The lies you told: a novel

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Grand Central Publishing
Publication Date
©2020.
Language
English

Description

From the acclaimed author of Blood Orange, a dark new psychological thriller about the perfect mother, the perfect wife, the perfect family -- and the perfect murder.In the playground it's the law of the jungleBut at the school gate, there are no rules at all...When Sadie Roper moves back to London, she's determined to pick up the pieces of her shattered life. First, she needs to get her daughter settled into a new school-one of the most exclusive in the city. Next, she's going to get back the high-flying criminal barrister career she sacrificed for marriage ten years earlier. But nothing goes quite as planned. The school is not very welcoming newcomers, her daughter hasn't made any friends yet and the other mothers are as fiercely competitive as their children. Sadie immediately finds herself on the outside as she navigates the fraught politics of the school gate.But the tide starts to turn as Sadie begins to work on a scandalous, high-profile case that's the perfect opportunity to prove herself again, even though a dangerous flirtation threatens to cloud her professional judgment. And when Julia, queen of the school moms, befriends Sadie, she draws her into the heart of the world from which she was previously excluded. Soon Sadie and her family start to thrive, but does this close new friendship prevent her from seeing the truth? Sadie may be keeping her friends close, but what she doesn't know is that her enemies are closer still...Dark, addictive and compelling, The Lies You Told is a compulsive psychological thriller from a master storyteller. "An extremely well-written and unsettling novel . . . Full of intrigue and menace, it creeps up on you until that final explosive twist. A great read" -- Alex Michaelides, #1 New York Times author of The Silent Patient "I read The Lies You Told in two days, barely able to turn the pages fast enough. It's spare and taut, the sense of wrongness building in chilling, skillfully written layers, with a jaw dropping last-line twist." -- Lisa Jewell, New York Times bestselling author of The Family Upstairs

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ISBN
9781538762752

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Sadie Roper's world is abruptly turned upside down when her husband inexplicably forces her to leave their Brooklyn home with their 10-year-old daughter, Robin. So lawyer Sadie finds herself living in the London house left by her manipulative mother in trust for Robin, as long as Robin attends the same school, Aslams, that Sadie hated as a child. Both Robin and Sadie, the new girl and her mum, are harassed and even bullied by Aslams' "queen bee" in a typical "mean girls" manner, all of which appears to clear up when Sadie herself is found to be an Aslams "old girl." When she's hired to work on a case in which a teenage girl has accused her teacher of seduction, Sadie must try to balance work with parental school duties, all the while suffering recurring nightmares of being unable to find her lost daughter, as disquieting rumors about the school come to light. While this is a bit shorter on suspense than former barrister Tyce's notable debut, Blood Orange (2019), it's spot-on in capturing mother-daughter relationships and posing ethical legal questions.

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

Sadie Roper, the narrator of this engrossing psychological thriller from Tyce (Blood Orange), returns to her native London, along with her 11-year-old daughter, Robin, after she and her husband break up in Brooklyn. The provisions of Sadie's late mother's will state that she can claim a small inheritance and her childhood home only if she sends Robin to Asham Girls School, the same school Sadie attended. Despite the bullying Sadie endured at Asham, she agrees to the will's terms and enrolls Robin. Robin's new schoolmates are mean, but the girls' highly competitive mothers are worse. When Robin goes missing, the police arrest a mentally unstable mother on suspicion of kidnapping. Meanwhile, Sadie returns to the job as a criminal defense lawyer she gave up 10 years earlier for marriage. In her emotionally vulnerable state, she becomes dangerously attracted to a handsome teacher accused of molesting a student. More than one suspicious death raises the ante as multiple twists keep the pages turning to the satisfying conclusion. Readers are sure to look forward to Tyce's next. Agent: Veronique Baxter, David Higham Assoc. (U.K.). (Dec.)

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Library Journal Review

In this latest from the author of the attention-getting Blood Orange, anxious mom Sadie Roper, newly single and newly reemployed as a barrister, is thrilled to win the attention of Liza, queen-bee mother at her children's school. But what's the cost? With a 40,000-copy first printing; originally scheduled for July.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Coming home to London to confront her past, Sadie Roper finds herself embroiled in several mysteries. When Sadie left for New York with her husband and her daughter, her mother made it perfectly clear that she was a failure for choosing motherhood over her job and that she'd never be welcome in her childhood home again. But when her mother dies, she leaves Sadie the home in her will--with the stipulation that Sadie's daughter, Robin, must attend Ashams, the prestigious private school where Sadie went. Her marriage already in tatters, Sadie flees back to London; she has little choice but to adhere to the terms of the will. Returning to a house of gloomy memories, bearing the weight of her daughter's disappointment and homesickness, she struggles to find her footing. The school mothers are the worst, and the Queen Bee, Julia, has all the other women wrapped around her little finger. She makes Sadie's and Robin's lives a living hell--until she finds out that Sadie is an Ashams "old girl." Connection and legacy go a long way, and Sadie and Robin are soon invited to parties and sleepovers, part of the inner circle. Meanwhile, Sadie, trained as a barrister but having left work when Robin was born, finds a job helping to organize materials for an upcoming trial in which a young woman has accused her teacher of sexual abuse. As she begins to wonder about the truth of that relationship, a tragedy strikes close to home, and then Robin goes missing. What is the rot at the heart of Ashams? And whom can Sadie trust to help her uncover the truth about the case? The characters are sharply drawn, but there's not much depth to the plot. Misdirection, shadows, and a lot of snarky meanness--but in the end, it's all surface drama. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Sadie Roper's world is abruptly turned upside down when her husband inexplicably forces her to leave their Brooklyn home with their 10-year-old daughter, Robin. So lawyer Sadie finds herself living in the London house left by her manipulative mother in trust for Robin, as long as Robin attends the same school, Aslams, that Sadie hated as a child. Both Robin and Sadie, the new girl and her mum, are harassed and even bullied by Aslams' "queen bee" in a typical "mean girls" manner, all of which appears to clear up when Sadie herself is found to be an Aslams "old girl." When she's hired to work on a case in which a teenage girl has accused her teacher of seduction, Sadie must try to balance work with parental school duties, all the while suffering recurring nightmares of being unable to find her lost daughter, as disquieting rumors about the school come to light. While this is a bit shorter on suspense than former barrister Tyce's notable debut, Blood Orange (2019), it's spot-on in capturing mother-daughter relationships and posing ethical legal questions. Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Following the LJ-starred Our House, which was Candlish's U.S. debut, The Other Couple features middle-aged Clare and Jamie and the young couple they befriend, the upwardly aspiring Melia and Kit, until one day Kit vanishes after being seen arguing with Jamie on their regular ferryboat commute. Giller Prize winner Coady's Watching You Without Me opens with Karen back home in Novia Scotia after her mother's unexpected death, tending to her sister full-time and depending on her mother's old caregiver, Trevor, of whom she becomes increasingly suspicious. In JP Delaney's Playing Nice, the Riley and Lambert families are devastated to learn that their two-year-olds were switched at birth—and it gets worse. A prize finalist in Australia, Downes brings us disappointed thespian Emily Proudman, who thinks she's found The Safe Place she needs when she agrees to become housekeeper/nanny at the French estate of the Dennys—but her employers' dark secrets will out. In debuter Glass's Someone's Listening, scandal-ridden psychologist and radio star Faith Finley attends the launch of her new book with her husband, but when her car crashes afterward, the police claim he was not with her (70,000-copy first printing). In Hamilton's The Last Wife, Marie promises to watch over terminally ill friend Nina's family, but after Nina's death she starts uncovering uncomfortable intimations about what happened on a long-ago vacation they took in Ibiza that left Marie's boyfriend dead (200,000-copy paperback and 10,000-copy hardcover first printing). Finally, in Harriet Tyce's The Lies You Told, anxious mom Sadie Roper, newly single and newly reemployed as a barrister, is thrilled to win the attention of Liza, queen-bee mother at her children's school—but at what cost? From the author of Blood Orange; with a 40,000-copy first printing.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.
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Library Journal Reviews

In this latest from the author of the attention-getting Blood Orange, anxious mom Sadie Roper, newly single and newly reemployed as a barrister, is thrilled to win the attention of Liza, queen-bee mother at her children's school. But what's the cost? With a 40,000-copy first printing; originally scheduled for July.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Sadie Roper, the narrator of this engrossing psychological thriller from Tyce (Blood Orange), returns to her native London, along with her 11-year-old daughter, Robin, after she and her husband break up in Brooklyn. The provisions of Sadie's late mother's will state that she can claim a small inheritance and her childhood home only if she sends Robin to Asham Girls School, the same school Sadie attended. Despite the bullying Sadie endured at Asham, she agrees to the will's terms and enrolls Robin. Robin's new schoolmates are mean, but the girls' highly competitive mothers are worse. When Robin goes missing, the police arrest a mentally unstable mother on suspicion of kidnapping. Meanwhile, Sadie returns to the job as a criminal defense lawyer she gave up 10 years earlier for marriage. In her emotionally vulnerable state, she becomes dangerously attracted to a handsome teacher accused of molesting a student. More than one suspicious death raises the ante as multiple twists keep the pages turning to the satisfying conclusion. Readers are sure to look forward to Tyce's next. Agent: Veronique Baxter, David Higham Assoc. (U.K.). (Dec.)

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly.
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