The Good Liar: A Novel
The Good Liar: A Novel book cover

The Good Liar: A Novel

Paperback – January 31, 2017

Price
$11.89
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
Harper Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062407504
Dimensions
0.9 x 5.2 x 8.3 inches
Weight
8.8 ounces

Description

Review “A gut-clenching cat-and-mouse game…. This debut novel is a wellcrafted, complex tale that will appeal to fans of psychological thrillers.” — Booklist “If you like Patricia Highsmith’s Mr. Ripley books…this is an excellent debut indeed.” — BookPage.com “An incredibly dark, taut thriller…. Think of Ruth Rendell morphing into John Le Carré.” — Daily Express (London) “Engrossing. . . . An elegantly structured long con. The pace is almost maddeningly deliberate, with details about the characters and their schemes doled out like a controlled substance, but patient readers will be rewarded with devastating third-act twists and a satisfying denouement.” — Publishers Weekly “[A] fantastically assured debut…. The Good Liar makes you want to experience Nicholas Searle’s next trick.” — The Guardian “I was engrossed…. As deceiver and deceived move towards each other with hypnotic predestination, the plot unfolds to a payoff as inevitable as it is shocking. A superb thriller and a truly engrossing read.” — Ruth Ware, New York Times bestselling author of In a Dark, Dark Wood “ The Good Liar is a taut, compulsive thriller with a dark, intriguing heart. A Mr Ripley for our time.” — Jonathan Freedland, author of The 3rd Woman “What a clever and menacing novel The Good Liar is. I was gripped and horrified in equal measure and the ending knocked me sideways! I can’t wait for everyone to read the book so I can talk about it.” — Nina Stibbe, author of Love, Nina “As the tension mounts, the reader is kept guessing….The final denouement is a real cracker… Added to the fiendishly clever plot, Searle’s writing is both drily amusing and elegantly crafted.” — Daily Mail “One of 2016’s most intriguing debut novels.” — The Independent (London) “Searle paces the twists and turns of the plot admirably well…. Increasingly engaging and poised.” — The Independent (London) “[A] compelling premise.... Elegant writing.” — The Times (London) From the Back Cover When Roy meets Betty, a wealthy widow online, he can hardly believe his luck. Just like Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley, Roy is a con man who lives to deceive—and everything about Betty suggests she’s an easy mark. He’s confident that his scheme to swindle her will be a success. After all, he’s done this before. Sure enough, Betty soon lets Roy move into her beautiful home, seemingly blind to the web of lies he’s woven around her. But who is Roy, really ? Spanning almost a century, this stunning and suspenseful feat of storytelling interweaves the present with the past. As the clock turns back and the years fall away, long-hidden secrets are forced into the light. Some things can never be forgotten. Or forgiven. About the Author Nicholas Searle grew up in the southwest of England and studied languages at the University of Bath. He spent more years than he cares to remember in public service before deciding in 2011 to leave and begin writing fiction. The Good Liar is his first novel. Nicholas lives in the north of England. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Now a major motion picture starring Helen Mirren and Ian McKellen.
  • “A superb thriller and a truly engrossing read.”—Ruth Ware,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • In a Dark, Dark Wood
  • and
  • The Woman in Cabin 10
  • When Roy meets a wealthy widow online, he can hardly believe his luck. Just like Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley, Roy is a man who lives to deceive—and everything about Betty suggests she’s an easy mark. He’s confident that his scheme to swindle her will be a success. After all, he’s done this before.
  • Sure enough, Betty soon lets Roy move into her beautiful home, seemingly blind to the web of lies he’s woven around her. But who is Roy,
  • really
  • ? Spanning almost a century, this stunning and suspenseful feat of storytelling interweaves the present with the past. As the clock turns back and the years fall away, long-hidden secrets are forced into the light. Some things can never be forgotten. Or forgiven.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.1K)
★★★★
25%
(884)
★★★
15%
(530)
★★
7%
(248)
23%
(813)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Waste of Time

Read the opening on Amazon, thought it was incredibly good, bought the book, and found the structure cumbersome and boring, the PC butt kissing a bit overboard, generalizations here and there about the idiocy of males, and then the characterization crumbled because of the demands of the uninteresting plot. Wife couldn't even get past the first twenty pages, I read on because I was curious how such a good beginning could self-destruct so badly. Lots of good books out there, this ain't one of them.
62 people found this helpful
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Well Written, Suspenseful & Unique Tale

I enjoyed this very much. A very well executed tale with a unique premise. The main character is a man of much coldness and laser focus. A rather frightening individual who has no scruples when it comes to cheating others, even friends, out of their fortunes. This book veers from the past to the present -- going back in time to Nazi-era Germany, and to present day U.K. Very enjoyable with a few tantalizing twists that weren't expected. Not trying to be vague, but I don't want to give anything away. I will seek out more by this author.
20 people found this helpful
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Prepare to Stay Up Late Reading This Book

The book kept me reading much too late at night it was so good. I can't wait to see the movie and see how they could make a movie out of a book with such a complex structure.

The 'explanation' at the end of the book was not particularly satisfying, but the lead up to it was terrific. I wondered through every chapter how this was going to come together. No spoilers here, just read the book and be entertained by a very good new writer.

I rarely give a book 5 stars as so many new books merely re-write the same story concept. I'm so tired of the genre's of cleaning out grandpa/grandma's stuff and discovering a hidden secret that drives the rest of the narrative; or a brave woman who secretly fought the Nazis; or the woman who is the unreliable narrator, a drunk, drug addict or some other psychological disability or.... The Good Liar was a new story - actually in an old style. The Spanish Prisoner comes to mind. I was thoroughly entertained.
6 people found this helpful
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Don't bother

Can't understand why it has received any praise. Author is in love with adjectives. Take out all the unnecessary descriptions and you'd have a very short story.
6 people found this helpful
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After the film...

I liked the film very much and wanted to know the full story as written by the author.
It was a fun, fast read. It made the film points clear. It was interesting to be able to
analyze the twists and turns of the film with the details provided by the book.
3 people found this helpful
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A long long march but not for me

I was excited when I watched the trailer and love the actors. I bought the book based on that. I have not seen the movie yet, but I am on page 220 of 332 and I have to force myself to keep on reading. I know it is leading up to something, but so far, I just can't get into this story. As soon as I finish, I will give it away. So sorry that I fell for the advertising.
1 people found this helpful
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A Lifetime of Deceit

Quick inspection. Immaculate white shirt: yes. Creases of grey flannels:
perfect. Spit-shined shoes: gleaming. Regimental stripe tie: well knotted.
Hair: combed neatly. Blue blazer off hangar, and on. Fits like a glove.
Glance in the mirror: he'd pass for seventy, sixty at a pinch.

In fact, Roy Courtnay is eighty, but meeting an online date for the first time, he must make a good impression. Establish a persona, in fact. There is something a little slick in everything he does, as slightly false as his British old buffer diction. But he knows it will work; it always has.

Clearly, this is no romantic date, but a con. And the woman he goes to meet, Betty, seems the perfect dupe: an attractive widow, perhaps once intelligent, now sweetly fluttery, driven to the rendezvous by an attentive grandson. She is touchingly grateful for the attention of a personable gentleman of her own generation. Both have used false names of course, but both confess this early, thus bonding their relationship. Only a dozen pages in, and the date is going perfectly.

Too perfectly? Well, yes. Because it soon becomes clear that this is a game that two can play. The chapters in the present begin to alternate with flashbacks to Roy's earlier schemes, going back a year or more each time. He is indeed an inveterate liar, living on his wits. But the person who began to interest me most is Betty. Author Nicholas Searle tells us nothing about her former life, but clearly there is more to it than the sweet old lady will admit. We find ourselves reading more and more eagerly, looking for clues. I will not say more, except that, from the midpoint on, I found myself utterly hooked, waking up in the middle of the night in order to finish it.

Without giving away the plot, I find it hard to explain why my rating is four stars rather than five. Searle manages a stunning reversal at the climax of the book, which has already happened before you realize you have been had. Five stars at that point, and then some. But after that, the texture changes. Instead of watching Roy in action, as we had been up to now, we move to a long section of delayed exposition, in which the remaining back-stories are filled in—told, rather than shown. Searle is very adept in switching sympathies from Roy to Betty, who turns out to be a truly interesting character. But there is enough material in those last chapters about her to have made a full novel on their own. I was sorry not to have been able to live through them more fully, especially in comparison to the facile Roy. All the same, Searle is an insightful writer with an inventive feel for plot. This is a brilliant start that promises even more for the future.
1 people found this helpful
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Uneasy menace that builds and builds

Slow and pendulous, this story’s hold took time to build for me, but when it eventually did, oh my, was it worth it!

Thick with the sort of uneasy menace that creeps under your bones, taking its time to settle in fully, the pull of this story was inevitable and unavoidable, steadily dripping glimpses into a soul as dark as the encroaching doom it appears to predict.

Octogenarian Roy Courtnay - once “bold and handsome”, with his “lizard eyes” and the “smile of an assassin”, - a seasoned internet dating veteran - is on the hunt for his next victim. When his meets Betty, a sweetly smart academic, with her faded English-rose looks and a pocketbook to fit the bill, Roy appears to have hit the proverbial jackpot.

“Were it not for the watery, diluted quality of age she might be afraid of him; indeed she is a little afraid”.

But wait, could it be that all is not as it seems? Stick with it, as little niggling hints, dropped artfully by the author, begin to suggest there are layers upon layers left for this story that are yet to unfold.

As the reader begins to piece together a past for Roy, which unfolds backwards in time, the story opens up, with narrative arcs now both engrossing and tantalizing.

Just who exactly is this evilness, and what has brought it to this time and place?

In the words of the author - “let’s not go searching for profundity”.

Suffice it to say that this reader’s search for answers, which in the end may, as the author suggests, skim the surface of the truly profound, certainly make for stellar reading, with interesting insights and a crackerjack finale (no spoilers here!) that definitely did not disappoint.

Highly recommended for thriller and suspense readers everywhere - particularly those who love a complex and historically intricate plot.
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The Good Lair

Roy is a liar, conman and just basically an awful human being. I didn't like him from start to finish. Betty is a wealthy, attractive woman and comes across as very gullible. (In my head, i was shouting at her to "wake up!!")

The book does jump around a lot and i did find it annoying and confusing in parts, but once i found the rhythm of the book it became easier to read.

I think the story is well written and clever, i did find myself skipping some parts though as it got a little slow, but i enjoyed the read and i would recommend it.
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Reading now

I am enjoying this book very much. It holds my interest. I start some books and after 30-50 pages, put them away because they are not interesting or I don't like the writing. So far, so good. I really enjoyed the movie and look forward to finding out what is different in the book since the book is almost always better than the movie.