Hilary
Davidson is a Toronto native now living in New York City. Her first work of
crime fiction The Damage Done (Forge Books, 2010) won the 2011 Anthony
and Crimespree awards for best first novel and was shortlisted for the Arthur
Ellis and Macavity awards for best first novel. She’s written dozens of short
stories. The Lies I Told (Blackstone, June 2026) is her eighth novel.
Jackie Swift
is just another hamster on the enormous wheel of New York, running endlessly
trying to reach the next rung on the ladder of success. Her parents died when
she and her sister Madi were young, leaving them to the questionable care of an
uncle. Jackie has been trying to overcome the disadvantages of her early life
ever since, while pretending to have the upper-crust life that she wants. She
learned early that her lack of family connections and resources would keep her
out of her chosen field of journalism, no matter how hard she worked. She slid
sideways into a dubious public relations firm with some credible clients and a
lot of shifty ones. Her habit of shading the truth about her life quickly
expanded to covering up for wealthy people behaving badly. Dissembling about
everything, from her customers’ actions and intentions to the store where she
bought today’s outfit, became routine.
Jackie is
overwhelmingly protective of Madi, who dabbled far too often in drugs and made
other unwise decisions. Jackie had come to keep Narcan on hand for emergencies
so when Madi called in the early hours of Monday morning that she needed help,
Jackie scrambled for the naloxone and drove to an Upper East side townhouse.
She could not find Madi but she did find the quite dead body of her former
mentor and employer. The police focus early on Madi as the likely killer and as
they search for her, Jackie does everything she can to throw suspicion on
others, including an ex-wife who tried to kill the dead man more than once.
The story delivers
credible insight into the inner workings of publicity firms and marketing
psychology, which I found thought-provoking. With a driving pace and one
surprise after another, the story held my attention to the end despite my lack
of sympathy with most of the characters, who were singularly unpleasant. Fans
of contemporary psychological thrillers and unreliable narrators will love this
book.
·
ISBN-13: 979-8228475151
·
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing, Inc.
·
Publication date: June 16, 2026
·
Edition: Hardcover
·
Language: English
·
Print length: 371 pages
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4fv3o3j
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal
It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.


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