Who needs an enemy when you have Jane for a best friend? She narrates this story and she's telling us (or someone) the seven lies that she told her best friend, Marnie. Jane thinks that if she hadn't told the first lie, Marnie's husband, Charlie, might still be alive. But one lie begets another because each lie is told as a way for Jane to keep a stranglehold on her relationship with Marnie, a relationship that has probably outgrown its usefulness, that should have died a natural death, years ago.
Just because you are best friends with someone, it doesn't mean that they should be the everything in a person's life, almost two decades later. But Jane doesn't see things that way, she sees no reason that she and Marnie should grow apart and she sees no one as better deserving of Marnie's friendship and time, than herself. Jane describes herself as dark to Marnie's light, people are drawn to Marnie while they ignore Jane. But Jane doesn't care as long as she has Marnie. When Charles enters Marnie's life and they get married, Jane knows she needs to do something to right the balance that Charlie has upset.
Let me warn you, Jane likes to talk, ramble, go on and on and on, making excuses that only she can justify, finding fault in everyone else. As I read this story with my reading buddies, I ranted and raved about wanting Jane to get to the point and stop talking so much but in reality, her monologue is what makes the story, it's what makes Jane who she is, we are seeing the real Jane, not the Jane that she allows the world to see. The Jane the world sees steadfastly does her job, takes care of her mom and sister, jumps to do every little thing that Marnie asks of her. The real Jane is something else, something very dark, very sinister, very dangerous. Jane has a story to tell and she is going to tell it, her way.
This was a fun book to read with a group! Thank you to Pamela Dorman Books/Penguin Publishing Group and Edelweiss for this ARC.
Available as of June 16, 2020