One Of Us Is Lying: TikTok made me buy it (One Of Us Is Lying, 1)

£3.80£8.50 (-55%)

The international bestselling YA thriller by acclaimed author, Karen M. McManus – NOW A MAJOR NETFLIX SERIES.

Book One of the Bayview Trilogy.

Five students walk into detention. Only four come out alive.

Yale hopeful Bronwyn has never publicly broken a rule.

Sports star Cooper only knows what he’s doing in the baseball diamond.

Bad boy Nate is one misstep away from a life of crime.

Prom queen Addy is holding together the cracks in her perfect life.

And outsider Simon, creator of the notorious gossip app at Bayview High, won’t ever talk about any of them again.

He dies 24 hours before he could post their deepest secrets online. Investigators conclude it’s no accident. All of them are suspects.

Everyone has secrets, right?
What really matters is how far you’ll go to protect them.

‘Tightly plotted and brilliantly written, with sharp, believable characters, this whodunit is utterly irresistible’ – HEAT

‘Twisty plotting, breakneck pacing and intriguing characterisation add up to an exciting single-sitting thrillerish treat’ -THE GUARDIAN

‘A fantastic murder mystery, packed with cryptic clues and countless plot twists. I could not put this book down’ – THE SUN

‘Pretty Little Liars meets The Breakfast Club’ – ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

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EAN: 2000000202761 SKU: AD358C54 Category:

Additional information

Publisher

1st edition (1 Jun. 2017), Penguin

Language

English

Paperback

368 pages

ISBN-10

0141375639

ISBN-13

978-0141375632

Reading age

11+ years, from customers

Dimensions

19.8 x 12.9 x 2.21 cm

Average Rating

4.50

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( 8 Reviews )
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8 Reviews For This Product

  1. 08

    by Molly Cameron

    This book is a great introduction to ya murder mystery. Would 100% Recommend it, the only fault is towards the end it gets slightly confusing but great nonetheless!

  2. 08

    by hero_of_canton

    A geek, a jock, a criminal and a princess. Each with their secrets to keep, each ending up in detention alongside Simon, a fellow student who runs a gossip app that is always accurate. When Simon ends up dead all eyes turn to the four who were with him at the time. Did one of them kill him to keep their secret?

    I had seen “One Of Us Is Lying” around on bookstagram a lot and was curious about it so when it was on the Kindle deals at some point I downloaded it but that’s as far as I’d gotten until looking at my tbr for books to fit the prompts for a reading challenge that I’m taking part in this month over on bookstagram and it seemed the perfect fit.

    It is a YA book and I would say that it does read like one too, not that that’s a bad thing necessarily. In fact, I’ve had a lot going on this week so it has actually been perfect for me as it’s not really needed high levels of concentration to follow the plot.

    I liked the way the story was told in first person narrative but with the narration shifting between the four main characters so we really got to know each of them.

    I love a good plot twist and this definitely had them, although a couple were a little predictable and I did figure out most of the ending but I do read an awful lot of true crime and crime fiction so that’s not necessarily a slight on McManus.

    I liked her writing style. She kept me gripped and the writing had a good pace to it. Some parts were a little on the nose but I think on the whole you know what you’re getting with these types of books.

    I enjoyed the world McManus created and I will most likely pick up the sequel at some point, partly because it would be nice to see what happens next for these characters.

    There was a diverse mix of characters and I felt as though the supporting characters were fleshed out enough to make them feel real without taking too much time away from the action.

    Overall, a fun and engaging read.

  3. 08

    by Eliza Davies

    Closed door romance, SUCH A GOOD BOOKKKK! ????

  4. 08

    by Veronica Ashton

    Great book, good story line.

  5. 08

    by Miss R.

    It is very interesting to read even a few pages leads to reading half the book????

  6. 08

    by Read and Reviewed

    High school might not hold fond memories for the majority of us, detention even less so, but reading this debut YA thriller from the comfort of an armchair is a wholly pleasurable experience! As an onlooker with access all areas to a cast of adolescent narrators, One of Us Is Lying is an experience to relish and fiendishly addictive!

    When a diverse group of students at Bayview High all show up for Mr Avery’s detention after getting caught with their mobile phones in their bags during class they are convinced they have been set up. On a superficial level the individuals who walk into detention are a teen movie just awaiting a script; Yale-bound perennial overachiever, Bronwyn Rojas; notorious supplier and slacker Nate Macauley; airhead homecoming princess Adelaide (“Addy”) Prentiss; all American heartthrob and baseball star, Cooper Clay and social pariah and man with a smoking gun, aka creator of “About That”, Simon Kelleher. Given that these students do not ordinarily move in the same social circles, converse or even trust each other, most definitely not Simon, a twitchy atmosphere prevails when Mr Avery has to leave the room.

    “If all you knew of Bayview High was Simon Kelleher’s gossip app, you’d wonder how anyone found time to go to class.”

    Things take an unexpected turn for the worse when Simon takes a sip of water, collapses and dies and the Bayview Police enter the fray and discover that his drink was laced with peanut oil. With no EpiPens on hand and Simon’s allergy widely known, it isn’t long being the rumour mill gathers apace and given that the Internet gossip application created by Simon, ‘About That’, has ruined plenty of lives already in some pretty serious ways, the list of students who have reason to want to orchestrate his demise is abundant. In fact, asking which students do not have an axe to grind with Simon would probably be more useful, but given only four other people along with Mr Avery were in the room, the discovery that Simon had queued a blog post due to go live the very next day revealing some juicy gossip about each of those students in the room puts Bronwyn, Nate, Addy and Cooper squarely in the frame. And with the revelations most definitely not trifling and having the potential to change the course of the future for all involved, all four have possible cause to plot Simon’s murder. As readers get to hear from all the students under suspicion, tentative alliances begin to form but as further revelations and a series of Tumblr posts follow the foursome under suspicion decide they must work together as a team to ensure their freedom and restore their besmirched reputations. As Bronwyn’s sister, Grace, digs into Simon’s online persona and his posts to some very twisted internet community forums they start to see a different side to the student they all thought they knew.

    Karen McManus proves that writing a YA novel with well-realised characters is most definitely not an oxymoron, and excels by not adhering to the stereotypes and cliched tropes of the genre. In fact she goes much further and actively turns them on their heads. It is this excellent characterisation which leaves the reader second guessing each and every one of the ‘suspects’ who make it out of detention alive, because nothing these students do is predictable and they do not subscribe to the proscribed norms. Hard to believe, but even Simon who we learn much more of after his demise and the supporting cast of relatives, best friends and associated rubberneckers and gossipmongers all feel like real individuals. By switching the narrative, McManus keeps her readers in the dark, chasing their tail in a bid to identify just who is lying and who is scrambling from the fear of their past catching up with them. A more ambiguous bunch you could not want to meet and however much contempt the reader summons for Simon’s cretinous trolling, it is hard not to conclude that he played to his strengths and whilst not entirely being a “public service” as Simon attests, there is an obvious element of entrepreneurship at work with the creation of his gossip app.

    Although I did work out where the novel was heading before it was made clear by the author, I am not ashamed to admit that I spent two-thirds of this novel playing detective and it took me far longer to get a handle on matters than with some adult thrillers! However the real joy of this novel is not how realistic and convincing McManus is able to make this story feel, it is the growth and evolution of the lead characters who all discover more about themselves and escape the confines of their designated niche in society. It sounds supremely naff to say that all four become better people during the course of their month under the microscope, but they do all discover more about themselves as people and without feeling overly twee due to a few stumbling blocks along the way it feels truly authentic. What contributes to making this such a fantastically compelling read is that the tone never even verges on becoming too preachy and the obvious lessons are not writ too large. In contrast to the majority of YA novels which unfold from the perspective of a loner or school misfit navigating the tricky waters of high school, One of Us Is Lying showcases a diverse cross section and some wonderfully individual perspectives.

    Review written by Rachel Hall (@hallrachel)

  7. 08

    by Rachel.

    My daughter’s new favourite series. She loves them. Never say no to a child reading. Apparently the books are much better than the tv series. What would you do if someone died in your detention? How far would you go to protect yourself?

  8. 08

    by erin r.

    Although a good book, it is not suitable for 11 year olds. I’m glad I read it before giving it to my 11 year old daughter. I will keep it for when she is older.

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One Of Us Is Lying: TikTok made me buy it (One Of Us Is Lying, 1)

£3.80£8.50 (-55%)

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