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Fault Lines

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Years of caring for her needy family have left Merritt Fowler exhausted and confused, uncertain of who she is or what she wants. When a family argument sends her lovely, fragile daughter, Glynn, running from her Atlanta home to her Aunt Laura in Hollywood, Merritt is compelled to follow.

On impulse, the trio takes off in Laura's red Mustang convertible, barreling up the coast to the lush wilderness outside San Francisco -- earthquake country. There, amid the beauty and protection of the mountains, mother, daughter, and sister will struggle to see if the widening fissures between them can be healed, as they search for the bedrock of strength and courage that can save them and their family.

384 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1995

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770 people want to read

About the author

Anne Rivers Siddons

60 books1,232 followers
Born Sybil Anne Rivers in Atlanta, Georgia, she was raised in Fairburn, Georgia, and attended Auburn University, where she was a member of the Delta Delta Delta Sorority.

While at Auburn she wrote a column for the student newspaper, The Auburn Plainsman, that favored integration. The university administration attempted to suppress the column, and ultimately fired her, and the column garnered national attention. She later became a senior editor for Atlanta magazine.

At the age of thirty she married Heyward Siddons, and she and her husband lived in Charleston, South Carolina, and spent summers in Maine. Siddons died of lung cancer on September 11, 2019

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5 stars
900 (27%)
4 stars
1,003 (30%)
3 stars
998 (30%)
2 stars
270 (8%)
1 star
70 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 178 reviews
Profile Image for Suzy Black.
133 reviews5 followers
March 24, 2009
I'm an Anne Rivers Siddons fan, and this book was my absolute favorite - I keep a copy of it on my Kindle so that I can refer back to a couple of my favorite passages - passages that still mean a lot to me on a personal level - and ones that make me cry every time I read them. I'm not sure it would be everyone's favorite (I'll have to admit that it's a bit sappy), but I loved it
Profile Image for Esther.
441 reviews105 followers
December 25, 2017
I’m not quite sure why I picked up this book - blurbs like “circumstances that will forever change the lives of all three women” are kryptonite to me. People ‘finding themselves’ is not my thing especially when an affair is used to get a marriage back on track.

It started off better than expected and in the first few chapters I so wanted to smack Pom I found it upsetting.
By the time Pring was also turning out to be a total rat I was getting a little weary with the women tangling themselves in knots trying to cope with this behavior and Ms Siddons was using the word alabaster too frequently.

Then the scene moves to the Redwoods where our main character is obviously going to find herself, and also earthquakes.
At this point the language switches from bordering on the flowery to repetitive dialog, particularly the inner dialog. Seemingly endless paragraphs are spent discussing feelings and how these feelings make them feel and how these feelings make them act and how they feel about how these feelings are making them act or feel or …. Heck only knows because I had stopped paying attention.

The romance was dry and dull. The tragedy was extremely predictable and left me unmoved.
Everyone else lived happily ever after (except Forrest - nobody seemed concerned about the poor rat) and the only character I really wanted to make it out alive was Curtis the dog.

I would recommend to some who likes a better class of chic-lit with a half-decent language style and more concerned about feelings than fashion.
Profile Image for debbicat *made of stardust*.
848 reviews122 followers
April 6, 2020
Man! The woman can write!!! It’s been a long time since I’ve read an ARS. My favorite by her is UpIsland I’ve read it more than once. I’m not one to read a book 📚 more than once too often.

This one had all the feels. Seriously. I loved it. I laughed. I cried. Related easily. Easily to the protagonist and her sister Laura. I saw myself in both. Even Glynn the 16 year old daughter took.

So glad I had the time to read this during quarantine. I’ve missed Siddons. I just didn’t know it. If you love her too let me know.

I feel so good after just finishing this. She writes about strong woman. Women like me.
Profile Image for ~☆~Autumn .
1,170 reviews171 followers
September 15, 2018
The first half of this was mostly annoying but I persisted so it had something and was rewarded as it got better and better. I really liked T. C. and his dog. The other characters not so much. The setting at the end in CA was wonderful to read about.

I carried this with me when we went to Seattle but was unable to read much at all as I was too worried and distracted.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
493 reviews288 followers
Read
May 3, 2024
Not sure how to rate this. Enjoyed the first 2/3 of it well enough for what it was, but the last 1/3 just fell off a melodramatic cliff. Liked the overall message, though, that love can only expand us and our world, no matter how messy things get
Profile Image for Claire Fullerton.
Author 5 books421 followers
March 23, 2016
I consider Anne Rivers Siddons one of the select few of masterful, contemporary Southern writers, and Fault Lines is the tenth novel of hers I've read. Fault Lines is another of Siddons' fine examples of a seamlessly crafted story, wherein palpably developed characters find themselves in a plausible predicament. Beginning in Atlanta, Merritt Fowler is the second wife of a doctor, whose mother, who lives with them, has a more advanced stage of Alzheimers than her husband is willing to acknowledge. Their sixteen year old daughter has growing pains, and Merritt's bohemian younger sister, Laura, who is an actress on the wane in California is a constant worry. When Merritt's daughter flees to California, on the heels of a family rupture, Merritt finds herself a fish out of water on the west coast and begins to like the possibilities of a life away from the unworkable sameness of Atlanta. Realizing she has always been a fixer and a rescuer to those around her, Merritt tests her wings when she meets the renegade caretaker of a property in Northern California's Santa Cruz Mountains. It is here that Merritt begins to experience an unexplored side of herself and begins a life-altering romance, though it is built on unstable ground.
941 reviews6 followers
November 2, 2014
The beautiful prose drew me in, but the soap opera about 2/3 in was really a bit much. I suppose people behave that way, but ugh! (Integrity - doing the right thing even when no one is watching.) I liked the main character until all this mess. Skipped all the scientific earthquake info - too dull - and read the end, which was satisfying. But not a book I'd share or recommend.
No one was anything but skinny in this story. An anorexic and two perfect figures, one nearly 50. Really? Not a single figure flaw or a wart on her nose? Come on!!
Profile Image for Deanne.
92 reviews
March 29, 2011
Definitely not my favorite Anne Rivers Siddons book. In fact, compared to other books I have read of ARS, it was a real disappointment. I didn't find any of the characters particularly likeable and the plot itself was completely unbelieveable. Once it finally got to the part about the earthquakes, I found myself pretty much skimming the pages, so that I could be finished with it.
269 reviews3 followers
December 6, 2009
Starts out promisingly but soon descends into soap opera and bathos. When Siddons describes landscape, natural phenomena, or animals, she's at her best-- in fact, sometimes profound-- but her people are paper dolls, and the "dialogue" is straight out of Dr. Phil. The plot was interesting enough to keep me hooked, but by p. 250 the novel had devolved into an embarrassing bodice-ripper, unfit for grownups.
Profile Image for Cindy.
603 reviews
May 4, 2017
Where shall I begin? Overwrought, pretentious, melodramatic, kinda like wearing flashy jewelry, full makeup, a stiff hairdo and stiletto heels to a hayride. I seem to remember now from previous Siddons books I'd read long ago that her style is a bit blowsy with completely unrealistic dialogue and wildly improbably scene-setting. The premise was interesting but for me she blew it with the artificial speech from her characters.
Profile Image for Mary.
38 reviews
December 1, 2009
Intrigueing plot and character development. I think it speaks to our "wild side" -- that part of us that would sometimes like to throw off our responsibilities and our orderly lives and just experience something new, exciting, daring, romantic -- even though to do so puts our lives and our relationships at great risk.
Profile Image for Barbara Nutting.
3,205 reviews159 followers
April 7, 2024
WOW that was quite a ride. I can only describe it as classic Chick Lit by a master storyteller. Three women from a very dysfunctional family (murder and divorce could have fixed that right up front) lead us on a not so merry chase. From Atlanta to the cesspool of the Hollywood movie industry and then on to the redwoods of Northern California the plot thickens and thickens!

Meredith - a helicopter mother with DOORMAT tattooed to her forehead.
Glynn - an obnoxious teen who turns into a mall slut.
Laura - the sister from hell who is totally self absorbed.
Put ‘em together and what have you got? - a simmering, seething, steaming plot!!

As a native Californian, I am well acquainted with earthquakes, but I did enjoy some of the geological info. Just a side note - I had to laugh when Stuart had his Waterford damaged during a tremor. The same thing happened to mine. My crystal goblets were hanging on a wine rack and all of a sudden they were chiming like the Bells of St Mary’s as the room swayed. Four of them sustained chipped rims. Drink carefully!!

I loved the description of their day at Point Reyes - spot on. I could feel the wind and shivered in the fog. One of my most favorite places. I even climbed the 301 steps to the lighthouse.

The only characters I liked were Curtis, the dog and Stuart. The rest were all hateful.

After 602 pages (LP) I was disappointed by the ending. A bit over done and too long. But it was a great otherwise.
Profile Image for Miranda Summerset.
615 reviews5 followers
February 3, 2024
3.5/5 STARS! This is my 2nd book from this author, & I really enjoy her writing. This is a tale of a family in peril, & wanting to be someone else for a while. I enjoyed the story, & the 3 women, all hot messes imo, but that made it feel more real. I really liked how this progressed, & the growth of the characters in the end. Good book for sure! I had fun with it.
332 reviews1 follower
June 16, 2023
The last few books were too shallow and Zi did not enjoy them. I’m glad I found this for sale at our library. It was not shallow but deep and very interesting. Some of the story was unrealistic bu I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Mira.
5 reviews
September 6, 2017
I've finally managed to finish an Anne Rivers Siddons novel and the jury is out. I felt like I read two vastly different tales of four women, one of whom is cast aside only to be revisited with one sentence of closure on the second to last page... characters are built up and left, like loose change on a dresser. The male antagonist shows up in the last paragraph whimpering sans thought or dialogue... my favorite character... Curtis. And, btw, what happened to Forrest? I do like the challenge of rich vocabulary and the visuals that are created by detailed descriptors. Perhaps I'll try one more ARS tale to see if she's branded a formula that consistently leaves the reader hanging... hopefully not.
Profile Image for ☮Karen.
1,764 reviews8 followers
April 9, 2012
Even though I found it hard to really identify with any of the three main characters, I liked this book a lot. It is very much a book about women and the roles we play in our loved ones' lives. The story goes from Atlanta, where Merrick does nothing but take care of everyone -- her mother-in-law with Alzeimer's who almost sets the house on fire, her teenage daughter recovering from anorexia, and her often-absent doctor husband -- to Hollywood, where Merrick's younger sister is trying to become an actress and also will need her help. Merrick slowly realizes that she needs to start taking care of herself too, but it is a long, wild, journey.
Profile Image for Louise.
340 reviews
July 11, 2011
Siddons has always been one of my favorite authors. She creates charaters that are believable. I usually find that I can identify with aspects of all her characters...not this one. I could not wait to get it over with. This was the worst book by Siddons I have ever read and I have read quite a few of them. Perhaps it is because it is an earlier book but the characters seemed shallow and completely self-involved. While there was a bid at the end to change this attitude it did not ring true. It was predictable and had nothing surprising or revealing. I would not recommend this one to anyone except by way of comparison to much better novels by Siddons, such as Outer Banks.
Profile Image for Emily.
925 reviews51 followers
November 22, 2015
I have mixed feelings about this book. It was well-written, to be sure (although I think Siddons uses the word "presently" too much), but entirely unrealistic to me -- both the journey that Merritt takes, how quickly she falls in "love" (lust is more like it), and the ending -- which I won't spoil here. All that said, I thoroughly enjoyed entering a fantasy world for awhile and traveling along with her on an emotional and sensual journey, even while my practical side was saying "this could never happen". 3.5 stars, but I rounded up to 4 since the ending made me cry, so I did get emotionally involved.
Profile Image for Margaret Wallace.
74 reviews
June 10, 2017
Don't bother to read this highly predictable book. Not only was it simple it was insulting to the power of women. Every decision was a reaction to a man. I had to finish it because I just could not believe it would continue to the end.
48 reviews4 followers
March 17, 2014
Great book exploring relationships, Siddons always at her descriptive best.
Profile Image for Jackie.
1,175 reviews3 followers
June 6, 2014
This is a novel of life reevaluation and finding a new path.
Profile Image for Russell Sanders.
Author 12 books22 followers
December 30, 2021
A teenager’s coming of age is a time-honored theme in literature. But Anne Rivers Siddons puts her own special spin on it. For, in many of her novels, she has a middle-aged upper class woman, who somehow missed her teen rite of passage, come of age after the central experience Siddons creates for her character. In Fault Lines, Merritt Fowler is the wife of an Atlanta doctor from a prominent family. When their teenage daughter runs away to her aunt, Merritt’s sister, in California, Merritt goes to fetch her back home. In a sense, both mother and daughter are running away from a particularly bad home situation, but the mother, not having fully reached her potential even in mid-life, does not know she is running. In California, Merritt, her sister, and her daughter begin an adventure that has consequences that not only precipitates Merritt’s coming of age but her daughter’s as well, and in many ways, the sister/aunt’s realization. Siddons is a masterful writer using beautiful and evocative imagery, unexpected plot points, and the metaphor of an earthquake that is both thrilling and powerful. The story is a wild ride with unexpected twists. A listing for the novel I saw while reading it gave categories in which it was placed. Among them was “chick-lit.” Admittedly, I don’t know the meaning of the term, but it evokes in me an image of a book that is light, airy and bright, appealing to women who need a beach read. I was enraged when I saw this, for Fault Lines does not fit that description at all. It is fine literature, written by a master. And it changed my life somehow. I don’t really know how right now, but somehow I feel when I need its message, it will be waiting for me.
82 reviews
November 24, 2023
I gave this a 2 rating as the last half of the story was just too unbelievable to me and written almost like soft porn or a Harlequin romance type story. Merritt and T.C. fall so madly in love with each other that they spend a day totally doing everything in the nude (sleeping, swimming, eating, lounging around, etc.) and making love all day. Merritt wants sex constantly! They "do it" at least 5 times in one day. THEN I realize they have only known each other for THREE days! That's when they talk about being on the pill and not having any STDs. WHAT?? How about page 321 when Merritt is getting ready to go back home and her sister is going to clean up the lodge she stayed in she says "Maybe I should hide my dirty underwear where he'll never find it. Make him smell me every time he turns around." EW! That was way too much for me. Call me an old fuddy duddy, but c'mon!
I felt for Pom and his denial of his Mom's dementia, but, again, c'mon - he is a DOCTOR and should be more aware and in tune with someone exhibiting these dangerous behaviors (almost set the house on fire). Glynn (16 y/o dgt.) was in the middle of this dysfunctional family and she acted out accordingly. But the part about her getting the lead part in a movie just because "she looked gorgeous"? The studio execs fawning all over her like they had absolutely no other person to give this part to? Really?
The ending with the earthquake was predictable and the last few pages were just too sappy.
After reading over my review, maybe I should have given this book a "1" rating!
Profile Image for Dana.
1,209 reviews
February 12, 2024
I remember nothing about this book, only that I read, and loved it. We are talking about nearly 30 years ago, so I probably should reread it, but rarely do that. There are so many books I hope to read, and never enough years left on earth to read them all, so I probably will not reread this one, but wanted to update my Goodreads account. There WAS not Goodreads in 1995, and I was not yet familiar with the internet, so I certainly was not tracking my book reading. I always read voraciously, and Anne Rivers Siddons was a favorite author of mine from the time I discovered her until her death. I am currently going back through a list of all her books, and trying to figure out which I missed and whether they are of interest to me now. If you are new to the author's works, my favorites were "Colony" and "Outer Banks," which I read poolside, not far from The Outer Banks in the early 1990s. I remember seeing a woman reading it, and asked her about it. She finished it that day, and then put it on MY chaise by the pool, as a gift!
942 reviews13 followers
April 22, 2020
A good story. Merritt has always taken care of everyone- her sister, Laura , and now her husband, Pom, and daughter, Glynn. Pom is at work all the time or out raising money for his clinic but still wants to control things. He has his mother living with them who has Alzheimer's and he expects Merritt to deal with it. Finally the grandmother sets fire to Glynn's new clothes and there is a confrontation. Glynn runs away to California to her Aunt Laura and then Merritt goes to bring her home. Then things begin to happen in California and Merritt meets and is attracted to the caretaker at a mountain place. The story then turns to their relationship and then and earthquake takes place. the lives of all her touched and changed in different ways and Merritt finds herself as a person and not just a caretaker. The story was a little unbelievable and at times I felt the author was too wordy and descriptive.
95 reviews
December 22, 2021
This was the last of a trio of books I found tucked away in a box when I recently moved---all three having stayed in their box over two decades since my last move. So I decided to reread them all and found that my taste in books has changed in some ways over the course of two decades. I clearly liked this enough to keep it back in the late 90s, but now it's not a winner for me. The book was bogged down in so many paragraphs of flowery descriptive passages that I grew weary of them right away, and the characters were hard to cheer for with the exception of tiny amounts of time here and there which always seemed to disappear far too soon for me. I won't be keeping the book another two decades--it's no longer a "keeper" for me.
Profile Image for Janey.
304 reviews
June 2, 2020
Love Anne Rivers Siddons books, thought I’d read them all, but how did I miss this one from 1995? Glad I found it now. Her stories are always wonderful, and this one is no different. The fault line is in the earth in CA and the fault lines are in the lives of the characters - mother Merritt, her daughter Glynn, and Merritt’s sister Laura. They all find the strength to change their lives for the better as the story moves along from Palm Springs to L. A. to earthquake country near Paulo Alto and San Francisco. Shallow Hollywood life is seen, gorgeous mountain scenery is described in detail, and a love affair is developed. Loved all of it!
26 reviews
August 4, 2025
FAR TOO LONG!!!!

The first few chapters of this novel were good but the last 4/5 of it were wordy and too full of description of the places and people; I finished it, all the while hoping it would get better; it never did. It is as though the author was being paid by the word: More words,
more profit. The characters were not believable. Descriptions of their looks, attire, and behaviors were so outlandish, they seemed to have been created simply to extend the story. This author could write much better than is reflected in this novel.



109 reviews2 followers
November 25, 2018
another great book by Anne Rivers Siddons...this one was a bit soap operish about halfway thru, but she is still a favorite author of mine because of the way she is able to write about relationships and what it means to be in a family, no matter how challenging, especially when you're the one that takes care of everyone and everything.....This one was also interesting to me as it takes place in California where my daughter is now living. I liked this book and would recommend.
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