Sunday, 28 June 2015

BIG LITTLE LIES by Liane Moriarty







This was a highly entertaining book with a fantastic twist. Liane Moriarty is the queen of vivid imagery which makes her characters very real and her stories very engaging. Reading her books makes you wonder what goes on in your local school, community, street, neighbourhood. Her stories turn the ordinary into something fascinating. Big Little Lies tells of one quintessential truth (quintessential being Liane's favourite word, at least in this book): just about everyone has secrets and all those who do would tell any lie to protect them, the most tragic secret guarded by one of this book's main characters being one of domestic violence. I loved the way Liane Moriarty handled this difficult subject in an objective way by uncovering another layer of abuse hiding behind the violence, that of bullying. Behind the perfect facade and protected by money and an impeccable image even the most unlikely can be oppressors but underneath the adult monsters cower little boys unable to handle humiliation to any degree. This is a story of a tragic death but so well written and intrigue so well perpetuated throughout the book that it is not until the very end that the reader finds out who actually died. Loved it. A warning: this book has swearing and blasphemy in it. This is my one and only complaint.