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One of Us is Lying is a young adult novel by Karen M.
McManus. It was published in 2017 by Random House. Everyone I know who has read
it describes the premise as “The Breakfast Club” meets “Pretty Little Liars”
which is a pretty on the nose depiction. The book can be purchased here from Bookshop.org.
The non-spoiler-y summary is as follows: On a Monday
afternoon, five students, a brain, a beauty, a criminal, an athlete and an
outcast, walk into detention. An hour later, only four walk out. Simon, the
outcast and the creator of a gossip app about the school, dies during
detention. It’s soon revealed that his death was no accident. The four students
in detention with him are the prime suspects and everyone has a motive. More
people wanted Simon gone than didn’t.
What unfolds is a complex murder-mystery taking place in a
modern high school. One of the strongest points of the book, and the most
appealing, is this backdrop of a suburban high school. Unlike traditional
mystery novels, a la Sherlock Holmes, the investigation takes place in our
time. Simon’s death gains national attention and the investigation unfolds
surrounded by, and impacted by, the 24-hour news cycle and the current trend to
sensationalize everything. It’s on national news, a 48 Hours-like
television program does a piece on the murder while its being investigated. The
plot isn’t just impacted by news sources; there’s the added perspective of
social media and the role it plays in hew news spreads and how stories are
covered. It becomes clear, with some minor characters, that the death doesn’t
matter much to them, but the attention the story gains is what they care about.
The novel unfolds through alternating point-of-view segments
of the four suspects: Bronwyn (the brain), Addy (the beauty), Nate (the
criminal) and Cooper (the athlete). While I’m not always a fan of narratives
with alternating POVs, it works extremely well here because it gives the reader
a chance to see the murder, and its aftermath, from more than one perspective.
Not only does this provide possible motives for every character, but it also
allows the reader to understand why a particular character wouldn’t have killed
Simon. No one character is presented as being squeaky clean or obviously
guilty. While the characters are all archetypes common in media aimed at
teenagers, they aren’t one-dimensional, which is refreshing for the reader and
adds depth to the story.
One of my favorite aspects of this book is how the
characters’ lives are changed by this common event. Others become immediately
suspicious of them, but that’s not the only outcome of Simon’s death. The
murder, the investigation, the press coverage, the four students trying to
solve what happened leads to each individual coming to some kind of
realization, whether its about self-acceptance or getting a toxic person out of
their life. The murder investigation is obviously a huge plotpoint, and their
lives may never be the same, but smaller problems arise, less important details
come to life. Despite the fact that they’re all suspects, and that each
character only knows their truth about what happened, they are brought closer
together by this event and try to work together to determine what exactly
happened.
Now, let’s discuss the plot without spoiling the ending. I
enjoyed the death itself, mostly because it posed an interesting mystery. Simon
doesn’t get shot or stabbed. There isn’t a power outage and when the lights
turn back on, he’s dead on the floor. He dies, everyone in the room sees it,
but no one’s able to figure out what happened. How he died, and how the killer
is able to kill him, is just as compelling as trying to figure out who did it.
The revelation of how Simon died, and who killed him, is equally compelling,
and unlike some novels, the answer doesn’t come out of nowhere, nor does there
need to be an extensive amount of exposition given, for it to make sense. It
also isn’t glaringly obvious up front who’s involved with what happened.
While I find McManus’s novel great overall, I do have some
minor complaints. A few of the secrets the main four characters want to keep
hidden are a bit cliché or overdramatized. Some of that could be chalked up to
teenagers having heightened emotions, and everything feeling like a huge deal
in high school. Simon, our murder victim, has plenty of enemies and people who
aren’t sad to see him die which feels a little bit of a cop-out, but that could
just be me. There were a few scenes in the book where a character’s actions
seemed a bit over the top or their words didn’t sound like something a normal
person would say. Again, this is just my opinion but those scenes kind of took
me out of the story a little bit. I found the treatment of one character after
her secret gets out, because of course the secrets are revealed, was a little
heavy-handed but I’m also picky about the specific topic it covered. My
dislikes are mostly related to small details, and not major aspects to the
story.
Rating: 4 stars
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