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Big Little Lies: The gripping book behind the award-winning TV series from the multi-million copy selling author Kindle Edition

4.4 out of 5 stars 161,998 ratings

DISCOVER THE GRIPPING NO. 1 BESTSELLER BEHIND THE AWARD WINNING HBO SENSATION STARRING REESE WITHERSPOON, NICOLE KIDMAN & MERYL STREEP
____________

Perfect families, perfect houses, perfect lives.


Three mothers, Jane, Madeline and Celeste appear to have it all, until they find out just how easy it is for one little lie to spiral out of control . . .


Single mum Jane has just moved to town. She's got her little boy in tow - plus a secret she's been carrying for five years.

On the first day of the school run she meets Madeline - a force to be reckoned with, who remembers everything and forgives no one - and Celeste, the kind of beautiful woman who makes the world stop and stare, but is inexplicably ill at ease.

They both take Jane under their wing - while careful to keep their own secrets under wraps.

But a minor incident involving the children of all three women rapidly escalates: playground whispers become spiteful rumours until no one can tell the truth from the lies . . .

It was always going to end in tears, but how did it end in murder?
_____________


'Blame and guilt, forgiveness and retribution, love and betrayal. A tense, page-turning story . . . a great read'
Mail on Sunday

'Blending romance, comedy and mystery, this is a wonderful book - full of brains, guts and heart'
Sunday Mirror

'A hell of a good book. Funny and scary'
Stephen King

'Brilliant, standout, superbly clever. Moriarty writes vividly, wittily and wickedly'
Sunday Express

Popular Highlights in this book

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

An Amazon Best Book of the Month, July 2014: What is it about Liane Moriarty’s books that makes them so irresistible? They’re just classic “domestic” novels about marriage, motherhood, and modern upper-middle-class family life, after all. And despite the fact that Big Little Lies is Moriarty’s sixth adult novel (and it comes decades after the grandmother of this kind of thing, Bridget Jones’ Diary), it is remarkably new and fresh and winning Set in an Australian suburb, Big Little Lies focuses on three women, all of whom have children at the same preschool. One is a great beauty married to a fabulously rich businessman; they have a “perfect” set of twins. One is the can-do mom who can put together a mean pre-school art project but can’t prevent her teenage daughter from preferring her divorced dad. The third is a withdrawn, single mother who doesn’t quite fit in. Right from the start--thanks to a modern “Greek chorus” that narrates the action--we know that someone is going to end up dead. The questions are who and how. Miraculously, Moriarty keeps this high concept plot aloft, largely because she infuses it with such wit and heart. She also knows not to overplay the message she’s sending: that we all tell lies--to each other and, more importantly, to ourselves. --Sara Nelson

Review

Praise for Big Little Lies

“If you're looking for a novel that will turn you into a compulsive book-finisher look no further. Moriarty has produced another gripping, satirical hit...It’s can’t-put-downability comes from its darker subplots...A book that will make you appreciate the long days of summer.”—Oprah.com

"The secrets burrowed in this seemingly placid small town...are so suburban noir they would make David Lynch clap with glee...[Moriarty] is a fantastically nimble writer, so sure-footed that the book leaps between dark and light seamlessly; even the big reveal in the final pages feels earned and genuinely shocking.”—
Entertainment Weekly

“Reading one [of Liane Moriarty's novels] is a bit like drinking a pink cosmo laced with arsenic...a fun, engaging and sometimes disturbing read…Moriarty is back in fine form.”—
USA Today

“A hell of a good book. Funny and scary.”—Stephen King

“Ms. Moriarty’s long-parched fans have something new to dig into...
Big Little Lies [may have] even more staying power than The Husband’s Secret.”—The New York Times

Big Little Lies tolls a warning bell about the big little lies we tell in order to survive. It takes a powerful stand against domestic violence even as it makes us laugh at the adults whose silly costume party seems more reminiscent of a middle-school dance.”—The Washington Post

“Irresistible…Moriarty’s sly humor and razor-sharp insights will keep you turning pages.”—
People

“Funny and thrilling, page-turning but with emotional depth,
Big Little Lies is a terrific follow-up to The Husband’s Secret.”—Booklist (starred review)

“Moriarty demonstrates an excellent talent for exposing the dark, seedy side of the otherwise ‘perfect’ family unit...Highly recommended.”—
Library Journal (starred review)

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00K8J3VCC
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 31, 2014
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ 1st
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 7.2 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 460 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1405916370
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 161,998 ratings

About the author

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Liane Moriarty
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Liane Moriarty is the Australian author of nine internationally best-selling novels: Three Wishes, The Last Anniversary, What Alice Forgot, The Hypnotist’s Love Story, Nine Perfect Strangers and the number one New York Times bestsellers: The Husband's Secret, Big Little Lies, Truly Madly Guilty and Apples Never Fall. Her books have been translated into over forty languages and sold more than 20 million copies.

Big Little Lies, Nine Perfect Strangers and Apples Never Fall were adapted into popular television series with the star-studded casts including Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Melissa McCarthy and Annette Bening.

Her new novel, Here One Moment will be released in 2024.

Liane lives in Sydney, Australia, together with her husband, son and daughter.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
161,998 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book well-written with a compelling story told from multiple perspectives, featuring well-rounded characters and a perfect mix of humor. The narrative keeps readers guessing throughout, and customers appreciate how it covers emotional territory and deals with difficult topics. While some customers describe it as a fast read, others find it slow at the beginning.

9,911 customers mention "Readability"9,459 positive452 negative

Customers find the book well-written and fun to read, with one customer describing it as a lampooning beach read.

"...mainly through the distinct voices of the three women in such a well written style that everything is flawlessly integrated since the very beginning...." Read more

"...laugh-out-loud funny and this author has such a great ear for both dialogue and description...." Read more

"...captivating, sickening, heartfelt, disturbing, funny, lovable, powerful, and heart wrenching; All in one little book...." Read more

"...And I need to mention that the narrator did a fantastic job and made my listening experience OUTSTANDING!!!" Read more

6,096 customers mention "Story quality"5,773 positive323 negative

Customers find the book's story compelling and relatable, with an interesting plot and multiple perspectives. They appreciate the suspense that builds throughout the narrative, with one customer noting its fresh "who done it" approach.

"...We can say that this is a mystery book in which we receive, at the end of each chapter, clues about a tragedy that will happen in the near future..." Read more

"This was a very powerful read. Mixed with humor and a very serious subject...." Read more

"What a great rollercoaster ride of a story, the author expertly blending humor with the more serious undertones that we all come across in our day..." Read more

"...wasn’t dominating in the overall plot, yet each individual story was so powerful and important that they could have each had a book and I would have..." Read more

3,046 customers mention "Character development"2,871 positive175 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, noting well-developed personalities with distinct quirks, and find the central women characters relatable.

"...nature. The author really has a way to create complex and rich characters and yet make them so real that they look like someone who lives next..." Read more

"...At the start of the book Jane helps out my favorite character - a woman named Madeline - who has turned her ankle when exiting her car while yelling..." Read more

"...Solid, relatable characters as well as pages that move as smoothly as skating on ice, what more could you ask for in a well written novel?..." Read more

"...The dynamic of the characters, adding these harrowing issues right into the lives of perfect, suburban life was so enticing...." Read more

3,014 customers mention "Humor"2,910 positive104 negative

Customers enjoy the humor in the book, describing it as a perfect mix of funny with laughs in equal measure, and appreciate that the author maintains a sense of humor throughout.

"...She has a special way of making the revelations because they always come out as a natural consequence of what was being said or done, and she also..." Read more

"...champion at the school and is everything Jane is not - she is popular and outgoing and happily married to her second husband, Ed...." Read more

"This was a very powerful read. Mixed with humor and a very serious subject...." Read more

"What a great rollercoaster ride of a story, the author expertly blending humor with the more serious undertones that we all come across in our day..." Read more

1,241 customers mention "Message quality"1,190 positive51 negative

Customers find the book insightful and masterful in its portrayal of human nature, with one customer noting how it deals with meaty topics and provides a new perspective on certain situations.

"...about friendship, betrayals, loyalty, marriage, second-marriage, parenting, self-esteem, along with abuse in domestic violence and bullying, all of..." Read more

"...There are some very serious issues covered here, like domestic abuse and jealousy and the difficulty of being a single-parent which are handled in..." Read more

"...It was funny, and poignant. And so on point regarding school politics and crazy parents...." Read more

"...At times this zips along like a soapy, pastiche of life in suburbia (Bullying in school! Petitions about dumb things! Head lice!)..." Read more

1,093 customers mention "Suspenseful"938 positive155 negative

Customers find the book suspenseful, noting it kept them guessing throughout with multiple layers of mystery.

"Brief summary and review, no spoilers...." Read more

"...This book is a mystery that keeps you on your toes, you'll never want to put your book down, and you'll never guess what will happen next!" Read more

"...trio of female leads (Madeline, Celeste and Jane), not only fueling your curiosity but also illustrating how people, in general, tend to come to..." Read more

"...I love how the present interviews interact with the past, how they keep you guessing, trying to figure out who did what when...." Read more

824 customers mention "Heartfelt"713 positive111 negative

Customers appreciate how the book covers emotional territory and is deeply serious, with one customer noting how it tugs at heartstrings.

"...Besides, she provides us with a broad range of emotional responses: moments of loud hearty laugh, moments of complete shock and moments of teary..." Read more

"This was a very powerful read. Mixed with humor and a very serious subject...." Read more

"...Big Little Lies is engaging, enthralling, captivating, sickening, heartfelt, disturbing, funny, lovable, powerful, and heart wrenching; All in one..." Read more

"...It was funny, and poignant. And so on point regarding school politics and crazy parents...." Read more

1,189 customers mention "Pacing"771 positive418 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some praising its great and exciting pace, while others find it dragging and slow, particularly noting that the story begins rather slowly.

"...She sets an exciting pace while ushering us between the hidden and the social lives of each character, displaying a special skill at unearthing the..." Read more

"...I mean, at first I was tortured by the pace, the whiny character voices, the skipping back and forth...." Read more

"...This book is a mystery that keeps you on your toes, you'll never want to put your book down, and you'll never guess what will happen next!" Read more

"...The format of the book was awesome. I love the countdown aspect to the main problem...." Read more

Moriarty is Captivating
5 out of 5 stars
Moriarty is Captivating
I am extremely picky when it comes to reading books. Liane Moriarty really captures my attention. Her characters are well developed and I find that I can learn from their experiences. When a book has the ability to change my perspective on life that is so powerful. I find myself wanting to go to bed earlier every night so that I can curl up with her book and escape. Thank you Moriarty for such great writing and interesting plot! I wish I could write I envy your talent.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2014
    ENGAGING, CAPTIVATING AND HEARTFELT

    A great book about lies and its consequences. An author that makes an approach that goes way beyond that, portraying the dynamics of human actions and conflicts with no Manichaeism.
    My first and pleasant experience with Liane Moriarty was through “The Husband’s Secret”, which drew my attention to the release of her new book “Big Little Lies”, and I can tell now that the latter gave me an even more delightful experience than the first. I was captivated from the very beginning and was gently involved in the story of the three main characters and their individual dramas.
    Madeline is a generous, unreserved 40 year-old-woman in her second marriage, always ready to fight against any injustice and having to deal with her teenage daughter who looks up to her new stepmother.
    Jane, who holds a big secret, is in her early twenties and a single mother of a 5-year-old boy who is accused of bullying and thus is seen as an outcast at school.
    Celeste is the astonishingly beautiful woman married with a rich handsome man whose marriage is far from perfect although being regarded as such by everybody around her.
    The main setting is the kindergarten attended by their children where most situations take place.
    We can say that this is a mystery book in which we receive, at the end of each chapter, clues about a tragedy that will happen in the near future in an school event called Trivia Night. The chapters are named as a countdown to this event once their titles tell us how long it takes for it to happen. Along with this central line towards the event, every chapter reveals something important that feeds the subplots and whets our appetite for more. All that stoked my curiosity and kept me interested in reading to know what was going to happen and who was going to be struck by the mysterious blow. In my opinion, the enigma was built and solved in a completely unpredictable way. I caught myself many times thinking I had figured it out and was surprised in the end. I can say that I am an admirer of thrillers and am used to seeing mysteries being solved, but the way she does it in this book is special and I liked very much. She has a special way of making the revelations because they always come out as a natural consequence of what was being said or done, and she also provides wow moments of connections that couldn’t have been foreseen up to then. She skillfully masters the suspenseful style.
    However, as contradictory as it may seem, what makes this book a page-turner for me is not the mystery, masterfully held throughout it, or the excellent thrilling aspect of it, but the story itself and the author’s ability to create real deep characters and to address serious topics, such as insidious domestic violence and bullying, with the seriousness they deserve, without becoming boring, self-righteous or cliché. What I liked in this is that the social issues are not there as a sort of moral lesson but as part of their lives, and that is why we end up thinking them over and learning from them. At the same time that I could not wait to know the end, I savored and relished each and every moment of the story and, the balance between these two aspects amazed me. I did not feel like rushing because I was as much interested in knowing who did what to whom as I was in enjoying all the process in the character’s mind and life.
    The plot talks about friendship, betrayals, loyalty, marriage, second-marriage, parenting, self-esteem, along with abuse in domestic violence and bullying, all of them perfectly intertwined in the characters’ daily life. The story is told mainly through the distinct voices of the three women in such a well written style that everything is flawlessly integrated since the very beginning. Past and present, facts and emotions of each one of them are merged in a unique story that flows wonderfully. The author manages to be gentle and yet straightforward in building the depth of each character through clever and sensitive dialogues, unfolding what lies underneath the appearance or the lie they create to survive, pleasing us with genuine brilliant insights of human nature.
    The author really has a way to create complex and rich characters and yet make them so real that they look like someone who lives next door. She sets an exciting pace while ushering us between the hidden and the social lives of each character, displaying a special skill at unearthing the secrets.
    In spite of having a great number of characters and many issues dealt with in the subplots, everything is very well tied together making it easy for the reader to get hooked to the story throughout it without getting lost. Besides, she provides us with a broad range of emotional responses: moments of loud hearty laugh, moments of complete shock and moments of teary sadness.
    Liane Moriarty has a great style of writing, which is articulate, fluent and chatty, steering the reader into a close and intimate relationship with the characters and the story. Besides, she has a special talent to put humor while addressing serious issues in a story that flows round.
    I loved reading this book. I had far many reasons not to put my kindle down and a lot more to love about it. It was an easy reading yet rich and with many nuances of the human being. I think it is even better than “The husband’s secret” and I will certainly read more books from her. Maybe “What Alice Forgot” is next in line, as it seems to be regarded as her best of all.
    21 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2014
    Brief summary and review, no spoilers.

    This novel takes place in a small, suburban coastal town named Pirriwee in Australia and our main cast of characters are the parents of kids in the same kindergarten class at the local elementary school.

    There is Jane, the youngest of the mothers who is a plain-Jane and very docile and and recently moved to the town with her young son Ziggy. We know that Jane is a single-parent and that she had a bad experience with Ziggy's father. We don't find out the details of that until later on.

    At the start of the book Jane helps out my favorite character - a woman named Madeline - who has turned her ankle when exiting her car while yelling at another driver texting. Madeline and Jane then become buddies and Madeline becomes Jane's champion at the school and is everything Jane is not - she is popular and outgoing and happily married to her second husband, Ed. Madeline and Ed have a daughter in that same kindergarten class as well as a little boy. Madeline also has a 14 year old daughter named Abigail with her ex-husband Nathan. Nathan has remarried a woman named Bonnie and they have a daughter named Skye in that same kindergarten class.

    Madeline's best friend, and soon Jane's as well, is a woman named Celeste. Celeste is a natural beauty and is married to her handsome and very-wealthy husband, Perry. They have twin sons who attend the same class. As beautiful and wealthy as Celeste is, we also know she is very unhappy and we soon find out why.

    There are assorted other people we meet along the way, including a gaggle of gossipy mothers, as well as teachers, administrators and a good-hearted and good-looking coffee shop owner named Tom.

    From early on we find out that Ziggy is accused of bullying and that this may or may not be true. We see sides taken and open warfare as the mothers from Pirriwee Public battle their way through this first year.

    We also know from the start - because there are various short "interviews" that we read interspersed in and between chapters - that there was a possible murder that has taken place, and we know that it happens at or about an event called Trivia Night which a yearly event at the school. What we don't know is who ended up dead or why.

    I really, really enjoyed this book. Summarizing the book in many ways does not do it justice because the book is much more than just a "chick" book about these mothers and their various fights. There are some very serious issues covered here, like domestic abuse and jealousy and the difficulty of being a single-parent which are handled in such a sensitive and smart way. This book is also laugh-out-loud funny and this author has such a great ear for both dialogue and description.

    I think everyone is going to enjoy the characters in this book and see either ourselves or people we know. Personally, I loved Madeline the best and loved every scene with her.

    Add to the humor and mystery element a very clever twist, that I did not see coming. Really well-done.

    I have never read this author before but I will definitely pick up more of her books now. This was really such a kick.

    Recommended.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2025
    This was a very powerful read. Mixed with humor and a very serious subject. At the beginning I was worried I may not be able to keep track of all the characters but soon discovered they were just background noise.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2025
    What a great rollercoaster ride of a story, the author expertly blending humor with the more serious undertones that we all come across in our day to day lives. Solid, relatable characters as well as pages that move as smoothly as skating on ice, what more could you ask for in a well written novel? This lady's books are a wonder to behold. Five platinum stars.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Alpha Reader
    5.0 out of 5 stars So dark and so funny and so darkly funny...
    Reviewed in Australia on July 31, 2014
    The Pirriwee Peninsular is a fictional slice of Sydney-sider heaven. A laid-back beach community with a mix of well-to-do’s and blue collar families, all of whom congregate at the only Primary School, Pirriwee Public.

    This school year has already kicked off with a bang, when the new crop of little darlings were embroiled in a bullying scandal on orientation day – that’s right, one little girl was sporting bruises and finger-pointed a classmate (a little boy, whose mother was also new to the area and so young she was mistaken for a nanny!).

    But this little incident would prove only the tip of the iceberg for the new school year – especially when you consider the bullying that went on amongst the parents in retaliation to allegations thrown against their own children.

    Is it any wonder the Trivia Night ended in the murder of a parent?

    Backtrack six months to where it all began, and follow three mothers who would prove too close for comfort to the ongoing investigation.

    Madeline is as glittery as she is fiery, never happier than when she’s wearing righteous indignation – and lately she’s had cause to wear it often. Not only is she at the beginning of the terrible teenage years with her 14-year-old daughter, Abigail, but Abigail’s father (who walked out of their marriage and left Madeline the single-mother to their baby) is living on the Peninsular too – having moved there with his new wife, and their toddler daughter who will be attending Pirriwee Public with Madeline’s own daughter from her second marriage. There really should be a law against ex-husband’s and their new (replacement) families sharing school zones.

    Celeste is one-half of dazzling couple with her jet-setting husband, Perry. They live in a sprawling house, have the best of everything and Perry makes up for his long absences with beautiful bits of jewellery for his stunning wife. They have twin boys who are starting at Pirriwee Public this year and Perry’s Facebook account can attest to their perfectly happy family … except it’s all a lie.

    Jane is twenty-five and single-mother to beautiful little boy, Ziggy. Painfully thin and self-conscious, she up and moved to Pirriwee on impulse and because she thought Ziggy would quite like the beach. Her family have been concerned about her ever since she confessed to being pregnant from a one-night-stand she has no wish to go into more detail about … save to say, Ziggy won’t be meeting his biological father anytime soon, not so long as Jane has something to say about it.

    These three women form a united front when, on the Pirriwee Public orientation day, one of their children is singled out as a bully – and then subjected to ongoing and unsubstantiated bullying by Pirriwee Public parents who want them expelled from the school.

    It’s going to be a hell of a year.

    ‘Big Little Lies’ is the new fiction book from Australian author Liane Moriarty.

    The Moriarty name has long been associated with literary excellence and bookish-obsession for many Australian readers. Jaclyn Moriarty is the extremely popular young adult author of ‘Ashbury/Brookfield’ fame, and recently Nicola Moriarty has rounded out the triumvirate literary powerhouse. But lately the rest of the world has started sitting up and paying some serious attention to Liane Moriarty, the sister who since 2003 had been quietly releasing wonderful adult fiction titles (and the occasional children’s book) … until last year when her novel ‘The Husband’s Secret’ made it to #1 on the New York Times Bestseller list and catapulted this Australian women’s fiction author into a new stratosphere of international literary fame.

    The praise was deserved, as ‘The Husband’s Secret’ (a favourite book of 2013 for me) was a tight, psychological suburban-gothic thriller that was as much an examination of marriage as it was of guilty-conscience. And now Liane Moriarty has come out with ‘Big Little Lies’ – which has already received a Kirkus starred review and seems destined (and deserving) of another trip to the top of the NYT Bestseller list for Moriarty … with this book she turns her eye to women’s secrets, family microcosms and the funny little world of child rearing in an era of mummy-bloggers and bullying as the hottest of hot-button topics.

    Let me just say – this is one of my favourite books of 2014. Hands down.

    I don’t have children, but I come from a family of teachers (many of whom teach Primary school) and I absolutely delighted in this book for the way it so seamlessly (and frighteningly) matched up with the anecdotes my family bring home from their jobs. The helicopter parents, and precocious little darlings and the “everyone get’s a trophy!” ethos of modern-day parenting/schooling – it was vicariously delicious, and I envision many readers squirming for how Moriarty portrays these caricatures of modern-day family with pin-prick accuracy. And, believe me, Liane Moriarty gets some descriptions so perfectly, so acerbically, right: "They mean very, very well. They’re like, hmmm, what are they like? They’re like Mum Prefects. They feel very strongly about their roles as school mums. It’s like their religion. They’re fundamentalist mothers."

    It’s the sort of book you read and, with descriptions like that, you’ll instantly have a private light-bulb moment and chuckle because it’s just like someone you know (and when that happens, please, recommend the book to them).

    The story begins on the fateful trivia night, when someone dies – and then backtracks to six months before and the bullying incident that sparked a parental warfare in the playground of Pirriwee Public. Each chapter from then on offers a glimpse into the present-day investigation going on into the murder, with hilarious excerpts from the detective interviewing the parents (who also offer the odd tid-bit of gossip and personal opinions on all players involved).

    The book follows three mothers – Jane, Celeste and Madeline – each with their own problems and secrets, and maps their friendship and how they three came to be on one side of the parental warfare.

    I ‘discovered’ Liane Moriarty in 2011 with ‘The Hypnotist's Love Story’, which I loved. I’ve since gone back and read Moriarty’s backlist … but I’ve got to say, I think ‘The Hypnotist's Love Story’ marked a turning point for her that reaches a brilliant crescendo with ‘Big Little Lies’. Her earlier books were a lot funnier, and much more typical ‘women’s fiction’ (sigh, do I dare use the word ‘beach reads’?). They’re good, don’t get me wrong, but I think Moriarty started exploring much darker stories and sharper edges with ‘The Hypnotist's Love Story’ which then led to the very gothic ‘The Husband’s Secret’ and now ‘Big Little Lies’ feels like the best of both worlds – this book is funny, particularly for Moriarty’s social commentary around family, female obligation and school. But this book is also very dark – I always read feminist undertones in Moriarty’s work, and in ‘Big Little Lies’ especially she touches on domestic abuse, single-mother stigma, the conflict of “working women can’t have it all”, female beauty and sexuality, pornography and a slew of other topics … coupled with the over-arching murder storyline, this is a brilliantly placed book for being so dark and so funny and so darkly funny.

    This was such an enjoyable read. One moment I’d be cackling manically and then when I finished reading a chapter I’d think on the events for hours afterwards, for all the controversies Moriarty had raised. I loved this book, it really does cement Liane Moriarty as someone who is very deserving of her new literary fame (though I say that reservedly, she’s always been beloved in Australia – it’s mostly America who is suddenly taking notice of her).

    I’m calling ‘Big Little Lies’ as my favouritest-favourite book of 2014 thus far. A big call, but it’s a bloody great book.
  • Kanika gupta
    5.0 out of 5 stars An amazing read
    Reviewed in India on January 16, 2025
    This book had me hooked to it from the very start and I finished this one in 4 days . My personal best. The story is very engaging with a powerful message against domestic violence and how we tend to ignore such things.
  • Thorsten Fischer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Sehr spannend und unterhaltsam
    Reviewed in Germany on June 5, 2018
    3 Frauen, Freundinnen, jede hat ihr eigenes Geheimnis. Von Anfang an ist deutlich, dass die Geschichte auf eine Katastrophe zusteuert, wie die aussieht, bleibt jedoch bis zum Schluss unklar. Sehr lebendig und spannend erzählt. Zwar passieren eigentlich nur alltägliche Kleinigkeiten, aber die Autorin schafft es irgendwie, damit eine ungeheure Spannung aufzubauen. Mich hat das Buch nachhaltig beeindruckt. Es ist lang her, dass ich so ein unterhaltsames Buch gelesen habe. Ich habe dann auch das andere bekannte von ihr gelesen, "The Husband's Secret", war auch gut, aber dieses hier hat mir besser gefallen.

    Ich habe das Buch auf Englisch gelesen, es liest sich sehr flüssig, keine schwierigen / unbekannten Wörter.
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  • shiloh
    5.0 out of 5 stars Passionnant de bout en bout
    Reviewed in France on August 30, 2019
    C'est le 1er ouvrage que je lis de cet écrivain. L'intrigue est bien écrite, bien menée. Un crime a peut être été commis. Qui est la victime, qui est le potentiel meurtrier? Les dernières pages nous donnent la clé de l'énigme, sans que cela "tombe comme un cheveu dans la soupe". On se rend compte aussi qu'un petit secret plus un petit secret peuvent amener à une catastrophe...
    Après avoir dévoré ce livre, je l'ai prêté à ma fille qui l'a trouvé également passionnant. Il est maintenant dans les mains de mon autre fille. J'attends son verdict
  • Catarina Natucci
    5.0 out of 5 stars Intrigante e surpreendente
    Reviewed in Brazil on August 16, 2019
    O livro prende a atenção do leitor do início ao fim. Com capítulos curtos e bem escritos, é quase impossível parar de ler. Os detalhes da vida cotidiana dos personagens são muito reais e bem descritos, assim como seus diálogos e pensamentos.
    Como um livro de ficção parece uma novela ou um filme de suspense, a leitura é tão
    viciante e prazerosa que até termina-la todos os meus momentos de lazer foram dedicados a ler.

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