Description
What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty is a contemporary psychological and family drama built around memory loss, identity, and the gap between who we think we are and who we become.
The story follows Alice, a woman who unexpectedly loses the last ten years of her memory after an accident. When she wakes up, she believes she is still in her late twenties, happily married and expecting her first child, only to discover she is now in her late thirties, separated from her husband, and estranged from parts of her former life. As Alice tries to reconstruct what happened during the missing decade, she is confronted with the reality of a life that no longer feels like her own. Relationships have shifted, priorities have changed, and the version of herself she has become is unfamiliar and unsettling. The narrative explores how marriage, motherhood, ambition, and personal change can reshape identity in ways that are not always immediately visible.
What Alice Forgot is ideal for readers who enjoy emotionally driven fiction focused on relationships, self-discovery, and the consequences of long-term change.













