Lies

Lies by Enrique de Hériz, published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson in 2007, is a thought-provoking narrative exploring themes of identity and familial connections. The story centers on Isobel, an anthropologist who has been mistakenly declared dead following a boating accident in Guatemala. While the world believes she is gone, Isobel is very much alive, hiding in a remote jungle shack, grappling with the implications of her situation and her studies on death rituals.
Readers will find a rich exploration of family dynamics as Isobel’s daughter, Serena, navigates her own challenges, including her father’s Alzheimer’s and the urgency to document their family history. Serena’s obsession with her grandfather’s survival story from a shipwreck intertwines with her quest for truth, revealing the complexities of memory and legacy. This edition spans 392 pages and is presented in English, inviting readers to delve into a narrative that intertwines boating accidents, missing persons, and the intricate relationships between mothers and daughters.
Official synopsis Publisher
What does it really mean to be dead? This is the question that vexes Isobel because as far as the outside world is concerned she is dead. The book springs from a case of mistaken identity. Isobel, mother of three adult children and an anthropologist has officially been pronounced dead following a boat accident in a remote part of the Guatemalan jungle. But Isobel is very much alive and is hiding in a remote shack in the jungle. She isn’t ready to tell the world she’s still alive and she’s not sure whether she ever will. The news of her own death is especially ironic because as an anthropologist, she studies death rituals.
Serena, Isobel’s daughter, studies weather. Her father has some form of Alzheimer’s and with her mother now supposedly dead, she is trying to write the family history before it is lost. Above all, she is obsessed with the story of Simon, her father’s father who was in a shipwreck and survived three days at sea before being rescued. The story of his life has become a family legend together with the tales her father told about The Battle of Formigues and the story of Li Po. Ever since she was a child, Serena has been tantalised by these stories, always asking questions, turning the ‘facts’ over in her mind, always trying to piece the ‘truth’ together. Yet the irony is that she isn’t investigating the one story she really should.
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