Rippling with humor, warmth, and style, Lost Lambs is a new vision of the charms and pitfalls of family dysfunction.
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 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.
Okay y'all, hear me out... Did you ever play The Simpsons: Hit & Run as a kid? This book is giving that. I loved it.
It's absurdist, so stupid (complimentary), and made me laugh out loud several times. Each member of the family has a compelling arc that culminates in them working together in some amateur vigilante sting operation to take down a corrupt billionaire. It doesn't try to be profound or sentimental, which was much appreciated as a reprieve between heavier reads.
The ending has some loose ends I would have liked to see resolved, but honestly, this was so fun and so hard to put down that it deserves a five-star rating. If you enjoyed the family dynamics of The Bee Sting with an absurdist, campy tone (like Sky Daddy, Mood Swings or Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead) then I think you'll really enjoy this. I can see this being divisive, but I'm a believer that Cash has struck some true genius in this debut!
Thank you to Farrar, Straus and Giroux for the ARC! Lost Lambs releases January 13th, 2026!
what a ROMP! the best way to start your reading year for 2026. a laugh on every page. absurd. warm. a prolonged buzz from an espresso martini, but if you’re smart enough, you’ll soon realize it’s just a guinness, but you’re having too much time to really care, really realize that we’re all here for a good time, not a long time so then it’s all the same, and all our little worries are the same, our loves too, our ways of understanding each other, putting up with each other, and, really, tolerating each other just enough to make an ounce of sense of this life, really look at it, laugh at it, and sail on.
A family of black sheep you can't help but follow.
"Lost Lambs" is one of those rare books that manages to be completely unhinged and yet deeply endearing. In her debut novel (!), Madeline Cash introduces us to the delightfully dysfunctional Flynn family - Catherine and Bud, whose open marriage is collapsing in slow motion, and their three wildly different daughters: Abigail, who's dating someone nicknamed War Crime Wes (yes, you read that right); Louise, who's secretly emailing an online terrorist; and Harper, a brilliant but paranoid teen convinced the entire town is under surveillance.
When Harper's obsession with a mysterious shipping container pulls the family into an actual criminal conspiracy, things go off the rails in the best possible way. Sure, the plot teeters into absurdity (the Alabaster subplot in particular could have wandered out of an early Coen brothers movie), but that's part of the novel's charm. Beneath the chaos lies a surprisingly tender, sharp, and funny portrait of love - the kind that exists in eye rolls, inside jokes, and the stubborn decision to show up for each other anyway.
Christine Lakin's audiobook narration is pitch-perfect, juggling the ensemble cast with effortless humor and warmth.
Chaotic, messy, snarky in all the best ways, and yet full of heart, "Lost Lambs" is proof that sometimes the black sheep have the best stories - and I'd follow these lost lambs anywhere. An incredibly debut of an author to watch.
Morally uncomfortable reads tend to be very thought provoking for me. This one particularly promises to think “holy shit”, clearly I’m already interested. On top of that, I love reading about dysfunctional families that are held together by a crazy glue.
Very funny. Slightly crazy plot. Great characters.
The Flynn family are going through some radical changes - the youngest girl, Harper who is convinced that someone is using a sculpture to spy on them; Louise who is so lonely that she has taken to the Internet to converse with a man calling himself Yours Truly who seems to want her to do some rather strange things for "the cause"; Abigail who has fallen for a soldier nicknamed War Crimes Wes; mother, Catherine, who is bored with her marriage and father Bud who is trying to keep a lid on his entire family's craziness even as he tries to work out what is going on at his job at Alabaster Harbour (owned by tech billionaire, Paul Alabaster).
I loved this family (Harper, with her dry wit and intelligence, obviously being my favourite) and the plot is suitably insane. From a gnat infestation in the church to the Lost Lambs programme that Bud becomes involved with to find some meaning, not leaving out Louise's fight with her speech impediment or the neighbour's peculiar hobby. It is all brilliantly mad and extremely funny.
I highly recommend this novel. If you like the work of Chris Brookmyre, Antti Tuomainen or Carl Hiaasen you will love this. Even if you never heard of those guys, if you just like a clever and funny book with great characters you will love this. Read it! I'm just hoping Madeline Cash writes more novels.
Thankyou very much to Netgalley and Random House, Transworld Publishers for the advance review copy. Much appreciated.
“When a lamb strays, it's usually lost to wolves, vulnerable without its flock. But sometimes, just sometimes, if its lucky, it finds a new one.”
When life gives you lemons, make lemonade, or rather bitter makes it better is the story of the Flynn family: the patriarch, Bud, living out in his car, helpless victim to a non-consensual non-monogamous spell, who finds comfort in the arms with the lady who runs his work-mandated self-help Church group, when his wife, Catherine decides the only way to save their two decade long marriage is to have an affair with their neighbor. 😒
Plus their three daughters; 17 yo, Abigail, the beauty with an impenetrable heart, who adored being the sole recipient of 23 yo War Crime Wes' attention, 13 yo, Harper, the brain, plagued with ennui and restlessness, and 15yo, Louise, suffering from middle child complex (I know the feeling!) who simply craved unconditional acceptance.
“Life was worth living because things needed to be done.”
For is that not what we're all searching for. a place to matter and belong. To be seen and feel loved? 🥺 It is that quandary of absurdity that this already dysfunctional family unwittingly find themselves caught up in, when as accounts and systems manager to the Alabaster Group, Bud discovers a discrepancy in the business, thus leading to a culmination of dirty dealings and chaotic findings that strangely enough helps them find a way to become a real family - in a strange but oddly endearing way. 🫂
The writing was its strong suite. Witty, sharp, with biting humor, with that take or leave it attitude that just was strangely addictive in how I was either chuckling or shaking my head - in our situation, you have to have a sense of humor. There was a nice balance to the serious tone to the more flitting, fleeting nature of the grave situation they'd stumbled into.
“As a soldier, you didn't choose your battles. they were something into which you were thrust.”
The multi-pov of each respective perspective, it isn't just what you see. 🤫 It's what you plan to do about it was immersive. The rapport between the cast was relatable; a bit quirky, but still - it can be real, if you choose to believe. As in, the truth hurts, but we sometimes have to look at it through colored lenses, or in this case, with a sense of humor to see that the morbid and mercurial somehow go hand in hand. 🤝
And sometimes that's what we need to survive. To poke fun at what brings us down in order to lift ourselves up and be united in the face of adversity to strengthen the bonds that had been lost to them. 🥲 Each member of the Flynn family was bereft, Lost Lambs, floundering before they finally found a place to belong, even if it is weirdly enough, amongst themselves. 🐑🧑🧑🧒🧒🐑
I did not expect one of the characters to hide their duplicitous nature; I wish it hadn't been that way, since his smart, dry candor was fun. I also felt the ending lost some of its charm, where the character growth was overshadowed by plot development with a crazy incredulous premise; which was unfortunate. 😕 There is also some crass dialogue with crude innuendo and scenes of, imo, unnecessary sexual dalliances, which, I understand how it was meant to show the derangement of society, but it can also be seen as offensive by some.
“Think about life as a fence. And each time we transgress, each time we hurt one another, we must tap a nail into that fence... The fence is still standing. the light can shine through.”
In spite of that, from the strange and bizarre, to a gnat infestation to marital challenges, it was the little things that lingered that left me - not entirely satisfied, but slightly pleased with what an odd, but surprisingly read it was how it drew me in. 👍🏻 With a bit of a strange start, there was a straightforward honesty tinged with a snarky touch that worked well enough for me.
I also want to add that there was a moment where I found a spelling error that threw me off; but when it occurred again and again and again, I caught on to what it was the author was aiming for. 😏 A bit of an inserted tongue-in-cheek kind of humor that, well, poked fun at the unfortunate (haha! - iykyk) plight, but it was a special touch that brought a bit of life and character to the writing to make it their own. And that was different and I can appreciate that. 🦗
*Thank you to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
As soon as I started Lost Lambs, I knew it was a book for me. There was this instant click where the voice grabs you and you slow your reading down purposefully because you don’t want it to end.
Madeline Cash’s writing is uniquely funny in a quiet, little sneaky way, building a world around the Flynn family that feels oddly polite and literal on the surface. The language is matter of fact, reasonable, almost stiff, while underneath it all is chaotic and absurd, begging to burst through, and the book really thrives in that contrast. It is cringe comedy at its finest and the comedic timing is perfect.
The characters are constantly trying to rationalize things that are deeply irrational, making strange observations that feel out of place but it’s very real at the same time. One standout scene has the main character, Bud Flynn, waiting in his billionaire boss’s mansion for an important meeting, spiraling over whether his goofy tie was the wrong choice. He debates it with a weird childlike assistant, and the whole exchange feels surreal yet relatable. It gave strong Severance and The Chair Company energy.
Lost Lambs lives in a deadpan psychological unease that is both so insanely funny and deeply uncomfortable, even creepy at times. Every small decision triggers a mental spiral, pulling the reader into that characters anxiety. It is absurdist realism, where these are things that could happen, but pushed JUST far enough that they almost start to feel like a fever dream. Truly unsettling, hilarious and impossible to forget! I can’t wait for people to read this one and experience the weirdness that is Lost Lambs. Big thanks to the publisher for my review copy! Comes out January 13 (tomorrow when this review is written)!
Oh, what a freakin' hoot! I absolutely loved this. While it had been on my radar, I really had no plans to read it until I was desperate for an audiobook to get me through my holiday crafting projects. Shout out to LibroFM for having this one on this month's ALC list.
The story and characters that Cash has created are absurd, but what makes it all work and keeps it from feeling overly quirky is that it's still so real and human. Even though middle-child Louise keeps falling victim to religious conversions in the name of love, the truth underlying her new penchant for Islamic fundamentalism is her need to feel seen. Oldest daughter Abigail's consistent pushing of boundaries is all normal teenage behavior, even if the consequences here are taken to laughable lengths. Each character is going through it, but there's a kernel of truth in every trial and tribulation they face.
This book is hilarious. I was consistently laughing at the dryly delivered one-liners, it is dripping with nonchalant wit. The next time you need to take a breather from heavy or contemplative reads, please give this one a go--the hype is real!
Sometimes it's easy to dismiss these overhyped buzzy debuts, but Lost Lambs totally surpassed my expectations! Jesus, can Madeline Cash write.
Lost Lambs is the story of the Flynn family. The three sisters - Abigail (the eldest and most beautiful but who only has eyes for her new beau who goes by the name of War Crimes Wes), Louise (typical middle child syndrome, doesn't really know herself and starts getting pulled into a relationship with an online terrorist), and finally Harper (young and fearless, digging deep for the truth of what's really going on in this town). Then there's their parents - Catherine and Bud, who are just beginning to open up their marriage and find themselves, whatever that means.
You might think this sounds somewhere between a Jonathan Franzen novel by way of The Virgin Suicides (clear influences on Cash's novel without a doubt), but wait - there's more. Because this novel is effin' bananas, from the church plagued by gnats, to the Lost Lambs support group run by Mrs Winkle, to the local billionaire with more money than sense, and the neighbour next door who.... no, wait - I'll let you discover that one for yourselves! ;) is it too bonkers? Sometimes. I was having so much fun with the characters and exploring their lives, that I actually was less interested in the *big stuff* building in the background.
Think Eleanor Catton's Birnam Wood, mixed with Miranda July's All Fours, by way of Franzen and Eugenides, and Paul Murray's The Bee Sting.
I genuinely laughed out loud and scoffed at so many lines in this. Madeline Cash is a voice to look out for.
Lost Lambs is a raw and unobscured look at the Flynn family; each dealing with their own vices, struggles, insecurities, and desires.
This is a wonderfully human novel that is original, funny, engaging, and remarkably well written with a cast of characters that display layers of complexity. It’s a search for connection, understanding, and ultimately love.
One of the great examples of literary fiction that’s a joy to read physically and audibly from narrator Christine Lakin. Thank you Macmillan and Farrar, Straus, and Giroux for the early copies. Pub date Jan 13 2026
Is there a Franzen-sized hole in your heart waiting to be filled by the next book in the Crossroads trilogy (when is this happening btw)? Maybe Franzen isn’t warm, absurd, or comedic enough for you? Or maybe you wished there was more of an Eyes Wide Shut vibe in his novels? Do you just want to have fun reading a book (a crazy concept I know)?
Can I offer you some Lost Lambs in these trying times?
In all seriousness, this book hit perfectly for me and I had high expectations after loving her collection Earth Angels. I’ve been ‘saving’ it since receiving the ARC this summer, an emotional support ARC if you will, waiting for the need for a madcap, dysfunctional family saga to arise. You know how that happens right?
Cash created a novel that is both sweet and tender, while having this darkness run throughout. It’s about how the nuclear family is falling apart while we all have a desire for connection. It’s about girlhood (and womanhood) and all the positive and scary things that come along with it. It’s how a lot of time, when we’re feeling lost living through these uncertain, and frankly weird, times we reach out for something that ends up being spirituality or God. YMMV on that one btw. It's about how the tech billionaires are up to no good and that conspiracy in your town may be true after all. What makes it fresh is its wit, the absurdist tone, and word play (those damn gnats that I thought were typos at first!) that thankfully comes together in an optimistic ending. You really are rooting for everyone and maybe that weird neighbor kid won’t turn into an incel after all!
The best way I can describe Cash’s style is pacey and visual (I fear I’ve used up my ‘absurdist’ allotment) with some of the best dry humor around - how does she manage to write dialogue that can be both unhinged and affecting? I think coming from a short story background, Cash is able to switch things quickly, create little twists here and there, and can handle a large cast of characters as they come in and out of scenes, and just have it all work.
How many ways can I say that I LOVED this? and what would you all do if I called this the Zillennials answer to The Corrections, or how I may actually learn to love earnestness?
Funny, a bit crazy and certainly wild. This is a great debut novel about a unique, wonderful family and I came to love every single family member with all their flaws and peculiarities (Harper is absolutely my favourite though). This would make a great film as well! Thank you Penguin Random House UK for the ARC.
arc provided by the publisher n netgalley… really wanted more from this… it was fine! parts of it were funny, parts were weird, but nothing ever dug any deeper than the surface. wished that instead of cramming the book with a variety of subplots, the author would have gone deeper on the more pressing ones that existed throughout the story. fun read tho
spectacular give me 14 of them right now!!! wow, it would be easier to tell you what this book offers but shorter if i tell you what it doesn't. What this book offers: everything and every one(i'll elaborate later). what this nook doesn't offer: nothing.
This book was about the flynn family, but there were so many other characters being described and introduced as well. Everyone of them is detailed in away that is not too much or too less, it's a perfect balance. in here, you get to see women with a disabled child running a church support group, you get to see parents with three daughters,a dysfunctional family, you get to see husband and wife who are having troubles with their marriage and are trying to broaden their horizon and are thinking about starting an open relationship, you get to see that eldest daughter child who thinks she is nothing more than a beauty in everyone's eyes, you get to see a typical middle child who thinks of herself as someone un-loveable and someone nobody ever thinks about and never acknowledges which ends in her dating online and long distance with a terrorist... than we also have the youngest child who is quite literally a multilingual prodigy at 12 but is titled as the troubled child, you also get to see a billionaire Tech Businessman who has a lot of money like I cannot even fathom how one can have this much money, a priest who's part of a cult. and a few more characters.
I think this is the 3rd time this month that I have ended up reading about cults, like I did not know that any of them were going to have the cult aspects, but here we are. There are a lot of things going on when you are reading this but everything is so funny. The writing style is also very good like you will be reading a paragraph and it will be like 'xy character wanted to open the pool', "I want to jump in pool said xy" like this was kind of funny to me and there were also parts with short one word dialogues that i absolutely loved. A book very amazing and mind blowing at the same time and so many people, different groups, different life stories, with different social and economic statuses. and like it's so amazing, I don't know how to explain more, just read it, it's really funny and absurd and thought provoking at the same time.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
eccentric and entertaining but fell off towards the end trying to wrap everything up through what felt a bit like needless ramblings. i thought the morbid humor worked well and found myself particularly charmed by Harpers musings. the family dysfunction and crass tone reminded me a lot of cousins by aurora venturini but more modern!
Thank you to Netgalley and FSG for an arc of this title!
A brilliant novel about a truly dysfunctional family. Catherine and Bud Flynn’s marriage is in serious trouble. Trapped in a conventional life with a stable job in accounts for Bud, three children and a house funded by Catherine’s parents, their lives are far from what they dreamed of when they were young. A gradual descent into mundanity has taken its toll and they’ve decided to open up their marriage. There’s no doubt that the three Flynn children are at their most vulnerable in this evolving situation - beautiful and rebellious Abigail, child genius Harper and middle child Louise whose loneliness makes her a target for online radicalisation.
I found this novel appallingly fascinating. While none of the members of the Flynn family were especially likeable, their actions and the decisions that they made for better or worse felt profoundly human. Catherine, for example, had a strong desire to re-discover the person that she felt she once was. She didn’t just want to be an artist, she wanted to feel seen as an artist. Yet all decisions have consequences and in pursuing something of importance to her, she neglects her family.
Lost Lambs just got better and better as I kept reading. As the plot pivoted in unexpected directions, I often found myself wondering what was going to happen next. The writing style was so engaging that I’m still thinking about what the future holds for the Flynn family now that I’ve finished the novel. This is a five-star read which tackles complex family dynamics head-on and is certainly a book I’d recommend.
Thank you so much to Random House UK, Transworld Publishers and NetGalley for sharing this eARC with me in exchange for an honest review.
I absolutely sped through this funny, weird and twisty novel in two days. Goodbye reading slump! This is a multi-pov story where we get to live inside the heads of all members of the dysfunctional Flynn family; Catherine and Bud and their three daughters. All of the characters are flawed, unique and often unlikable but you end up rooting for them all. Things start to unravel for the Flynn family once Catherine proposes they open their marriage. As the parents start to go their separate ways, a sinister plot by the local Billionaire starts to make its way into the family’s lives, bringing the family together.
I can see this book being a big hit! (I need it to be released so I can discuss the gnat situation with someone)
Thanks so much to doubleday for sending me a free advanced copy.
“Lost Lambs” by Madeline Cash is a story about a wildly unhinged and dysfunctional family. We are thrown into the chaotic lives of each of the weird and troubled family members. Aspects of this story, like the parents failing open marriage, the daughter who gets caught up with a terrorist on line, and a daughter who is dating a guy accused of war crimes did become a bit much for me. However, for those who like dark family dramas with characters who are flawed and lost, this well written book is for you!
Thank you NetGalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
read this because the dysfunctional family saga sounded a little like the bee sting, which i love, but which this book is not. definitely lighter, though id have to disagree with reviews on the back claiming it’s as ‘sincere as it is funny’ (or maybe not—it’s also not that funny). just far too #quirky for me, full of characters who all speak in the same ironic snarky (distinctly american millennial) tones and children so precocious and witty that they lose all credibility as real characters. plot was a bit too ridiculous for me, and there was a lack of character development that left it all feeling pretty shallow. very readable though, and not boring.
This book will likely appeal to white liberals (and to be clear, I don’t mean left-wing readers) because it offers so many excuses for bigotry by leaning heavily on the familiar patterns of white feminism. It highlights everything that’s wrong with that framework: in the age of Trump, it relies on dog-whistled Christian morality, casual Zionism, and the kinds of “acceptable” white-feminist politics that conveniently make room for certain marginalized groups—such as gay people—while simultaneously villainizing or mocking others, particularly disabled people and Muslims.
“Darling, sweetheart, light of my life, fruit of my loins, please refrain from going into my work email.”
I feel like Lost Lambs read to me like how Rue narrates in Euphoria, but I’ll stop you there, this is NOTHING like Euphoria 🤚🏾 I loved the storytelling of the Rippling family in multi-POV. This was SO funny, I was literally laughing out loud throughout. It felt like a surrealists dream. Absurd. So many moments reading this felt like Virgin Suicides to American Beauty then would drift away to what Lost Lambs was written to be, from those few influences. It’s also not just about the Flynn family but heavily about so many of the side characters too.
If you love lit fic, weird lit fic, and character driven novels! Or you may also have a little religious trauma, or not. I can also see this being hit or miss for people, or even having to be in the right mood for it. Lost Lambs is original and human, even twisty.
I am a very pleased early reader and might I add, it’s one of my favorite book covers, ever! I felt a lot of warmth from the book and the end solidified it. Loved the last page :)
You think your family is dysfunctional? Meet the Flynns. Madeline Cash has created a family comedy unlike anything I’ve ever read. I don’t even know how to explain it in a paragraph or two. But it is beautiful.
Regarding the audiobook specifically, Christine Lakin narrates the hell out of this book. I can’t stop thinking about and talking about how great she is. It’s like she crawled inside the brain of each one of these very wild but very different characters and played them perfectly. She has jumped right up there among my favorites.
Thanks to Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Macmillan Audio, Madeline Cash (author), Edelweiss, and Libro.fm for providing an advance digital review copy and an advance listening copy (narrated by Christine Lakin) of Lost Lambs. Their generosity does not influence my reviews in any way.
Thank you Macmillan Audio for the advanced listener copy of Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash.
This is a wild and crazy ride that explores some pretty deep philosophical questions in a unique way. The author's voice is witty and full of dark humor. This definitely isn't going to be for everybody as there are some pretty questionable moments involving racism and ableism, but I do think for the correct audience this will be a thought provoking read.
The author explores themes of religious corruption, corporate greed and morality all through the lense of a highly dysfunctional family hanging on by a thread. The characters are multi-layered and the plot is action packed.
This was an excellent debut. I flew through this in one day, unable to stop listening.
Boy do I love a dysfunctional family, especially when one tells their story with such wit and hilarity as Cash does in Lost Lambs.
The Flynn family is falling apart in both ordinary and extraordinary ways. The beautiful eldest is seeing a much older man (possible war criminal?), the middle child is seeking attention from an online terrorist, and the youngest is concerned about a secretive mass surveillance plot in her neighborhood. The parents would consider tending to these issues if it weren't for their own extramarital affairs as they have recently - and somewhat reluctantly - opened up their marriage in order to avoid addressing any underlying issues. The cast of characters surrounding the Flynn family is also colorful including, but not limited to, an evil billionaire.
I adored this book and highly recommend to fans of The Bee Sting, as it scratches that same hilarious/dysfunctional itch.
welp this really wasn’t for me but I also didn’t really know going in what it really was about & probably shouldn’t have picked it up to be completely honest