A Thousand Lies

by Laura Wilson

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In 1987 Sheila Shand was given a suspended sentence for murdering her father. At her trial, it emerged that she and her mother and sister had been forced to shield brutal sadist Leslie Shand while he subjected them to a reign of terror, daily beatings and sexual abuse. Years later, investigative journalist Amy Vaughan discovers letters and a newspaper cutting about the Shand case while clearing out her late mother's flat. Concluding that she must be related to the Shands, she decides to show more visit Sheila's mother who is in a care home. Amy is curious about the elderly Iris Shand who pores over an album of family photos, for Amy knows that photographs tell lies. Her own mother had subjected her to a different form of abuse - Munchausen By Proxy, using snaps of the daughter she'd made sick to try to keep the affections of Amy's father George, a charismatic con-man. Then George appears on Amy's doorstep after a long absence and tells her that he is dying of cancer. Soon she discovers that he may be lying about far more than his health. As she pursues her investigation of the Shand case, Amy realises that there is more to the murder of Leslie than the police ever unearthed, including two long-buried skeletons in woods near the family's home ¿ show less

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In 1987 Sheila Shand was given a suspended sentence for murdering her father. At her trial, it emerged that she and her mother and sister had been forced to shield brutal sadist Leslie Shand while he subjected them to a reign of terror, daily beatings and sexual abuse. Years later, investigative journalist Amy Vaughan discovers letters and a newspaper cutting about the Shand case while clearing out her late mother's flat. Concluding that she must be related to the Shands, she decides to visit Sheila's mother who is in a care home. Amy is curious about the elderly Iris Shand who pores over an album of family photos, for Amy knows that photographs tell lies. Her own mother had subjected her to a different form of abuse - Munchausen By show more Proxy, using snaps of the daughter she'd made sick to try to keep the affections of Amy's father George, a charismatic con-man. Then George appears on Amy's doorstep after a long absence and tells her that he is dying of cancer. Soon she discovers that he may be lying about far more than his health. As she pursues her investigation of the Shand case, Amy realises that there is more to the murder of Leslie than the police ever unearthed, including two long-buried skeletons in woods near the family's home.

A very raw and harrowing account of the mental, physical and sexual abuse of a family, but mainly one sister. It was a very graphic and uncomfortable book to read but compelling as I wanted to keep turning the pages to find out what happens. The scary part is that this sort of abuse on this scale does really happen, remember Cromwell Street and the Wests. All the characters are believable and I felt for all the family even though some of their own actions where questionable. At times I wanted to jump into the pages to try and help. A very good read again from this author even though the subject was disturbing.
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I think this is Ms Wilson's best book so far. It is a thriller that will keep you up late at night and I notice that LibraryThing's members have given it an average rating of 4.29. It truly is a great read. Amy Vaughan, a young journalist, finds a newspaper clipping and an old letter, while clearing out her dead mother's home.
Two decades earlier, Sheila Shand was given a 3 year suspended sentence for killing her father. The father had terrorized her and her sister and mother for years with beatings, sexual abuse and torture. The newspaper clipping that Amy found was about the Shand case and the old letter and a diary which she also found convinced her that they were related. Amy starts with a visit to the elderly Mrs Shand in a care show more home.
And that is all that should be said about this chilling tale. Enjoy.
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The death of Amy Vaughan's mother really came as no surprise. Her parents' marriage had really collapsed over 30 years before and so there was just Amy to cope with Patti's funeral and then the cleaning up of Patti's flat. In her final years, dying of cancer, Patti turned against Amy, blaming her for husband George's long absence. So that's how Amy came to find Mo's diary amongst her mother's possession. With it is a newspaper cutting about a case nearly two decades before when Mo's sister, Sheila Shand, was convicted of the manslaughter of her brutal sadistic father. Amy realises that she is Sheila's great-niece. Mean time a body has been found in the woods at the back of the Shand family home, where Sheila, freed from prison, is now show more living. Amy Vaughan is a journalist and there is something about this story that she just can't let go. An excellent read. show less
I don't understand how I've been reading mystery and suspense, esp. by British authors, for decades and not stumbled across Laura Wilson's work before. This is a great read, albeit quite disconcerting/uncomfortable at times. I stayed up waaa...y too late in order to finish this.
This book is one the better thrillers written about abuse. A woman cleans up her deceased mother's house and discovers that she had an aunt. Curious about this unknown relative, she tries to discover who she was and finds out a whole lot more. The things she gets to know are so terrible, that, as a reader, you know this must happen in real life too. The ending is shocking and maybe not suitable for all readers.
good psychological thriller - ending a little too pat
Als Amy Vaughan de flat van haar overleden moeder opruimt, vindt ze een dagboek met bizarre teksten. Het is niet van haar moeder. Tussen de pagina’s ligt een oud krantenknipsel over een moordzaak in de familie Shand. In 1987 kreeg de 36-jarige Sheila Shand een voorwaardelijke straf vanwege doodslag op haar vader. Tijdens de rechtszaak blijkt dat zij, haar moeder en haar zusje jarenlang onderworpen zijn aan het gewelddadige regime van hun vader/echtgenoot. Ze werden dagelijks geslagen en seksueel misbruikt. Amy vraagt zich af waarom dit in het huis van haar moeder ligt. Ze zoekt Sheila op en raakt direct meer betrokken bij de zaak dan ze had gewild. De hele kwestie wordt sinister als vlakbij het huis van Sheila twee lichamen worden show more opgegraven. Wie waren dit? En wat doen de lijken daar? Amy stort zich op de zaak, terwijl ze eigenlijk heel wat anders aan haar hoofd heeft. Ze heeft zelf namelijk ook geen al te gelukkige jeugd gehad en wordt daar nog regelmatig mee geconfronteerd. show less

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18+ Works 1,322 Members
Laura Wilson is the real voice of Jesse Adams. She has written and edited children's history books on subjects from plantation life in the antebellum South to medicine through the ages. For How I Survived the Oregon Trail, she has created a journal based on authentic pioneer diaries and letters.

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2006
People/Characters
Amy Vaughn; Sheila Shand; Mo Shand; Iris Shand; Leslie Shand; Bill Drake (show all 8); Charlie; George
Dedication
To Tim
First words
When they asked me "Did you kill your father ? Did you do it alone " I said yes both times because that was what we agreed.
Quotations
He is the devil, there is nothning I can do.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Nothing" she said, "Lets drink to Sheila shall we "

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6073 .I4716 .T48Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
70
Popularity
445,810
Reviews
7
Rating
(3.91)
Languages
5 — Dutch, English, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål)
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
15