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The Liar

Audiobook
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This "brilliant" novel, an Elle Magazine Best Book of the Year about "lying and the lure of fame" (Joan Siber, National Book Critics Circle and PEN/Faulkner award-winning author), reveals how one mistake can have a thousand consequences.
Nofar is an average teenage girl — so average, in fact, that she's almost invisible. Serving customers ice cream all summer long, she is desperate for some kind of escape.
One afternoon, a terrible lie slips from her tongue. And suddenly everyone wants to talk to her: the press, her schoolmates, and even the boy upstairs. He is the only one who knows the truth, and he is demanding a price for his silence.
Then Nofar meets Raymonde, an elderly immigrant whose best friend has just died. Raymonde keeps her friend alive the only way she knows how, by inhabiting her stories. But soon, Raymonde's lies take on a life of their own.
Written with propulsive energy, dark humor, and deep insight, The Liar reveals the far-reaching consequences of even our smallest choices, and explores the hidden corners of human nature to reveal the liar, and the truth-teller, in all of us.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 2019
      Lies take life in this excellent novel about a young Israeli girl who finds power in deceit. Nofar Shalev is 17, exceedingly unremarkable, and stuck in the shadow of her beautiful younger sister, Maya. She spends her summer evenings working at an ice cream parlor and hopes to be noticed by her high school crush. Instead, she encounters Avishai Milner, a winner of a televised singing contest who is now washed up and without future prospects. After Avishai lashes out verbally at Nofar, the teenage girl flees to the alley behind the shop, and Avishai follows and grabs her, causing Nofar to scream. When asked by police if she had been assaulted, Nofar says yes. This lie snowballs into an unstoppable force, garnering media attention and sweeping up friends and family members along with it as Nofar battles between her building guilt and her fear of rejection if she comes clean. Though some characters fall to the wayside and leave the reader curious as to their purpose in the story, Nofar’s internal journey makes up for it. This tender and satisfying coming-of-age story leads readers to question how a split second can change lives.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Ajjaz Awad becomes the teenage Nofar, full of angst, foibles, and a longing to be seen. Awad's characterization is light, allowing us to hear Nofar's boredom as an ice cream shop attendant. As we feel both pity and amusement at her plight, Awad moves us capably through seemingly inconsequential moments at a rapid pace so that the novel's darker turn comes as a surprise. Listeners are drawn into a swirl of confusion and delight as a dilemma arises over a lie that Nofar has told. The heroine's complicated emotions are perfectly captured by Awad in the girlish voice she uses for Nofar's interior monologue. We don't judge her as harshly as we would otherwise. When Nofar is joined by an older liar, Awad's dexterity--and our interest--is heightened. M.R. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
    • Kirkus

      Starred review from July 15, 2019
      One very hot summer in an Israeli city, two lonely people discover the life-changing power of a lie. "In the ice cream parlor next door, the girl went behind the glass counter and began handing spoons of ice cream to those who wanted to taste, knowing that summer vacation was about to end and no one had yet tasted her, the only girl in her class still a virgin, and next summer when the fields yellowed, she would be wearing a soldier's army green." Nofar's name means "water lily" but she thinks of herself as "zit face." Her friends have dropped her, her younger sister is more beautiful and popular, and when a rude customer cruelly insults her, she loses it entirely. She rushes from the store screaming, the customer follows her, a crowd forms, the cops arrive--and a charge of attempted rape of a minor is made. Only an unhappy boy watching from his apartment knows it didn't happen. As his attempt to blackmail Nofar turns into her first romance, she's also becoming a national celebrity, lauded for her bravery and supplied with free designer outfits for TV appearances. Gundar-Goshen (Waking Lions, 2017) pauses Nofar's story to introduce Raymonde, a resident of a senior citizens' center who assumes her dead best friend's identity so she can take a trip the other woman was about to go on. She didn't realize this would entail becoming a speaker about her (nonexistent) experiences surviving the Theresienstadt concentration camp. Like Nofar, Raymonde's lie brings her magical good fortune. Ah, if it were only that simple. The author unfurls her ironic fable--simultaneously timeless and contemporary--from a God's-eye view, with captivating authority and in lush prose. "His heart had pounded furiously all night, not even letting up at dawn, as if a new branch of a twenty-four hour supermarket had opened in its chambers." A psychological page-turner, rich in setting, character, and wisdom.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2019
      This slyly edgy second novel from Isreali author Gundar-Goshen (Waking Lions, 2017) explores the repercussions of a split-second decision by a socially awkward 17-year-old. When Nofar, working for the summer at an ice cream parlor, is insulted by a formerly popular singer, she runs into the alley behind the store. He follows, she screams, and everyone around assumes that he has attempted to assault her. Nofar goes along with the story, and is swept into becoming something of a national heroine for her bravery in standing up to him. Her decisions impact the lives of the teenage boy who witnessed the non-attack, the jealous younger sister who resents Nofar's newfound popularity, and, eventually, an elderly woman who has told some lies of her own. Gundar-Goshen explores the thin line between lying and story-telling, and considers whether lying may ever have positive consequences. She writes with detached affection for her misguided but essentially well-meaning characters, skipping nimbly among their points of view, and introducing new ones along the way. Both sardonic and touching, the novel raises questions of morality for which there are no easy answers. Its timely subject matter and intriguing, unpredictable plot are sure to prompt discussion among readers.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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