Title: The Lie
Author: C. L. Taylor
Publisher: HarperCollins UK, Avon
Read: April 2015
Synopsis (Goodreads):
I know your name's not really Jane Hughes...
Jane Hughes has a loving partner, a job in an animal sanctuary and a tiny cottage in rural Wales. She's happier than she's ever been but her life is a lie. Jane Hughes does not really exist.
Five years earlier Jane and her then best friends went on holiday but what should have been the trip of a lifetime rapidly descended into a nightmare that claimed the lives of two of the women.
Jane has tried to put her past behind her but someone knows the truth about what happened. Someone who won't stop until they've destroyed Jane and everything she loves...
Jane Hughes has a loving partner, a job in an animal sanctuary and a tiny cottage in rural Wales. She's happier than she's ever been but her life is a lie. Jane Hughes does not really exist.
Five years earlier Jane and her then best friends went on holiday but what should have been the trip of a lifetime rapidly descended into a nightmare that claimed the lives of two of the women.
Jane has tried to put her past behind her but someone knows the truth about what happened. Someone who won't stop until they've destroyed Jane and everything she loves...
My thoughts:
The book starts with Jane Hughes, a quiet young woman who
works in an animal shelter in rural Wales, but who, as the reader soon finds
out, is hiding from a dark event in her past. Five years ago her name was Emma
Woolfe, and she was about to set off on the trip of a lifetime to a remote
mountain retreat in Nepal with her three best friends Leanne, Al and Daisy. All
four woman each come with some emotional baggage which largely determines the
dynamics which hold their friendship together. At first, the Ekanta Yatra
Retreat looks like just the place to get away from it all – set in a quiet,
remote and picturesque place in the mountains there are none of the
distractions of modern society, like internet or mobile phone reception. It
provides the perfect escape – for Emma from a boring job and her overbearing
family, for Al from a failed relationship, for Daisy as an opportunity for adventure.
But it soon becomes obvious to Emma that there are strange things going on at
the retreat, and it may not be the peaceful getaway that they had hoped for. With
Leanne and Daisy dismissing Emma’s fears, their friendship soon becomes
strained and starts to unravel. And by the time Al has also realised that
things are going wrong, the isolation they so treasured has suddenly become a
trap.
The story is set in dual timelines, switching back and forth
between Jane’s present life and the events which claimed the lives of two
friends five years ago. Whilst Jane’s life is quite plain and she comes across
as a bit too naive considering the experiences in her past, the story of the
girls’ trip to Nepal is chilling and disturbing and soon drew me in. None of
the characters are particularly likeable, which however does not present an
obstacle to enjoying the story – quite the opposite. The author knows how to
explore the dynamics behind the rather dysfunctional friendship of four young women
who each bring their own baggage and agendas into the mix. I loved the way the
author describes the slow unravelling of the friendship, the stripping away of
pretences, the unmasking of the women’s true personalities as they find
themselves in a dangerous situation. Step by step the reader gets drawn deeper
into the abyss, and some aspects of the story are quite disturbing and
chilling. Anyone who has ever travelled with a group of friends where things
have not gone quite as planned will be able to recognise aspects of the women’s
changing relationships as each tries to adapt to the situation in different
ways and manipulate people and circumstances to fit their own agendas. Or allow
themselves to be manipulated by someone who uses the ever widening cracks in
their friendship for his own purposes, like their charismatic but dangerous
host Isaac. Once Emma discovers the true nature of the Ekanta Yatra retreat, it
is already too late to make a clean escape.
For me, the story was driven by the different characters and
the group dynamics the author describes so well, which made the present-day
part of the story a little bit slow and less interesting, even with the new
threat Jane has to face. It took me a little while to get into the book, but by
the time the girls had arrived in Nepal and things started to go wrong, I was
hooked on the rollercoaster ride of tension, mistrust and fear the author has
created. Tense and atmospheric, The Lie makes for a suspenseful and interesting
read. This is my first book by C. L. Taylor and I look forward to reading more
from this author.
Thank you to
Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a free electronic copy of
this novel in exchange for an honest review.
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