Lisa of Troy's Reviews > Listen for the Lie
Listen for the Lie
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Listen for the Lie centers on Lucy who can’t remember if she killed her best friend five years ago.
This is a highly digestible mystery where the author utilized short paragraphs and chapters, resulting in a quick read.
At the core of this novel, we need Lucy to remember what happened on the night of the incident, and one of my favorite mystery novels does rely on the main character remembering exactly what was said in the past (The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager). However, for most of Listen for the Lie, I didn’t feel that we were making progress, mainly interviews from people who knew next to nothing.
Also, I wanted to learn more about memory, think Anna O. and sleepwalking. Personally, if my best friend died, I wouldn’t try to remember for two days and give up. Lucy just kind of does nothing, a leaf in the wind, waiting for someone to determine her fate.
There is this voice in Lucy’s head, encouraging her to unalive people; however, it isn’t very entertaining and finally becomes rather annoying and tedious.
And, although it seems that everyone wants to get Lucy into her birthday suit, the steam wasn’t as good as author May Cobb.
Then, there is the ending. It was extremely confusing—I am not even sure what the author intended. But I think I figured out a solution……..
*SPOILER*
MEGA-SPOILER
(view spoiler)
*Thanks, Celadon, for a copy of this book in exchange for my fair and unbiased opinion.
How much I spent:
Softcover text – Free/Nada/Zilch provided by publisher
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This is a highly digestible mystery where the author utilized short paragraphs and chapters, resulting in a quick read.
At the core of this novel, we need Lucy to remember what happened on the night of the incident, and one of my favorite mystery novels does rely on the main character remembering exactly what was said in the past (The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager). However, for most of Listen for the Lie, I didn’t feel that we were making progress, mainly interviews from people who knew next to nothing.
Also, I wanted to learn more about memory, think Anna O. and sleepwalking. Personally, if my best friend died, I wouldn’t try to remember for two days and give up. Lucy just kind of does nothing, a leaf in the wind, waiting for someone to determine her fate.
There is this voice in Lucy’s head, encouraging her to unalive people; however, it isn’t very entertaining and finally becomes rather annoying and tedious.
And, although it seems that everyone wants to get Lucy into her birthday suit, the steam wasn’t as good as author May Cobb.
Then, there is the ending. It was extremely confusing—I am not even sure what the author intended. But I think I figured out a solution……..
*SPOILER*
MEGA-SPOILER
(view spoiler)
*Thanks, Celadon, for a copy of this book in exchange for my fair and unbiased opinion.
How much I spent:
Softcover text – Free/Nada/Zilch provided by publisher
Connect With Me!
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Reading Progress
December 31, 2023
– Shelved
March 1, 2024
–
Started Reading
March 5, 2024
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-18 of 18 (18 new)
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Annette
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Mar 05, 2024 07:04AM
Great review and feedback Lisa :)
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I was also confused with that ending! I don’t like endings like this because I don’t want to guess what they mean, I NEED TO KNOW
I think the whole truth was about her and Savvy plotting to murder Matt, as well as knowing Savvy had killed in the past. She even mentions to her grandma about not wanting to share Savvy’s secrets. Just my take.
As mentioned above I truly believe that the whole truth thing just had to to with Savvy's secrets, especially given that those words are specifically mentioned
I thinks Lucy meant how savvy killled someone before and also them plotting to kill Matt? I dunno. This was a page turning story but very hard to believe and the voice was definitely tedious
It was raining, most of the evidence was washed away and they wouldn’t have been able to do any blood spatter analysis
The whole truth would include Savvy murdering a man and Savvy/Lucy planning to murder Matt. Also, Ben never heard Emmett say he murdered Savvy/tried to murder Lucy. What he did hear was Emmett proclaiming his innocence. Ben lied to the police because “the truth doesn’t matter.” He knew nobody would believe Lucy without his help. Side note, Emmett’s comeuppance was enjoyable, but I wanted more.
Agreed. I didn’t like the ending and I think it’s a joke that a podcaster would be the mystery solver over trained professionals at a crime scene.
I agree…. The endless murder talk in her head was annoying and I don’t think it was necessary for the plot