No Fault
By Haley Mlotek
By Haley Mlotek
By Haley Mlotek
By Haley Mlotek
By Haley Mlotek
Read by Haley Mlotek
By Haley Mlotek
Read by Haley Mlotek
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$28.00
Feb 18, 2025 | ISBN 9781984879080
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Feb 18, 2025 | ISBN 9781984879097
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Feb 18, 2025 | ISBN 9798217016112
480 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
Advance Praise for No Fault
“Haley Mlotek’s No Fault is a book about life escaping the story built to contain it. A history of heterosexual love, marriage, and divorce that’s suspicious of clean answers, a winsome and poignant recounting of her own romantic formation and deformation, No Fault is a cool and bracing corrective against those many over-certain stories of marriage’s dissolution that still dominate the form. Mlotek, as always, is a master of elegant destabilization; her sentences are enigmatic, opalescent, so precise as to feel like long-lost aphorisms. We’re lucky to have her on this subject—a writer who can work in the gap between the known and the unknown, the intimate and the public, the way our lives are always forged in material context and the unreachable particularities of the human heart.”
—Jia Tolentino, New York Times bestselling author of Trick Mirror
“Sharp, smart, and searingly personal, No Fault is an ideal hybrid of rigorous reporting, social commentary, and personal reflection on the nature of love and divorce. Mlotek writes like a dream, and draws us close as she ponders what makes a marriage endure or crumble. You’ll want to join her on this journey.”
—Susan Orlean, New York Times bestselling author of The Library Book
“No Fault is a remarkable work of nonfiction: sensitive, deftly researched, tender, wise. Mlotek’s writing is beautifully alive to the world, alive to the histories of marriage and divorce, alive to the hardest thing to pin down on the page: the truths of who we are and have been, in all their shimmering, quantum states.”
—Sarah Thankam Mathews, author of National Book Award finalist All This Could Be Different
“No Fault is a boldly intimate and political work that tenderly reveals the links between intimacy and politics; societal forces and emotional chaos. Mlotek is at home in contradiction, confidently traversing systemic analysis alongside the nuances of individual experience. From the rubble of old stories and structures, Mlotek has unearthed insights about love and endings that will stay with me for a long time.”
—Tavi Gevinson, actor and writer
“Haley Mlotek’s No Fault stuns with its emotional intensity, intelligence, and frankness. Her clarity and psychological sophistication produce acute insights. They come from experience, analyzing media, and researching divorce laws and their effects on society. In No Fault, a surprising, genre-bending work, Mlotek discusses the aftermath of her own divorce, with its indefinable, unexpected feelings and anguish. ‘To be wanted is one thing, to be left is another,’ she says. No Fault is unrelenting in its mission to expose the complexity of divorce. Not an absolute end, bringing freedom and relief, fault or no fault, Mlotek tells us. It can be hell, even if easier to get. No Fault is a formidable, important work.”
—Lynne Tillman, author of Mothercare
“Sentence for sentence, Haley’s personal and closely examined chronicle of marriage and divorce, ‘forever’ and ‘for now,’ is keenly observed and real fun.”
—Durga Chew-Bose, author of Too Much and Not the Mood
“I’m haunted by the sophistication of Haley Mlotek’s insights and the tenderness with which they are delivered. No Fault is devastating because it is as full of pain as it is love. There is no other book on divorce or marriage—or romance—like this one.”
—Charlotte Shane, author of An Honest Woman
“Singular, dazzling and wry, No Fault weaves the personal and political in an elegant exploration of divorce’s cultural position, and of what it means to take that step yourself—moving onto ground both historically well-trodden, and unimaginably alien. There is such clarity and tenderness set out in the pristine sentences of this book.”
—Sophie Mackintosh, author of The Water Cure
“Mlotek debuts with a frank combination of personal and social history that examines both her own divorce and shifting attitudes about the practice. . . . a shrewd testament to personal agency and self-definition. . . . This raw and reflective account stands out in the crowded field of divorce memoirs.”
—Publishers Weekly
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