ALL THE BEAUTIFUL LIES by Peter Swanson: Book Review
There are the lies we tell to others (to impress, perhaps, or to make ourselves more important), and there are lies we tell to ourselves (to protect ourselves from acknowledging the truth of what we are doing or what our motivations are). In Peter Swanson’s latest mystery, All The Beautiful Lies, there are both kinds of lies; it’s up to the reader to decide which is the more dangerous.
Harry Ackerson is a few days from his college graduation when he receives a call from his stepmother to say that his father is dead. The night before, while walking on his favorite cliff path overlooking the ocean, Bill Ackerson apparently slipped and fell into the water below.
The initial police investigation quickly changes gears, however, when the autopsy reveals a bruise on Bill’s head; now it’s considered “a suspicious death.” But who would want to kill this quiet man, owner of two rare book stores, married for several years to his second wife, and father to an only child? Bill would seem to have had no enemies…but apparently he had at least one.
Nearly everyone in All The Beautiful Lies has a secret. Alice, Bill’s widow, is the product of a very dysfunctional mother and an unknown father, two things she never told her late husband. Her stepfather, Jake, was attracted to her before he married her mother, a woman he knew to be an alcoholic and sometimes drug abuser; after her mother’s death, Jake and Alice lived their lives closed to family and friends lest the true nature of their relationship be exposed. Harry seems to be fearful of his sexuality, something he’s not ready to admit even to himself. And who is the mysterious young woman Harry notices outside the used bookstore his father owned in their hometown, and why was she at the funeral, only to leave without speaking to anyone?
Peter Swanson is one of today’s best writers, regardless of the genre being discussed. His characters are totally realistic in what they say, do, and think. Their lies are what they have constructed to get through life–whether to hide what they dislike about themselves or to help them get what they want. Either way, it’s a question as to whether they control the lies or whether those lies control them.
This is Peter Swanson’s fourth mystery and the fourth one I’ve reviewed. He’s definitely one of the authors whose novels can never come quickly enough for me.
You can read more about Peter Swanson at this website.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website. In addition to book review posts, there are sections featuring Golden Oldies, Past Masters and Mistresses, and an About Marilyn column that features her opinions about everything to do with mystery novels.