Reviews

Here We Lie by Paula Treick DeBoard

jujubee4393's review against another edition

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5.0

I really enjoyed this book! Major trigger warning for sexual assault for the book (but not this review). I learned about this book because my cousin leant next “The Mourning Hours” also by Paula Treick DeBoard and I really enjoyed that so I looked up other books by her. I enjoyed this one even more. It weaves together a world of wealth and privilege, female friendships, powerful men abusing their power, and more with twists and turns throughout. Paula Treick DeBoard is very good at surprising you out of left field and this book did not disappoint. I definitely recommend this book and I look forward to reading other books by this author!

helgamharb's review against another edition

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3.0

Lies, deceptions, unlikely friendships and survival

The story is about two roommates Lauren and Megan. Lauren is a senator’s daughter and Megan is a small-town girl from a middle class family.
It is told alternately from Lauren’s and Megan’s perspective and goes back and forth in time.

The book is well written and the story-line is compelling, but to tell the truth I was underwhelmed. From the beginning there are so many hints about what has happened 14 years ago that when we reach the actual revelation, it falls flat. I was expecting the author to pull a big twist out of her hat in the end, but nothing happens.
There are too many details about the daily routines of the characters that one longs to skip pages.


lynnahaller's review against another edition

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dark emotional hopeful inspiring reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

mdlynprsrpn_'s review against another edition

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tense

3.5

"Permintaan maaf tidak bisa menghapus apa yang telah terjadi, dan banyak maaf tidak akan bisa menggantikan apa yang telah hilang."

Awalnya bener-bener seneng sama persahabatan Megan-Lauren karena mereka berasal dari keluarga yang betolak belankang 180°; terlebih lagi mereka bisa saling mengerti satu sama lain. Lambat laun mulai makin kesel sama mereka berdua, mungkin karena masih remaja dan impulsif banget. Terlebih lagi sama Lauren yang selalu tutup mata sama Megan.
Terlebih lagi pas dia nyalahin Megan karena melakukan wleowleo sama kakaknya Lauren, little dis she knows bahwa si bejaf kakaknya itulah yang memerkosa si Megan. Like bitch, you should ask from Megan's pov first baru boleh melayangkan penyataan apapun i


Dari buku ini kita belajar bahwa hal terbaik yang harus kita lakukan kepada korban pelecehan seksual adalah believe in them. Sebagai penyintas, mereka pasti akan menyalahkan dirinya sendiri. An it's our job to remind them that they are not to blame.

chris10b's review against another edition

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3.0

Probably closer to a 3.5 than a 3.

Not a bad book, and I enjoyed reading it. It's a lot of build up and the plot was fairly predictable. The resolution was lacking. Some parts seemed to drag, and it felt like it took forever to get to where ever the book was taking me. But overall it was an enjoyable read, and relatively timely with current social issues and the "Me too" movement.

jaimel's review against another edition

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emotional reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

elisemoens's review against another edition

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emotional fast-paced

3.75

judithdcollins's review against another edition

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5.0

From the critically acclaimed author, of [b:The Drowning Girls|27069952|The Drowning Girls|Paula Treick DeBoard|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1445267529s/27069952.jpg|47198482], [b:The Fragile World|20821541|The Fragile World|Paula Treick DeBoard|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1407719370s/20821541.jpg|40167367], and [b:The Mourning Hours|17133946|The Mourning Hours|Paula Treick DeBoard|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1366067196s/17133946.jpg|23535730] (all five glowing stars-review links below), Paula Treick DeBoard follows with her latest riveting suspense, coming Jan 2018— HERE WE LIE.

Rich in character, a look inside the secret lives of two different unlikely friends from two different social classes. A world of privilege and secrets. The lies and secrets they tell themselves, and to one another —with devastating consequences.

Ripped from today’s headlines: Scandal, power, cover-ups, and deadly secrets. Messy, complicated and imperfect lives.

Told in alternating first-person perspectives, moving between past and present. Megan Mazeros and Lauren Mabrey. Each views the world differently— from diverse backgrounds.

As the book opens it is 2016. A press conference. Someone is about to spill a lie. Age thirty-five. Female. A lie kept silent for fourteen years is about to be exposed to the world.

“Fourteen years was a long time. It was long enough to forget, forgive, move on.” A long time to keep a secret.

Megan is from Kansas. She lived for years watching her dad die each day slowly from asbestos fibers (a poor man’s cancer) from the mesothelioma with his job. She holds a secret. Her father’s dying wish.

“Something had to die so something else could live.”

With the life insurance money, Megan can attend a college of choice in combination with a scholarship and her good grades. She wants nothing more than to escape this town and her past. Her mom has moved on to Gerry, her boss at the accounting firm.

She decides on Keale College in Scofield, Connecticut— a unscale private girls-only school. She realizes that wealth lives here and people of privilege. People different than herself.

She meets a regular local boy named Joe on her first day. Soon after that, her roommates commits suicide, assigning her another roommate.

Lauren Mabrey is the wild child with continued reckless behavior from a wealthy family. From the elite, boarding schools, and old money pedigree. The cars, wealth, homes, status, power, and the best education. She is the daughter of a U.S. senator from Connecticut. Lauren has a poor GPA; however, with her parent’s money, she can pretty much do as she pleases.

She also feels like an outsider in her only family and goes against the traditional values, causing disarray in her family. Often she wanted to be regular so as not to have to live up to the expectations.

A bit rebellious, she encounters some problems with drugs before she goes off to college, which lands the guy in jail, and ultimately ended up dead in a prison yard. This event haunts her. However, her parents manage to keep this out of the news. Her mom warns her they cannot continue to bail her out.

Lauren loves photography and takes her talent a little too far. Her family dismisses it. After an encounter with her current roommate, Erin she is assigned a new one.

Lauren and Megan become best friends in their freshman year 1999-2000. Lauren is everything Megan is not. Lauren sees Megan as normal. Due to her family environment, she finds herself attracted to Megan, Joe, Marcus, and others she meets, unlike her status.

However, Megan distorts her life offering shocking lies about her family. She exaggerated about how poor her family was and how many boyfriends she had. She wants to be someone else, someone different from the dull girl she is. To feel better about herself. Both girls are insecure in their ways.

Lauren loves Megan’s wit, and the two develop a friendship based on lies. Telling each other their best and worst truths and lies. As time moves on, they also become jealous and angry with one another.

Megan meets Lauren’s family and becomes exposed to a different way of life. Their home, a job, and a private summer island off the coast of Maine. This trip was to be their last vacation before senior year.

However, one night something happens which changes the course of their lives. A house of money. To cover up the dirty deeds of its family members.

Dreams of Harvard are no longer in view. Shattered by one night. Worse than her father dying. A choice to make. A decision. Who would believe her—a girl from nowhere? The Mabrey's had the kind of power that could buy justice—that could shape truth.

The lies she had told. She could not put herself through it. She would remain silent. One girl all alone. Dreams shattered. Another one left clueless about the events unfolding around her. Where was the trust in one another?

Many years later when the girls have their separate lives and families of their own, someone comes forward with rape and sexual assault. A political scandal. If someone had come forward earlier, could it have saved others down the road?

The silence broken, shattering lives and the ugly truth revealed. Allegations, investigation, and a trial. The what ifs.

What a fabulous story— highly relatable to the events which surround us today. Even though fictional, unfortunately, it is all too real for many women who experience sexual assault at the hands of famous figures such as politicians and celebrities. The victims often are viewed in a negative light; therefore they remain silent.

An avid fan of the author, for years—her books continually land on my top books of the year. Unique and compelling, her stories possess a common thread. Thought-provoking, she writes of powerful bonds of friendships, family, and betrayal.

Paula’s writing is superb! The dual timelines and alternating perspectives keep the reader engrossed in the lives of the two young women of different ages. From college years to the present, the author gives a glimpse of the gap and how words and actions have consequences resulting in hurt and resentment. A convincing look at lies and how they come back to haunt (no matter the age).

From teenagers to young women with families of their own to their true selves. In addition to the topic of friendship, a strong focus on daughter/father and daughter/mother relationships.

Highly charged topics: enjoyed how she tied female friendship, sexual assault, political scandal and moral complexities together in one dynamic story. HERE WE LIE an ideal choice for book clubs and further discussions (Reader’s Guide Included).

A bonus—a insightful Q&A with the author! Highly recommend. A "read-in-one-sitting" kind of novel.

JDCMustReadBooks

A special thank you to the author for the lovely print copy and Park Row and NetGalley for the digital advanced reading copy. Also purchased the audiobook narrated by Alex McKenna and ‎ Cassandra Campbell (My favorite)!

The Drowning Girls
Top Books of 2016

The Fragile World
Top Books of 2014

The Mourning Hours

aida_am13's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5

susanthebookbag's review against another edition

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4.0

Two young women, both who have secrets and tell those little 'safe' lies to make themselves be someone they are not, meet in college and become fast friends. But what happened that one summer before their senior year, tears them apart. Once the lies and secrets start to unravel, will the truth restore their friendship or keep them apart forever?

Here We Lie is an intriguing story with very interesting and memorable characters. The story starts out in the present, at a press conference, where the truth from fourteen years ago is finally going to be told. Then the author takes us back to that time in the past where it all started. The author does a wonderful job of weaving friendship and animosity, the past and the future, the lies and the truths—to create a chain of events that is so timely in today's world.

I was immediately drawn into this story and was impressed with the author's wonderful way with words. She is a new-to-me author but I will definitely be checking into her other books.