Title: Lie With Me
Author: Sabine Durrant
Publisher: Mulholland Books
Read: December 2016
Synopsis (Goodreads):
"I suppose what I am saying is, how much do we collude
in our own destruction? How much of this nightmare is on me?
You can hate and rail.
You can kick out in protest.
You can do foolish and desperate things, but maybe sometimes you just have to hold up a hand and take the blame."
Breathless.
Claustrophobic.
Unsettling.
Impossible to put down.
You can hate and rail.
You can kick out in protest.
You can do foolish and desperate things, but maybe sometimes you just have to hold up a hand and take the blame."
Breathless.
Claustrophobic.
Unsettling.
Impossible to put down.
My thoughts:
At the age of 42, Paul Morris is, by all accounts, a
failure. Still relying on the literary success of a book he published in his
early twenties, he is a womaniser, a layabout, a conceited man who relies on
the few friends who have stuck by him to get by with a minimal amount of work
or effort. Just as his life is starting to unravel and he has to face moving in
with his mother, a chance encounter with an old friend from college leads Paul
to meet Alice, a successful lawyer and single mother of three teenagers. Initially
seeing Alice as a needy widow and a chance to exploit, Paul is surprised when
he finds himself falling in love with her. He is thrilled when he gets invited
to join the family and friends on their annual holiday in Greece. But Greece
holds a terrible secret, and soon Paul finds out that no one, and nothing, is
quite as it seems.
Now this is what I call a real psychological thriller! With
its rather slow pace, Lie With Me relies heavily on character development,
clever plotting and a strong sense of place and time to reel the reader into
its web – and the author does this very, very well. I love books where
seemingly ordinary, everyday events suddenly turn to disaster, an underlying
sense of dread and danger slowly building whilst the characters remain totally
unaware, slowly stumbling down the path to their own undoing. Special kudos to
the author for serving us up a rather unsavoury main protagonist, Paul Morris,
whilst still enabling the reader to feel a sense of connection and empathy for
the man. Despite his chauvinism, his womanising, his lying and cheating and using
his friends for his own gain, I had moments when I felt actually sorry for
Paul. And despite a logical little voice telling me that he got what he deserved,
I never stopped barracking for Paul and hoping against hope that he would find
happiness. Perhaps this trait is what made so many women fall for the man in
the first place? To convey Paul’s charisma in the written pages of a book shows
the author’s skill in presenting true-to-life characters that masterfully played
out the story in my mind like a carefully chosen movie cast. I could see them
so vividly, lying around the pool surrounded by olive groves, that I almost
felt like I had been there myself, toasting pale British skin under a hot Greek
sun.
Lie With Me had everything I look for in a psychological
thriller, slowly building tension and a sense of certain doom, which made it
impossible to put the book down. And of course the ending, though not totally
unexpected by then, was very clever, casting all events of the past into a
totally new light. A great read, one of my favourite psychological thrillers of
the year. If you are looking for a good book over Christmas, don’t look any further,
because Lie With Me has it all. Highly recommended.
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