Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash

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Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash

Contemporary fiction

Lost Lambs

by Madeline Cash

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Quick take

Three daughters navigate dating, adolescence, and their parents’ dissolving marriage in this quirky, clever story.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Multiple_Viewpoints

    Multiple viewpoints

  • Illustrated icon, Family_Drama

    Family drama

  • Illustrated icon, Quirky

    Quirky

  • Illustrated icon, Salacious

    Salacious

Synopsis

The Flynn family is coming undone. Catherine and Bud’s open marriage has reached its breaking point as their daughters spiral in their own chaotic orbits: Abigail, the eldest, is dating a man in his twenties nicknamed War Crime Wes; Louise, the middle child, maintains a secret correspondence with an online terrorist; the brilliant youngest, Harper, is being sent to wilderness reform camp due to her insistence that someone—or something—is monitoring the town’s citizens.

Casting a shadow across their lives, and their small coastal town, is Paul Alabaster, a billionaire shipping magnate. Rumors of corruption circulate, but no one dares dig too deep. No one except Harper, whose obsession with a mysterious shipping container sends the family hurtling into a criminal conspiracy—one that may just bring them closer together.

Irreverent and addictive, pinging between the voices of the Flynn family and those of the panorama of characters around them, Madeline Cash’s Lost Lambs is a debut novel of quick-witted observation and surprising tenderness. With it, Cash has crafted a family saga for the twenty-first century, all held together with crazy glue.

Content warning

This book contains mentions of suicidal ideation.

Read a sample

Get an early look from the first pages of Lost Lambs.

Lost Lambs

The gnat situation in the church was getting out of hand. It was Miss Winkle’s fault, she had brought the gnats and this was unforgivable, not in the eyes of God but those of Father Andrew, who was unable to extermignate the gnats, not for lack of trying—he’d employed every trap, spray, and swatter on the modern market—and yet his efforts had little effect on the greater gnat population. If anything, it was growing. Father Andrew imagined that soon the gnats might attract a larger pest—gnat-eating spiders, perhaps—which might attract, say, frogs, which might attract rats, which might attract cats, which might attract coyotes, which might attract a larger coyote-eating mammal, and so on and so forth. It was Miss Winkle’s fault because Miss Winkle had brought the plant into the church, “like God did on the third day!” Miss Winkle attended every church function with her brain-damaged child, who wore gun range earmuffs to mass—the organs startled her—and occasionally Miss Winkle brought plants from the nursery where she volunteered, tending the orchids. Surely she didn’t know that the plant had fungal gnat eggs in its soil, but why bring a plant into a church in the first place? thought Father Andrew. It wasn’t a botanical garden. A monstera plant too, meaning monster in Latin, assumed Father Andrew, although he wasn’t sure, hadn’t studied Latin at the seminary, majored instead in French Cinema. The plant topped his list of Reasons to Dislike Miss Winkle. Also on the list of Reasons to Dislike Miss Winkle was that she never dognated to the quarterly fix-the-church-bells charity fundraiser but complained quarterly about the lack of church bells. And she was in the habit of saying “I’ll say” when she hadn’t, in fact, said anything at all. She had never, in recent memory, offered an original point or enhanced a conversation. She simply tacked “I’ll say” onto someone else’s conversational enhancement, which was disingenuous and obnoxious and probably indicative of a deeper character flaw, maybe even inherent evil dating back to Miss Winkle’s apple-eating ancestor, or at least this was what Father Andrew told the state-mandated therapist. After that unsavoriness a while back with the priests and the altar boys, Our Lady of Suffering made some structural changes to its programming, such as weekly Consent through Christ workshops, an intimacy czar at every confessional, and mandatory psychoanalysis for the presbyters with the newly appointed parish shrink. The parish shrink often attributed Father Andrew’s “latent misogyny” toward Miss Winkle to “repressed sexual desire,” a diagnosis with which Father Andrew ardently disagreed. He was not repressing anything, had been with a number of women—thirty-three, specifically, one for every year of Jesus’s life—before joining the seminary. Plus, he highly doubted that his masculine desires would express themselves for Miss Winkle, whom Father Andrew often pictured to dissipate unhallowed urges.

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Why we chose it...


This is a big-hearted, original take on a dysfunctional family drama, with characters who prove that “coming of age” can happen at any age.


The book expertly balances a juicy, unpredictable plot with thought-provoking explorations of community, faith, and American adolescence.


We couldn’t stop chuckling while reading this book—the voice is singular, and there’s a running bit of wordplay that had our entire Editorial Team laughing out loud.

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View all
A Good Person
Nothing Tastes as Good
The Paris Match
Annie Knows Everything
Silver Elite
Blood Bound
No Matter What
How to Write a Love Story
Almost Life
And Now, Back to You
Dawn of the North
So Old, So Young
How to Kill a Guy in Ten Dates
One & Only
Sunk in Love
The Odds of You
Most Eligible
Rings of Fate
Lost Lambs
We Who Will Die
Good Spirits
Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore
An Academic Affair
The Everlasting
Flat Earth
Kitty St. Clair’s Last Dance
Never Over
The Ten Year Affair
Red City
The Academy
Wild Reverence
The Heartbreak Hotel
To the Moon and Back
Play Nice
Seduction Theory
The Compound
Finding Grace
These Summer Storms
How Freaking Romantic
The Other Side of Now
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
A Curse Carved in Bone
Aftertaste
Gifted & Talented
Passion Project
The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits
Every Sweet Thing Is Bitter
Promise Me Sunshine
Wild Dark Shore
Liquid
You Between the Lines
Rebel Witch
Kingdom of Claw
The Bones Beneath My Skin
Black Woods, Blue Sky
First-Time Caller
Babylonia
I Might Be in Trouble
Most Wonderful
The Courting of Bristol Keats
Pictures of You
PS: I Hate You
The Road of Bones
Hum
Hera
Husbands & Lovers
Margo’s Got Money Troubles
Honey
The Lady Waiting
The Paradise Problem
A Fate Inked in Blood
Annie Bot
Ready or Not
More
Alice Sadie Celine
A Winter in New York
Stars in Your Eyes
Love, Theoretically
The True Love Experiment
Yours Truly
Ana María and the Fox
Georgie, All Along
Vladimir
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The Love Hypothesis
The Hunting Wives
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Bringing Down the Duke