Add to library
You don't have any lists yet. Create one in My Library.
Go to My LibraryAdd to library
You don't have any lists yet. Create one in My Library.
Go to My LibraryApples Never Fall
- Language
- English
- Published in
- Publisher
- Henry Holt and Company
- Pages
- 480
- ISBN
- 9781250220257
Then, Joy vanishes. As the police investigation zeroes in on Stan, the four Delaney siblings are forced to confront their family's history and re-examine everything they thought they knew about their parents' marriage. Two believe their father is innocent, two are not so sure. The search for their mother reveals a complex and troubled story, full of secrets, resentments, and the toxic rivalries that have defined them. This is a story that explores the dark side of a seemingly happy family and asks what happens when the people you love most might also be the ones you should fear.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (5)
It had all begun months earlier, on a chilly Tuesday night. Joy Delaney, sixty-nine and perpetually energetic, was listening to a podcast on her new headphones, trying to fill the howling silence of her empty nest. She and her husband, Stan, had recently retired from running the tennis academy that had been their life's work, and they were adrift. Their children were grown, their days long and unstructured. Grandchildren, the one thing Joy yearned for, remained conspicuously absent. As she stood in her kitchen, memories of her children's past bumped against her present, a disorienting haze of regret and nostalgia. A sudden, urgent knocking shattered the quiet. A sobbing young woman, bleeding from a fresh cut above her eye, fell into Stan's arms as if she belonged there.
The girl's name was Savannah. She was a stranger, she said, who had fled a violent boyfriend with no money, no phone, nothing but the clothes on her back. She'd jumped in a cab, found a stray twenty-dollar bill in her pocket, and gotten out at random when the fare was up, landing on their doorstep because the house looked “warm and safe.” Joy, her heart aching for the fragile, barefoot girl, didn't hesitate. She cleaned Savannah's wound, fed her leftover casserole, and insisted she stay the night in her daughter Amy's old room. Stan, ever the pragmatist, was wary. That night, he quietly gathered the television, the computers, and even his beloved laminator into their bedroom, just in case. But Joy saw only a lost soul in need of comfort, a welcome distraction from the echoing quiet of her own life.
Savannah stayed. She cooked magnificent meals, filling the house with the scent of garlic and herbs, and Joy, who had secretly come to loathe the nightly tyranny of dinner, felt a profound sense of relief. Savannah listened with rapt attention as Stan recounted the glory days of the tennis academy, her interest a soothing balm on the wounds of retirement. She slotted into their lives so seamlessly that the children, when they found out, were unnerved. Amy, the eldest and most fragile, was suspicious. Logan, the stoic one, was wary. Troy, the wealthy trader, saw a potential con artist. Only Brooke, the pragmatic physiotherapist, tried to be rational, telling her siblings their parents were simply doing a kind thing for a victim of domestic violence. But as weeks turned into months, a strange tension settled over the Delaney family. Savannah was a mirror, reflecting their own cracks and secrets back at them.
The breaking point came on Father's Day. The house was filled with the aroma of two competing chocolate brownies - one baked by Amy, her signature dish, and one by Savannah. Stan, buoyed by Savannah's presence, decided to hold a “bake-off,” oblivious to Amy's simmering resentment. Fueled by wine, he then launched into a brutal, point-by-point analysis of each of his children's failed tennis careers. Amy choked under pressure. Logan lacked the burning desire to win. Troy was a show-off without substance. Brooke's migraines ruined her chances. It was a litany of their deepest insecurities, laid bare for a stranger to witness. The lunch devolved into a cascade of shocking confessions: Logan and his partner had split; Brooke and her husband were separated; Troy revealed that his ex-wife wanted to use one of their frozen embryos with her new husband. Overwhelmed by the sudden implosion of her family and the loss of all potential grandchildren, Joy collapsed.
Days later, after Joy was home from the hospital, the children's suspicions about Savannah solidified. Logan saw a TV documentary featuring a domestic violence victim telling a story identical to the one Savannah had told them. Brooke remembered a little girl with elfin ears who had once tried to steal her banana from her schoolbag in their backyard. This was no random stranger. This was Savannah Haddad, the younger sister of their father's most famous and heartbreaking student, Harry Haddad. When confronted, Savannah's story spilled out - a childhood of neglect and hunger in the shadow of her brother's brilliant career. But she saved her final, most devastating revelation for last. It wasn't Harry's father who decided to leave Stan as a coach all those years ago. “That was your wife's decision,” she said, looking straight at Stan.
The secret Joy had kept for decades - that she had sacrificed her husband's dream to protect her own children from his all-consuming ambition - was finally out. Stan, his face a mask of stone, walked out the door. He didn't get far. He tripped on a pothole, injured his already bad knee, and was brought home by a neighbor. The silence that followed was heavier and more complete than any before. On Valentine's Day, after a bitter, explosive argument, Joy vanished. She left behind a garbled text message, her mobile phone under the bed, and a brand-new bicycle abandoned on the side of the road.
Weeks crawled by. The police investigation focused on Stan. He had scratches on his face. He'd had his car professionally cleaned the day after Joy disappeared. He refused to explain what their argument was about. The children were torn, two believing in his innocence, two riddled with doubt. The media descended. Then, a blood-soaked T-shirt - Joy's T-shirt - was found buried in the bushland behind their house. The police obtained CCTV footage from a neighbor's camera, showing Stan struggling in the dead of night to load a large, heavy object wrapped in a blanket into the trunk of his car.
As detectives arrived at the Delaney house to arrest Stan for the murder of his wife, the front door opened. Joy walked in, tanned and rested, keys dangling from her finger. She had not been murdered. She had gone with Savannah to a 21-day off-grid wellness retreat, a “circuit breaker” after her devastating fight with Stan. The note she'd left for him had been eaten by their paper-loving dog. The garbled text was the result of texting without her glasses. The bloody T-shirt was from an old injury, likely stolen from the clothesline by a neighbor's cat. The object in the CCTV footage was the hideous purple floral carpet Stan had finally ripped up as a surprise for her. It was a comedy of errors that had almost ended in unthinkable tragedy.
In the quiet aftermath, as a global pandemic forced the world into lockdown, the Delaney family found their way back to one another. The silence in Joy and Stan's house was no longer a weapon but a comfort. Logan, inspired, began coaching a promising young player. Troy's ex-wife became pregnant, choosing to raise their child in Australia. The family fractures, old and new, began to mend. One morning, Stan and Joy walked onto their court. He watched her across the net, her hair in a young girl's ponytail, still the only doubles partner he would ever want. He watched the plane streak across the clear blue sky, felt the sun on his face, and waited for her serve. "Let's play," she said.
No discussions yet for this book.
Delete Discussion
Are you sure you want to delete this discussion? This action cannot be undone.
Rating Sources
The book is largely praised as a scintillating and gripping family drama that delves into the intricacies of dysfunctional relationships. Readers found Liane Moriarty's characterization to be a standout, with distinct, compelling, and memorable individuals whose flaws and idiosyncrasies felt genuinely real. Many appreciated the author's sharp observations about human nature and family dynamics, which are peeled back with disarming honesty. The narrative is often infused with a witty, dry, and snarky humor that made the story engaging and even laugh-out-loud funny for many, despite touching on tender subjects. The central premise of a missing mother and the children's dilemma regarding their father's potential involvement created an intriguing hook that kept readers captivated.
Conversely, a significant portion of readers expressed frustration with the book's pacing and excessive length, describing it as tedious, plodding, and overwritten, with many feeling it could have been considerably shorter. The ending proved to be a major point of contention, with numerous reviewers finding the resolution to the central mystery anticlimactic, unconvincing, unbelievable, or even "stupid," diminishing their overall enjoyment. Some felt the story included unnecessary elements, such as repetitive details or a sudden, forced inclusion of the pandemic, which detracted from the narrative. While some enjoyed the slow burn, others found the story became a slog where "nothing happened" for long stretches, leading to a lack of connection with the characters or a sense of pointlessness.
Ultimately, "Apples Never Fall" elicits a divided response, with some hailing it as a return to form for the author and a dazzling gem, while others found it dull and disappointing. It is primarily a character-driven dysfunctional family drama, and readers expecting a fast-paced mystery or thriller may be left underwhelmed, as the disappearance serves more as a catalyst for exploring relationships. This book is best suited for those who appreciate Liane Moriarty's signature style of sharp wit, intricate character studies, and deep dives into domestic complexities. It will particularly appeal to readers who enjoy slow-burn narratives focused on human dynamics, sibling rivalries, and the unraveling of long-held family secrets, and who are prepared for a detailed exploration rather than a straightforward suspense plot.
No reviews yet. Be the first to review this book!
Delete Review
Are you sure you want to delete this review? This action cannot be undone.







