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The Lie by Oscar H. Bennett — book cover

The Lie

by Oscar H. Bennett
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Overview

For Terrell Matheus, the decision to lie about his brother's death is an immediate reaction to the panic he feels at having shot him. What he has not considered when placing the blame on a truck full of white boys are the ramifications—the near riots and the vigilante anger that threaten innocent men. Terrified to admit his guilt, he watches in dismay as schoolmates make a public display of support, and in horror as his uncle seeks vengeance. Finally, unable to live with his lie and the anger it creates in the town's black community, he is forced to come to terms with the terrible truth and the incalculable hurt he has caused his parents, who have effectively lost both sons with a single shot.

Though he is not sent to jail, Terrell finds himself in a prison of another kind. Shunned by former friends and forced to live away from home, he finds unexpected solace in the friendship of his dead brother's girlfriend, who stands by him as he struggles to rebuild his life.

Set in Evansville, Indiana, in the mid-1970s, The Lie is imbued with a perfect sense of time and place. It is a startling and controversial novel about family, redemption, and the price of honesty.

About the Author, Oscar H. Bennett

O. H. Bennett is the author of a previous novel, The Colored Garden. He lives in northern Virginia.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Set in the African-American community of Evansville, Ind., in the 1970s, Bennett's (The Colored Garden) moral tale is brought back from the brink of didacticism by compelling main characters. After accidentally shooting and killing Lawrence, his older brother, teenager Terrell Matheus blames the killing on three white boys in a pickup truck. In the wake of Lawrence's death, Terrell's parents sink into depression, his community flashes with racial unrest and Terrell endures a waking nightmare of guilt. After Lawrence's funeral, Terrell receives a friendly overture from Tamara Groves, an older girl who Lawrence was pursuing and who thinks her boyfriend, the neighborhood thug, may have killed Lawrence. Bonded by their guilt, Terrell and Tamara become wary allies, even after Terrell's lie is exposed, causing even more agony for Terrell's family and the community. What follows is an uneasy road to redemption for Terrell, and a period of transformation for Tamara. Though the supporting cast feels a little flat, Terrell and Tamara are wonderful characters whose complexity and self-determination demonstrate Bennett's exciting if still developing talent. (July)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Book Details

Published
July 7, 2009
Publisher
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Pages
307
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781565125735

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