{"id":163,"date":"2018-08-15T17:48:03","date_gmt":"2018-08-15T15:48:03","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/readerwitch.com\/?p=163"},"modified":"2018-08-15T17:48:03","modified_gmt":"2018-08-15T15:48:03","slug":"sometimes-i-lie","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/readerwitch.com\/2018\/08\/15\/sometimes-i-lie\/","title":{"rendered":"Sometimes I Lie by Alice Feeney"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cSometimes I lie.\u201d<\/i>\u00a0 <\/span>And so do the ratings.<\/strong><\/p>\n Genre: thriller.\u00a0\u2b50\ufe0fStars from Goodreads: 3.89.\u00a0\u2b50\ufe0fStars from me: 1<\/p>\n Do you know what the worst thing about a bad book is? It poisons your own language. The disfigured style plays in your head even after the book has finished. Just like the characters in the book you are no longer able to express your thoughts coherently. You suddenly find yourself squeezing in words you don\u2019t need, making unnecessary sentences. As if you were now also cursed with having one wish only, and that is to hear the sound of your own voice.<\/p>\n The symptoms of the curse are phrases like these. (They are actual quotes!)<\/p>\n If Stephen King suddenly got very much into drama, but lost all his talent for building characters and dialogues he could write this book. The plot, though, is also not of Stephen King quality. There are lots of loose ends sticking out from it like threads from an old tablecloth.<\/p>\n The author spins a few implausible characters in front of you, hoping to make you dizzy enough so that you wouldn\u2019t figure out who the villains and the victims are. If you use the trick of ballerinas and focus on one point only, you\u2019ll see through these juggles very quickly.<\/p>\n The plot itself got infected with the worst disease possible. The disease is called stupidity dependence. When this disease occurs the plot can develop only through the stupidity of characters and by the means of implausible facts. The intrigue at work progresses only because one character is an idiot who doesn\u2019t notice things under her nose. A dangerous situation happens because a character is dumb and does not warn another one. A complicated scheme works out because apparently you can post two cat photos to a new Twitter account and get viral overnight for a gossip. Stealing drugs from a hospital and poisoning anybody with them, including hospital patients, is easy. Nobody notices because the plot is sick with stupidity dependence.<\/p>\n I had an audiobook version<\/a>. Do you know the difference between an actor and a narrator? The narrator of this audiobook doesn\u2019t. She dramatically breathes into the microphone through most of the lines, but if there are modal verbs she has to cry them. Like \u201cI have to open the door but I CAN\u2019T\u201d<\/em>. Whenever there\u2019s a dramatic situation (and there are lots of them) she gets super intense. She literally sobs through some of the lines which made me want to calm her down rather than continue with the book. There are also lots of kid rhymes at supposedly scary moments and she makes it sound even more cliche because she sings them like in an outdated horror movie.<\/p>\n The only thing I\u2019m thankful for is that there was no quasi-suspense like in Something in the Water<\/a><\/em>. No actions were cut midway by a boring Wikipedia article. Instead, every time an action was interrupted a previously interrupted one was resumed. That\u2019s the only thing that helped me move through the book. This, and a colony of ants I had to battle with on my balcony unable to press a stop button without contaminating my headphones.<\/p>\n I didn\u2019t expect to have a one-star book so soon on my blog. I choose books carefully but I was tricked by an almost 4-star Goodreads rating and an interesting description. Sometimes I Lie<\/em><\/a> is indeed not boring, but is still not worth your time.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"\n