Tag: #nine_perfect_strangers

  • Book Review: The Strange, Unpredictable Journey of “Nine Perfect Strangers” by Liane Moriarty

    Book Review: The Strange, Unpredictable Journey of “Nine Perfect Strangers” by Liane Moriarty

    If you’ve ever walked into a bookstore and picked up a novel based on a stunning, inviting cover, only to find the contents were not at all what you expected, you’ve probably experienced the same whiplash I did with Liane Moriarty’s Nine Perfect Strangers.

    I recently finished the book, and while I have some strong feelings about where it went off the rails, it ultimately earned a solid 4 out of 5 stars from me. Here is my take on this wild, wellness-retreat-gone-wrong.

    The Hook: A Strong Start

    The premise is undeniably gripping. We follow nine individuals as they arrive at Tranquillum House, an ultra-exclusive, remote health resort in Australia. Each character is beautifully drawn, detailed, and incredibly engaging. Whether it’s a struggling romance novelist or a family grappling with deep, collective grief, Moriarty does a masterful job of setting the stage. For the first act, the book is a masterclass in character-driven drama. The tensions are subtle, the personalities are sharp, and I was completely hooked on the group dynamics.

    The Turning Point: When It Goes Off the Rails

    However, about midway through, the story hits a major speed bump. The retreat is run by Masha, an enigmatic director with a vision for “transformation” that is, to put it mildly, radical.

    The story began to go downhill for me the moment the guests started being dosed with psychedelics.

    While I understand the author was aiming for a high-stakes psychological shift, it felt like the narrative lost its drift here. The grounded, relatable human drama was suddenly replaced by chaotic, forced scenarios. The pacing slowed to a crawl, and the plot became increasingly confusing as Masha’s own grip on reality slipped. What started as a fascinating study of human vulnerability turned into something much more erratic and, at times, difficult to follow.

    A Deceptive Cover

    It’s also worth mentioning the presentation. I couldn’t help but feel that the book’s cover art slightly misrepresents the tone of the story inside. The aesthetic promises one kind of experience, but once the story veers into that psychedelic, chaotic middle section, it’s a total shift that might catch new readers off guard.

    The Redemption

    Despite the “strange” middle section and the pacing issues that followed, I’m glad I stuck with it. Moriarty managed to pull everything back together for a very strong, satisfying finish. The ending redeems the slower stretches, providing the resolution the reader is craving and bringing the characters’ arcs to a meaningful close.

    Final Verdict

    Nine Perfect Strangers is a bit of a rollercoaster. It’s a book of two halves: a brilliant, character-focused setup and a confusing, erratic middle that eventually finds its way home. If you can push through the chaos of the retreat’s “experimental” phase, the payoff is well worth the effort.

    Rating: ★★★★☆

    Have you read Nine Perfect Strangers? Did you enjoy the shift in tone, or did you find the second half as confusing as I did? Let me know in the comments!

    You can buy from Amazon

    https://amzn.to/4fNciJu

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