The Lies We Inherit
A Novel of Memory and Madness
by Angela R. Key
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Pub Date Dec 16 2025 | Archive Date Dec 04 2025
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Description
Ashdown taught Elise Miriam Scott two rules:
never make trouble, and never ask what happened at the lake.
Years later, Elise has done everything right. She has degrees, credentials, a life built on evidence and control—operating rooms, board meetings, and legal briefs where facts are supposed to matter more than feelings. She has therapy sessions scheduled into her calendar like any other standing meeting. She has the kind of distance from her family that looks, from the outside, like success.
Then her father dies, and Ashdown calls her home.
The Scott estate greets her like a crime scene that’s been professionally staged. The marble gleams. The flowers are fresh. The staff move with choreographed precision. Every room looks perfectly curated—and quietly wrong. Her childhood bedroom is frozen in time, right down to the furniture placement. The will is sealed and waiting on the nightstand. And hidden beneath a section of floor that should not move, Elise finds a plastic hospital bracelet with her name on it and a date that does not match anything she remembers.
Elise has spent her career teaching other people that memory is unreliable. Here, in the house that raised her, her own mind becomes the least trustworthy witness of all.
The more she explores Ashdown and Northbridge—the family’s lake house that still smells like lavender, chlorine, and fear—the more fractures appear in the story she was given about her childhood. Locked rooms open to tiled floors that feel like crime scenes, to photographs with a fifth person neatly edited out, to school reports that label her “unprovoked aggressive” in one line and are corrected in her father’s careful hand the next. The records don’t agree. The adults never did either.
Her mother, Vivienne, insists nothing truly terrible happened. Her brother, Julian, would prefer everyone stay on script. Both of them are more concerned with the “rules of the house” than with the girl who once lived inside it. When Elise pushes, they call it instability. When she remembers, they call it madness.
When the will is finally read, the real curse of Ashdown surfaces: the estate was never just about money or property. It was about stewardship, narrative, and control. The inheritance is structured to favor the child who stayed, who kept the record, who can convince the world—and the court—that their version of events is the truth. Elise’s journals, her missing summer, and the lake itself become evidence in a case she didn’t know she was building.
As Elise digs deeper, the house begins to answer back. Memories arrive like hauntings: a towel, a code word, the weight of a body that should have floated. Each flash feels like proof and yet might be something else—guilt, suggestion, or the kind of family editing that turns crimes into “incidents” and victims into “problems sent away.” If she names what really happened at Northbridge, she could finally break the Scott family’s hold on her. Or she could destroy the only identity she has left.
*The Lies We Inherit* is a novel of memory and madness, a psychological gothic about what it costs to tell the truth after a lifetime of being told to behave. For readers of dark family dramas and slow-burn thrillers, this is a story about legacies written in ledgers and scars, about a daughter who refuses to be the unreliable narrator of her own life.
Some inherit jewels. Some inherit keys.
Elise inherits the one thing her family never intended to give her back:
a memory sharp enough to cut—and the choice of what to do with it.
A Note From the Publisher
This version includes standard formatting polish and minor refinements.
If you downloaded an earlier file, please re-download to ensure you have the most up-to-date edition.
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Available Editions
| EDITION | Ebook |
| ISBN | 9781969947032 |
| PRICE | $2.99 (USD) |
| PAGES | 371 |
Available on NetGalley
Average rating from 17 members
Featured Reviews
Rose T, Reviewer
This is a family drama with real weight, told through secrets that never stayed buried as well as they should have. Key keeps the focus on people and the choices they make when the truth threatens the version of life they’ve been protecting. The setting feels specific, the timeline is easy to track, and conversations sound like the kind you only have with relatives who know where the bones are. I liked how the story lets history shape the present without turning into a history lesson. You get the push and pull of loyalty, shame, and responsibility in scenes that feel lived in.
On the craft side, chapters end at natural stopping points that make it easy to keep going. Clues are placed early and paid off later, and the tension grows from character decisions rather than sudden tricks. The point of view work is steady, so when the perspective shifts you understand why and what you’re meant to learn. Side characters have their own aims, which keeps the plot moving even when the lead needs time to process. If you want a multigenerational story that treats trauma and love with the same level of attention, this delivers.
This is a four star book because the voice is consistent, the momentum holds from start to finish, and several scenes stuck with me after I closed the book. It’s thoughtful and tense at the same time, and it respects readers who want emotion and clarity in the same chapter. I’d recommend it to anyone who likes character first fiction about family truths, identity, and the cost of silence
Denice L, Reviewer
This book was so much better than I expected. A story of family and the secrets that families keep from the world outside.....and from each other. Elise has built a safe, secure world for herself. When she must step outside her world to return to her family's estate, she'll slowly find the answers to the questions that have silently driven her entire life. Angela Key has built this community, developing every inch of the background into a major character in the conflict between Elise and the rest of her family. The characters are unique, yet familiar, if that makes sense. The mystery builds in pace and tension until you are sure there's something you missed earlier. But no, it's one of the twisted clues Key leaves for us. If you love the complicated family stories that leave you thankful for the few screwballs on your family tree, you will LOVE this book.
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