book cover of Lying
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Lying

(1999)
A novel by

 
 
Lying takes a sharp look at our whole culture of mendacity, in which hype and spin rule supreme, statistics are manipulated, history rewritten, hoaxes abound on the internet, bogus guests appear on TV chat shows, and the travel, beauty and health industries peddle expensive dreams.

Lying is also a love story. Alison Ward, an idealistic young editor in a publishing house, falls obsessionally in love with an older man, James Egerton, seemingly out of reach on both social and religious grounds. Why should a Cambridge-educated accountant from a well-to-do, ultra-Catholic family be attracted to someone of modest means and background who has rarely set foot inside a church (and whose father moreover dismisses all religion as claptrap)?

Against the odds, she wins his love but, five years into their marriage, finds herself leading a double life, upholding 'truths' in public which privately she abhors. The strain of this deception, coupled with deep sadness at their failure to conceive a longed-for child, eventually leads her into an affair. As lie piles on lie, she is horrified at her own faithlessness. Why, when she loves her devout and devoted husband, is she sloping off with a scruffy, layabout barman she doesn't even like?

She begins to see falsehood everywhere - in advertising and politics, even science and medicine - and above all in the constricting religion of her husband and his family. Yet James's faith is an essential part of him, his virtue and integrity the very qualities that first attracted her; thus the discovery that even he is entangled in deception comes as a profound shock.


Genre: General Fiction

Used availability for Wendy Perriam's Lying


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