Book Review: A Suitable Lie by Michael J Malone

Book Review: A Suitable Lie by Michael J MaloneA Suitable Lie by Michael J. Malone
Published by Orenda Books on August 5th 2016
Genres: Thriller, Psychological Thriller
Pages: 300
Goodreads
four-stars

Andy Boyd thinks he is the luckiest man alive. Widowed with a young child, after his wife dies in childbirth, he is certain that he will never again experience true love.

Then he meets Anna. Feisty, fun and beautiful, she’s his perfect match, and she loves his son like he is her own.

When Andy ends up in the hospital on his wedding night, he receives his first clue that Anna is not all that she seems. Desperate for that happy-ever-after, he ignores it—a dangerous mistake that could cost him everything.

My Review:

I finished this five days ago and I still can’t fully shake the feeling of what I read. I wanted to wait to do this review because I thought that I would be able to string together enough sentences that made sense, give you an idea as to what the book was about and maybe help you decide if this is one to go on your TBR.

Well, you can’t always get what you want. So let me tell you what reading this did to me. I read a couple of reviews by book bloggers but none stood out like Emma’s from damppebbles.com (that’s damppebbles – not damp pebbles, Damp Pebbles or DP – just damppebbles ;)). I read her review and knew that I had to get this and read it right away.  So I went into this having read the blurb a couple of times and Emma’s review. Maybe I’m denser than I want to admit, but I had no idea what awaited me in these pages.

Well drawn characters and situations that, while I was not in agreement with some decisions made, I totally understood. The situations were believable and the character’s actions were all understandable. In fact the only thing I found that was over the top was the pain this inflicted on me.

I had to take breaks while reading this. Many breaks, mostly to get coffee. This isn’t unusual for me because I often break for a cup of joe. The difference is I usually just want coffee, with this story I needed coffee. Which was good because I barely ate while reading this. Some breaks were to allow myself to calm down.

There was no roller coaster ride for me, just one low after another. I felt helpless, livid, sick to my stomach. I cried tears of frustration and I could feel my blood pressure rising. There was a relentless pounding on my emotions.

I wanted to throw the book across the room, but I was reading this on my laptop, so, no. I wanted to dnf this a couple of times along the way.

This beat me up so much that there came a time when I broke. It was inevitable. I became numb and I no longer hurt, I still cared but I no longer felt. I was out of it. I felt no joy, no sadness, no anger, no pain. This wasn’t a choice – the writing and the story took me to the brink and then pushed me over the edge. When I landed, I dusted off the seat of my jeans and continued on, somewhat indifferent to what played out but needing to know just the same.

If I had known what this story dealt with, I might have pushed this down on my TBR, if it made it on to it at all. Chances are I would not have read this, ever. That said, I do not regret for one minute having done so. I read for different reasons and being entertained is a big one, but if a story can elicit visceral reactions like this one did – well, my time was well spent.

I haven’t been this upset since Wuthering Heights.

I went online to see what Ayr, Scotland looks like and I felt homesick. I’ve never been, but it’s so lovely and I want to go. Quaint doesn’t even begin to describe High Street.

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four-stars

8 Comments

  1. Love this review! I can’t decide if I want to read this book based on your review or steer clear due to the obvious emotional damage it might do:) I have this one sitting on my Kindle but have always debated whether I wanted to read another domestic violence book at this time. Boy, am I curious now. Should I move this up my TBR??

    1. Thank you. Move it up? That’s a tough one. My instincts are saying, “Leave it where it is and get to it when you get to it”, but considering you know it’s about domestic violence and you’re curious, I say, “Go ahead. Move it on up”. Besides, the writing and the story are really good. Just be sure you’re in the mood for it.

  2. What a brilliant and heartfelt review Victor! Like you although I didn’t particularly ‘enjoy’ the experience of reading the book, I am extremely glad I did – some books are for entertainment, some have the power to make a real difference!

    1. Thank you very much Cleo. You are spot on about books having the power to make a difference. I need to make an effort to include more of those in my ‘read’ shelf on goodreads.

  3. When I read a book, I introduce the cast of characters into my life. This scares me a little. I don’t want to go down and feel rotten. I just read A Man Called Ove about a man who just wants to be left alone to commit suicide. It was hysterical. I loved it. The books I read have to be tempered somehow, so I’m not exhausted by it.

    1. When I read a book, I introduce the cast of characters into my life.

      I do the same thing Susie. I believe that reading is more than the understanding or processing of words on a page; there’s an interaction that goes both ways. I have to allow myself to feel, to try to connect or empathize if I can and even shoulder some of the burden. I spend too much time with my nose in a book to just process words 🙂

      Years ago a non-reader friend of mine said, “Man, you take this reading seriously.” I was waiting for her to make a point. According to her, she had, to me she was just stating a fact 😛

      Having said all of that, I still believe that I probably would have passed on this one had I known. This one is scary. What makes it so is that it is so within the realm of possibility; people live like this.

      I just added A Man Called Ove to my TBR. I’ve seen the cover and heard about it, but never made it past the part that he wants to commit suicide. I had no idea that it was a humorous story. Thank you 🙂

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