“Lies He Told Me” is a fall thriller release from James Patterson and veteran writing partner, David Ellis.
This is the story of Marcie and David Bowers, a happy couple living in small town with their two kids. Marcie, a former member of a highly prestigious Chicago law firm, is now content practicing family law. David is the owner of Hemingway’s Pub, a local bar and restaurant that does well.
One evening while Marcie and David are celebrating his birthday, they witness an SUV suddenly veer off Anna’s bridge into Cotton River. David immediately jumps in in an attempt to save the driver who suffered a n epileptic seizure. Fortunately, David is able to break the driver’s side window and pull the victim from the vehicle to the surface, where an emergency rescue team is able to extract and take them to a local hospital.
Thanks to those watching from the shore, videos of David’s act of heroism spreads like wildfire over social media. David tries to downplay his newfound momentary fame. However, about a month later strange things start happening to Marcie, David, and their two children. Their dog goes missing, their coffeepot is found in the clothes dryer, and Marcie cannot find her courtroom ID…
Then things get worse when Marcie discovers that David lied to her. His explanation feels very wrong to her. She starts to wonder if David’s celebrity status has brought unwanted attention of a dangerous kind. However, the scary truth that Marcie faces, is that she may know less about her loving husband that she ever imagined…
In many ways, this was a typical Patterson mystery thriller, delivering his proven formula driven plotlines with crisp and fast-paced story telling prowess. The good news is that this was an enjoyable reading experience, providing a day’s worth of guilty pleasure, mind candy. Patterson and Ellis have written several good books together including “The Red Book” and “Invisible” that solidified their successful working relationship together. This novel - “Lies He Told Me” - is an extension of that relationship.
Now don’t get me wrong. This was not a classic or something that I would rate as outstanding, but it was a fun read that delivered on the things we most want from Patterson – fast-paced tempo, a group of key characters facing lots of conflict and drama, and multiple plotlines that connect and drive the storytelling forward with lots of twists, turns, and surprises along the way.
For me, what I think I appreciated the most was that this time Patterson and Ellis didn’t try to do too much. The story was focused, played out on a smaller scale, and was layered with the right amount of tempo, drama, and plotting. Sometimes Patterson tries to throw everything in including the kitchen sink, but sometimes more is less, and in this case, that made it better.
Overall, I think the best way to describe this kind of book is use one of my Patterson truths. We don’t read him for realism (and there were some definite moments when reality had to be set aside). We read him for high level thrillers that help us escape our daily grind and enjoy an exciting reading experience that makes us forget about everything else going on in our lives. “Lies He Told Me” was a prime example of that. Although it wasn’t one of his bigger scale novels or one of his best, it was still better than many of his books. One that is a worthy, entertaining, escapist reading.
For me, it was a worthy 3.5 out of 5-stars. (Side note -someday, Goodreads is going to have find a way to let readers give half-star ratings… Until then I am forced to round my score.)
My advice. Sit back and relax. Enjoy this one with one of your favorite choice of drinks. A guilty pleasure experience here we go…