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No Fault
No Fault: A Memoir of Romance and Divorce | Haley Mlotek
1 post | 1 read
A MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK OF 2025: Vogue, Vulture, Harpers Bazaar, W, Bustle, Lit Hub, The Millions Enigmatic, opalescent, so precise. Jia Tolentino An investigation, an invocation, a mood. Becca Rothfeld, The Washington Post A personal accounting of heartache. . . . Mloteks writing reaches toward and actually meets poetry. Alissa Bennett, The New York Times Book Review A cool appraisal of millennial divorce. Emma Alpern, Vulture An intimate and candid account of one of the most romantic and revolutionary of relationships: divorce Divorce was everything for Haley Mlotek. As a child, she listened to her twice-divorced grandmother tell stories about her husbands. As a pre-teen, she answered the phones for her mothers mediation and marriage counseling practice and typed out the paperwork for couples in the process of leaving each other. She grew up with the sense that divorce was an outcome to both resist and desire, an ordeal that promised something better on the other side of something bad. But when she herself went on to marryand then divorcethe man she had been with for twelve years, suddenly, she had to reconsider her generations inherited understanding of the institution. Deftly combining her personal story with wry, searching social and literary exploration, No Fault is a deeply felt and radiant account of 21st century divorcethe remarkably common and seemingly singular experience, and what it reveals about our society and our desires for family, love, and friendship. Mlotek asks profound questions about what divorce should be, who it is for, and why the institution of marriage maintains its power, all while charting a poignant and cathartic journey away from her own marriage towards an unknown future. Brilliant, funny, and unflinchingly honest, No Fault is a kaleidoscopic look at marriage, secrets, ambitions, and what it means to love and live with uncertainty, betrayal, and hope.
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review
fredthemoose
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Mehso-so

⭐️⭐️⭐️ I‘m not sure what this was supposed to be. It was a little bit memoir, but both held back quite a bit and included a lot of post divorce romantic encounters that didn‘t feel that important. It was part history of divorce. It was a little bit of divorce in popular culture. Many of the pieces were fine, but there combination didn‘t really add up to a meaningful narrative.