Last Girl Lied To
Last Girl Lied To
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Square Fish
Annotation: Refusing to believe that her best friend committed suicide, a teenage girl enlists the help of her friend's former "best friend with benefits" in a search for the truth that leads to another suicide case and unsettling revelations.
Genre: [Suspense fiction]
 
Reviews: 4
Catalog Number: #6629859
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Square Fish
Copyright Date: 2020
Edition Date: 2020 Release Date: 06/02/20
Pages: 347 pages
ISBN: 1-250-23340-2
ISBN 13: 978-1-250-23340-0
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2018944974
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

As high school, senior Fiona comes realize, "You don't have to say anything at all to tell a lie. Lies come in many forms. A nod. A kiss. A caress." Fiona's best friend and pseudo-mentor, Trixie (who brings to mind the protagonist from E. Lockhart's Genuine Fraud, 2017) reinvented herself continuously throughout the last several months she was alive. As Fiona delves into Trixie's presumed death by suicide, she is led inevitably to Jasper, Trixie's "friend with benefits." Unsure whether Jasper is an ally or adversary, she slowly unravels Trixie's shadowed past and finds reasons why Trixie might have been obscuring her identity before she vanished. Could she even still be alive somewhere? Told in chapters alternating between "before" and "after" Trixie's disappearance, Flynn (Firsts, 2016) lays out a twisty psychological thriller complete with red herrings and even a love triangle or two. Though the epilogue feels slightly forced and superfluous, fans of E. Lockhart, Karen M. McManus, and Flynn's other work will revel in this mystery/thriller and the authenticity with which its characters are rendered.

Kirkus Reviews

Teens pair up with and then cheat on each other while two go in search of a missing friend.Readers only see Trixie through the eyes of others, especially Fiona. There seems to be little to admire in the girl who went missing after a party and who apparently killed herself: Trixie betrayed one best friend after another and was unkind to her devoted father. But if Fiona is right, she also faked her suicide and just walked away from the mess she created. Fiona's present-tense narration is interspersed with frequent recollections of Trixie that gradually reveal what led up to her possible death. Fiona, almost incapable of making decisions for herself, drifts from one controlling friend to another, never quite realizing a relationship with Beau, her emotionally troubled soul mate. Her infatuation with Trixie motivates her to search for evidence that she isn't dead, while Jasper, another domineering figure, insinuates himself into her life. Much of the treachery among this group of older high school students takes place at alcohol-drenched parties as the cast of white teens fall in and out of love, behave badly, suffer emotional whiplash, and then, eventually, move neatly on. Although the suspense effectively intensifies as Fiona discovers the nuances—and consequences—of several unhappy relationships, the ending is disappointingly pat for the enormity of the angst these teens generate.A page-turner of love and passion that features a slew of unadmirable characters. (Fiction. 14-18)

School Library Journal

Gr 10 Up-On the same day Fiona's best friend successfully steals her longtime crush, she meets Trixie. Trixie is edgy and different, and Fiona needs her, because she is unraveling. She immediately quits cheerleading, gains weight, ditches all her old friends, and begins living in Trixie's shadow. Then Trixie disappears into the ocean. Everyone thinks it was a suicide, but Fiona doesn't believe she's dead. Did Trixie leave and start a new life? And what does her disappearance have to do with the death of another boy from their school one year earlier? Chapters alternate between past and present, a technique that works at times but occasionally creates confusion and pacing problems. While the mystery is compelling, the shallow relationships and completely self-serving choices made by all of the characters make it hard to care. A pretty big twist at the end is worth the wait if readers make it that far. VERDICT A bit melodramatic, but this novel could find a place in larger collections where YA mysteries are popular. Mandy Laferriere, Fowler Middle School, Frisco, TX

Reading Level: 5.0
Interest Level: 9-12

Told in alternating chapters between the past and the present, L. E. Flynn's Last Girl Lied To is a gripping, emotional YA thriller about a teenage girl investigating the disappearance of her best friend. Something made him angry that night. Something made her cry. Something made Trixie disappear. What if it was all the same thing? Fiona claims she doesn't remember anything about the night her best friend left a party early and walked into the ocean. But the truth is, she wishes she could forget. Trixie's disappearance is ruled a suicide, but Fiona starts to believe that Trixie isn't really dead. Piecing together the trail of a girl who doesn't want to be found leads her to Jasper, Trixie's former friend with benefits, and Beau--the boy who turned Fiona down, who loved someone else, who might be happy Trixie is gone. The closer Fiona gets to finding out what happened, and the closer she gets to Jasper and Beau, the more she realizes that the girl she knew better than anyone may have been a carefully constructed lie--and she might have been waiting to disappear the entire time. An Imprint Book "I can't lie: Last Girl Lied To is my favorite thriller of 2019. Flynn's perfectly paced story about a girl who can't trust anyone integrates important subjects, like body image, addiction, and romantic obsession, imaginatively and masterfully. Twisted and delicious." --Kim Savage, author of In Her Skin "A twisty, piercing thriller with an end you won't see coming." --Mindy McGinnis, author of Female of the Species


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