RATING GUIDE:
6 – Life-Affirming and Life-Changing!
5 – A keeper!
4 – Very good
3 – Passable
2 – I’d rather read
a telephone book
1 – An absolute bomb.
Read at your own risk!
0 – Nothing will compensate for what I lost reading this
book
“THE HUSBAND’S
SECRET” BY LIANE MORIARTY:
THE UGLY TRUTH
ABOUT PEOPLE IN GENERAL AND WOMEN IN PARTICULAR
If you are brave enough to face your own “dark side,” then
you might want to read “The Husband’s Secret” by Liane Moriarty, a complex tale
about lies, secrets and compromises.
“The Husband’s Secret” is
essentially the story of three Australian women. There’s Cecilia, who appears to have the Picture Perfect
life. Everything about her life seems
Martha Stewart-perfect. She’s married
to a gorgeous guy (considered a great catch by everyone), has beautiful
children, a flourishing career selling Tupperware. She and her family are model citizens of the community. Then, there’s Rachel, a woman in her
twilight years. She used to have the
big career and the wonderful family, but now, she’s just an aging widow who
can’t get over the death of her daughter, Janie, thirty years ago. Finally, there’s Tess, who hates change but
is forced to change her husband has an emotional affair.
One day, Cecilia stumbles upon a
letter written by her husband, Jean-Paul.
Despite his written instruction that the letter must only be opened
after his death, Cecilia’s curiosity gets the better of her. She opens the letter and discover’s
Jean-Paul’s deepest, darkest secret which totally turns her life upside
down. If she tells the truth, it will
destroy her family. If she doesn’t, she
destroys someone else’s family --- Rachel’s.
If you are able to get past the
endless, confusing changes in point of view, and can overlook Liane Moriarty’s
tendency to give her readers too much information (for example, does it really
matter what kind of food her characters ate?), then you have a story that is
deeper, darker and more complex that it initially appears to be.
At first, “The Husband’s Secret”
irritated me. The story and the
characters seemed shallow and frivolous.
However, further reading shows that “The Husband’s Secret” is a
laser-sharp, unpleasant presentation of the secret thoughts, desires and pain
of people. Whether they’re ordinary
people or “special” people, Lainie Moriarty’s book shows us that many times,
what we think is real truly isn’t.
Lainie’s characters are painfully
shallow, nasty, irritating, hypocritical, but sadly, very real. As a woman, these fictional women made me
cringe. I found them so terrible that I
think my overall view of humanity went down several notches. I particularly disliked Tess’ character, who
was such a hypocritical, mean-spirited bitch compared to her adulterous cousin,
Felicity. In fact, it is ironic that
the characters who initially seem to be the “bad guys” (Will and Felicity) turn
out to be the “purest” of them all. And
yet, despite these, it’s still easy to sympathize with the characters because
they seem so real. I’m pretty sure
there isn’t a reader out there who has been as shallow or mean or hypocritical
--- flawed --- as the characters in the book.
Ultimately, Liane Moriarty’s “The
Husband’s Secret” presents us with so many thought-provoking questions. How far would you go to protect what is
yours? Are people inherently good or
evil? Will you forgive someone who
betrayed you and took away what you love the most? How sure are you that you will do the “right” thing in a given
situation? Do you know how to forgive
yourself and others? What does it take
to move on from a painful experience?
These are just a few of the serious questions that Liane Moriarty asks
in her seemingly trashy but ultimately profound book.
RATING: 4
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