He is no longer fifteen. Or fifty, or eighty for that matter. But your instincts never change. Once a charmer, ineffably attractive to the opposite sex, always a charmer. He could not help it even if he wanted to.
Outwardly, Roy and Betty appear like any other couple approaching their later years, but we soon discover – via a series of exceptional vignettes – that little in Roy’s life can be taken at face value.
A conman and expert liar, Roy has some a long way. A vicar’s son and former war-hero, his life has been building up to this, one final confidence trick and he has the potential victim lined up and ready, perhaps a little too ready. Layer upon layer of subterfuge develop as Roy’s life reveals itself piece by piece, taking the reader from wartime Berlin to New Labour Britain; all building to a moment where one false step may make this carefully constructed house of cards come crashing down.
Already shortlisted for the Crime Writers’ Association John Creasy (New Blood) Dagger, Nicholas Searle’s The Good Liar is one of those pitch-perfect debuts, combining a keen eye for historical detail with a brilliantly-convincing and compulsive plot.
Searle – a pseudonymous civil servant, picked up by the same agent who represents John le Carré – clearly knows a thing or two about the secret state and this one of those novels which really provides an insider’s view on a clandestine world.
‘…This is a part-thriller, part-human condition novel that packs a tremendous punch.’ – The Financial Times
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN: 9780241973295
Number of pages: 368
Weight: 255 g
Dimensions: 198 x 129 x 22 mm
An assured thriller debut in the footsteps of le Carré, Highsmith and Rendell...The Good Liar makes you want to experience Nicholas Searle's next trick - Guardian
This is set to be one of the books of the year that will get everyone talking....If you go in with absolutely no preconceptions, you will have your socks knocked, nay, blown off - Stylist
A part-thriller, part-human condition novel that packs a tremendous punch - Financial Times
The Good Liar is a taut, compulsive thriller with a dark, intriguing heart. A Mr Ripley for our time - Jonathan Freedland
All the ingredients are in this book...You're in safe hands with Searle's elegant writing - The Times
An incredibly dark, taut thriller...it deserves to be a bestseller. Think of Ruth Rendell morphing into John le Carré - Daily Express
Searle shows a gift for complex plotting. The Good Liar is packed with secrets and surprises, bluffs and double-bluffs - Daily Telegraph
A perfectly entertaining way to spend a few hours - Sunday Times
A confident debut...an easy page-turner - Grazia
A cracking read - Graham Norton, BBC Radio 2
What a clever and menacing novel The Good Liar is. I was gripped and horrified in equal measure and the ending knocked me sideways! I can't wait for everyone to read the book so I can talk about it - Nina Stibbe, bestselling author of 'Love, Nina' and 'Man at the Helm'
Secrets and lies provide the main focus of this impressive debut novel. When octogenarians Roy and Betty meet in a local pub for a date arranged over the internet they both choose to adopt false names until they get... More
What a way to write a book, starting with the present and going back over half a century with an explosive ending.
All I can say is: Betty, gut gemacht !
When only a good lie will reveal the truth. Roy is a con man. He tells the women that he meets that one of things he dislikes dishonesty. But he seems to think dishonesty is all right if you can get away with it. Do... More
Please sign in to write a review
Would you like to proceed to the App store to download the Waterstones App?