Who is ready for a new review on a new book?!
I hope you all are eagerly waving your arms up in the air! haha.
I don't know how old the majority of our readers are but if you fall into the mid to late twenties and up, you should know about all of those classic John Hughes films from the 80s!
Sixteen Candles! Pretty in Pink! St. Elmo's Fire! The Breakfast Club!
And this 90s baby does love Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club :)
Let me know what you're favorite John Hughes movie is! You can post down below OR find us on Facebook! FortheLoveofDewey is now a group and we'd love it if you joined!
One of Us is Lying is Karen McManus' debut novel. As a YA fiction story, One of Us is Lying is a story about five teenagers, one who mysteriously ends up dead in detention. The "who done it" and the why are what you as the reader are trying to figure out.
This book is a mash up between the game of Clue and The Breakfast Club.
From what I could find out there on the great internet, it seems like McManus was influenced by the writings of Agatha Christie for her debut novel. According to Book Club Babble, McManus used The Breakfast Club as her primary inspiration.
Which is something I can totally see... Take for example Brian and Simon. For anyone who has seen this movie, do you think that McManus loosely based Simon on Brian?? Brian had the intentions of suicide but was never success. Simon actually *dies*...
Tabitha Lord of Book Club Babble did an *amazing* review with Karen McManus. I strongly recommend to everyone to go and check out her review! Another good review on the book was done by The Big Thrill- you can check out that review here.
Lord brings up great questions that included awesome points. I love how she brings up how nowadays, teenagers don't have a sense of privacy (which is true, when I was in high school, TEXT MESSAGES were just becoming a thing! and I am by no means old!). How social media has taken over and made things that were once private, public. (Not only that, but suicide is something that's increasing in teenagers :( )
I very much liked the delivery of the story! I liked how as the reader got deeper into the novel, the plot became more twisted. The police were pitting Bronwyn, Nate, Cooper and Addie against each other- something that should have pulled them apart, made them stronger together in the end. You slowly learn about Simon's life and
As, I said before (because for anyone who knows me, I love to repeat myself) I liked how the book was a spin on The Breakfast Club: you had the athlete, the criminal, the brains, the outcast and the pretty girl. While the five of them were able to walk out together at the end, One of Us is Lying loses the outcast.
There was a twist at the end of the story that I was not expecting. I could see how the "killer" was who they were, but I would never have imagined who was helping them.
I give this book 5 out of 5 coffee beans. It held the right amount of suspense and it answered all of the questions that it laid out. I didn't get tired of the characters and I didn't find them to be annoying. The book progressed in a way that didn't leave you feeling ripped off.
~ Jillian
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