About This Book
Five people. One weekend. A game designed to drag secrets into the open. Five Liars drops you into a carefully curated bachelorette getaway where the maid of honor has orchestrated every detail — including a "White Lie Party" that turns confessions into something far more dangerous than party entertainment. What starts as sun-soaked celebration curdles quickly when it becomes clear that one of these five people is hiding something that goes well beyond the merely embarrassing. The premise is irresistible: a closed-circle thriller where every character has something to conceal, and trust is the first casualty.
D.L. Fisher builds tension through structure as much as plot — this is a book that plays with identity and unreliable narration in ways that keep you recalibrating your suspicions with every chapter. The voice of the maid of honor is slippery and knowing, drawing you in as a confidant while withholding just enough to keep you off-balance. The pacing is relentless, the interpersonal dynamics crackle with unspoken history, and the twist earns its reputation for catching readers genuinely off guard. If you like your psychological thrillers tightly coiled and socially sharp, this one delivers.