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All Our Lies Are True
Lisa Manterfield, author
For far too long, Abby Kirkpatrick has lived with survivor’s guilt. She was only six when her twin sister, Cassie, vanished without a trace from the room where they slept, an unsolved mystery that continues to haunt her family. Now, Abby is ready for a fresh start—a new town and a promising career in child psychology. Maybe if she can save just one child, it will ease her conscience about losing Cassie.
But when Cassie’s remains are discovered, Abby’s family is thrust into a devastating “trial by media,” with her father emerging as the prime suspect. Despite her older sister’s efforts to protect the family from fresh trauma, Abby returns to the crime scene, determined to uncover the truth about that fateful night. As she unravels a web of secrets, Abby realizes the close-knit family she has always trusted might be protecting a killer.
All Our Lies Are True is a gripping page-turner and a deeply moving portrayal of a woman longing for freedom from her past.
Reviews
Manterfield follows up The Smallest Thing with the gut-wrenching story of a young woman grappling with the long shadow of her sister’s disappearance. When Abby Kirkpatrick was six years old, her twin sister, Cassie, vanished from their shared bedroom. The ensuing investigation cast suspicion on the girl’s father, and the community support the family received in the days following the tragedy quickly dried up. In response, the Kirkpatricks moved to a remote corner of the U.K., where Abby grew up in a “strange, isolated world.” Sixteen years later, she’s preparing to leave her troubled home life behind for college. Just as she’s about to accept an admission offer, two police officers arrive at the Kirkpatricks’ home with news that Cassie’s corpse has been found in a dried-up lake near their old house, with a fracture on her skull that suggests foul play. The reopening of the case reopens old wounds, as Abby grapples both with her foggy memories of that night, and renewed suspicions that her father may have played a part in her sister’s death. Manterfield enriches her familiar premise with lived-in family dynamics and legitimately gripping suspense. This will linger in readers’ minds. (Self-published)