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A review by aserra
Nine Perfect Strangers by Liane Moriarty
mysterious
fast-paced
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.25
A compelling, easy read. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Is the prose absolutely marvelous? Are the characters particularly stand-out? Is the plot life-changing? No to all, but it's a good book still. Liane Moriarty is a consistent, reliable career writer and storyteller. Nine Perfect Strangers is good to pick up if you're seeking something quick and not too deep, like a pleasant in-and-out hike.
The characters are not meant to be revolutionary and stand-out. The mundane ambiance is very purposefully and expertly employed. Moriarty does a great job at acknowledging the privileges of the main cast, and how a ten day health retreat isn't financially accessible to all.
If I could ask anything more of this book, it would be more overt diversity. While reading, I was picturing several of the characters as POC, but never got confirmation for anyone more than Yao (and Carmel, as it turns out, is not Black or of west or south Asian descent, but Romanian--aside from those two, I don't believe we receive any clues beyond everyone is upper middle class Australian). The inclusion of an explicitly queer character (Lars) was nice. I think Moriarty absolutely has the skill to extend the inclusion of this novel in a normalizing way like she did with Lars, but alas.
Again, a solid book! If I see other Moriarty books about, I'll be sure to pick them up.
Is the prose absolutely marvelous? Are the characters particularly stand-out? Is the plot life-changing? No to all, but it's a good book still. Liane Moriarty is a consistent, reliable career writer and storyteller. Nine Perfect Strangers is good to pick up if you're seeking something quick and not too deep, like a pleasant in-and-out hike.
The characters are not meant to be revolutionary and stand-out. The mundane ambiance is very purposefully and expertly employed. Moriarty does a great job at acknowledging the privileges of the main cast, and how a ten day health retreat isn't financially accessible to all.
If I could ask anything more of this book, it would be more overt diversity. While reading, I was picturing several of the characters as POC, but never got confirmation for anyone more than Yao (and Carmel, as it turns out, is not Black or of west or south Asian descent, but Romanian--aside from those two, I don't believe we receive any clues beyond everyone is upper middle class Australian). The inclusion of an explicitly queer character (Lars) was nice. I think Moriarty absolutely has the skill to extend the inclusion of this novel in a normalizing way like she did with Lars, but alas.
Again, a solid book! If I see other Moriarty books about, I'll be sure to pick them up.
Moderate: Drug use
Minor: Addiction, Confinement, Cursing, Suicide, and Gaslighting