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   Summary and Book Reviews

Liars and Saints: Summary and book reviews of Liars and Saints by Maile Meloy, plus links to an excerpt from Liars and Saints and a biography of Maile Meloy.

Liars and Saints Liars and Saints
by Maile Meloy
Hardcover: Jun 2003,
272 pages.
Paperback: Jul 2004,
272 pages.

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Critics' Opinion:   very good
Readers' Rating:  Five Stars
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Book Summary
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With her 2002 debut story collection, Half in Love, prizewinning author Maile Meloy drew acclaim from readers and reviewers across the country. "Here is an author who knows how to jump-start the reader's interest," raved The New York Times. "Wonderfully wise beyond the author's years," said the Chicago Tribune. "What distinguishes Meloy is her insistence on old-fashioned plot and sensibility ... Maile Meloy is a truly compelling discovery."

With her first novel, Liars and Saints, Meloy more than delivers on the promise of her earlier work. This richly textured, emotionally charged novel tells a story of sex and longing, love and loss, and of the deceits that can lie at the heart of family relationships.

Set in California, Liars and Saints follows four generations of the Catholic Santerre family from World War II to the present, as they navigate a succession of life-altering events through the submerged emotion of the fifties, the recklessness and excess of the sixties and seventies, and the reckonings of the eighties and nineties. In a family driven by jealousy and propriety as much as by love, an unspoken tradition of deceit is passed from generation to generation, and fiercely protected secrets gradually drive the Santerres apart. When tragedy shatters their precarious domestic lives, it takes astonishing courage and compassion to bring them back together.

By turns funny and disturbing, irreverent and profound, Liars and Saints is a masterful display of Maile Meloy's prodigious gifts, and of her penetrating insight—into an extraordinary American family and into the nature of human love.

Book Reviews

Very Good BookBrowse
This first novel packs quite a punch. In less than 300 pages Maile Meloy paints a picture of 50 years in the life of one Californian family from World War II to the present. It seemed that the less words Maile used to describe a scene, or the feelings of a character, the more vividly you relate to that person or situation. It takes great skill to hone one's words to this degree, instead of simply expanding them!



Good  Booklist - Donna Seaman
In its finer moments, Meloy's sexy, circular, five-decade-spanning tale transcends its soap-opera tendencies and calls to mind the work of Antonya Nelson and Andre Dubus.

Very Good  Library Journal
Meloy shows how skillful she is at hurtling the reader into an intriguing story line ... a compelling read.

Very Good  Publishers Weekly
Meloy's unerring mastery of narrative is remarkable ... The rich emotional chiarascuro and fine psychological insight of this haunting novel mark Meloy as a writer of extraordinary talent.*

*According to the Oxford English Dictionary Chiaroscuro means 'the style of pictorial art in which only the light and shade are represented'.

Very Good  Kirkus Reviews
A multigenerational first novel told with remarkable compression and precision ... Meloy pushes every melodramatic hot button with disarming understatement.

Good  The Washington Post - Carol S. Briggs
The consistently distant and detached tone, reminiscent of Evan Connell's novels Mr. Bridge and Mrs. Bridge, is heartbreaking in its careful observations.

Good  New York Times Magazine
... combines the meticulous realism of domestic fiction with the witchery of a natural-born storyteller.

Very Good  Glamour
Meloy has written an exquisite novel about the power of secrets—and the redemption found in religion and love.

Very Good  New York Times Book Review
... upends popular notions of American fiction ... spectacular.

Very Good  Los Angeles Times
Meloy's Santerres may just be the most fascinating, engrossing American family since the Louds.

Very Good  Minneapolis Star Tribune
Vivid, memorable characters ... [Meloy's] various plot lines are woven together with a skill that seems effortless.

Very Good  The Economist
Calmly efficient, pared-down prose, and ... keen perceptions ... Admirers of Half in Love will find much to enjoy here too.

Author Blurb  Philip Roth
... a surehanded little first-novel by a sly, knowledgeable, no-nonsense young writer who will not permit herself a single exaggeration but who nonetheless packs quite a punch ... an impressive achievement, literary and otherwise.

Author Blurb  Elizabeth Strout - author of Amy and Isabelle
In this exquisitely rendered novel, Meloy brings her incisive intelligence to the page once again ...

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