
Liars
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Rebecca Lowman
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By:
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Sarah Manguso
About this listen
An “eviscerating” (The New York Times) novel about being a wife, a mother, and an artist, and how marriage makes liars of us all—from the author of Very Cold People and 300 Arguments
A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: NPR, Town & Country, Lit Hub, Chicago Public Library
“Is divorce the new marriage plot? . . . [Liars] pulses with a rare kind of anger, making it a compulsive, unforgettable read. Love stories, it seems, are out. Divorce as liberation? Very much in.”—Vogue
“A tour de force . . . Liars makes an old story fresh.”—NPR
“A bracing story of a woman on the verge.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
A nuclear family can destroy a woman artist. I’d always known that. But I’d never suspected how easily I’d fall into one anyway.
When Jane, an aspiring writer, meets filmmaker John Bridges, they both want the same things: to be in love, to live a successful, creative life, and to be happy. When they marry, Jane believes she has found everything she was looking for, including—a few years later—all the attendant joys and labors of motherhood. But it’s not long until Jane finds herself subsumed by John’s ambitions, whims, and ego; in short, she becomes a wife.
As Jane’s career flourishes, their marriage starts to falter. Throughout the upheavals of family life, Jane tries to hold it all together. That is, until John leaves her.
Liars is a tour de force of wit and rage, telling the blistering story of a marriage as it burns to the ground, and of a woman rising inexorably from its ashes.
©2024 Sarah Manguso (P)2024 Random House AudioListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
“Makes stirring observations about marriage and identity.”—Time
“Is divorce the new marriage plot? . . . [Liars] pulses with a rare kind of anger, making it a compulsive, unforgettable read. Love stories, it seems, are out. Divorce as liberation? Very much in.”—Vogue
“[Manguso] is at the top of her game.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review
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Story
When Catalina is admitted to Harvard, it feels like the fulfillment of destiny: a miracle child escapes death in Latin America, moves to Queens to be raised by her undocumented grandparents, and becomes one of the chosen. But nothing is simple for Catalina, least of all her own complicated, contradictory, ruthlessly probing mind. Now a senior, she faces graduation to a world that has no place for the undocumented; her sense of doom intensifies her curiosities and desires. She infiltrates the school’s elite subcultures—internships and literary journals, posh parties and secret societies.
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Monotone delivery
- By Patricia M Hart on 11-01-24
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The Extinction of Irena Rey
- By: Jennifer Croft
- Narrated by: Lanessa Tremblett
- Length: 12 hrs and 1 min
- Unabridged
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Eight translators arrive at a house in a primeval Polish forest on the border of Belarus. It belongs to the world-renowned author Irena Rey, and they are there to translate her magnum opus, Gray Eminence. But within days of their arrival, Irena disappears without a trace. The translators, who hail from eight different countries but share the same reverence for their beloved author, begin to investigate where she may have gone while proceeding with work on her masterpiece.
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Unique plot
- By Kinga on 03-30-24
By: Jennifer Croft
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God Bless You, Otis Spunkmeyer
- A Novel
- By: Joseph Earl Thomas
- Narrated by: JD Jackson
- Length: 5 hrs and 47 mins
- Unabridged
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After a deployment in the Iraq War dually defined by threat and interminable mundanity, Joseph Thomas is fighting to find his footing. Now a doctoral student at The University, and an EMS worker at the hospital in North Philly, he encounters round the clock friends and family from his past life and would-be future at his job, including contemporaries of his estranged father, a man he knows little about, serving time at Holmesburg prison for the statutory rape of his then-teenage mother.
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Another Perspective of Urban Life
- By Stephanie W. on 07-23-24
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The Book of George
- A Novel
- By: Kate Greathead
- Narrated by: Blair Baker
- Length: 9 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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If you haven’t had the misfortune of dating a George, you know someone who has. He’s a young man brimming with potential but incapable of following through; sweet yet noncommittal to his long-suffering girlfriend; distant from but still reliant on his mother; charmingly funny one minute, sullenly brooding the next. Here, Kate Greathead paints one particular, unforgettable George in a series of droll and surprisingly poignant snapshots of his life over two decades.
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Lots of potential, little payoff
- By Chalin Smith on 10-24-24
By: Kate Greathead
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Bear
- A Novel
- By: Julia Phillips
- Narrated by: Sophie Amoss
- Length: 7 hrs and 51 mins
- Unabridged
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Sam and Elena dream of another life. On the island off the coast of Washington where they were born and raised, they and their mother struggle to survive. Sam works on the ferry that delivers wealthy mainlanders to their vacation homes while Elena bartends at the local golf club, but even together they can’t earn enough to get by, stirring their frustration about the limits that shape their existence.
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Depressing drudgery
- By Catherine on 08-09-24
By: Julia Phillips
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No Fault
- A Memoir of Romance and Divorce
- By: Haley Mlotek
- Narrated by: Haley Mlotek
- Length: 7 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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Divorce was everything for Haley Mlotek. As a child, she listened to her twice-divorced grandmother tell stories about her “husbands.” As a pre-teen, she answered the phones for her mother’s mediation and marriage counseling practice and typed out the paperwork for couples in the process of leaving each other. She grew up with the sense that divorce was an outcome to both resist and desire. But when she herself went on to marry—and then divorce—the man she had been with for twelve years, suddenly, she had to reconsider her generation’s inherited understanding of the institution.
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When we are divorced, it is still happening.
- By Anonymous User on 03-29-25
By: Haley Mlotek
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The Book Censor's Library
- A Novel
- By: Bothayna Al-Essa, Ranya Abdelrahman - translator, Sawad Hussain - translator
- Narrated by: Cindy Kay
- Length: 5 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged
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The new book censor hasn't slept soundly in weeks. By day he combs through manuscripts at a government office, looking for anything that would make a book unfit to publish-allusions to queerness, unapproved religions, any mention of life before the Revolution. By night the characters of literary classics crowd his dreams, and pilfered novels pile up in the house he shares with his wife and daughter. As the siren song of forbidden reading continues to beckon, he descends into a netherworld of resistance fighters, undercover booksellers, and outlaw librarians.
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The ending!
- By laurie on 01-29-25
By: Bothayna Al-Essa, and others
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Practice
- A Novel
- By: Rosalind Brown
- Narrated by: Imogen Wilde
- Length: 4 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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Rosalind Brown's Practice shows us just one day. Annabel, sitting in her small student room, attempts to write an essay about Shakespeare. She follows a meticulous, solitary routine but finds it repeatedly thrown off course as the day progresses: by family and friends who demand her attention and time, by thoughts of her much older boyfriend and his impending visit, by wild sexual fantasies and stories of her own invented characters—and by darker crises, obliquely glimpsed but capable of derailing Annabel's carefully laid plans.
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Talented author; book won’t be for everyone
- By Emily on 01-31-25
By: Rosalind Brown
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Consent
- A Memoir
- By: Jill Ciment
- Narrated by: Eileen Stevens
- Length: 4 hrs
- Unabridged
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In this close-up look at the ardent love affair between the author and her painting teacher, which began in the 1970s, when she was seventeen and he was forty-seven and married with two children, Ciment not only reflects on how their love ignited (who leaned in first for that kiss?) but interrogates her 1990s memoir on the subject, Half a Life. She asks herself if she told the whole truth when she wrote about their passion back then, and what truth looked like to her in the even longer-ago era of love-bead curtains when she fell in love.
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Excellent writing; overworked main question
- By Eric A. Ruthford on 06-18-24
By: Jill Ciment
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We're Alone
- Essays
- By: Edwidge Danticat
- Narrated by: Edwidge Danticat
- Length: 4 hrs and 35 mins
- Unabridged
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Tracing a loose arc from Edwidge Danticat’s childhood to the COVID-19 pandemic and recent events in Haiti, the essays gathered in We’re Alone include personal narrative, reportage, and tributes to mentors and heroes such as Toni Morrison, Paule Marshall, Gabriel García Márquez, and James Baldwin that explore several abiding themes: environmental catastrophe, the traumas of colonialism, motherhood, and the complexities of resilience.
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Always a story to tell
- By TAE on 10-09-24
By: Edwidge Danticat
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Someone Like Us
- A Novel
- By: Dinaw Mengestu
- Narrated by: Junior Nyong'o
- Length: 8 hrs and 9 mins
- Unabridged
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After abandoning his once-promising career as a journalist in search of a new life in Paris, Mamush meets Hannah—a photographer whose way of seeing the world shows him the possibility of finding not only love but family. Now, five years later, with his marriage to Hannah on the verge of collapse, he returns to the close-knit immigrant Ethiopian community of Washington, DC, that defined his childhood. At its center is Mamush’s stoic, implacable mother, and Samuel, the larger-than-life father figure whose ceaseless charm and humor have always served as a cover for a harder, more troubling truth.
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Not ideal as an audiobook
- By Kate Liburdi on 04-09-25
By: Dinaw Mengestu
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Fire Exit
- By: Morgan Talty
- Narrated by: Darrell Dennis
- Length: 6 hrs and 35 mins
- Unabridged
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From the porch of his home, Charles Lamosway has watched the life he might have had unfold across the river on Maine’s Penobscot Reservation. On the far bank, he caught brief moments of Roger and Mary raising their only child, Elizabeth from the day she came home from the hospital to her early twenties. But there’s always been something deeper and more dangerous than the river that divides him from this family and the rest of the tribal community. It’s the secret that Elizabeth is his daughter, a secret Charles is no longer willing to keep.
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Wonderful story about love, family , truth and deception and identity
- By ReallyNelie on 06-23-24
By: Morgan Talty
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Rental House
- A Novel
- By: Weike Wang
- Narrated by: Jen Zhao
- Length: 5 hrs and 47 mins
- Unabridged
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Keru and Nate are college sweethearts who marry despite their family differences: Keru’s strict, Chinese, immigrant parents demand perfection (“To use a dishwasher is to admit defeat,” says her father), while Nate’s rural, white, working-class family distrusts his intellectual ambitions and his “foreign” wife. Some years into their marriage, the couple invites their families on vacation.
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Flat storyline with monotone narration
- By Julia on 01-02-25
By: Weike Wang
What listeners say about Liars
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- likitmtrs
- 08-04-24
A hard listen
Beautiful narrator. No happy ending. A rough story of a marriage. Sad. Angry. Real. Made me grateful for my own relationship. Excellent writing.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Kerri toney
- 07-30-24
The love despite the dysfunction
This was very very relatable. And real. And triggering but also cathartic . Not just about the breakdown of a marriage that was dysfunctional from the start, but the loving and yearning for it to work in the giving and losing of oneself.
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- sara v
- 07-26-24
Truth Mirror
No one writes like Sarah Manguso—with such precision & honesty. This work might be a mirror or a cautionary tale, depending on the reader. Whatever the perspective, it is a story that will linger long after it ends.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Alessandra Nardi
- 12-01-24
Incredibly relatable even though totally different
After five days of finishing devouring her book in less then three days I'm still processing so much I've come to learn about myself from her excellent skills in describing her experiences and feelings. The book starts differently and also the narrator gives a lot of pauses (which I found very intimate and uncomfortable) but if you stick to it, you get to lift a dark cover above a lot of "us" whom are in a marriage institution which deceives the meaning of what it is to be a women after kids and yet still there is not much other way out. It touched something inside so profound! Very visceral.
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- Kimberly
- 09-15-24
Excellent book - real and raw
This book has stayed with me and I want more - like what happens next but we all know what happens next - we keep going.
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- CLS
- 11-19-24
Resonated with me
I’m going through a separation, so I picked this book as a way to work through some of the issues and feelings that I’m having. It was helpful for that, but I also enjoyed it on a narrative level. I found the storytelling technique of using small, disconnected snippets of narration—like snapshots that you might go through on your phone to reminiscing about the things that have happened to you or you’ve done—to be an interesting way to describe going back through your life and remembering the moments of a multi decade relationship. I also enjoyed the matter of fact tone that the author takes as she describes deeply emotional scenes. This reminded me of “Room” where the narrative voice as told from a child’s perspective gives you space between the horrors of the subject matter and yourself as the observer/reader. Just as I found myself wondering why the main character stays with her husband, there would be a moment of levity or affection in their lives. This too I found very effective as a narrative technique, keeping me engaged as the reader and able to experience her marriage without judging her outside of it. It was exactly what I needed for my situation right now, and it would also be an interesting read for a creative writing class exploring voice, tone, and plot.
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- Josh
- 01-06-25
Emotional
I can’t imagine that this is the truest series of events. I’m sure there’s some difference in how things are portrayed. But I do believe this is the incredibly true sense of how it felt. How it hurt the whole way through. And how healing, real healing, just sort of happens along the way and not at the time or pace you wished it would.
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- Heather Demeter
- 08-05-24
Beautiful
This was one of the best books I’ve ever read/listened to. The writing is poetry in prose. I think it will start a much needed raw and thoughtful conversation about the state of modern marriage.
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1 person found this helpful
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- J. A. Zinklar
- 07-26-24
Searing portrayal of a marriage unraveling
What a ride. The narrative flows like a stream of consciousness confession with some of the best prose I’ve encountered in years. The story follows a woman, Jane, and the erosion of her marriage that crumbles by degrees. Your blood will boil. Narrated wonderfully.
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- Colleen McCann
- 01-10-25
This book should be required reading for anyone looking to get married
This is the most accurate description of how I experienced my marriage. I hope more women read this before saying yes to a marriage proposal.
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