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If the Witness Lied

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Choices do matter and forgiveness is possible.
Jack Fountain knows that what’s happened to his family sounds like the most horrible soap opera anyone could ever write. But it happened—to Jack; his parents; his sisters, Smithy and Madison. And to his baby brother, Tris. What made it worse was that the media wanted to know every detail.
Now it’s almost Tris’s third birthday, and everything’s starting again. Aunt Cheryl, who’s living with the Fountain children now that their parents are gone, has decided that they will heal only if they work through their pain—on camera. The very identities they’ve created for themselves are called into question. In less than twenty-four hours their fate will change yet again, but this time they vow to not be exploited and to discover the truth.
In this gripping thriller, Caroline B. Cooney details how love, devotion, and forgiveness make resilience—and recovery—possible.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 4, 2009
      Readers will be unable to put down Cooney's latest thriller. Jack, 15, lives with his two-year-old brother, Tris, and his aunt, while sisters Smithy and Madison are living elsewhere. Taking place on a single day, the novel switches between the viewpoints of the older family members and a teenage neighbor. Early hints point to Tris being a controversial figure, and it is gradually revealed that he is believed to be the cause of his parents' deaths (their mother delayed chemo to give birth to him). But as the day wears on and the siblings reunite, whether or not Tris inadvertently caused their father's death (the parking brake on his Jeep was released and it rolled over him) comes into question. Additionally, a religious undertone has several characters rethinking their relationship with God. Adding to the family's misery, their aunt has arranged for their lives to become a TV “docudrama,” hosted by a man so sleazy he asks Smithy, “What was it like to realize your mother would rather die than bring you up?” Cooney masterfully ratchets up the tension in each scene and delivers fully in the exhilarating conclusion. Ages 12–up.

    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 2009
      Gr 6-9-Three orphaned teenage siblings, separated by the tragic supposed patricide of their father by their two-year-old brother, reunite a year later to save this same brother from the clutches of their evil aunt, who wants to sell them out on a tell-all television show. The plot involves a lot of aimless meandering around their small Connecticut town, the characters are unremarkable, and the title, of course, gives away the mystery, but, as with all of Cooney's novels, the joy is in readers being more clued in than the hapless characters. Thus every chapter, narrated alternately by each sibling, ends with a successful degree of suspense. Contemporary technologytexting, cell phone videos, digital photography, online bank accountsplays a weighty role; initially the reliance upon them aids each character's unhealthy distance from one another, but by the conclusion, it has become the link between them, creating laughably miraculous resolutions at every turn. A Christian theme pervades as well, as the siblings each question their relationship with God as well as with one another, and inevitably resolve both issues simultaneously. Fans of previous Cooney offerings will enjoy this, but most others can pass on it."Rhona Campbell, Washington, DC Public Library"

      Copyright 2009 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2009
      Grades 7-10 First Jack Fountains mother dies of cancer after postponing treatment so her baby, Tris, could be born. Then his father is run over after two-year-old Tris accidentally moves the parking brake. Shortly after their fathers death, Jacks sisters bailSmithy to boarding school and Madison to her godparents home. But Jack stays at home to watch over Tris, knowing that Aunt Cheryl, now ensconced in the family home, is hardly a mother figure. She then proves it by selling the Fountains tragic story as a reality TV show. On their fathers birthday, the girls are drawn home, and the siblings must put aside their hostilities to salvage their family and save their baby brother. There are many holes in this story, starting with Cheryls ability to get custody, the unquestioning acceptance of Tris ability to move the brake, and the TV producers right to film without his subjects permission. Moreover, the title gives away the twist. Despite all this, readers will be enthralled. This isnt about inconsistencies; its about creepy (if one-dimensional) villains, page-turning action, and kids taking charge.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2009
      The Fountain children's father died in a freak accident allegedly caused by their baby brother. Now older brother Jack discovers Aunt Cheryl's plans to televise their grieving process on a reality show--and clues that indicate the death was no accident. By rotating perspectives, Cooney draws out the action. Anchored by a poignant sibling reunion, this family-drama/thriller will have readers racing to its conclusion.

      (Copyright 2009 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      May 1, 2009
      The Fountain children are marked by tragedy of the media-frenzy variety. Their mother decides to carry her fourth pregnancy to term despite the cancer threatening her life; a year after her much-publicized and -picketed death, the children's father is killed in a freak accident allegedly caused by that same baby, Tris. Now daughters Madison and Smithy have escaped to godparents and boarding school, respectively; and Jack shuns normal teenage pursuits to take care of Tris while their guardian, Aunt Cheryl, creepily excises all traces of their previous life from the house. Then, in one pivotal, action-filled day, Smithy and Madison decide, separately, to return home and do right by their family; Jack discovers Cheryl's plans to have their grieving process televised in a reality show; and an accumulation of clues indicates that their father's death was no accident. The pacing here is pure gold. Rotating through various perspectives to follow several plot strands (and making excellent use of modern communication technology to propel the intrigue), Cooney draws out the action, investing it with the slow-motion feel of an impending collision. The threat is so personal, so inescapably close, that the tension grows nearly unbearable as the climax, marked by a brilliantly revealed villain and motive, nears. Anchored by a poignant sibling reunion, this family-drama-turned-thriller will have readers racing, heart in throat, to reach the conclusion.

      (Copyright 2009 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.6
  • Lexile® Measure:670
  • Interest Level:6-12(MG+)
  • Text Difficulty:3

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