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Three Wishes: A Novel

“Moriarty’s first novel, written with wisdom, humor, and sincerity, is an honest look at sisters who have a bond stronger than anything life throws their way.” — Booklist

The funny, heartwarming, and completely charming first novel from Liane Moriarty, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Nine Perfect Strangers and Big Little Lies.

Lyn, Cat, and Gemma Kettle, beautiful thirty-three-year-old triplets, seem to attract attention everywhere they go. Together, laughter, drama, and mayhem follow them, but apart, each is dealing with her own share of ups and downs.

Lyn has organized her life into one big checklist, Cat has just learned a startling secret about her marriage, and Gemma, who bolts every time a relationship hits the six-month mark, holds out hope for lasting love.

In this wise, witty, and hilarious novel, we follow the Kettle sisters through their tumultuous thirty-third year as they deal with sibling rivalry and secrets, revelations and relationships, unfaithful husbands and unthinkable decisions, and the fabulous, frustrating life of forever being part of a trio.

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“Moriarty’s first novel, written with wisdom, humor, and sincerity, is an honest look at sisters who have a bond stronger than anything life throws their way.” — Booklist

The funny, heartwarming, and completely charming first novel from Liane Moriarty, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Nine Perfect Strangers and Big Little Lies.

Lyn, Cat, and Gemma Kettle, beautiful thirty-three-year-old triplets, seem to attract attention everywhere they go. Together, laughter, drama, and mayhem follow them, but apart, each is dealing with her own share of ups and downs.

Lyn has organized her life into one big checklist, Cat has just learned a startling secret about her marriage, and Gemma, who bolts every time a relationship hits the six-month mark, holds out hope for lasting love.

In this wise, witty, and hilarious novel, we follow the Kettle sisters through their tumultuous thirty-third year as they deal with sibling rivalry and secrets, revelations and relationships, unfaithful husbands and unthinkable decisions, and the fabulous, frustrating life of forever being part of a trio.

9 reviews for Three Wishes: A Novel

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  1. Rea Keech

    More Droll Than Tragic
    There are already 2,511 reviews of this novel on Amazon, and so I will just explain why I found it such a pleasure to read. It wasn’t for the plot or action (mostly chick concerns) but for the witty, humorous voice of the author in describing her characters. In general, she tends to find people and the situations they get themselves into far more droll than tragic.The novel is filled with comments that made me laugh out loud. Instead of a review, I will just list a few of them to show what I mean:• Dan had cooked the spaghetti, so it was hearty and bland.…He stirred his ingredients like concrete mix, one arm wrapped around the bowl, the other stirring the gluggy mix so vigorously you could see his biceps working.• Gemma was dressed, as always, like an oddly beautiful bag lady.• She was wearing jeans and a white T-shirt that looked suspiciously like it might have been ironed.• In fact, she generally swore only in situations involving cockroaches or her sisters.• He was always so chipper after sex.• It was a bad habit of hers, complimenting strangers on their physical attributes. She once told a woman in an elevator that she had an especially lovely collarbone. The woman had looked panic-stricken and had begun jabbing at the elevator buttons.• Sometimes when Gemma thought about sex, sometimes even when she was having sex, she felt a faint echo of that horror she felt as an eight-year-old. My goodness, she’d think, looking up at the ceiling as some boyfriend earnestly scrabbled around her body, what in the world is he doing now?• “My wife is a triplet, you know,” Dan said chattily. He leaned back against the squeaky vinyl sofa and crossed his arms comfortably behind his head. Cat watched him suspiciously. He was finding marriage counseling far too enjoyable for her liking.• The cab pulled away from the curb in a mature, sober fashion so Cat could see just how childishly she’d behaved.• Perhaps she could just choose to stop being angry, as recommended by Lyn’s self-help gurus.• When Lyn was in her final year at university, she had a profound, almost religious experience: She read The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. Every page brought a new epiphany. Yes! she kept thinking, as she highlighted another paragraph in fluorescent yellow and felt herself expanding with potential.• Next thing she knew Michael had his arms around her and they were kissing in a way that had a very distracting sexual element. Lyn had become the Other Woman—an event not listed on her five-year plan.• It was later that night and Lyn stood at the bathroom mirror applying her moisturizer with upward patting motions.• Most men, Gemma knew, were convinced they were extraordinarily talented lovers and simultaneously terrified that maybe they weren’t. It was important to pay them lavish compliments about their abilities. It put them in a good mood.• He could remember rugby league grand final scores from fifteen years ago and quote whole slabs of Simpsons dialogue, but his memory of personal events was notoriously shocking.• “There you go, my dear! All defuzzed!” The beautician patted Cat’s legs with uncalled-for intimacy.• One of the multitudes of ex-boyfriends had been a country music fan and left Gemma with an unfortunate passion for Tammy Wynette. It was like, Cat thought, he’d given her herpes.• He was a strange, inscrutable man, with a disconcerting habit of allowing his eyelids to droop, turtlelike, whenever any of his staff spoke. The longer they spoke, the more it seemed he was drifting into a deep, comfortable sleep.• Cat didn’t need to see her mother’s face to know the lemony expression of distaste that would be pulling at her mouth as she said the word “counseling.” Counseling was something other people did.• “I’m a little tense” was a deeply personal revelation for her mother. It must be something terrible. It would be just like Maxine to announce terminal cancer over Christmas lunch.• There was a moment’s silence in the kitchen. The central characters had left the stage, leaving the supporting cast without a script.• Lyn had even given her a book called Ten Stupid Things Women Do to Mess Up Their Lives and helpfully indicated with a Post-it note the chapter on the stupid thing she believed Gemma was doing.• I’ve always had an interest in lepers,” Nana Kettle told Dan. “I beg your pardon?” Dan looked dazed. His paper crown was leaving a stain of red across his forehead. “Lepers!” chimed in Gemma. “Nana has always had an interest in lepers. It means your present is probably a donation on your behalf to the Leper Foundation. That’s what she gave Michael last year.• Something about the expression on his face made Gemma think, Uh-oh, he’s about to share. It was lovely of course, but she had a terrible habit of laughing in the wrong places when boyfriends got profound.• For starters, Hank was American. Americans were more open about this sort of thing. They liked chatting about deeply embarrassing emotions. They loved weird phobias! There was no such thing as an Aussie Oprah.These are just a few quotes from the earlier parts of Three Wishes. If they don’t make you want to read the novel, I guess the novel isn’t for you.

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  2. DorC

    Interesting story of adult triplet interactions
    I read this author’s most recent best seller ‘The Husband’s Secret’ and found that I wanted to read more of her books.This was an interesting story of triplets. There interaction with each other over the course of their 34th year was funny, sad andinsightful and I wanted to see what happens next.Cat was the character that seemed to be in the most understandable pain. She endures the betrayal from both husband and sisters. She keeps getting the rug pulled from under her.I was sad to see that Dan lived happily ever after. There should have been consequences or some concrete regrets. One hopes that a cheating spouse gets noticeably trounced. I did not really understand Cat’s response when she met Dan in the park.The triplets are college educated. Gemma was a teacher at an earlier age. She now seems to be an air head which is a role in the family that she always assumed. Her sisters do not know that she has income other than house sitting. They also do not know her true relationship with her deceased fiancé.Lyn is happily married to the man she cheated with. She is successful and strangely the one who touts doing the right thing.While I enjoyed reading this book, I found the message is that one’s actions that specifically hurt others is something that the injured party needs to move on from quickly. Not a lot of insight into the pain of others.

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  3. Farnoosh Brock

    Good but not great. Here’s why.
    Disclaimer: I am a HUGE Liane Moriarty Fan! Huge!! I have now read all her books and I’m comparing this work to the best of her work and of course to the general standards I hold for a fantastic book and thus giving it a 3-star.Don’t get me wrong, it was a GOOD book. It is a great story and it is funny and sad and addresses the great domestic and family and interpersonal and relationship issues that Moriarty does brilliantly in all of her works but you can tell she is just starting out at her craft in this book and it gets SO MUCH better in her later works, especially Big Little Lies and The Husband’s Secret (which is my absolute favorite).Three Wishes is the story of 30-something triplet sisters who run into new challenges, uncover their true selves in the process and butt head on more than one occasion to get through this fun journey of life. It is a light-hearted easy read, but it didn’t flow as well as I had hoped. For some reason, the interactions and exchanges between the three didn’t flow well for me. I have read books (Game of Thrones and Lord of the Rings, anyone? :)) where I’ve followed hundreds of characters and their journeys, but something about the story-telling process and the characters and their relationships just didn’ fit together all that well.The author always touches on a deep meaningful issue in her works and in this book, she chooses abuse – verbal and physical abuse of a boyfriend to demonstrate the complexities and victimhood that women could get trapped in when they believe they have no choice or that it is “their fault”. It was well done.Also, I have to admit, I have no idea who was telling the story at the start of select chapters – the font was all in the italics. It was the view point of some outsider person watching the triplets throughout their lives. That part did not integrate too well in the story either.Overall, I didn’t fall in love with any one character. Sure, I cried for Cat and even Gemma. I laughed hard in parts too. Moriarty is a master storyteller but she had not yet mastered her craft with Three Wishes, and I would recommend her later works more strongly than this one.

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  4. little

    fun read!
    Loved it. I couldn’t put it down at times. I laughed out loud and had to read my husband parts that tickled me.

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  5. Lucia

    O livro é maravilhoso, enredo, personagens, tudo! Leitura agradável e enriquecedora! Recomendo!

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  6. Janet Bowker

    As always, Liane Moriaty does not disappoint. Her style is tight and moves at a good pace, her characters, although a little larger than life, are appealing and identifiable with. An enjoyable trip around familiar social mores and human foibles.Any funny too.

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  7. Cliente Amazon

    Este es el segundo libro que leo de Liane Moriarty (el primero fue The Husband’s Secret) y ahora me compraré otro. Me encanta su estilo de escritura, es muy fresco y descriptivo. Sus personajes generar empatía y las historias te atrapan desde el primer momento. Para mi esta autora ha sido todo un descubrimiento.

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  8. westcoast girl

    My favourite author! All her books are winners. So insightful, interesting characters, funny and touching, they really speak to me.

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  9. Sarah

    Great read. Love this author

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    Three Wishes: A Novel
    Three Wishes: A Novel

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