Dangerous Lies by Becca Fitzpatrick

Dangerous Lies

by Becca Fitzpatrick

After witnessing a murder, high school senior Stella Gordon is sent to Nebraska for her own safety where she chafes at her protection, but when she meets Chet Falconer it becomes harder for her to keep her guard up, and soon she has to deal with the real threat to her life as her enemies are actually closer than she thinks.

Reviewed by Briana @ Pages Unbound on

4 of 5 stars

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Dangerous Lies is one of those books that tackles a question that just about everyone has considered in their daydreams--what would happen if I ever have to go into witness protection--and runs. It's a book version of Our Lips Are Sealed for a new generation, complete with requisite romance but adding a stronger sense of danger--and resentment--than the Mary-Kate and Ashley film ever had.

The problem with Stella's brand of witness protection is that she isn't sent anywhere fun; she's sent to the middle of nowhere. Hiding isn't entertaining, and for the most part it isn't even suspenseful except in her nightmares. It's just boring. Stella embraces a lot of bitterness about being sent to spend her summer in Nebraska. She doesn't even latch onto the idea that at least she did the right thing by agreeing to testify in court, because she's not sure she has, which means for a while this story is about a whiny city kid who thinks it's cool to hate on ranches and small-town living and that talking back to everyone makes her tough. (Still no word on why someone who readily admits she's from a respected, wealthy, upper-class family thinks just having lived on the outskirts of Philly in a mansion makes her a rough city kid.)

Anyway, the story steadily evolves and Stella learns a lot about herself and who she wants to be--either as Estella or Stella. Her growing relationship with her "foster mom" and a cute neighbor boy make her question what it means to do the right thing and what it means to be successful in life. Stella's personal growth is as much the draw here as the plot about the dangerous thugs looking to kill her.

Chet Falconer is also a worthy love interest. He seems like a typical wholesome farm boy, until Stella learns more about his shaded past. His past actions make him complex, which also makes his good match for Stella. Readers will find it easy to like him and his determination to do right by everyone around him, no matter the personal cost. I do think the way sex plays out between Chet and Stella is odd--they seem on somewhat different pages about the importance of sex and a bit leery of talking about it to each other as if afraid they'll discover they disagree--but this part of the relationship doesn't take a lot of precedence in the book.

The romance in general can take center stage because most of the danger Stella faces is indirect: she has flashbacks and worries and nightmares, and she ponders the benefits of breaking the rules that keep her safe. She wants to reconnect with her Philly boyfriend. She wants to tell her new friends the truth. She wants to keep new enemies from finding out the truth. The fact that the sense of danger is simply lying in the background for much of the novel helps to keep the suspense alive.

However, the ending of the novel is a little bit neat. There are certainly loose ends, but they tend to be loose ends that readers and Stella have decided they don't care much about. Stella herself gets a lot of her life back in a neat little bow, and I'm not sure how realistic this actually is. Nonetheless, it is satisfying from a literary perspective, and I'm not sure I would have wanted the novel to end any other way.

 

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  • Started reading
  • 12 July, 2015: Finished reading
  • 12 July, 2015: Reviewed