What: In Conversation with Liane Moriarty
Where: Bolen Books, 111-1644 Hillside Ave.
When: Saturday, Nov. 17, 7 p.m.
Tickets: $5
Big Little Lies author Liane Moriarty is still largely unsure of what will take place at her Bolen Books appearance Saturday night, the only Canadian stop of her North American press tour. But she knows one thing about the event, at which Moriarty will be interviewed by CBC host Hal Wake: She won鈥檛 be reading pages from her new book, Nine Perfect Strangers.
鈥淯nless I鈥檓 forced to, I don鈥檛 ever read at readings,鈥 Moriarty said with a laugh. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 stand reading my work out loud. I feel ridiculous, so I often pretend to have forgotten my glasses.鈥
Moriarty, who turned 52 on Thursday, suffers no crises of confidence when she鈥檚 writing. The聽straight-shooting Australian found international success with Big Little Lies, her sixth book, after the tale about the intertwined lives of three women was adapted for TV in 2017.
The series created by David E. Kelley and starring Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon became a huge hit for HBO, and won eight Emmy Awards, including outstanding limited series and best actress for Kidman.
Through the experience, she developed a friendship with Kidman, whose company Blossom Films recently secured the film and television rights to Nine Perfect Strangers.
With her fellow Australian at the helm of the new project, Moriarty is expecting a process similar to the one that brought Big Little Lies to television. In fact, all of her experiences with the medium have been great, Moriarty said. She also wrote the novella upon which the聽upcoming second season of Big聽Little Season is based, and has been working with Blake Lively, the producer and star of an adaptation of Moriarty鈥檚 2013 book The聽Husband鈥檚 Secret.
鈥淭he experience [of adapting Big Little Lies] was a pleasure from start to finish,鈥 Moriarty said.
鈥淚 was very lucky. I don鈥檛 think every author has that experience, so I was lucky that the producers made such a point of making me feel involved and part of it, even though I happily handed it over. They could have ignored me, but instead, they made me feel a part of it.鈥
Nine Perfect Strangers follows nine people who enroll in a 10-day wellness course at Tranquillem House, a health-and-wellness resort in Australia. The story came to the author years ago when she was on a press tour to promote Big Little Lies.
Moriarty said she was often asked about her next book and didn鈥檛 yet have an idea. Needing to buy some time, she made up a story on the spot. 鈥淚 started saying my next book was going to be set on a tropical island resort, but that I was going to need to do a lot of meticulous research to get it right.聽But the more I made that joke, the more I started to think: 鈥榃hy not?鈥 鈥
When she returned from that press tour, Moriarty wrote a couple of chapters of her tropical island tome, though that book was quickly pushed aside by another idea, which resulted in 2016鈥檚 Truly Madly Guilty.
She eventually went back to the island tale, though the story shifted to a health resort and got a new central character, a former bestselling romantic novelist named Frances. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 lie 鈥 of course she has little parts of me within her,鈥 Moriarty said of the author character. 鈥淢y husband said: 鈥榊ou do realize that by the time this book comes out, you will be exactly the same age as Frances. Everybody is going to think it鈥檚 you.鈥 I said: 鈥業 know 鈥 that鈥檚 why I聽made her completely charming in every way possible.鈥 I gave her the nicest parts of me, and none of the bad parts.鈥
The story was based, in part, on Moriarty鈥檚 experience at a health resort a few years ago. 鈥淚 have to say I did not suffer that much for my art,鈥 she quipped.
She did find a way to write the book without much else in the way of deep-dive research, however.
鈥淚 could never write historical fiction, because I would find that research overwhelming. Even if I聽do a flashback to the 鈥80s 鈥 and I was there in the 鈥80s, so I should be able to remember 鈥 I get too caught up in the detail. I like doing a little research, but not so much where it鈥檚 too beyond my own day-to-day life.鈥