Bloomsbury presents Tell Me Every Lie by Ellen Hagan and David Flores read by Rosanna Pilcher and Grayson Villanueva
This is the kind of love story that starts with a lie.
John Paul Reyes wants to escape the worst truths in his life—other people's pity since his dad died, and everyone else's expectations about what he should do with his life now that he's graduated high school. When he arrives at the Majestic Mountain resort with his Tita Abrigo's wealthy family, he sees a way to escape—he can be JP Abrigo, rich and set, and he can lie his way to feeling fine.
Mia Malik is trapped in this town, working hard at the resort, trying to escape her broken family and to make her way to the prestigious art program she was accepted into. She's desperate to afford her way there, and she's sick of the privileged guests who have the whole world open to them, who don't really even see her.
But then another staffer dares Mia to make one of the guests fall for her. If she can, she'll collect enough money to get out. Mia knows this is dangerously against the rules, and doesn't even want to pretend to like an entitled rich kid, but then she meets JP. Lying to him starts off easy, but then there's more to him than she expected. And the way JP feels about Mia? So real. As their week together runs out, Mia and JP will have to dig themselves out from the lies they tell to see if there's any truth in the feelings they have for each other.
A moving, layered young adult novel in two voices about finding truth in the lies we tell ourselves.
Ellen Hagan is a writer, performer, and educator. Her books include: Crowned, Hemisphere, Watch Us Rise, a YA collaboration with Renée Watson, Blooming Fiascoes, Reckless, Glorious, Girl, Don’t Call Me a Hurricane and All That Shines. She has a new YA project forthcoming in 2025 with her partner David Flores. Ellen's poems and essays can be found in Oprah Magazine, ESPNW, So We Can Know: Writers of Color on Pregnancy, Loss, Abortion, and Birth (edited by Aracelis Girmay), Creative Nonfiction, Underwired Magazine, She Walks in Beauty (edited by Caroline Kennedy), Huizache, Small Batch, and Southern Sin. Ellen's performance work has been showcased at The New York International Fringe and Los Angeles Women's Theater Festival. She is the recipient of the 2020 New York Foundation for the Arts fellowing in poetry, the 2013 NoMAA Creative Arts Grant and received grants from the Kentucky Foundation for Women and the Kentucky Governor's School for the Arts. National arts residencies include The Hopscotch House in Louisville, Kentucky and Louisiana Arts Works. Ellen is Head of the Poetry & Theatre Departments at the DreamYard Project and directs their International Poetry Exchange Program with Japan, South Korea, the Philippines and Australia. She is on faculty in the low residency MFA program at Spalding University and co-leads the Alice Hoffman Young Writer's Retreat at Adelphi University. A proud Kentucky writer, Ellen is a member of the Affrilachian Poets, Conjure Women, and is co-founder of the girlstory collective. She lives with her partner and children in New York City.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ This was a fairly quick read of a summer romance between the two main characters who fall in love after one of them makes a bet with their co-workers to get the other to say “I love you” for a cash prize. Both the protagonists start off getting to know each other based off of little white lies that spiral but struggle with the conflict of coming clean to the other and start a relationship on a foundation of truth instead 💬
ੈ✩‧₊˚ I loved the POC representation in this book so much. I saw so much of myself in John Paul “JP” Reyes and to have my culture be represented through him in this book is so inspiring. The casual mentions of food to culture of karaoke and Original Pilipino music were so nice to read. I almost wish we got more flashbacks of JP and his life when his dad was still alive because JP recounting all his fond memories rooted in Filipino culture and tradition made me feel so at home and like I belonged. He’s a pretty interesting character and I can somewhat understand why he felt the need to lie to Mia about his family. JP having doubts and pressure to carve a successful path out of lie was very relatable and I’m glad it was touched on in here 🇵🇭
ੈ✩‧₊˚ Mia Malik, our Assyrian-Italian FMC, was also interesting to learn about but in a different way. I feel like I had trouble connecting with Mia just because even though she only agreed to the bet to get JP to say she loves her so that she could get financial help to get out of town and choose her own life, it was hard to sympathize with someone who was willing to embarrass and humiliate someone her age for her own reasons. She’s a hardworking and does everything by the book with so much passion, which is very admirable in YA protagonists. I did feel like she was a strong character too who had to wrestle between wanting to be a child and having to grow up early and know that she couldn’t rely on her parents who had her own struggles 📸
ੈ✩‧₊˚ I think JP and Mia’s relationship kicked off too quickly for me? I didn’t feel very invested when they began realizing their feelings for each other and I’m not so sure why. It just seemed like they jumped into it all at once. Maybe it would have felt a bit more natural if they had gotten to know each other more personally versus rushing in with their strong physical attractions to each other setting the rest of the tone of their relationship for the remainder of the book? I also wish there was more insight into JP and Mia’s family dynamics. There was a lot of telling of events to other characters instead of showing it. The ends being tied up with both their families felt a bit rushed towards the end too ⌛️
ੈ✩‧₊˚ The luxury resort setting was very fun to read about and I almost felt like I was there too with Mia and JP. I would give this a read if you want something fast-paced with underlying themes of grief, loss, and being brave enough to tell the truth and find your own path no matter how intimidating life gets ✈️
Thank you to Ellen Hagan and David Flores, Bloomsbury USA Children’s Books, and NetGalley for providing me with a free eARC in exchange for my honest review!
What to expect: - Resort worker FMC x resort guest MMC 🏖️ - POC representation: Filipino MMC x Assyrian-Italian FMC 🇵🇭 - Summer romance ☀️ - Coming-of-age - Mentions of substance use disorder, loss of a parent
It’s been ages since I’ve read a young adult contemporary romance this good. A romance with fairly low drama, with depths of character backstory, with a quick bu authentic connection between our love interest and a setting that is relaxing and enjoyable and believable. Honestly, in a time where I’m really struggling to connect with stories and characters, Tell Me Every Lie was exactly the book I needed and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
John Paul. Recently graduated from high school. Mourning his father. And traveling to a fancy resort with his aunt, uncle and cousins, a place he knows he doesn’t belong. It’s meant to be when his family reconnect but who knows when his mother will come, if at all. So this summer, he’ll be JP rather than John Paul. Someone who is cool and calm rather than the guy who has to count his breaths to make it through the day. Mia. One last summer until she finally makes it out of Monument, follows her dreams of a future far away doing something she loves. One last summer of looking after entitled goats (sorry, guests) at Majestic Mountain House resort. But a dare from an idiot coworker makes her dreams that one step closer. Who cares if she has to get a goat to fall in love with her, she’s desperate enough to do anything. It all starts with a lie. Multiple lies. JP lies about his family, who he is, what he’s into. Mia lies about her family, her dreams for the future and why she’d even be interested in JP. But despite the lies, John Paul and Mia might actually find a truth they didn’t realise they needed.
For a book all about lies and a dare, there is delightfully little drama. Sure there’s a bit of tension and your usual “I need to come clean and tell the truth” build up, but there is just something about JP and Mia’s connection. Add in a majestic backdrop, plenty of action, great side characters and some real depth to discussions around race, comics, substance abuse, and therapy, and you’ve got a fantastic book.
I adored JP’s chapters. So lyrical and descriptive. Mia’s chapters fit her chapter, facing things head on, pragmatic. Yes, their romance takes place over just five days. Yes, they lie to each. And yet, and yet!! There is something so genuine and enjoyable about their connection. It doesn’t feel rushed, despite the timeline and it feels so authentic despite their lies to each other.
I’m not a fan of the cover, got to be honest, but I did really enjoy this book. A great addition to the library’s romance collection and a book I’m more than happy to place in the school library.
The publishers provided an advanced readers copy of this book for reviewing purposes. All opinions are my own.
Find more reviews, reading age guides, content advisory, and recommendations on my blog Madison's Library
With electricity, humor, grace, and kindness, Ellen Hagan + David Flores activate their writerly superpowers to deliver the touching and nuanced Tell Me Every Lie. This brilliant novel follows the stories of two young people looking to find their places in a world that seems constantly against them. As John Paul Reyes and Mia Malik deal with grief, family struggles, and the desire to be enough, their worlds collide on a dare and a lie - but there is truth and complexity to their love story.
It's as dreamy as Romeo and Juliet, if Romeo were a Filipino storytelling dancer in a Batman hoodie and Juliet were an Assyrian-Italian badass swimmer/skater with opinions and talents bold enough to fill the sky.
Hagan and Flores may no longer be teenagers, but they capture the teenage experience with empathy, a willingness to understand, and compassion. Money, class, and what it means to feel like you belong - all these themes are explored with such eloquence it hurts. The focus on detail, character development, and keeping things fresh, bold, and believable are the biggest strengths of the novel. You'll be swallowed whole, entirely invested, gasping for breath at the edge of your seat - and left with the worst book hangover. That's the brilliance this work brings to the table.
The authors make it look easy to write such deep, nuanced, and profound love. "This is the kind of story that starts with a lie," Flores writes. And it's the kind that ends with blazing acceptance of oneself, with truth beyond your wildest imagination, with what it means to grow up, change, move on, and fall in love.
So here's my pitch, @Netflix:
A seven episode limited series. Tell Me Every Lie. Love at Lake Majestic with just a week - let's make it happen, hm?
"Ask me no questions, and I'll tell you no lies." This seems pretty straightforward and reasonable. But what happens when the lies come before, and after, the questions? This is the exact situation for JP (a guest) and Mia (a worker), the main characters in "Tell Me Every Lie" by @ellenhagan and @uptownandbrown
JP and Mia meet at Majestic Mountain resort. Their situation is complicated, right along with their family dynamics, and the circumstances that bring them together. What isn't complicated though, are the feelings they share for each other. Can those feelings outlive family drama, a petty bet, and lies? They have one week to figure it out, and a lot can happen during that time. Let's see if it works to their benefit...or demise.
While this is David and Ellen's first YA collaborative novel, I really hope it isn't their last. This was a good read! I can't wait to see what they come up with next.
Ellen Hagan and David Flores have outdone themselves with this tender and unruly story. The novel, told in two voices, is perfectly balanced between the alternating narrators. Each of the characters feels real - their very teenage selves running with pulse and emotion and stress and tension. I loved how JP talked about food, anxiety, and his very nuanced takes on comic books; how Mia talked about identity, addiction, and her body through movement (swimming, running etc.). I fell in love with both of these characters!! Read this book! Give this book as a gift to your favorite young adult!
I really wanted to love this one since the resort setting has so much potential and it sounded like a perfect summer read. However, I'm really struggling with the writing style, and I'm not enjoying the way the dialogue is written. I'm not quite sure how to describe it, but it feels a bit cringe to me. I also feel like I can tell exactly how the story is going to go, and I'm not invested enough to continue reading. Not for me, but I'm sure others may enjoy more than I did!
This was a sweet YA romance that I think teens will relate to and enjoy. it's all about finding the courage to show your true colors in the first stages of liking someone- otherwise, you run the risk of ruining something before it even has a chance to start.
The writing here is excellent but I had a hard time with the story. There is so much sadness in JP's story and Mia is so angry. It was hard to read. Mia's snobbishness was also a bit hard when we get to spend time in JP's head and see he's largely guileless.
Do teens still watch Dirty Dancing? I feel like this one hits a lot of similar notes and has the perfect balance of nostalgia and yearning for what's next to appeal to fans of that movie.
I think this one will hit a lot of good notes for readers who want very summery vibes, camp adjacent stories, and something with the same kind of feels in Morgan Matson's YAs but with a bit more nuance and acknowledgement of privilege.
A fun summer romance full of secrets and drama. I didn't love the messaging of tricking someone into falling for you, but the personal stories were really well done.