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Liar (novel)

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
2009

Author
  
Justine Larbalestier

3.3/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Originally published
  
2009

Genre
  
Young adult fiction

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Publishers
  
Allen & Unwin (Australia), Bloomsbury Publishing (US)

Awards
  
Carl Brandon Kindred Award

Similar
  
How to Ditch Your Fairy, Magic or Madness, Razorhurst, The battle of the sexes in s, Magic's Child

Liar is a 2009 young adult thriller novel by Justine Larbalestier. It is written in first person from the point of view of a character named Micah Wilkins, who is a deliberate unreliable narrator (made clear as such on the first page of the book).

Contents

Summary

The protagonist of the novel, Micah Wilkins, is a seventeen-year-old biracial girl living in New York with her parents. When the novel opens, Micah's boyfriend Zachary, who's been missing, is found dead. The story is told in segments of past and present, moving between Micah's family history and how she met her boyfriend, and with the present as the investigation into Zach's death unfolds.

The concept of the story is that Micah is a compulsive liar. The novel is written as though Micah is writing the words, so she is aware of and refers to the audience in the text, to whom she is telling the story. In the opening she promises to tell the whole truth, but as the story continues she retracts or "corrects" statements she'd said before, claiming the new truth to be the real one.

Awards

  • 2009 Carl Brandon Kindred Award
  • 2009 WA Premier’s Literary Award, Young Adult Prize
  • 2009 Fellowship of Australian Writers (FAW) Christina Stead Award
  • Cover art controversy

    Liar became the focus of Internet-centered controversy due to its cover, in its initial U.S. print run, featuring a young white woman with long, straight hair, while the book describes its protagonist as an African American girl with "nappy" hair. Larbalestier herself was among those critical of this, saying "the problem is longstanding and industry-wide. Whitewashing of covers, ghettoizing of books by people of color, and low expectations (reflected in the lack of marketing push behind the majority of these books) are not new things".

    References

    Liar (novel) Wikipedia


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