
Member Reviews

Love this author...this book did not disappoint.
So many twists made it awesome
Great until the very last page!!
Thanks to the author, the publisher and NetGalley for an early release of this book.

A small community of 30 homes is very tight knit. Except it’s a community of liars. Celeste, Frankie, and Saylor all are liars. It’s an absorb0mg read and Marsh had me entranced about how the lives of,the three were intertwined. As the plot unfolded, I discerned some of the truth. When it ca,e to the ending, the author has one more surprise to pull. I was completely absorbed while reading this book. I had to find out the truth behind all the lies. I felt sorry for Walter since I think he got the short end of the stick. It’s a wickedly woven web of deceit. Don’t lie about not wanting to read this book.

Thrilling from start to finish. This book will keep you engaged in the the story so you don’t want to put the book down. Great story with a deep storyline.

Excellent "Who Is It?". This is one of those books I'm going to recommend you approach the same way I did - I knew title and author, that was it. Didn't even look at the description at all until I was over halfway into the book. I've read several books from this author over the past year in particular, and no matter if she is writing romantic comedy (July 2021's The Man Ban) or suspense/ drama (this book), she never fails to give a great story within the bounds of the genre of the particular book.
And y'all, if you approach this book in this particular manner... you're not going to have any dang clue who the titular "Liar" is. If you read the description before the book, you'll know immediately as the description is specifically from the perspective of one of 3 main perspectives (among 7 primary players), though one of the perspectives does get a now/ then timeline split emphasizing that particular storyline more. (This is the perspective from the description.) But *all seven* main characters, and in particular all three main perspectives, are lying about something to someone, and unravelling all the various lies and how they stack up is one wild ride. Even when certain things begin to be resolved, Marsh manages to have the book end on yet another final bang within the last few sentences. (So a word of caution to those who generally read the last page of a book before reading the rest of the book: DO NOT DO THAT HERE.)
Yet again, with such a dichotomy of books releasing just a month apart, Marsh shows just how talented a storyteller she really is. Very much recommended.