Liar ['lī-ər] (n):
1. A person who tells lies.
2. A writer.
"Lying is essential to good storytelling. Daily, we writers sit at our computers - or legal tablets or Underwoods - and write down a bunch of untruths, piling one on top of the other, page after paltering page. We compound them, massage them, edit them, spin them, cut-and-paste them, until we’re satisfied that, despite how outlandish or otherworldly these lies are, you, the reader, will swallow them.
In that, we’re like politicians. Except that we’re spared the hassle of running for elected office.
- Sandra Brown
In this gripping new audio collection you’ll find fifteen tales of deceit and deception, perjury and prevarication, falsehoods and fibs, spun by some of the finest liars in the business:
Mad Science: A Joe Ledger Adventure
by Jonathan
Maberry
The Gateway
by Solomon Jones
Shuffle
by Kelly Simmons
She Looks Just like Her Mother
by Edward Pettit
Choosing Teams
by Don Lafferty
What I Did
by Marie Lamba
Bliss
by Merry Jones
Under the King’s Bridge
by Keith R. A. DeCandido
Doe Run Road
by Dennis Tafoya
What Lies Between
by Keith Strunk
For Love
by William Lashner
The Return Trip
by Jonathan McGoran
So Coldly Sweet, So Deadly Fair
by Gregory Frost
The Truth-Telling
by Stephen Susco
Two Guns in Liar’s Canyon
by Chuck Wendig
A portion of the proceeds from this audio collection will benefit literacy programs.