
When tennis-obsessed Joy Delaney vanishes, her family's perfect facade crumbles. Now a gripping TV adaptation starring Sam Neill and Annette Bening, this 480-page psychological thriller asks: What secrets hide behind suburban smiles? Liane Moriarty's masterful character study will make you laugh, cry, and suspect everyone.
Liane Moriarty is the internationally bestselling Australian author of Apples Never Fall and a leading voice in contemporary domestic suspense fiction. Born in Sydney in 1966, Moriarty crafts psychologically complex narratives that explore the secrets and tensions beneath seemingly perfect family lives, blending literary depth with page-turning plots that keep readers guessing.
Before becoming a full-time novelist, Moriarty worked in advertising and marketing, honing her storytelling skills before completing her first novel as part of a master's degree at Macquarie University. Her signature style—sharp wit, authentic female relationships, and expertly layered mysteries—has earned her a devoted global readership. Other notable works include Big Little Lies, The Husband's Secret, Nine Perfect Strangers, and Truly Madly Guilty, all of which became New York Times bestsellers.
Apples Never Fall was adapted into a critically acclaimed television series for Peacock, joining Big Little Lies (HBO) and Nine Perfect Strangers (Hulu) as successful screen adaptations. Moriarty made history as the first Australian author to debut at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list with Big Little Lies.
Liane Moriarty is known for blending domestic suspense with sharp wit, exploring themes of family dynamics, marriage, friendship, and hidden secrets beneath suburban life. Her novels typically feature multiple point-of-view characters, unexpected twists, and complex female relationships. She creates her own unique category that blends women's fiction, mystery, and drama.
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The Delaney family seems to have it all - a successful tennis academy, a beautiful Sydney home, and four adult children who remain close despite their differences. Stan and Joy, married for nearly fifty years, built their lives around tennis and family. But retirement has left them adrift, with simmering resentments bubbling beneath the surface. "Each night at five o'clock, like clockwork, your father says, 'What's for dinner?' and I grit my teeth so hard I can feel it in my jaw," Joy reflects. Their four children - emotionally volatile Amy, ambitious Troy, analytical Brooke, and easygoing Logan - all showed tremendous tennis promise in youth but ultimately fell short of professional success. The family's dynamics reveal deep-seated tensions, with Stan's relentlessly demanding coaching style creating a pressure-cooker environment where the children's self-worth became inextricably tied to their tennis performance. What happens when this delicate balance is disrupted by an unexpected visitor?
One September evening, a young woman named Savannah appears at the Delaneys' door, bleeding and claiming to have fled an abusive boyfriend. Joy immediately takes her in, drawn to Savannah's vulnerability and the way she fills the emptiness in Joy's life. Savannah quickly integrates herself, cooking elaborate meals and showing interest in family history. Yet inconsistencies emerge. She claims to have grown up in foster care with "highly superior autobiographical memory," but remains evasive about her past. Logan's suspicions grow when he sees a domestic violence documentary featuring a story nearly identical to Savannah's. The family discovers she's actually the sister of Harry Haddad, a former student at their tennis academy who achieved professional success. Why has she targeted the Delaneys? The answer connects to one of the family's deepest wounds and will expose long-buried secrets that test their bonds like never before.
Joy Delaney has disappeared. Her four children gather at a cafe, debating whether to report her missing. She's been gone for over a week, sending only a strange text with nonsensical phrases and emojis on Valentine's Day. After finding her mobile phone under the bed, they file a missing persons report. Detective Christina Khoury approaches the case with her ABC principle: "Accept nothing. Believe nothing. Check everything." Evidence against Stan accumulates rapidly - unexplained scratches on his face, Joy's bloodied t-shirt buried in bushland, and CCTV footage showing him carrying something wrapped in a blanket to his car at midnight. Investigators discover Joy had searched online about divorce after sixty and marriage counseling. As media attention grows, a reporter boldly asks Stan, "Did you kill your wife?" on their front lawn. Internet sleuths note how two Delaney children subtly distance themselves from their father. The once-perfect family now stands at the center of a potential murder investigation.
The investigation forces the Delaney children to reexamine their parents' marriage. They recall a disastrous Christmas lunch where Joy smashed cherished china cats against the wall, met with Stan's contempt-revealing marital discord that had worsened since Savannah's departure. Behind this conflict lies a devastating truth: Joy had secretly advised Harry Haddad's father to find another coach in Melbourne, betraying Stan and crushing his dream of coaching a champion. The investigation also exposes the children's own struggles: Troy paid Savannah "an exorbitant amount" after false claims about Stan; Brooke has separated from her husband; Logan's long-term relationship has ended; Amy battles mental health issues while dating her younger flatmate. The Delaneys' pattern of withholding important truths reflects how the pressure to maintain appearances creates a culture where failure and vulnerability remain hidden rather than shared.
Tennis isn't just the Delaney family business - it's the lens through which they view themselves and each other. Stan's assessments of his children's tennis abilities reveal his understanding of their characters: Amy the "Comeback Queen" who began "choking" at fourteen; Logan with extraordinary ability but no commitment; Troy the "show pony" with a temper; Brooke strategically brilliant but plagued by migraines. These tennis-based identities have followed them into adulthood, creating a gap between Stan's expectations and their achievements. Troy resents his siblings' failure to acknowledge his Stanford success, while Logan has abandoned tennis entirely, unable to play without the life-or-death competitive drive he was raised with. "How can you play 'socially'?" he asks Troy, revealing their fundamentally different relationships with the sport. The Delaneys' tennis-focused upbringing created a family culture where worth was measured by achievement and failure was seen as character weakness - a mindset that has shaped their relationships, career choices, and self-perception into adulthood.
Savannah's vendetta is finally explained: she had visited the Delaneys' house as a starving child. While Harry trained with Stan, young Savannah-whose mother severely restricted her diet for ballet-snuck in looking for food. Meanwhile, Harry lived with their father and ate well for tennis. When caught trying to steal a banana, Joy shouted at her, Logan threw his racquet nearby, and Troy chased her out, calling her a "vulture." This memory festered for years until, after being stood up on her birthday, she saw Harry announcing his comeback on TV. Rather than throwing a brick through their window as initially planned, she knocked on their door with her fabricated abuse story. Her journal reveals her ongoing eating disorder-"Quarter apple," "Five sultanas," "Toast. No crusts. No butter"-a legacy of her mother's abuse. The irony of Savannah cooking lavish meals for the Delaneys while barely eating herself underscores her psychological damage. Her family was "sliced cleanly in two" when her brother first held a tennis racquet. Her revenge transcends a stolen banana-it's about the inequality throughout her childhood and how tennis destroyed her family.
As police prepare to arrest Stan, Joy returns. Her cryptic text about "dancing daffodils" and "Dog Champagne" actually meant "doing Harry's 21-Day Challenge to End Childhood Cancer" - she had impulsively joined Savannah at an off-grid retreat. The dog had eaten her note. During those twenty-one days, Joy experienced a profound shift, realizing she hadn't truly stopped when she retired but kept running toward some unspecified goal. She gained new perspective on Savannah: "a nice person who has done some not so nice things. Like all of us." Joy's return catalyzes family healing. Stan buys a mobile phone and learns to cook "a perfectly adequate roast dinner." The children find their paths: Logan and Indira get engaged; Brooke's clinic thrives; Troy learns his ex-wife is pregnant with their embryos; Amy acknowledges her feelings for Simon. Even Savannah confronts her abusive mother and leaves Brooke an apple crumble as reconciliation. Logan decides to coach a friend's tennis prodigy, embracing the family legacy on his terms. Watching Joy on the tennis court, Stan acknowledges that though she has fallen out of love with him multiple times, he has never stopped loving her.