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Mass Market Paperback The Good Liar Book

ISBN: 0778325016

ISBN13: 9780778325017

The Good Liar

Kate Livingston and Liza Kingsley have been best friends since their childhood in the suburbs of Chicago. They know everything about each other. Or do they? When Liza sets up the newly divorced Kate with Michael Waller, an elegant man sixteen years her senior, neither woman expects Kate to fall for him so soon. The relationship is a whirlwind that enthralls Kate...and frightens Liza. Because Liza knows she may have introduced Kate to more than her...

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Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Romantic Suspense Thriller

The world seems a little weird these days - conspiracy theories abound, governments conduct clandestine operations half way around the world, and secret organizations manipulate entire nation's economies and governments. How this all takes place is a mystery to most people. Some reference to these "behind the scenes" processes was recently documented in John Perkens' Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. But it focused on the past - facts and events. What I've been looking for is a book that captures what is going on today, and gives a hint into what will be going on tomorrow. Thank goodness I recently came across The Good Liar,a book that captures the thrill, mystery, and clandestine nature of this economic and political manipulation on a grand scale. Robert Ludlum's The Borne Identity came close, when it talked about Jason Borne and his work for a mysterious government run branch that manipulated governments at will. However, it was hard to believe that the story in The Borne Identity could be real. Sure the government does things behind our back, in a secret fashion, but to the extent that was depicted in The Borne Identity always stretched my imagination. Not so in The Good Liar by Laura Caldwell. Here is a thriller that is not only plausible, but most likely is happening right now. Meet Liza Kingsley, a young sophisticated lady who works for "The Trust," a secret private company that has ties to the government (just like today's Blackwater). She is in love with Robert, who has recently moved up in the ranks of the Trust and is beginning to clean up loose ends. One of those loose ends happens to be Michael, a former Trust employee that is looking to gracefully exit from his former life and settle down to a nice retirement. Kate, Liza's best friend from childhood who has recently divorced is introduced to Michael, and a fast paced romantic relationship develops. This is where The Good Liar shines beyond The Borne Identity. Because Liza is friends with Kate and also works for The Trust, she is put in the position of either protecting her friend - but breaking her relationship with Michael - or letting her in on the dark secrets of The Trust and Michael's past. Meanwhile, Robert is attempting to close any potential "problems" that the Trust may encounter in the future, including eliminating Michael - and now Kate. Although the book starts off in seeming disarray, soon things begin to come together and the reader is caught up in the story. Taking place in Brazil, Canada, and Russia, The Good Liar revolves around mystery, power, manipulation, love, and (dis)trust. It's not often that you are waiting until the last 20 pages to figure out just who will survive and who will be caught up in the quest for truth. The Good Liar by Laura Caldwell is one of those books that delivers; it is bound to be made into a Hollywood blockbuster soon enough. I'm just glad I read the book first - books are always better then the movie and The Good Liar is no excepti

The Good Liar / A Great Read!

The Good Liar is a smart, sexy tale of intrigue that takes us from Chicago to the far corners of the world. Caldwell goes beyond your typical espionage thriller to pose questions of morality, making us ask how far we'll go to protect our loyalties. In other words, is there ever such a thing a good lie? So not only does she have the perfect title for this novel, but her prose is clean and vivid as she weaves us in and out of a string of dangerous set ups. I highly recommend The Good Liar--truly an exciting read that keeps you hooked page after page.

The Good Liar's a good read

Two pairs of old friends anchor Laura Caldwell's thriller The Good Liar. Thirty-something Kate, despondent after her divorce, is introduced by her friend Liza to Michael Waller, who's smart and fit and fifty-five and almost too good to be true. Kate winds up marrying Michael before she notices anything disquieting about his personality or habits: his secrecy about his job, his occasional jumpiness, his over-familiarity with Liza, with whom he was allegedly only slightly acquainted before she fixed the newlyweds up. Caldwell tells her story from multiple perspectives, mostly in the third person. We learn, before Kate does, the truth about Michael's relationship with Liza and about his job: he's an operative with a pro-American counterintelligence unit, the Trust, and he's sworn to secrecy about his missions as well as the very existence of the organization. We also meet the book's bad guy, Michael's long-time friend Roger Leiland, the Trust's new honcho and the fourth member of the book's quartet of principals. Roger has developed a lust for power and isn't about to let friendship stand in the way of his acquiring it. Kate, ignorant of these truths, is living in a very different world from the rest of the characters. This is reflected on the page: the chapters told from Kate's perspective are written in the first person. We get to watch as she slowly comes to suspect that her husband is not what he seems. We already know what she wants to know, but it's still fun to watch her put the clues together. The Good Liar is a really good read. The plot is tight. The prose is transparent and the chapters short. Caldwell doesn't leave us hanging at the end of every chapter quite as successfully as, say, Ken Follett does: it is possible to put the book down, that is, but you won't want to if you don't have to. I love the book's spy stuff--secret drops and faux personas and the operatives' über-competence. What prevents the book from being as successful as it might be is Caldwell's villain, who is too unrelentingly evil to be quite credible: Roger wants power because Roger wants power. The personal loss and character flaws feeding that monomania don't amount to sufficient motivation. -- Debra Hamel But I quite enjoyed the book. I'll definitely be reading more from Caldwell.

Trust No One

The story told by Laura Caldwell in The Good Liar might seem farfetched at first glance, but in this post 9-11 world in which many of the West's worst enemies have died at the hands of military assassins or sophisticated rocket attacks, if something like the Trust does not exist, maybe it should. Its existence, however, was the last thing that Kate Livingston was thinking of when she fell in love with Michael Waller and decided to forever pack away her life in Chicago to marry him and move to Canada where Michael was starting his new business. Looking back, Liza Kingsley, Kate's best friend, wondered what she was thinking when she had insisted that Kate go out to dinner with Michael Waller the next time that business brought him to Chicago. She could only rationalize her decision by reminding herself how improbable it was that Kate, recently divorced and not particularly interested in meeting anyone new, would fall in love with a man more than fifteen years older than her. She had only hoped to offer Kate a diversion that would tempt her back into the dating world. What she got was something that none of the three could have foreseen. Kate may have been madly in love with Michael Waller but the experience of a failed marriage left her with a keen sense of when she was not being told the whole truth by her husband. In a matter of weeks she was sure that Michael was hiding something from her and she feared that it was an affair with her best friend, the very woman who had introduced them. But as much as Michael wished that he could put all of Kate's suspicions and fears to rest, there was no way that he could even begin to tell her the truth about himself, his work, or his past. Waller knew that being honest with Kate would place her life in danger because of his work with a private espionage group, one highly funded and not afraid to use assassination to protect the interests of the United States or to keep its own existence hidden to the rest of the world. The Good Liar is one of those stories in which it is not always possible to tell the good guys from the bad guys. Even those deepest inside the Trust were having that problem and, as Kate applied more and more pressure on Michael to tell her the truth about himself, she inadvertently became the catalyst that could destroy the very existence of the organization. Of course that could not be allowed to happen and the question became one of who would survive the turmoil that Kate had helped create. Laura Caldwell has written a first-rate thriller and she has capped it with an especially suspenseful ending that will have most readers reading the last few pages of The Good Liar as quickly as they can in order to ease the suspense.

the good liar

I would certainly recommend this book to readers who enjoy a fast-paced thriller, but I personally preferred Laura Caldwell's previous book, "The Rome Affair." I enjoy books in which I can connect with the main character, but that connection was hard to maintain here because of the switching points of view. I was very confused by the switching between first & third persons. I felt that I was supposed to connect with Kate, who was the first person narrator, but doing so was difficult because her chapters totaled less than half of the book. Overall, I felt that "The Good Liar" was an interesting story, but I was too detached from the characters to really care much about their fates.
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