Reviews

Liar's Bench by Kim Michele Richardson

sarahb_513's review against another edition

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challenging dark mysterious sad tense

4.0

Great story! The narrator does such a fantastic job. Heartbreaking, tense, mysterious, and sad. Enjoyed it very much 

rmarcin's review against another edition

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4.0

It is August 1972, in Peckinpaw, KY. Mudas Summers has just turned 17, and her world has been ripped apart. Her mother, Ella, has been found hanging in her house, leaving Mudas and her baby daughter, Genevieve behind. Mudas swears that her mother would have never killed herself. Mudas wonders if her mother's abusive husband killed her mother.
Mudas, angry at her father, believing he is keeping secrets, runs out of her house, into the arms of bi-racial Bobby, highlighting racial discrimination by others in the town. But Mudas loves Bobby, and he loves her. Together, they stumble on town secrets, and are put in danger.
I liked the grit of Mudas and the kindness towards Bobby, but I think the novel tried too hard to cover many issues, and only superficially--the Vietnam War, racial tensions, interracial relationships, pre-marital sex, cockfighting, Title IX sports, government scandal.

judithdcollins's review against another edition

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5.0

LIAR’S BENCH, a powerful southern debut novel, by Kim Michele Richardson, a multi-generational chilling mystery, with a mix of coming-of-age, humor, and historical fiction--covering a century of deceit.

From racial injustice, lies, small-town secrets, murder, corruption, two senseless hangings, and three strong heroines of different generations; grabbing you by the heart from the first page to the last, and never letting go. Lovable well-developed characters you will remember long after the book ends!

As the novel opens, it is 1860, and readers briefly learn of the nasty mistress of Hark Hill Plantation, Mrs. Evelyn Anderson who cannot seem to deliver an heir for her husband. Her faithful and innocent house slave, Frannie Crow has been raped and accused of poisoning her mistress. Of course, after a jury of all white men, she does not stand a chance. They find her guilty and within a week the people line up on Town Square to watch the hanging- a proposed “poisoner and a thief”. Frannie goes to her death with no one knowing the real truth. She is innocent and her owners are the liars.

Afterwards, her son Amos is given the pieces of his mama’s gallows and two healthy hogs, along with his freedom papers. He is instructed to build a bench for the town square out of the wood left over to be called Anderson bench. But its legacy of misfortune drawn from lies, false promises, and tall tales earned the name of Liar’s Bench, the center point of the novel.

As we jump to 1972, we hear from our main protagonist, Mudas Elizabeth Summers, age seventeen, living in rural small town Peckinpaw, Kentucky, with her dad, Adam Persis Summers, attorney-- well liked in the small southern town. Of course, her dad also vowed to love her mom, Ella Mudas Tilley but he cheated and drank. More lies.

Unfortunately, Mudas had to leave her dad after the divorce and moved with her mom to Nashville, where her mom learns to love her refreshments (liquor) after she began associating with the devil, Tommy. Before the age of nine, her mom had married a horrible and abusive man, Tommy Dale Whitlock and Mudas were in the way, so back to Peckinpaw--her mom drops her off to live with her dad.

Before this time, her dad quit drinking and cheating and begged her mom back with no success. Her mom later returns to Peckinpaw with Tommy, and they have a daughter Genevieve. She becomes close to her mom with weekly visits when Tommy is not around; however, due to him, she was not invited to live with them.

Now, her mom is dead, hanging from the rafters. She is heartbroken and knows it has to be a druggie and abusive Tommy, or the nasty man, McGee; however, everyone says it was suicide. What do McGee and a ledger have to do with her death? She loves her mom, and knows for certain she would never commit suicide. She has found the killer and figures out the mystery--as we continue to learn more about the events leading up to the murder (hanging).

Mudas is a smart, headstrong, passionate, and tenacious young woman. She is not like most girls- she is fighting in a man’s world of the deep south in the 1960s and 1970s in a small-minded town, in the middle of unrest and racial injustice, telephone party lines, the KKK, Vietnam, Civil Right movement--her school does not even allow for a proper women’s athletic program-- even though she is a runner with a promising scholarship.

A virgin, and naïve in the dating department, she misses her grandmother, long gone; her recipes, warm, loving heart, and wise tales of scents of a man; how to know real love; now no mother to confide in. Like most girls from a small town, she has visions of success, an education, love, and a better life. With only one best girlfriend, she now has a best guy friend, Bobby. He is part Indian, Caucasian, and African American; smart and maybe going to college in Boston, as has lived in the big city-- the north where he is accepted; unlike this town, where he is treated like a second-class citizen. She loves him, and he wants to help her uncover the truth about her mom, and in the process, he may learn more about his own past.

They are saying bad things about her mom and the danger intensifies the closer they get to discovering the truth; many clues leading them back to Hark Hill Plantation, a graveyard, a tree, a cave, encrypted messages, ribbons, a ledger, and some cruel and evil men – nothing will stop her --and Bobby is beside her every step of the way.

In this stunning coming-of-age charmer, Mudas and Bobby, two teens take on the entire town full of evil, corruption, and prejudice as they fight all obstacles for justice, not only for their respective generation but more importantly their family, and the strong women heroines who gave their life, as they help clear their names for generations to follow. A mix of murder, suspense, thriller, mystery, coming-of-age, first loves, and historical and Southern Gothic fiction - crossing several genres.

Loved, loved LIAR’S BENCH and you will root for these two, to the end (loved the grandfather, too). When I read the summary, I knew I would adore, and immediately starting recommending to my Goodreads' friends, before I reached page fifty.

With a line-up of advance praise from my favorite authors: Beth Hoffman, Diane Chamberlain, Amy Conner, Jamie Mason, and Susan Wiggs; high expectations--Kim Michele Richardson, storyteller, lives up to every word, and does not disappoint.

An outstanding debut novel, (predict a bestseller) will warm your heart in this triumph over tragedy southern tale. Being in this age range, growing up in the south, Richardson is "right on" with dialect, atmosphere, and setting of these times.

Infused with vivid descriptions of nature, and true love explained through scents, and the strength of a strong young woman ready to shed her childhood ways for womanhood during a time before love, peace, and bell-bottoms---making an ideal selection for book clubs with some great discussion questions included.

I am looking forward to reading Richardson’s previous memoir: The Unbreakable Child: A Memoir About Forgiving the Unforgivable.

Fans of Dollbaby, Calling Me Home, The Right Thing, This Dark Road to Mercy, Snapshot, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Color of Justice, Necessary Lies, The Third Hill North of Town, and upcoming Lavina, will enjoy this entertaining southern gem. Highly recommend!

A special thank you to Kensington Books and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

JDC Must Read Books

Look for Richardson's second novel, [b:GodPretty in the Tobacco Field|26025661|GodPretty in the Tobacco Field|Kim Michele Richardson|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1453062461s/26025661.jpg|45948988] and add to your reading list, [b:The Sisters of Glass Ferry|34570041|The Sisters of Glass Ferry|Kim Michele Richardson|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1490364220s/34570041.jpg|55715888], Coming Nov 28, 2017. 5 Stars! (Kentucky's Finest Storyteller). Grab a bottle of bourbon and get ready for some juicy southern secrets.

amberpatrice's review against another edition

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2.0

2.5 Stars. This books showed a lot of promise in the beginning, but ended up being quite stale. That’s all I have.

tiffanyk43's review against another edition

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5.0

The ending gave me goosebumps. So, so good!

knaught's review against another edition

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3.0

Absolutely loved the author’s descriptions but the first 70% moved too slowly and then everything rushed through at the end. Good read, important telling, but the pacing was off.

rebeccaweger's review against another edition

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dark hopeful tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0


Expand filter menu Content Warnings

dobermanmom's review against another edition

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Too dark

pamiverson's review against another edition

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3.0

A young girl relates her coming of age in her Southern town, with race, class, violence, family issue, family history and more thrown in. I enjoyed some of her language, and the chase near the end was quite suspenseful, but I felt there were some unrealistic plot twists and too many somewhat superfluous stories thrown in.

mollyjordan's review

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dark hopeful inspiring mysterious sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0