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Long Bright River: A GMA Book Club Pick (A Novel) Kindle Edition

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 16,732 ratings

ONE OF BARACK OBAMA'S FAVORITE BOOKS OF THE YEAR

NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY NPR,
PARADE, REAL SIMPLE, and BUZZFEED

AN INSTANT
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

A GOOD MORNING AMERICA BOOK CLUB PICK


"[Moore’s] careful balance of the hard-bitten with the heartfelt is what elevates Long Bright River from entertaining page-turner to a book that makes you want to call someone you love.” – The New York Times Book Review
 
"This is police procedural and a thriller par excellence, one in which the city of Philadelphia itself is a character (think Boston and Mystic River). But it’s also a literary tale narrated by a strong woman with a richly drawn personal life – powerful and genre-defying.” – People
 
"A thoughtful, powerful novel by a writer who displays enormous compassion for her characters. Long Bright River is an outstanding crime novel… I absolutely loved it."
—Paula Hawkins, #1 
New York Times-bestselling author of The Girl on the Train

Two sisters travel the same streets, though their lives couldn't be more different. Then one of them goes missing.


In a Philadelphia neighborhood rocked by the opioid crisis, two once-inseparable sisters find themselves at odds. One, Kacey, lives on the streets in the vise of addiction. The other, Mickey, walks those same blocks on her police beat. They don't speak anymore, but Mickey never stops worrying about her sibling.

Then Kacey disappears, suddenly, at the same time that a mysterious string of murders begins in Mickey's district, and Mickey becomes dangerously obsessed with finding the culprit--and her sister--before it's too late.

Alternating its present-day mystery with the story of the sisters' childhood and adolescence,
Long Bright River is at once heart-pounding and heart-wrenching: a gripping suspense novel that is also a moving story of sisters, addiction, and the formidable ties that persist between place, family, and fate.

Get to know this book


From the Publisher

Liz Moore, Long Bright River, Good Morning America Book Club Pick, Book Club Pick

Liz Moore, Long Bright River, Good Morning America Book Club Pick, Book Club Pick

Liz Moore, Long Bright River, Good Morning America Book Club Pick, Book Club Pick

Liz Moore, Long Bright River, Good Morning America Book Club Pick, Book Club Pick

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

An Amazon Best Book of January 2020: Many thrillers distract the readers with false leads and red herrings—it’s part of the joy of reading a good thriller. Long Bright River distracts the reader from seeing the wood for the trees too, by going back to childhood to painstakingly lay out the events that made once-close sisters take divergent paths in life. Raised by their bitter grandmother, Mickey is now an arrow-straight cop, raising a child alone, while Kacey is a victim of Philadelphia’s opioid epidemic. Estranged from one another, Mickey’s job enables her to keep tabs on her sister along with all the other lost souls and criminals on her regular beat. Every sighting of Kacey means one more day Mickey doesn’t have to worry about her sister turning up among the dead in the opioid-ravaged Kensington section of Philly. But when a string of murders coincides with Kacey’s disappearance, Mickey’s fears overrule her good sense and she obsessively hunts for Kacey in a neighborhood riddled with crime, corruption, addiction, danger, and deception. Both a harrowing tale that shows how the arc of addiction can feel like death by a thousand cuts to the rest of the family, and a tense, layered police procedural with a strong sense of place that puts it right up there with the best of Tana French or Dennis Lehane, readers will be thinking about Long Bright River long after the final page is turned. —Vannessa Cronin, Amazon Book Review

Review

"An instant sensation and the January pick for Good Morning America’s book club." 
Entertainment Weekly
 
"Navigates assuredly between the plot twists and big reveals. . . . 
Long Bright River is equal parts literary and thrilling." 
O, The Oprah Magazine
 
"Tough, tense and twisty - but tender, human and deeply affecting, too ... I don't have a sister, but when I finished the book I called my brother, just to hear his voice."
—Lee Child
 
"Satisfyingly, the characters’ interior lives are as important as the mysteries that propel the action." 
NYT Editor’s Choice
 
"
Long Bright River— a book that has garnered much ­pre-publication buzz — nervously twists, turns and subverts readers’ expectations till its very last pages. Simultaneously, it also manages to grow into something else: a sweeping, elegiac novel about a blighted city.”
The Washington Post
 
"Alternating its present-day mystery with the story of the sisters' childhood and adolescence,
Long Bright River is at once heart-pounding and heart-wrenching: a gripping suspense novel that is also a moving story of sisters, addiction, and the formidable ties that persist between place, family, and fate.” 
Good Morning America

"Truly, this is a great literary novel about a city in the age of opioids and two sisters navigating their past. And in the tradition of many great literary thrillers, I promise you, you will not see the end coming."
NPR

"Powerful." 
The Wall Street Journal

"Moore’s observations are informed and compassionate… One of loveliest things about Long Bright River is that it’s not a literary glorification of addiction."
The Guardian

"Thoughtfully explores the power of nature versus nurture, the pull of addiction, and, and the lengths we go to for family." 
Marie Claire 

"An exquisite novel that dug its fingers into my heart and has refused to let go…I finished this novel shaken, both by its sheer emotional resonance and also because of how clear and familiar so much of what Moore describes feels to me.
Medium.com

"Pulsating with breathtaking suspense and boundless compassion, Long Bright River is the kind of genre-defying novel that, once the final chapters close, you instantly implore people to read. Topical yet timeless, its page-turning narrative wrestles with the fissures and wreckage that addiction can inflict on a family—and a city. Liz Moore is a force, and Long Bright River should be on top of everyone's to-read list come January.”
Forbes

"A propulsive thriller and a poignant family saga.”
Time Magazine

"Deftly plotted with strong, vivid characters, Liz Moore's outstanding 
Long Bright River works as solid crime fiction and an intense family thriller." 
—Associated Press 

"Liz Moore’s Long Bright River is the perfect literary page-turner. It’s a brilliantly plotted crime novel, yes, but it’s also a story about the complicated push and pull of family, and how much of our childhood traumas we carry forward through our lives. Anyone with a mother, a father, a brother, or a sister – anyone with a heart, for that matter – will love this book, as I did." 
Mary Beth Keane, New York Times bestselling author of Ask Again, Yes

"Liz Moore’s
 Long Bright River is a riveting portrait of so many things—of grief, of sisterhood, of a neighborhood in despair. Moore makes you care about the people that society too often abandons and, in doing so, pulls off a hat trick of epic storytelling that is stigma-busting, love-rendering, and page-turning to the last word."
— Beth Macy, 
New York Times-bestselling author of Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America

"A superlative crime novel. Set against the backdrop of Philadelphia’s opioid crisis, this is not just a gripping mystery but a thoughtful, powerful novel by a writer who displays enormous compassion for her characters. 
Long Bright River is an outstanding crime novel, bringing to mind the best of Dennis Lehane or David Simon. I found myself eking out the final pages because I didn’t want it to end. I absolutely loved it."
—Paula Hawkins, #1 
New York Times-bestselling author of The Girl on the Train

"
Long Bright River is a remarkable, profoundly moving novel about the ties that bind and the irrevocable wounds of childhood. It’s also a riveting mystery, perfectly paced. I loved every page of it."
—Dennis Lehane,
 New York Times-bestselling author of Since We Fell
 
"Both sweeping and unbearably intimate, a riveting crime novel and a character-rich study of a city and its battered heart. And, in the way that Dennis Lehane anatomizes and explores his Boston, or Tana French her Dublin, Moore brings Philadelphia to vivid, wrenching life. Not to be missed."
—Megan Abbott, author of 
You Will Know Me

"It was excellent." 
Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could be Yours 

"Impossible to put down, impossible to forget." 
—Library Journal (*starred review)

"One of the pleasures of this deeply moving, absolutely page-turning novel is the way Moore, in both the present and in flashbacks to Mickey and Kacey’s childhood and teen years, slowly peels back layer after layer, revealing the old-boy’s network in the Philadelphia police force, the depths of Mickey’s loneliness, and the way the city of Philadelphia, particularly Kensington, is woven into this story, for good or ill. Give this to readers who like character-driven crime novels with a strong sense of place."
—Booklist (* starred review)

"Smartly crafted. . .Filled with strong characters and a layered plot, this will please fans of both genre and literary fiction." 
—Publishers Weekly

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07QLJ7P7K
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Riverhead Books (January 7, 2020)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 7, 2020
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2355 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 492 pages
  • Page numbers source ISBN ‏ : ‎ 0525540687
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 16,732 ratings

About the author

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Liz Moore
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Liz Moore is the author of five novels: The Words of Every Song, Heft, The Unseen World, the New York Times-bestselling Long Bright River, and The God of the Woods. A winner of the 2014 Rome Prize in Literature, she lives in Philadelphia and teaches in the MFA program in Creative Writing at Temple University.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
16,732 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the descriptive writing very realistic and true to Philly. They also appreciate the well-developed characters. Customers describe the emotional tone as heart-wrenching but hopeful. They describe the plot as captivating and gripping. Customers find it a great, powerful, and hard to put down read. They find the content insightful, complex, compassionate, and timely. However, some find the engagement flat and repetitive. Opinions are mixed on the writing style, with some finding it well-done and amazing, while others say it's not an easy read.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

159 customers mention "Readability"156 positive3 negative

Customers find the book mesmerizing, great for fans of literary fiction, and hard to put down. They also say it's powerful, true, and moving.

"Liz: Long Bright River “Long Bright River” is an entertaining novel with a very well developed protagonist, Micky...." Read more

"I read this book in one sitting, and it was worth it. It looks deceptively long on a shelf due to how it was formatted...." Read more

"This was GREAT!!! Bring from Philly it was such a good read. Suspenseful. I thoroughly enjoyed this!! Can’t wait till your next one!!" Read more

"...money problems, and of her misinterpretation of Philly, the novel itself was quite good...." Read more

152 customers mention "Plot"132 positive20 negative

Customers find the plot captivating, suspenseful, and gripping. They also describe the book as a gritty cop novel that slowly sucks them into a murder mystery. Readers also say the story is fascinating and griping.

"...The story was captivating." Read more

"...As a novelist, Moore’s strong points are plot and dialogue - it is unsurprising that she expressed great interest in screen writing, and she is..." Read more

"...LONG BRIGHT RIVER is full of mysteries and unexpected results and solutions. The answers I expected were most often incorrect...." Read more

"...This is a gritty cop novel, yes, but there is so much more to the writing...." Read more

76 customers mention "Characters"58 positive18 negative

Customers find the characters in the book rich, well developed, and stunning.

"...“Long Bright River” is an entertaining novel with a very well developed protagonist, Micky...." Read more

"...Worth the read. The writing is approachable, the characters neither likable or dislikeable, but the story is good...." Read more

"...The writing is excellent & the characters stay with you. Enjoy!" Read more

"...The story wasn't moving." Read more

45 customers mention "Emotional tone"32 positive13 negative

Customers find the emotional tone of the book heart-wrenching, sad, and chilling. They also describe it as a dark thriller with an undertone of family drama. However, some customers find the lives of two sisters remarkably redeeming in the end.

"...It’s a pretty dark book, but it all hangs together reasonably well...." Read more

"...line that juxtaposed the tragic lives of two sisters was remarkably redeeming in the end and I loved the characters and recognized how trauma..." Read more

"...So no editing awards for this one. And it’s depressing...." Read more

"...It was a great story and very emotional but it was a bit too dragged for me...." Read more

39 customers mention "Content"39 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful, complex, and compelling. They also say it explores life, family, and personal struggles. Readers say the book is well written, suspenseful, and focused on social issues. They mention the opioid crisis is very real and sad.

"True to Philly. Well written and devised" Read more

"...Nothing is tied nicely in a bow. It felt like the most real depiction of drug addiction that I have ever experienced and I felt only a small dose of..." Read more

"I enjoyed the realness with which she writes. I was very impressed by the depth of all the "chess" characters; made it tough to read at times when..." Read more

"...in giving us everything--an exciting plot, a timely theme, and fully developed, relatable characters. And the writing is superb...." Read more

34 customers mention "Descriptive writing"34 positive0 negative

Customers find the book very realistic, well-plotted, and believable. They also describe it as a beautiful, richly painted crime drama, with a powerful ending. Customers also mention that the book finishes nicely and has stunning clarity.

"...The secondary characters are well drawn, realistic, with good as well as bad qualities...." Read more

"...But the ending shows, with stunning clarity, the ways we fail to leave both financial and moral poverty behind." Read more

"True to Philly. Well written and devised" Read more

"...Long Bright River is brutally honest about the grittiness around dysfunctional families, the opioid epidemic, and sex work...." Read more

119 customers mention "Writing style"81 positive38 negative

Customers are mixed about the writing style. Some say the prose is well done, accurate, and amazing. They appreciate the author's unwavering description of addicts. However, some find the subject matter grim and the book difficult to read and follow. They also mention the punctuation is frustrating and hard to put down.

"This book was very easy to read. I live in the Philadelphia area so I am happy to support a local author! The story was captivating." Read more

"...The prose is well done, but too many scenes are a bit too long; it feels like it may have been a better book with 50 to 100 fewer pages...." Read more

"...I don't add this to my list of "favorites" because of its awkward dialog style, with em dashes used to indicate quotations rather than quotation..." Read more

"...Worth the read. The writing is approachable, the characters neither likable or dislikeable, but the story is good...." Read more

31 customers mention "Engagement"6 positive25 negative

Customers find the book flat and repetitive. They say it's confusing and annoying.

"...How to categorize LBR?It’s good fiction, not great fiction, though many will probably debate that point...." Read more

"I was amazed at her abuse of her own child. So little quality time and no fun moments...." Read more

"...lol Please use quotations!!!The main character is so bland and boring, and honestly it is hard to see a career long police officer being..." Read more

"...in any of the characters realistic, overall, it's a long haul and no fun. I didn't find the "bright" part of the River, just the "long."" Read more

WOW. SO INCREDIBLE!!!
5 Stars
WOW. SO INCREDIBLE!!!
Wow. One of the best books I’ve read in a long time!!! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ It’s an addicting/can’t put it down psychological thriller/mystery but also SO much more than that. Moore captures the opioid crisis and the tragedy of losing someone you love to addiction in such a heart breaking and beautiful way. It’s eye opening, addicting, and overall AMAZING. Everyone move this to the top of your “to be read” list it’s going to be the next big thing!!
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on March 28, 2024
This book was very easy to read. I live in the Philadelphia area so I am happy to support a local author! The story was captivating.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2020
Liz: Long Bright River
“Long Bright River” is an entertaining novel with a very well developed protagonist, Micky. It is also something of a “thriller” as Micky investigates killings, and a social novel, about: an area of Philadelphia called Kensington where opioid abuse is rife; family members trying to deal with the addiction of someone dear to them; a police department unwilling to root out the many bad apples. Is the police department as bad as it is portrayed? Certainly in these times it is easy to believe, and there have been some bad scandals in Philadelphia, but I would have felt better if there were an afterword as to sources. The author was interviewed at the Free Library of Philadelphia about the novel, by a journalist who writes about Kensington, but he did not bring up police corruption.

As a novelist, Moore’s strong points are plot and dialogue - it is unsurprising that she expressed great interest in screen writing, and she is writing a script for a movie version of the novel. The secondary characters are well drawn, realistic, with good as well as bad qualities. I also particularly liked how Micky becomes convinced, successively, of several people’s guilt. Some editing would be useful, eliminating for example some of Micky’s commonplace paeans to motherhood. Micky’s extended family is not as universally low-life as she portrays them, for example an uncle who owns an auto dealership, but she is not intended to be a totally reliable narrator.

SPOILER ALERT: In the Free Library interview the author expressed pride in the fact that Micky evolves as a character. Micky is remorseful about having asked how the sister knows who is the father. But how does the sister know, given that Micky has observed her working as a prostitute? Circumstances change, Micky’s father and sister become clean, Micky can no longer think of her police job as being one to be proud of, but has Micky’s personality really changed that much? From the beginning she tried to look out for all the addicts on the corners, and not think as badly of her neighborhood as many of her fellow policemen did.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2024
LONG BRIGHT RIVER is slow for a while at first. But you want to keep going anyhow. It's well written and obviously setting up a story that will be worth your while. It turns out to be unputdownable.

Most of the book is centered on Michaela's search for her sister, Kacey. Michaela is a cop; Kacey is a drug addict living on the streets. The story is told in alternating THEN and NOW chapters. So you gradually understand more and more of the sisters' background and how the NOW came to be.

LONG BRIGHT RIVER is full of mysteries and unexpected results and solutions. The answers I expected were most often incorrect.

I am so glad I didn't read other reviews of this story before I read it. If I had, I probably would have been given synopses of the story and been unable, then, to anticipate its mysteries as the author had intended.

This is the first time I've given five stars to a book that is slow to start. Believe me, it will be worth your while to read and remember it.

However, I don't add this to my list of "favorites" because of its awkward dialog style, with em dashes used to indicate quotations rather than quotation marks. Quotation marks were invented to aid readability. It is, therefore, rude not to use them.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2020
Many of the blurbs describing “Long, Bright, River” (LBR) label it a thriller. No way. While there are several passages with tension, none of it rises to the level of nail-biting, and the second ingredient for a thriller, “action”, just isn’t here. Lee Child writes thrillers, as does Brad Taylor, Joseph Flynn, Daniel Silva, etc. Liz Moore’s book, while good, ain’t no thriller. So what is it then, crime fiction? That label also appeared in some endorsements. No, not crime fiction. Some people were easily misled because our protagonist is a cop, and deals with a dead body in an opening scene. So what are we left with then? How to categorize LBR?

It’s good fiction, not great fiction, though many will probably debate that point. It seems like LBR has been pre-ordained to be a Big Book of 2020, at least in the early going. Lots of recognition, mentions, even an award or two. I think it’s a bit over-rated.

As mentioned above, Mickey is a cop, a young, inexperienced one. She is also a single Mom of a 4 year old boy. Mickey has a younger sister, a druggie, by the name of Kacey. Much of the book, and I mean MUCH, deals not with crime but with Mickey’s and Kacey’s history and relationship. And their single Mom, and their mean, irascible grandmother. And Kacey’s drug problems and occasional prostitution, and attempts to get clean, and her failures, and ditto for too many of the poor young women who somehow manage to survive in a run down section of Philadelphia. The prose is well done, but too many scenes are a bit too long; it feels like it may have been a better book with 50 to 100 fewer pages. So no editing awards for this one. And it’s depressing. The story feels researched, not lived, and the ending feels a little too pat, so four stars seems a bit too generous.
33 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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Artisan
5.0 out of 5 stars Story of two sisters and their diviergent lives
Reviewed in Canada on May 20, 2020
i really enjoyed this book, had not read anything by the author before, good story,well written, definitely worthwhile read, good suspense, and a very pertinent window into todays drug epidemic.ill look for more titles from this author in future
arbruma
4.0 out of 5 stars Me ha sorprendido
Reviewed in Spain on January 29, 2021
Es un poco lento al ppio pero merece la pena porque la resolución me ha sorprendido
One person found this helpful
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Isha Jain
3.0 out of 5 stars A tale of sisters..
Reviewed in India on June 1, 2020
It's a good family based story of two sisters but does not involve a great mystery unfolding, in case, you're a fan of "edge of the seat" moments like me. Good book for dramatic readers.
2 people found this helpful
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Bristol Book Blogger 📚📖📓
5.0 out of 5 stars MY TOP READ OF 2020 SO FAR!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 23, 2020
Hawkins' quote on the cover of this outstanding novel says exactly what I thought when I closed the book. This is an absolutely stunning psychological crime thriller. The narrative is sharp, the characterisation authentic, the themes of addiction, poverty, and the way our familial history shapes us excellently written and believable, and the plot itself so realistic I kept forgetting I was reading fiction. It reads more like a literary thriller. I'm quite a visual reader anyway but I can really see Moore's work being adapted into a movie. This has shot straight up to my top reads of the year (2020) and it's going to take a very special book to reach anywhere near the same level.

Stunning, visceral, and absorbing. I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a procedural element to their psychological fiction.
9 people found this helpful
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Ocean Hitachi
5.0 out of 5 stars 人の性格、人生観、責任感、行動とその選択について考えさせられます。ドラッグが蔓延した社会の現実を考える良い材料でもあります。
Reviewed in Japan on March 13, 2021
人、社会との繋がり、生まれ持った性格、責任感、義務感、人との繋がり、自責の念等、人格や人生観を築く過程に重きを置かれた素晴らしい作品です。今のアメリカのドラッグ問題を理解する為の社会小説としも秀逸です。重い内容ですが、一気に読みたくなるストーリーです。

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