Michael Linden, otherwise known as Linden to his closest prep school friends, has been invited to spend the last days of his summer vacation at his closest friend’s posh Martha’s Vineyard vacation home: August House. Arriving at the massive Victorian, Linden does his best to fit in. After all, he’s had plenty of practice hiding his less than wealthy home life from all of his boarding school pals.
When someone is found floating unconscious in the pool following a nighttime of partying, however, everyone is quick to brush it under the rug as just an accident. Even the cops seem decidedly underwhelmed by the scene. Linden, though, has an unnerving feeling that something seems unmistakably off.
Unsure what to do with his complicated feelings, Linden reaches out to the one person who will know just what to do: Holiday Proctor, his old childhood friend. After all, she is the one person on the island who knows the unvarnished truth about Linden. She also just so happens to be a rather good detective and perhaps that’s just what the doctor ordered.
Meeting her one afternoon, Linden fills her in on everything that has happened, partly hoping to hear her laugh at his outlandish suspicions. To his dismay, however, she not only agrees, but is determined to root out who the potential murderer might be on their very own. Because if there’s one thing Holiday seems sure of, it’s that there’s a killer on the island. And according to her, it’s now down to the two of them to figure out who.
A fresh take on one of my favorite Agatha Christie novels (The Mysterious Affair at Styles), Liar’s Beach was aptly named. After all, with secrets, lies, and plenty of hidden agendas buried deep within its pages, there were plenty of unexpected details left to uncover.
While billed as a YA mystery, I personally found this one decidedly more along the lines of a crime fiction novel geared towards teens. Following in Christie’s brilliant footsteps, the plot unwound with one twist after another, although perhaps a bit more predictably than the Grand Dame of Mystery herself. I was, however, thoroughly pleased to find the much required dénouement at the very end where all of the suspects gathered for the final reveal. Even better, I didn’t, for the life of me, sniff out what really happened until Holiday delivered her spiel.
The one glaring issue I found was with that conclusion, though. After all, when I turned the last page, there was one unanswered question. Now perhaps this will be addressed in a sequel, as I would truly love to follow this dynamic duo through about investigation, but I have a bad feeling that this book was a one off. So, inevitably, I’m somewhat disappointed with the lack of that nice, pretty, little bow at the end. Sigh, guess you can’t have everything you want, though, right?
Now back to the pluses, as I also have to applaud Cotugno on the well-developed, truly top-notch characters. Each of them were so much more than who I initially thought they were, including Linden himself. But the best bit was easily how each had their own unique identity. While some of them weren’t necessarily well fleshed out, they all did manage to capture my attention wholeheartedly despite some rather unlikable traits. But then, perhaps that was partly why they each felt so genuine and true-to-life.
All said and done, Liar’s Beach worked equally well for this decidedly not teenage reader. A quick, fun read that was just made for the beach, I had a blast following Linden and his wealthy friends around Martha’s Vineyard. With evocative descriptions and some rather witty dialogue, not much was missing. Granted, it was far from groundbreaking, but just the same, it was the perfect escapist read that was a nice departure from my much loved hard-hitting thrillers. So if you’re looking for something like that, this will most definitely hit the spot. Rating of 4 stars.
Trigger warning: drug and alcohol use, mention of: infidelity, financial crimes