![]() ![]() Dunmore does a superb job of capturing her lead’s inner torment, even as his story creeps toward a shattering conclusion. Grove Press The Lie by Helen Dunmore On the 100th anniversary of World War I, award-winning English novelist Helen Dunmore publishes The Lie, her spellbinding tale of love, remembrance, and deception, set against the backdrop of the First World War. ![]() ![]() Flashbacks graphically depict Branwell’s grim experiences during the war, even as, in the book’s present, he fears that his lie cannot be sustained for the long term. The move should have given the returned veteran some stability, but nothing is that simple for him he keeps Pascoe’s death a secret, believing no one would care about her passing, and tells those who ask that she is unwell and that he’s taking care of her. In this moving and complex novel from Dunmore (Orange Prize winner for A Spell of Winter), 21-year-old Daniel Branwell has returned to his small Cornish community after World War I, haunted by the specter of the close childhood friend he lost, whose ghostly manifestations seem so real that Branwell can actually smell the vile combination of “shit and rotten flesh, cordite and choloride of lime.” After the death of Mary Pascoe, a reclusive elderly neighbor who allowed Branwell to build a shelter on her land, he moves into her cottage, fulfilling one of her final wishes. ![]()
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