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MK’s Book Reviews: We Were Liars

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God. This book.

The setting pulled me in. Rich cousins on a private island off of Massachusetts? Yes please. Love developing between two childhood friends? I’m a sucker for that.

“He was contemplation and enthusiasm. Ambition and strong coffee. I could have looked at him forever.

The voice was so well done, lots of sentence fragments filled with bits of beauty. It could have come off oddly in the hands of a less talented writer, but Lockhart did it wonderfully.

“It is good to be loved, even though it will not last.”

You know from the beginning something bad is going to happen, and then when something does, you aren’t even entirely sure what it is. To find out, along with Cadence, you keep reading. But before you even know the extent of Cadence’s struggle, you admire her strength.

“I’d a million times rather live and risk and have it all end badly than stay in the box I’ve been in for the past two years.”

“I lie there and wait, and remind myself over and over that it doesn’t last forever. That there will be another day and after that, yet another day. One of those days, I’ll get up and eat breakfast and feel okay.”

And oh, Cadence and Gat.

“When blood dripped on my bare feet or poured over the book I was reading, he was kind. He wrapped my wrists in soft white gauze and asked me questions about what had happened. He asked about Dad and about Gran—as if talking about something could make it better. As if wounds needed attention.”

“Someone once wrote that a novel should deliver a series of small astonishments. I get the same thing spending an hour with you.”

And the end. I did not see it coming, though in retrospect there were so many clues. That’s a real accomplishment, as an author. It was so good and so devastating. Think first-time-reading-Fault-in-Our-Stars levels of sobbing.

“They know that tragedy is not glamorous. They know it doesn’t play out in life as it does on a stage or between the pages of a book. It is neither a punishment meted out nor a lesson conferred. Its horrors or not attributable to one single person. Tragedy is ugly and tangled, stupid and confusing. That is what the children know.”

Go read this book. Now.

Posted on Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Filed under Blog, MK's Book Reviews, Reading

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5 responses to “MK’s Book Reviews: We Were Liars”

  1. […] on a mission to write reviews of all my favorite books before the year is out. I’ve reviewed some of them sporadically on my blog, but not […]

  2. […] Why everyone should read it: Lyrical writing (noticing a theme here?) as well as a fascinating look at the dynamic of a wealthy family and how it can ultimately destroy the people in it. Prepare to love it. And to sob. […]

  3. […] read more Rainbow Rowell. I discover Stephanie Perkins, E. Lockhart. Cassandra Clare, who goes on to further tip the scales. Female writers firmly in the lead! (Though […]

  4. […] of, and yet I gave her first book, Shiver, only two stars. There’s E. Lockhart, whose We Were Liars left me a sobbing mess (in a good way), and yet an earlier novel of hers just left me kind of meh. […]

  5. […] favorite shows (Buffy, Angel, Downton Abbey, Friends) and reread more of my favorite books (this, this, this) this past year than I think in any year. I plan to continue this trend […]

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