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  • Apples Never Fall
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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
27,726 global ratings
5 star
46%
4 star
32%
3 star
15%
2 star
4%
1 star
3%
Apples Never Fall

Apples Never Fall

byLiane Moriarty
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Top positive review

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Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 starsAnother excellent Moriarty novel
Reviewed in Australia on 28 September 2021
This one is about a tennis family and as sport isn’t my thing I was dubious at first. However, when the materfamilias disappears and it looks as though the paterfamilias might be responsible and the four very different adult kids plus Detective Khoury and her offsider struggle to figure it out, things become very interesting. Turns out that a young woman claiming to be fleeing domestic violence who ended up living with the mum and dad is more than a bit disturbed. What Moriarty does very well is show how a long marriage can be patches of light and dark and she’s particularly good at demonstrating inter generational trauma and its effects. There are also some good chuckle moments, like the receptionist eavesdropping on a phone conversation because her hearing is very good, “which was not her fault “. Like other authors now, care is taken to present characters from a variety of ethnic backgrounds as well, which is refreshing. I’d have to re-read the previous books to see if this is true, but my feeling is that this one is sharper-edged than her previous work. There’s a lot of astute observation of the human condition here. Enjoyed it a lot.
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HarleyB
1.0 out of 5 starsCan be bothered finishing ...
Reviewed in Australia on 16 October 2021
I wish I had remembered how disappointed I was by Nine Perfect Strangers.

This is the extremely tedious story of a family of unlikeable people where the mother disappears.
I can't finish it because I really don't care what happened to her.
I tried to get interested and skipped ahead to see if it got better.
I have always finished books - even ones I don't like - until now.
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4 people found this helpful

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From Australia

Maggie
4.0 out of 5 stars Moriarty at her best
Reviewed in Australia on 26 September 2021
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I just love the way she writes about families. Each as individuals and how they come together as a family. Thoroughly enjoyed this book.
Wasn't too enamoured by her previous book 'Nine Perfect Strangers'; favourite book of hers is 'What Alice Forgot'
5 people found this helpful
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stine
5.0 out of 5 stars My Review
Reviewed in Australia on 2 October 2021
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I really enjoyed this book & am happy that it is very much better than the last one ( Nine Perfect Strangers ) I was starting to think that this author had lost her edge , not so , can’t wait for her next book 📕
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gemini09
4.0 out of 5 stars Line Moriartys latest
Reviewed in Australia on 22 November 2021
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A very enjoyable tale from Liane Moriaty, sees her return to form after the disappointing Nine Perfect Strangers.
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Rina P
4.0 out of 5 stars Awesome hard-hitting Tennis Family drama!
Reviewed in Australia on 13 November 2021
Liane Moriarty writes the kind of hard-hitting drama that I love - with a hint of mystery/thriller on the side. This one was no exception.

Joy and Stan were the perfect couple. They had four adult children, a nice house, a tennis court in their backyard, and a successful tennis coaching business. They were also a strong couple in tennis matches, perfectly communicating silently to match each other’s movements on and off courts. Except, there was no such thing as perfect. So when Joy went missing, the entire neighbourhood and their children were divided on whether Stan finally lost his temper and killed her.

First of all, can I say how delighted I was to find out that the main characters of this book were in their 70s? Joy and Stan Delaney were both such strong characters (and so were the Delaney kids - Amy, Logan, Troy and Brooke). Each had distinct personality, strengths and weaknesses. By the end of the book, I couldn’t help but falling in love with all of them.

This entire book was about the Delaneys; what they did right, what they did wrong, and what happened leading up to Joy’s disappearance. So it was only natural to ‘see’ the events unfolding multiple times from the point of views of the four children. With this kind of storytelling formula, sometimes it could significantly slow down the pace and readers might lose interest. However, Moriarty did this very creative approach where those chapters were written from the perspective of ‘nobodies’, i.e. non-characters/passerby’s in the story - it still slowed down the pace in some places, but it was unique enough to keep me interested in turning the pages.

I would recommend this book highly to those who enjoyed Big Little Lies. In my opinion, the style of this book was more similar to it than the other Moriarty books, such as Nine Perfect Strangers, What Alice Forgot, etc.

It was such a wonderful reading experience!

(Thanks to NetGalley and Pan Macmillan Australia for a free copy in exchange for an honest review)
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Ms. S. J. Hood
TOP 500 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars An engrossing read from the Aussie queen of domestic drama
Reviewed in Australia on 25 September 2021
Moriarty returns to her domestic drama heartland in her latest release, Apples Never Fall.
The dual timeline narrative follows the members of the Delaney family in suburban Sydney. Recently retired parents Joy and Stan remain highly competitive tennis players after selling their successful coaching academy. Their four adult children - Amy, Logan, Troy and Brooke - were also each successful junior players, none of whom managed to break into the professional circuit, and each face challenges in their personal and/or professional lives. The Delaney's comfortable, if imperfect, lives are impacted by the sudden arrival of Savannah, a young woman who knocks on Joy and Stan's front door one night, seeking assistance after experiencing domestic violence. The Delaney parents take her into their lives, offering her a temporary home, despite the misgivings of their four children.
Some months later, Joy Delaney goes missing during a bike ride to the nearby shops. When she makes no contact, police begin to suspect foul play, and their investigation focusses on patriarch Stan. The situation places inevitable pressures on the remaining members of the family and their interrelationships.
I found Apples Never Fall an engrossing domestic drama, with a healthy dose of intrigue and second-guessing of each of the characters' motivations and secrets. While not always particularly likeable, I found each of the central characters well-developed and identified with the concept that different members of the same family often have different recollections of the same events and that the scars borne in childhood often run deep.
The conclusion was well-crafted and satisfying, but like other readers I felt that the novel could perhaps have ended more successfully at the end of chapter 70. While intriguing, the rather macabre final twist felt superfluous and jarring.
I'd encourage readers who enjoyed Moriarty's early work - such as The Husband's Secret and Big Little Lies - to give this one a try. To my mind it's a return to form after her more experimental 2018 release Nine Perfect Strangers. Highly recommended.
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Ms. S. J. Hood
4.0 out of 5 stars An engrossing read from the Aussie queen of domestic drama
Reviewed in Australia on 25 September 2021
Moriarty returns to her domestic drama heartland in her latest release, Apples Never Fall.
The dual timeline narrative follows the members of the Delaney family in suburban Sydney. Recently retired parents Joy and Stan remain highly competitive tennis players after selling their successful coaching academy. Their four adult children - Amy, Logan, Troy and Brooke - were also each successful junior players, none of whom managed to break into the professional circuit, and each face challenges in their personal and/or professional lives. The Delaney's comfortable, if imperfect, lives are impacted by the sudden arrival of Savannah, a young woman who knocks on Joy and Stan's front door one night, seeking assistance after experiencing domestic violence. The Delaney parents take her into their lives, offering her a temporary home, despite the misgivings of their four children.
Some months later, Joy Delaney goes missing during a bike ride to the nearby shops. When she makes no contact, police begin to suspect foul play, and their investigation focusses on patriarch Stan. The situation places inevitable pressures on the remaining members of the family and their interrelationships.
I found Apples Never Fall an engrossing domestic drama, with a healthy dose of intrigue and second-guessing of each of the characters' motivations and secrets. While not always particularly likeable, I found each of the central characters well-developed and identified with the concept that different members of the same family often have different recollections of the same events and that the scars borne in childhood often run deep.
The conclusion was well-crafted and satisfying, but like other readers I felt that the novel could perhaps have ended more successfully at the end of chapter 70. While intriguing, the rather macabre final twist felt superfluous and jarring.
I'd encourage readers who enjoyed Moriarty's early work - such as The Husband's Secret and Big Little Lies - to give this one a try. To my mind it's a return to form after her more experimental 2018 release Nine Perfect Strangers. Highly recommended.
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Sandra
5.0 out of 5 stars Back to her best!
Reviewed in Australia on 29 September 2021
I am a longstanding Liane Moriarty fan, right back from when her first novel Three Wishes was published. I loved all her books over the years up to and including Big Little Lies. I thought Truly,Madly, Guilty was a bit weaker, but still ok, but I really did not enjoy Nine Perfect Strangers. I was a bit concerned about Apples Never Fall before I read it, but I need not have been. It is a fabulous novel, back to Moriarty at her best. I couldn’t put it down.
It follows a tennis coaching couple, the Delaneys and their four adult children. Stan and Joy have retired from their coaching business, and are having a bit of difficulty adjusting to retirement. They are not sure how to fill their days. All their children have moved out, but are yet to have children. So no grandchildren for Joy. One evening a young woman turns up on their doorstep saying that she has been beaten by her boyfriend, so they take her in. The novel examines sibling rivalry, the pressures that parents put on their children and the different way this effects different individuals. It also looks at long relationships and how things can shift and change, and that even in long relationships there are still things to be learned. I found it a thoroughly satisfying book with an equally satisfying outcome. A great read. Thank you to Pan Macmillan Australia and Netgalley for an ARC of this excellent novel.
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From other countries

lika
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable
Reviewed in the United States on 15 September 2021
Verified Purchase
I'm a fan of Liane Moriarty, but her latest book Nine Perfect Strangers didn't impress, so I was apprehensive about losing my favorite author but decided to pre-order Apples Never Fall and found this book enjoyable. Moriarty's wry humor and complex family dynamics are back. Enjoy the book!
129 people found this helpful
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Gwen S.
5.0 out of 5 stars Moriarty back up to speed!
Reviewed in the United States on 8 May 2022
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I have read all her books and think they are all written well and often make me laugh out loud. (contentment spread throughout her body, as blissful as an extra strength Tylenol) I did not like Nine Perfect Strangers so I was relieved that the author seems back to par. I can’t believe all the negative reviews! This story pulled me in and kept me guessing the whole way through. I love love love the characters. (Maybe taking in a stranger in distress is more likely in Australia, people). I loved the tennis stories and was delighted and shocked as the story moved along. I think Moriarty has a unique style. I loved the book!
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NtnKtn
5.0 out of 5 stars Liane Moriarty is Back
Reviewed in the United States on 25 October 2021
Verified Purchase
I'm so glad to say Apples is fabulous. I was worried, after Nine Perfect Strangers that we may have lost Liane. But the writer who wrote What Alice Forgot and Three Wishes has returned. So happy.
2 people found this helpful
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coolmom9
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!
Reviewed in the United States on 5 October 2021
Verified Purchase
Once again, Moriarty does not disappoint! Personally I was so disappointed with Nine Perfect Strangers. This book redeems Moriarity back to her rightful place as a great story teller. Twists and turns, lovable characters. Situations that have you second guessing your first impressions. Do yourself a favor and read it.
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