Why am I passionate about this?
The first books I loved were Gothic classics like Jane Eyre and Rebecca, because of their isolated settings and secretive characters. When I first started writing, it was always stories about communities–the first novel I wrote featured a retirement village and a circus. Maybe that’s because I love observing communities in everyday life, like local pubs in which everybody has their place. When domestic suspense novels really took off, I started devouring crime books with close-knit settings and soon was writing them, too. I love the claustrophobia, the backstories, the landscape, the web of relationships. It can be done in so many different and brilliant ways.
Helen's book list on thrillers set in close-knit communities
Why did Helen love this book?
Most of the other books I’ve recommended have had a dark, gloomy atmosphere or a sense of bleak isolation, but the community in Moriarty’s book is sunny and bright. Set on an affluent peninsula in Sydney’s Northern Beaches, it depicts a world of huge houses, school gate gossip, and competitive parents–the perfect setting for a controversial death at a school trivia night.
In particular, I loved the brilliantly aggravating cliques and the characters who drove me mad but had me caring deeply about them by the end. Moriarty is great at knotty plots, too–by the climax of the story, everybody’s lives have become irreversibly entwined. She dials up the toxicity of the community to murderous levels but then shows us the good underneath it all, and that’s what stayed with me.
18 authors picked Big Little Lies as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
*Published as BIG LITTLE LIES in Australia and the United States*
Liane Moriarty, million copy selling author of The Husband's Secret brings us another addictive story of secrets and scandal.
Jane hasn't lived anywhere longer than six months since her son was born five years ago. She keeps moving in an attempt to escape her past. Now the idyllic seaside town of Pirriwee has pulled her to its shores and Jane finally feels like she belongs. She has friends in the feisty Madeline and the incredibly beautiful Celeste - two women with seemingly perfect lives . . . and their…