Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Nine Liars by Maureen Johnson


 
Summary from Goodreads:

Senior year at Ellingham Academy for Stevie Bell isn’t going well. Her boyfriend, David, is studying in London. Her friends are obsessed with college applications. With the cold case of the century solved, Stevie is adrift. There is nothing to distract her from the questions pinging around her brain—questions about college, love, and life in general.

Relief comes when David invites Stevie and her friends to join him for study abroad, and his new friend Izzy introduces her to a double-murder cold case. In 1995, nine friends from Cambridge University went to a country house and played a drunken game of hide-and-seek. Two were found in the woodshed the next day, murdered with an ax.

The case was assumed to be a burglary gone wrong, but one of the remaining seven saw something she can’t explain. This was no break-in. Someone’s lying about what happened in the woodshed.

Seven suspects. Two murders. One killer still playing a deadly game.

Review:

I love these books. I honestly think Maureen Johnson is becoming the new Agatha Christie. There is something so compelling about Stevie, the teenage sleuth with panic attacks. I loved having the chance to watch her solve a British mystery this time. It was like stepping into a PBS show with some of my favorite characters. Thanks, Maureen Johnson.

This British mystery was also soooooooo good. I had to know what happened in 1995. I knew right away it wasn’t some random burglar. And when the aunt character disappears….I was hooked. The murder mystery was a good one. That being said, this book had a lot of other things going on too.

The kids are all at that dramatic age where they have to figure out what comes next. Where do they go after Ellingham? And while it’s sometimes hard for me to remember they are all kids because of how brilliant they all are, Johnson doesn’t let you forget it in this book. Colleges are on their minds and so are the inevitable separations of the group. And while I can see this being a pain for some readers, and I guess I found some of it painfully dramatic too…thinking about it now, it makes it all more believable and real.

There was also one point where I got so mad at Stevie that I literally had to stop reading….I put the book down for a while…I guess this is a sign that you know and love characters? You feel like you know them so well you can get upset at them. Of course I forgave her, and so did everyone else. I had to know what happened too.

There were moments where it felt like I was in London, or in a country estate finding clues. It’s not just the mystery that’s good and the characters you feel like you know. You physically get transported to these places in these books. Maureen Johnson is a skilled master at storytelling.

This latest installment (and yes there has to be more after this one…) was not my favorite book in the series so far. Some of the drama was a little much for me. I also wish there was more time with some of Stevie’s other friends. However, even my least favorite in this series ranks higher in the scheme of things than a lot of other books I’ve read just because of how skilled of a writer this author is. All in all, this gets a 9/10.

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