Truly Madly Guilty (Moriarty) - Book Reviews

Book Reviews
Sadly, there is too much trope and too much tease in Liane Moriarty's Truly, Madly, Guilty for it to stand up well in comparison to her previous novels—Big Little Lies or What Alice Forgot. In this latest, the women come off as cliches—the stripper with a heart of gold, the childless woman who desperately wants children, and the talented artist, haunted and insecure.  READ MORE.
Cara Kless - LitLovers


Truly Madly Guilty…[is] about the day of a terrible, terrible barbecue, and features only a small group of characters. They are well delineated and saddled with various pathologies. (Ms. Moriarty is quite good with this kind of detail.) But hey, it’s just a barbecue. How earthshaking can the fallout be? The author does her damnedest to make it seem colossally important. She gives each character enough baggage for a world tour, even though this is just an afternoon in a showy suburban backyard in Sydney.… [I]t’s a shame to see her resort to the level of contrivance that this book requires.
Janet Maslin - New York Times


Ms. Moriarty’s shining talent in Truly Madly Guilty is her uncanny ability to get into the mind of her well-developed characters, turn the mirror on the reader and make you think about your own relationships, both past and present. All those feelings of elation, adoration, complacency, regret and selfishness? I had them all while reading this book, and I truly couldn’t be more thankful for it.
Dominic DeAngelo - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


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.
Publishers Weekly


What's worse than a terrible riot at Pirriwee Public's annual school Trivia Night that leaves one parent dead? The sneaking suspicion that the death was actually murder.
Library Journal


[A] barbecue in Sydney gone terribly awry. What happened emerges slowly through glimpses of characters coping—or not coping.… Moriarty’s characters resolve their issues too neatly and with too much comforting ease. Not one of Moriarty's best outings.
Kirkus Reviews

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