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Book Reviews of Company of Liars

Company of Liars
Company of Liars
Author: Karen Maitland
Audio Books swap for two (2) credits.
ISBN-13: 9781846485084
ISBN-10: 1846485088
Publication Date: 11/12/2008
Edition: Unabridged
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Oakhill Publishing Limited
Book Type: Audio CD
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

7 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

ssgilby avatar reviewed Company of Liars on + 19 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
This was an excellent book. Set in 14th century England, a band of rag tag people end up traveling together to try to escape the Black Plague and their own pasts. Each member of the group has a secret. One by one, the secrets are revealed. Dark and compelling, this book kept me totally engrossed. Highly recommended.
Philly avatar reviewed Company of Liars on + 38 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Excellent historical fiction with a host of different personalities. Its a little bit historical, a little fantasy and a little mystery. Very enjoyable.
reviewed Company of Liars on
Helpful Score: 2
Outstanding. One of the best first novels I have read.
answerquest avatar reviewed Company of Liars on + 197 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Loved it. I lean toward books with a dark theme and this is amongst the darkest.

The company is a group of people (lost souls, really) traveling to escape the plague. Each has a story about his/her past that is based on a lie. One within the group seeks out the truth - at all costs.

The moral question is, which should prevail - truth or hope?

Did I say I loved this book?
Nedheadz avatar reviewed Company of Liars on + 128 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book has quickly become one of my favorite novels.
Enough history to feed my interest, a GREAT storyline with interesting characters and reminders of how fragile our secrets are....lay your hands on it and I'll bet ya can't put it down!
TarynC avatar reviewed Company of Liars on + 213 more book reviews
I read this for my book club and I will admit that the cover and the description did not make me want to dive into this book- another depressing & boring book about the plague? Well, I was totally wrong. I was engaged from the first chapter and couldn't put the book down . The plot was intruiging, the characters well developed and the historical detail fascinating. The theme to me is hope vs truth- and how it makes us who we are and drives our decisions in life.
cathyskye avatar reviewed Company of Liars on + 2307 more book reviews
First Line: "So that's settled, then; we bury her alive in the iron bridle."

The year is 1348. Camelot, hideously scarred peddler of religious relics and hope, is in Kilmington for the Midsummer Fair when he learns that plague has reached the port cities of England. All he can think of is heading north to safety. Seemingly within the blink of an eye, eight other people have joined with Camelot in order to escape death: a young married couple, two minstrels, a one-armed man, a serving woman, a showman with a wagon filled with curiosities for exhibit, and a strange albino girl child.

The weather forecast is simple: rain, rain, nothing but endless rain. Food and shelter are scarce. The further they travel, the more they hear of other ports closing due to the plague-- and then the dreaded scourge begins moving inland.

The various personalities within the group begin to chafe, but they know they're stronger as a group than as individuals:

"The truth was, though none of us admitted as much, we had begun to depend on each other to survive. We shared all our food and ale, which we bought with the little each of us earned from the villages we trundled through. We made makeshift shelters when we couldn't find an inn or a barn, and together helped to gather fodder for the horse."

As their journey continues, strange things begin to happen, and one by one members of the group begin to die. Each member of the group has a secret, and they are all beginning to learn that what they don't know about the others may very well kill them.

The further into this book I read, the more I wanted to shut everything else out until I'd gobbled up every last word. There's something eminently satisfying about a road trip taken with people who cannot be trusted. (At least from the reader's standpoint!) With the reasonable voice of Camelot as narrator, I began to observe the others more closely in an attempt to ferret out their secrets.

To read Company of Liars is to be immersed in another place, another time, another culture in which the very weather plays an important role in how each hour of every day is negotiated:

"The rains still fell; the water continued to rise in hollows and lakes. The forests, meadows, and marshes absorbed the rain until the ground oozed water like a weeping sore....

Once, half submerged in a sodden field, we saw the statue of Saint Florian, his face battered, his millstone tied around his neck. Since their saint was unable to protect them from the rains, the parishioners had stripped his statue of his scarlet cloak and golden halo, beaten him, and cast him out to face the elements."


Some readers may find the torrential rains, the inexorable advance of the plague, and an almost total lack of trust to be much too grim. I didn't. As I turned the pages, I kept hearing mud squelch between my toes, wet strands of hair refused to stay out of my eyes, and a constant smell of wet wool surrounded me. The colder and the wetter and the more miserable I felt, I began to react to each new village, each stranger, each bend in the road with increasing suspicion. My mind was, indeed, in fourteenth century England.

Few writers can get into my head to such an extent as Karen Maitland did in Company of Liars. If only I could get the smell of wet sheep out of my nose, I'd thank her. As it is, I look forward to reading her other books with great pleasure.