rain. The characters are terrific, especially Vid and his sexpot wife, Tiffany, and even Erika, with her many, many neuroses. Readers of Moriarty's previous summer thrillers may find this one less thrilling than The Husband's Secret (2013) or Big Little Lies (2014), but nobody skewers the suburbs with as much affection as she does. Copyright 2016 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2016 August
    Drawing drama out of everyday life

    We're all one step away from disaster, and Australian author Liane Moriarty knows it. One day, the sun is shining and you're attending a backyard barbecue with friends and neighbors; two months later, it's pouring rain and you can't stop blaming yourself for what happened on that last sunny day.

    So what did happen in that backyard? To say would shatter the considerable suspense of Truly Madly Guilty. But we can reveal that it involved a child, and that it was so troubling that Clementine is taking breaks from practicing for a crucial audition (she's a cellist) to give talks with the sobering title "One Ordinary Day" at suburban libraries around Sydney.

    Even Moriarty (whose first name is pronounced Lee-ann, if you're wondering) has trouble talking about this one. "With my other books, I've been able to tell the whole story of how I was inspired to write it, but in this case it will give away far too much," she says during a call to her home in Sydney. "So all I'm able to say is that something happened at a barbecue, and I went home with the idea for this book."

    The good thing about a Moriarty novel is that even if there's one plot development you can't discuss, there are plenty of others to choose from. Like Kate Atkinson, Moriarty is a master at taking several seemingly disparate plot threads and weaving them all together with a bang at the end. Also like Atkinson's novels, Moriarty's work is difficult to classify.

    "If I am at a party and—well, I don't say this, usually my husband will show off for me and say, ‘My wife's an author'—but then, the first question is, what sort of books do you write. It's a reasonable question, but I struggle with how to describe them. I tend to say something like ‘family drama,' but I've never found exactly the right description for them," Moriarty says. "I love it when other people describe them for me. I don't think you can see your own books."

    Call them what you will, it's plain to see that Moriarty has hit a sweet spot for readers. Her stories are full of twists and drama, but they are grounded enough in middle-class reality to elicit a frisson of "it could happen to you," and they feature flawed but relatable characters. In her first bestseller, The Husband's Secret, Moriarty followed the repercussions of a long-ago murder on a community and explored trust within a marriage; in Big Little Lies, she took on spousal abuse, bullying and the parenting wars. Truly Madly Guilty touches on growing up with neglectful parents, negotiating a lifelong friendship and finding a balance between career and family life. But mostly, it deals with guilt and the way it affects relationships, especially the central relationship between childhood friends Clementine and Erika. 

    Now in their 30s, the two women became friends as children, thanks to the prodding of Clementine's mother, Pam, who saw that the withdrawn and awkward Erika needed a friend. Soon Erika was an honorary member of the family, to Clementine's chagrin. 

    "I was really interested in that because I had just been reading a lot about how people in difficult family circumstances end up sort of couchsurfing," says Moriarty. "They're not officially fostered or adopted, but they end up becoming part of another family, which is a wonderful thing, but then I also started to think about what happens if one of the family feels a bit resentful about that."

    The popular, beautiful Clementine does feel a bit resentful of Erika, but she feels guilty for this after she realizes why Erika needs a sanctuary: Her mother, Sylvia, is a hoarder. Over the decades, Clementine has maintained her relationship with Erika, though they're still polar opposites. Erika is godmother to Clementine and her husband Sam's oldest daughter; she has a successful accounting career and is married to the sweet and serious Oliver, who also had a difficult childhood. But Clementine continues to have complicated feelings about Erika, who, she says, "wasn't evil or cruel or stupid, she was simply annoying. . . . It was like she was allergic to her." 

    Obviously, Moriarty doesn't pull punches in writing about the intricacies of friendship, marriage and family. In Truly Madly Guilty, she expands her range to dive more deeply into the minds of her male characters, something she says readers have requested. "I made a conscious decision to explore [men] more, but perhaps that criticism was in the back of my head," she says. Moriarty says she had the most fun writing Vid, the Slovenian neighbor who hosts the barbecue. His boisterous demeanor makes it hard for even his wife to realize how hard he was hit by the events that happened that afternoon. 

    But there are also lighter moments. Early in the book, Sam tries to help Clementine practice for her cello audition by setting up a mock audition in the family's living room; his well-meaning gesture goes hilariously wrong thanks to 2-year-old Ruby and her constant companion, Whisk (yes, an actual kitchen whisk that sleeps next to Ruby in a tissue-paper-lined box).

    Balancing a creative life with family is something Moriarty, the mother of two young children, can identify with. "I have no experience as a musician, but if you're working toward an audition, you really need to give all of yourself, which is the way I tend to feel just toward the end of the book. I want to be writing all the time, and I don't want to be distracted." 

    Luckily, the success of Moriarty's writing has allowed her family some flexibility. "My husband is Mr. Mom: He's a full-time stay-at-home dad. So my life is beautifully balanced, and I feel very lucky," she says.

    Moriarty never re-reads her own books after writing them ("eating something other people have cooked for you just tastes better"), but she has enjoyed the process of seeing them translated on screen. Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman optioned Big Little Lies soon after it was published. Both actors are starring in the limited series, which has completed filming and will air on HBO in 2017. 

    "I went along to see the filming and because there are all these beautiful, talented people looking wonderful, and David E. Kelley has written a script based on my book, that feels quite different to me. I got to see Nicole Kidman and Alexander Skarsgård in a scene. Because they were doing it so well, I was thinking to myself, oh, that's quite good, I hope that part was mine and not David E. Kelley's."

    For those wondering if we'll get to hear Witherspoon attempt an Australian accent, the answer is (sadly) no: Kelley's adaptation is set in Monterey, California. "They've made it all American," Moriarty laughs. "But the school parenting experience seems to be universal. I think there are a lot of similarities between California and Sydney, so I'm quite happy with that."

    Big Little Lies was the first of Moriarty's novels to debut at number one on the New York Times bestseller list—and the first time a book by an Australian had debuted in the top spot. "We've looked hard! Obviously other Australian authors have gotten to number one, but no one else has debuted at number one," she says. 

    Surprisingly, her success in America came before she was a bestseller in Australia. "It was my lovely American readers who broke me out. I had a nice group of Australian readers, very loyal readers, who like to point out now that they were with me from the beginning," she says. 

    More readers have come to Moriarty with every book; Truly Madly Guilty is lucky number seven. We predict there will soon be many more readers buzzing about that barbecue.

     

    This article was originally published in the August 2016 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2017 August
    Book clubs: Philosophy served here

    Sarah Bakewell pays tribute to some of the modern era's greatest thinkers in the intriguing nonfiction book At the Existentialist Café. Focusing on Paris in the 1930s, Bakewell delivers a fascinating account of philosophers Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, whose careers converged in the City of Light, and whose radical new ideas shaped the existentialist movement. Bakewell skillfully lays out a history of the movement, which espoused individual freedom and personal choice. Appearances by literary heavyweights like Iris Murdoch, Albert Camus, James Baldwin and Richard Wright add to the grandeur of her tale. Unsurprisingly, Sartre—who could be tyrannical and cold-natured—looms largest in this masterful group portrait. As Bakewell demonstrates, his ideas informed both the feminist and gay rights movements. Fans of literary history and philosophy will find much to savor in her elegant chronicle of Paris during its intellectual prime.

    ONE FATEFUL SUMMER
    Set in Asheville, North Carolina, Ron Rash's The Risen is a suspenseful Southern tale about fractured families and the ways in which the past infiltrates the present. During the summer of 1969, the lives of brothers Bill and Eugene Watney are forever altered when they meet a free-spirited, fun-loving child of the times named Ligeia. Ligeia has come to North Carolina from Florida to stay with her clean-cut relatives. To the Watney boys—especially younger brother Eugene—she's a seductive, out-of-the-ordinary figure. When she goes missing, the questions surrounding her disappearance cause ripples throughout their small community. The novel is narrated by a middle-aged Eugene, now a struggling writer with a drinking problem. The experiences of that long-ago summer take on fresh meaning for him when the skeleton of a woman is discovered in a creek. The story of what happened to Ligeia makes for a taut page-turner of a novel. Rash's many gifts as a writer are on full display in this haunting tale.

    TOP PICK FOR BOOK CLUBS
    In her compelling novel Truly Madly Guilty, Liane Moriarty explores the challenges of relationships through her resonant portrayal of three families. Old friends Erika and Clementine are opposites. Clementine, a cellist and mother of two, leads a somewhat topsy-turvy life, while slightly neurotic Erika works as an accountant. When the women and their families are invited to a barbecue at the home of Erika's affluent neighbors, the alcohol-infused afternoon is interrupted by an upsetting incident that alters the perspectives of everyone present. As the novel progresses, Moriarty skillfully depicts the sense of guilt and regret felt by the partygoers. Exploring the ways in which seemingly insignificant choices can shape a life, she delivers a convincing, compassionate account of tested friendships and frayed marriages. Fans of Moriarty's previous bestsellers, including Big Little Lies and The Husband's Secret, won't be disappointed by this absorbing, sharply executed novel.

     

    This article was originally published in the August 2017 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2017 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2016 May #2
    Relying less on comedy or edginess than in previous novels (Big Little Lies, 2014, etc.), Moriarty explores the social and psychological repercussions of a barbecue in Sydney gone terribly awry. What happened emerges slowly through glimpses of characters coping—or not coping—weeks after the event intercut with an unfolding chronicle of the actual barbecue day. Both past and present are seen through the eyes of those remembering, who have been affected very differently by the events. Leading up to the barbecue, Erika and her husband, Oliver, accountants whose buttoned-up personalities compensate for miserable upbringings (in Erika's case by a hoarder and in Oliver's by alcoholics), have invited Erika's childhood friend Clementine, a cellist preparing for an important audition, her husband, Sam, and two small children, 2-year-old Ruby and 5-year-old Holly, for afternoon tea and are nervously planning to ask Clementine to donate eggs to help them have a baby. Oliver is understandably upset when Erika accepts a spur-of-the-moment invitation from their wealthy, very sociable neighbor, Vid, to bring everyone over to his backyard for a barbecue. But Clementine, who was instinctively dreading Erika's tea, jumps at the chance for a lively afternoon with Vid, his sexy wife, Tiffany, and their brainy 10-year-old daughter, Dakota. While Dakota watches the smaller girls, the adults proceed to get mildly sloshed. Then Erika, drunk for the first time in her life, screams, and a child ends up in a life-threatening situation. The suspicion and guilt the adults and even children secretly feel in the aftermath cause rifts and secrets to surface within the three marriages and within Erika and Clementine's friendship. The setup here is reminiscent of fellow Australian novelist Christos Tsiokas' The Slap (2008), but while Tsiokas uses a minor incident to propel his corrosive examination of middle-class lives, Moriarty's characters resolve their issues too neatly and with too much comforting ease. Not one of Moriarty's best outings. Copyright Kirkus 2016 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2016 July #1

    Three couples, one ordinary day, one barbecue. Clementine and Sam have a rock-solid marriage and are parents to two beautiful little girls. Clementine's best friend Erika and her husband, Oliver, enjoy their child-free lifestyle. Friends since their youth, Clementine and Erika have a complicated relationship. Tiffany and Vid enjoy entertaining in their mansion with the sprawling backyard, but they have their secrets. They all come together when Vid invites Erika and Oliver to their house for a cookout at the last minute, and she in turn, invites Clementine, Sam, and their girls. What starts out as an ordinary afternoon quickly takes a turn for the worse. Moriarty's fans will rejoice at her latest title (after Big Little Lies), as she tackles marriage, parenthood, friendship, and sex, in this provocative and gripping read. Alternating between present day and the day of the barbecue, the author builds suspense, keeping readers on the edge of their seats wondering what happened to cause such fallout among the couples. VERDICT This novel sheds light on the truths that we all fear as parents, spouses, and friends. It's perfect for those long summer days, but readers will have to pace themselves to not devour it in one sitting. [See Prepub Alert, 2/21/16.]—Erin Holt, Williamson Cty. P.L., Franklin, TN

    [Page 81]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • PW Annex Reviews : Publishers Weekly Annex Reviews

    In bestseller Moriarty's (Big Little Lies) latest, one small decision—going to a barbecue—reverberates through the lives of the six adults. Childhood friends Erika and Clementine couldn't be more different. Obsessive-compulsive Erika is married to Oliver; both are accountants, and they have no children. Clementine is a disorganized classical cellist with a husband, Sam, and two small children, Holly and Ruby. These two families are unexpectedly invited to a barbecue at the opulent home of Erika's neighbors: wealthy and vivacious Vid; his "smoking hot" wife, Tiffany; and their 10-year-old daughter, Dakota. During what is supposed to be an ordinary afternoon of food, drink, and lively conversation among people just beginning to become friends, a harrowing event deeply affects all these characters, forcing them to closely examine their choices, not only of that day but of their entire lives, and the effects of those choices. The novel holds back the meat of the story until the reader is about to burst with curiosity, but this technique strangely doesn't feel like torture; it gives readers a chance to consider the endless possibilities of every moment. (July)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2016 PWxyz LLC

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