Gratuit avec l’offre d'essai
-
We Were Liars
- Lu par : Ariadne Meyers
- Durée : 6 h et 27 min
Échec de l’élimination de la liste d'envies.
Impossible de suivre le podcast
Impossible de ne plus suivre le podcast
Acheter pour 22,63 €
Aucun moyen de paiement n'est renseigné par défaut.
Désolés ! Le mode de paiement sélectionné n'est pas autorisé pour cette vente.

Vous êtes membre Amazon Prime ?
Bénéficiez automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts.Bonne écoute !
Avis de l'équipe
Editors Select, May 2014 - E. Lockhart has already built a solid career as a young adult author, but I’d argue that this is the one that will really elevate her to a new playing field. I picked up We Were Liars because it was getting rave reviews from the biggies of the genre like John Green and Scott Westerfield, and of course I was sucked in by the promise of a twist ending. Well, I read this thing (in print as the audio wasn't yet completed) in about five minutes flat, or that’s how it felt, because it totally chewed me up and spit me out. Sure it’s a little melodramatic (but so are teenagers), and sure there’s a twist ending that you may or may not see coming. There’s also this blue blood fantasy land gone wrong element, which makes it feel salacious and juicy. All of these are fancy-ticklers, but that’s not why I’m recommending this book. It’s the utter heartbreak that unfolds with such sophistication that got me. Families should love each other without condition. Lockhart gives us one that doesn’t, and it’s very hard to watch, but even more impossible to look away. Emily, Audible Editor
Description
Number one New York Times best seller.
A modern, sophisticated suspense novel from National Book Award finalist, and Printz Award honoree E. Lockhart. Don't miss the eagerly anticipated prequel, Family of Liars, available May 2022!
A beautiful and distinguished family.
A private island.
A brilliant, damaged girl; a passionate, political boy.
A group of four friends - the Liars - whose friendship turns destructive.
A revolution. An accident. A secret.
Lies upon lies.
True love.
The truth.
Listen to it. And if anyone asks you how it ends, just lie.
Commentaires
"You’re going to want to remember the title.
Liars details the summers of a girl who harbors a dark secret, and delivers a satisfying, but shocking twist ending." (Breia Brissey,
Entertainment Weekly)
"Surprising, thrilling, and beautifully executed in spare, precise, and lyrical prose, Lockhart spins a tragic family drama, the roots of which go back generations. And the ending? Shhhh. Not telling. (But it’s a doozy)...This is poised to be big." (Booklist)
"Thrilling, beautiful, and blisteringly smart, We Were Liars is utterly unforgettable." (John Green, number one New York Times best-selling author of The Fault in Our Stars)
Autres livres audio du même :
Narrateur
Ce que les auditeurs disent de We Were Liars
Moyenne des évaluations utilisateurs. Seuls les utilisateurs ayant écouté le titre peuvent laisser une évaluation.Commentaires - Veuillez sélectionner les onglets ci-dessous pour changer la provenance des commentaires.
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- FanB14
- 28/04/2015
I Cannot Tell a Lie...Hated it
We were young, beautiful, and more than affluent. Blonde haired heiress to fortune falls for boy outside her WASP class and summers with Mummy and cousins on private island near Martha's Vineyard. After a traumatic event, Cadence struggles to remember what tragedy had befallen her the summer before last.
Boring is the best word for this. The writing was plain, repetitive, and if I heard one more time how pretty and rich they were, I was going to reach through my iPhone and strangle her myself. Waste of my time. Would have returned it, but purchased on sale.
92 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- The Reading Date
- 01/06/2014
Liar Liar
We Were Liars is about a group of four family friends that call themselves the Liars. They summer with their families every year at an exclusive island off Cape Cod. During the 15th summer everything falls apart, and our unreliable narrator Cadence (Cady) Sinclair Eastman suffers a head injury and selective amnesia. The reader follows a scant trail of breadcrumbs to put it all together, but still, the final act will likely shock you.
It took me some time to warm up to this group of privileged teens. But as the book wore on I got more curious about Cady, her cousins Johnny and Mirren, and her love interest Gat, the outsider, who only see each other in the summer and live separate lives during the school year. Issues of class, race, gender roles, and privilege are on the table among the Liars, and their old-money families are at the mercy of Cady’s grandfather who holds the purse strings.
After the mysterious incident in the 15th summer, Cady returns two years later a different person. She’s dyed her hair black, has memory loss and migraines, and gives away her belongings. And adding to the mystery angle, all the Liars and family members are instructed not to tell Cady what happened two years ago. My mind was going to all kinds of dark places, but I was still way off base.
With the setting and Cady’s foggy headspace there is a dreamy quality to the book that is further enhanced by the dark fairytales that Cady references in the story.
E. Lockhart’s writing is smart and poetic, and the book is cleverly crafted. I did feel detached from the story and the characters at times, but I’m thinking that’s part of the design of the book. Even if you feel a lack of connection to the story at first the mystery has a great payoff in the end that gives you all the feels.
Narrator Ariadne Meyers made Cady’s confused state of mind believable. Her tone of voice is convincing when portraying these blue blood type characters. The pacing was fine and the male and female voices and age ranges were distinct. One reason you might want to go with the print version instead though is to flip back for reference. With a high concept book like this with so many surprises, the audio makes it tricky to go back and re-listen if you need to. However, listening to the story does make it feel more mysterious and chilling and Meyers does a good job selling this story.
Listen to We Were Liars if you like: High concept mystery, literary YA, unreliable narrators, and twisty stories.
36 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Michael Welch
- 14/01/2021
Careful: verrrrrrry depressing
Just a word of warning: don’t read this book if you are even the slightest bit depressed. In fact, even if you are positively elated and exquisitely happy, make sure you have a pint of Ben & Jerry’s close at hand. Clever, but very very depressing.
12 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- John C.
- 16/06/2014
Why?
Is there anything you would change about this book?
This is not a spoiler, but early on the protagonist says her father shot her and left her bleeding when he abandoned the family. While meant figuratively, I thought for a second it was literal, and was entranced that the story might be a journey to learn why he shot his daughter. It might have been more interesting.
Would you recommend We Were Liars to your friends? Why or why not?
The book is very well written, and has well defined, fully realized characters. Having said that, this is a dark book without any particular depth or meaning, although the events and extreme emotionality almost simulate them. The younger the reader is, the more they may be hoodwinked, although I wouldn't recommended the book to anyone under 15. It touches on racism, elitisms, hypocrisy, friendship, family, charity, nostalgia, and fleetingly with forgiveness, but not to any true sense of resolution.
Some have commented on the twist(s) or the predictability, and I have to admit that if you combine two very popular movies together you've locked in on this books key gimmicks. I have mixed emotions, because they were undeniably well executed. Memory repression & selective amnesia have been somewhat of a cliche over the past 30-years and I wonder if they happen much more in movies and books than in real life. The chief mistake of the book is that the reveal is so close to the end that there is only time for minimal resolution. There is not a compelling message or resonance to the book.
Perhaps young people are idealistic and sometimes very foolish and old people are sometimes controlling and as childish as young people, but why did the author think this particular story was important to tell? What could have been a mystery, a horror novel, or a coming of age story gets somehow stalled as a character development piece. Ultimately the book reads quickly and maintains interest, so I don't discourage reading it--just know that it is more or a tragedy than an HEA.
Two examples (not YA) of books that are fully fleshed out, but better developed tragedies with some similarity to this book are:
The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death
&
An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England
Which character – as performed by Ariadne Meyers – was your favorite?
The narration was excellent and all characters were done very well. Toward the end, the narrator gets a little heavy with the emoting rather than letting the words carry the emotion.
12 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Kathi
- 13/05/2014
Blockbuster ending!
"Should you do what you're afraid to do?"
This is a challenging book to review, because the story is the unraveling of memories, understandings and events, and it would spoil the entire thing to say too much. Cadence, the protagonist--and also the narrating voice of the book, is friends with her cousins Johnny and Mirren, as well as Gat, the stepson of her aunt. They are a tight foursome, referring to themselves as "The Liars."
The story brings us into the lives of people who live a lifestyle most of us would never dream of (wealth, privilege, private island, etc). Gat, who is part of them, but has a slight outsider perspective provides some contrast. The relevant events take place during the summer they are all 15 years old. As the story begins, Cadence is trying to cope with migraines and traumatic amnesia from an accident she believes happened in the water. She has also had to cope with her parents' separation. She is trying to piece together what happened.
There is a wonderful background commentary revealed through fairy tale stories and literary allusions. I have to be careful here, because this has an amazing ending, and I am even tempted to say one reads the book for the ending, except that would deny the great writing and character development that takes place throughout the whole novel. I think this would make a great selection for a book club, where it could be more openly discussed.
The narration is very good, seems to capture the voice and inflections of an adolescent very well. The author has an amazing way of bringing the reader/listener into the family secrets with the parallel background fairy tales, and often the references to King Lear. This is an excellent book. Highly recommend!
11 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Ida Wilder
- 22/05/2014
Fell flat for me
What did you like best about We Were Liars? What did you like least?
I am slightly miffed that I fell for all the hype because this book was only confusing, tedious, and manipulative. The idea that there is a BIG TWIST!!! and be sure NOT TO KNOW ANYTHING!!! only built it up too much. So, if you like unreliable narrators and are capable of getting swept into the story and think you might like the protagonist, go for it. A lot of people that I admire and respect thought this a very well done story tell. I won't be recommending it. It might make more sense on a second read but the big reveal just had me relieved that the book was soon to be over.
What do you think your next listen will be?
Maybe The Husband's Secret or The Secret History. More secrets! ha.
Have you listened to any of Ariadne Meyers’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
This was my first listen of Ariadne Meyer. She captures the teen voices well and was not too distracting with adult voice variation. Do not expect Massachusetts accents for this which did cause me pause knowing that Aunt is pronounced differently in New England compared to the Midwest.
Could you see We Were Liars being made into a movie or a TV series? Who should the stars be?
NO, I wouldn't be interested in a movie of this.
9 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Morninggirl
- 05/04/2019
Boring - Could not connect
I’m still trying to figure out the purpose of this story. The reading was dull and monotone.
8 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Lyndsay
- 06/05/2016
The twist
I had a hard time getting into the storyline as it was quite slow moving for the first half.
About halfway through I figured out the twist and started wondering how long it would take for the author to get to the point.
The narration was ok, though I did find some of the voices grating.
7 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- AF
- 18/11/2021
Truly amazing
i got recommended this book from a friend and i never thought i would like the book and yet here i am writing a five star review on a book i never thought i would enjoy. amazing storyline and i loved.l
the end. i usually dont cry that often but this book got me right in the feels.10/10 i will be asking my friend for more recommendations.
3 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- eliamar
- 21/01/2021
Emotionally beautiful
I’ve never cried so much in my life. Absolutely beautiful and breathtaking, it was an ending I wasn’t expecting.
2 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Dosensepp
- 15/03/2019
Good idea but badly told
( note: this is only my opinion, I don’t mean to insult anyone, the way this book is written is just absolutely not my thing)
I found the idea of this book interesting, the plot itself was quite intriguing, but the way the author tells it ruined the entire thing for me. The main character between 15 and 17 years old ( as the story goes) but is behaving in a very childish way, already at the first few chapters I was annoyed with her, but near the end of the book I really just wanted to slap her! Moreover the story keeps jumping between past and present, gets lost in the main characters emotional monologues and keeps being interrupted by excerpts of fairy tales ( that was interesting at the beginning and I see how it gives another aspect to the story, but there was wayyyy to much of it! ) So overall the plot is quite good, but because of the way that it is told I hardly enjoyed this book and half of the time I just wanted the main character to shut up.
1 personne a trouvé cela utile
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- LukasH
- 29/04/2021
nothing is happening
I'm a few hours in and nothing happened. it's like listening to someone reading a chronicle.
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- My Shaloma
- 11/08/2017
Merkwürdig und verwirrend
90% der Geschichte bestehen aus der Protagonistin, die versucht, ihre Gedächtnislücken zu schließen, aber niemand hilft ihr dabei. Erst am Ende kommt etwas raus, wonach man sich wünscht, die Geschichte nochmal zu hören, denn es verwirrt einen ganz schön. Bin gespannt auf die Verfilmung.
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Naschbär
- 20/01/2015
Toll!
Spannend, einfühlsam und krasses Ende! Ich würds fast nochmal hören. Am Ende hatte ich Tränen in den Augen.
-
Global
-
Interprétation
-
Histoire

- Amazon Customer
- 25/05/2014
Wow...
Würden Sie We Were Liars noch mal anhören? Warum?
Ich habe dieses Buch wieder wegen Booksplosion gelesen und man bin ich froh um die Gruppe. Den es war wieder ein Buch auf dem ich von alleine nicht gekommen wäre.
Es hat mich total überrascht und den Atem geraubt. Dies ist mein 4 Versuch was über das Buch zu schreiben und ich glaube je weniger ihr über dieses Buch wisst umso besser wird das Erlebnis für euch da bin ich mir sicher. Weniger ist wirklich mehr hier
.
Cadence verbringt jeden Sommer auf einer Privatinsel die ihrem Großvater gehört, sie ist immer mit ihre Cousine Mirren, Cousin Johnny und sein Freund Gat zusammen, sie bilden die „Liars“. Dieses Sommer ist aber etwas anderes, Cadence erholt sich immer noch von einem Unfall den sie im Sommer 15 hatte, sie kann sich gar nicht an den Unfall erinnern und sie hat viele Erinnerungslücken was Sommer 15 betrifft. Ihre Familie hat ärztliche Anweisungen nicht mit ihr über das geschehene zu sprechen, sie soll sich alleine erinnern, ihr Gehirn soll damit klar kommen wenn es dazu bereit ist.
Ich saß die ganze Zeit da und fragte mich was zur Hölle passiert sein kann das sie so viel vergessen hat.
Dieses Buch war absolut schön geschrieben. Es ist wie eine tragische, kläglich wunderbare Reise, die mich buchstäblich sprachlos gemacht hat.
"Mein Vater hat einen letzten Koffer auf den Rücksitz des Mercedes geladen (er lässt Mama den Saab) und startete den Motor. Dann zog er eine Pistole und schoss mir in der Brust. Während ich auf dem Rasen stand, und ich fiel. Das Einschussloch öffnete sich weit und mein Herz rollte aus meinem Brustkorb auf und ab in ein Blumenbeet. Mama sagte ich soll mich zusammenreisen“
Ich meine, wirklich? So tragisch wunderbar geschrieben!
Jeder sollte dem Buch zumindest eine Chance geben es ist unglaublich!