Tell us no secrets: a novel

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
William Morrow
Publication Date
[2022]
Language
English

Description

This stunning debut thriller, set in a girls’ boarding school, will leave you breathless until the final page is turned.

Sometimes girls are the meanest of them all...

Female friendship is intense and that intensity can erupt into dangerous passions when teenage girls are cooped up in an exclusive East Coast boarding school.

Beautiful, streetwise Cassidy Thomas; debutante jock Abby Madison; academic, sensitive Karen Mullens; and sophisticated troublemaking Zoey Spalding are four seventeen-year-olds who should be cruising happily through their Senior Year. But jealousies are simmering. And when Zoey plays a game with the class list—if you lose your virginity you get a star beside your name—it sets in motion a chain of shocking events.

Nine months later, when one of the girls is murdered, the others must ask themselves if they can carry the truth of what happened the rest of their lives.

Tell Us No Secrets describes the bonds between these adolescent girls as well as the terrible pain of betrayal and the tragic consequences of peer pressure running riot at a time when the seismic shift of the Sixties changed the rules for everyone.

More Details

ISBN
006316180
9780063161801

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These books have the appeal factors menacing and intensifying, and they have the theme "dark academia"; the genre "psychological suspense"; and the subjects "boarding schools," "female friendship," and "memories."
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Female friendships run strong through these menacing, intensifying novels. Alternating between past and present, each book features multiple perspectives on an unspeakable tragedy as the characters ultimately discover the weight of the truth. -- Marissa Mace
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These intensifying, compelling novels take place at boarding schools on the East Coast (Massachusetts in Tell Us No Secrets and Maine in My Dark Vanessa) and feature complex teenage girls who discover danger in adolescent passion. -- Marissa Mace
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These books have the appeal factors intensifying and multiple perspectives, and they have the theme "dark academia"; the genre "psychological suspense"; the subjects "boarding schools," "teenage girls," and "girls' schools"; and characters that are "well-developed characters."
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Although The Last Time I Lied takes place at summer camp rather than a boarding school, both of these intricately plotted, suspenseful novels explore the power and consequences of teenage secrets. -- Marissa Mace

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Set in 1970 at a girls' boarding school in Lenox, Massachusetts, Sterling's novel is both a gripping psychological thriller and a not-so-nostalgic look back at a time of massive social upheaval. Zoey, Abby, Cassidy, and Karen are about to graduate from Stoneybridge School. Sent to Stoneybridge after her mother died, Cassidy is the gorgeous one--not clever but so pretty she gets by with things other girls don't. Zoey is the attention-seeker, a rebel whose mother dislikes her and whose film-director dad ignores her. Karen is the smart one, though, being overweight, she's a disappointment to her mother, who thinks looks are everything. Abby is the "normal" one, who is from a wealthy, loving family. The girls are now seniors, and it's Zoey's idea to create The List, on which the girls add their names when they've lost their virginity and rate their first sexual experience. That's when the trouble starts. Raging hormones, jealousy, lies, changing loyalties, vindictiveness, and ignorance of how their actions will impact themselves and others all play parts in a suspenseful story involving a suicide, a murder, and a devastating cover-up that has repercussions decades later. Both evocative and provocative, Sterling's blend of thriller and coming-of-age tale is deeply affecting and full of unexpected twists.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Set during the 1969--1970 academic year at the Stonybridge School for Girls in the Berkshires, Sterling's solid debut follows four 17-year-old girls through their senior year. Class president and jock Abby Madison used to be best friends with delicate star pupil Karen Mullens, but replaces Karen with the beautiful albeit unscholarly Cassidy Thomas as her new best friend. Devastated, Karen forms a close friendship with mature nonconformist Zoey Spalding, who was previously best friends with Cassidy. Fed up with her time at Stonybridge, Zoey proposes an "entertaining" idea to Karen: putting a star next to each student on the senior class list who loses her virginity. What starts out as fun turns into a domino effect of exposed secrets and rising tensions among the girls. Near the end of the school year, one of the four is murdered, with no suspect found. Scattered throughout are chapters that take place in 2018, narrated by an anonymous Stonybridge alumna who knows the truth about the murder. The result is a slow-burn psychological thriller filled with well-developed characters that builds to a satisfying, if unsettling, conclusion. Sterling is a writer to watch. Agent: Cindy Blake, Viney Agency. (June)

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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Set in 1970 at a girls' boarding school in Lenox, Massachusetts, Sterling's novel is both a gripping psychological thriller and a not-so-nostalgic look back at a time of massive social upheaval. Zoey, Abby, Cassidy, and Karen are about to graduate from Stoneybridge School. Sent to Stoneybridge after her mother died, Cassidy is the gorgeous one—not clever but so pretty she gets by with things other girls don't. Zoey is the attention-seeker, a rebel whose mother dislikes her and whose film-director dad ignores her. Karen is the smart one, though, being overweight, she's a disappointment to her mother, who thinks looks are everything. Abby is the normal one, who is from a wealthy, loving family. The girls are now seniors, and it's Zoey's idea to create The List, on which the girls add their names when they've lost their virginity and rate their first sexual experience. That's when the trouble starts. Raging hormones, jealousy, lies, changing loyalties, vindictiveness, and ignorance of how their actions will impact themselves and others all play parts in a suspenseful story involving a suicide, a murder, and a devastating cover-up that has repercussions decades later. Both evocative and provocative, Sterling's blend of thriller and coming-of-age tale is deeply affecting and full of unexpected twists. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Set during the 1969–1970 academic year at the Stonybridge School for Girls in the Berkshires, Sterling's solid debut follows four 17-year-old girls through their senior year. Class president and jock Abby Madison used to be best friends with delicate star pupil Karen Mullens, but replaces Karen with the beautiful albeit unscholarly Cassidy Thomas as her new best friend. Devastated, Karen forms a close friendship with mature nonconformist Zoey Spalding, who was previously best friends with Cassidy. Fed up with her time at Stonybridge, Zoey proposes an "entertaining" idea to Karen: putting a star next to each student on the senior class list who loses her virginity. What starts out as fun turns into a domino effect of exposed secrets and rising tensions among the girls. Near the end of the school year, one of the four is murdered, with no suspect found. Scattered throughout are chapters that take place in 2018, narrated by an anonymous Stonybridge alumna who knows the truth about the murder. The result is a slow-burn psychological thriller filled with well-developed characters that builds to a satisfying, if unsettling, conclusion. Sterling is a writer to watch. Agent: Cindy Blake, Viney Agency. (June)

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.
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