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Liar, Dreamer, Thief

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
A young woman's carefully constructed fantasy world implodes in this brilliantly conceived novel that blurs distinctions between right and wrong, comedy and tragedy, imagination and reality: "Surreal . . . leaves you with the creeping certainty that there is a different world lurking just under the surface of our own, filled with technicolor lies and terrible truths" (Alix E. Harrow, New York Times bestselling and Hugo‑award winning author).
Katrina Kim may be broke, the black sheep of her family, and slightly unhinged, but she isn't a stalker. Her obsession with her co-worker, Kurt, is just one of many coping mechanisms—like her constant shape and number rituals, or the way scenes from her favorite children's book bleed into her vision whenever she feels anxious or stressed.
But when Katrina finds a cryptic message from Kurt that implies he's aware of her surveillance, her tenuous hold on a normal life crumbles. Driven by compulsion, she enacts the most powerful ritual she has to reclaim control—a midnight visit to the Cayatoga Bridge—and arrives just in time to witness Kurt's suicide. Before he jumps, he slams her with a devastating accusation: his death is all her fault.
Horrified, Katrina combs through the clues she's collected about Kurt over the last three years, but each revelation uncovers a menacing truth: for every moment she was watching him, he was watching her. And the past she thought she'd left behind? It's been following her more closely than she ever could have imagined.
A gripping page-turner, as well as a sensitive exploration of mental health, Liar, Dreamer, Thief is an intimate portrayal of life in all its complexities—and the dangers inherent in unveiling people's most closely guarded secrets.
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    • Kirkus

      November 1, 2022
      In Dong's vertiginous debut, a mentally unstable woman stumbles across a conspiracy. After Katrina Kim flunks out of college, she returns to her family's home in Pleasance Village, Illinois, seeking solace; her father sends her away, however, suggesting Katrina stay at a hotel or a friend's house. Katrina goes to the local library and parks, curling up in her car's back seat while her mind retreats into Mi-Hee and the Mirror-Man, her favorite Korean children's book. Like Katrina, Mi-Hee is a lonely girl with compulsive tendencies, but Mi-Hee can access a fantasy world via her kitchen door and has a truth-revealing spyglass. Determined to create her own new existence, Katrina drives to Grand Station, gets an office job, and moves in with a stranger who saw her plea for help on Craigslist and took pity. The stress proves too much, and Katrina starts dissociating, layering Mi-Hee's "kitchen-door world over [her] own, like a colored pane of glass." She develops elaborate protection rituals and starts following co-worker Kurt Smith because she thinks they're connected. Then, one night on the Cayatoga Bridge, Katrina sees Kurt crash his SUV. He extricates himself, screams at Katrina for ruining things, and jumps off the railing. Katrina tells the police, who dismiss her, but when Kurt misses work on Monday, Katrina launches her own investigation, uncovering a reality far stranger than her inner fictions. Events unfold courtesy of Katrina's anxious, unmoored first-person present narration, keeping readers off-kilter. Some characters lack depth and verisimilitude, but Katrina's fraught relationship with her immigrant parents rings true. Though the setup drags on, sapping the book's momentum, once the mystery drops into gear, increasingly bonkers twists propel the story to a cogent, poignant close. A rabbit hole worth falling down.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from November 7, 2022
      Broke and estranged from her Korean family, Katrina Kim, the narrator of Dong’s mesmerizing debut, works a dead-end job at a soulless Illinois hospital billing firm. Her deepening reliance on OCD behaviors and her fear that the magical kingdom of a childhood book is becoming real throw her life into chaos, as does her obsession with her more successful colleague, Kurt Smith. Though Katrina and Kurt have barely spoken, the books and music she discovers searching his desk convince her that they’re kindred souls. One day, she finds a postcard with a threatening message in his desk drawer. Terrified it’s directed at her, she drives at midnight to the bridge she regularly visits, to perform the most potent of her self-soothing rituals. Then Kurt shows up, shouts some words of blame, and jumps to his death. Katrina is horrified and baffled. How does he know of Katrina’s visits to the bridge? Was he surveilling her even as she surveilled him—and who is he really? Katrina’s search for answers reveals secrets all around her. This nuanced depiction of a woman’s struggles with isolation and mental health rings entirely true. Fans of sharp, inventive fiction will be eager for Dong’s next. Agent: Amy Bishop, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret.

    • Booklist

      November 1, 2022
      In Dong's fascinating and psychologically complicated first novel, readers will be left wondering about the hidden inner lives of those closest to them. Protagonist Katrina Kim embodies an exploration of mental illness that blurs the lines between coping and obsession. Attempting to balance her personal life, including estrangement from her parents, a rundown car, and debilitating compulsions, with her work life as a temp who is under constant threat of being fired and dangerously obsessed with Kurt, a co-worker whom she sees leap to his death, Katrina finds herself tangled up in Kurt's trouble and conducting an inquiry that unravels in confounding, even unbelievable ways. Murder, spying, lying, and stealing all converge to keep readers on their toes in this fast-paced tale as they confront a tumultuous and baffling series of events. From start to finish, this is a captivating story with dire puzzles that beg to be solved one chapter at a time while readers will continuously wonder whether Dong's narrator can be relied on at all, making for yet another intriguing mystery.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Hannah Choi captivates listeners with this surreal debut thriller, which thoughtfully explores the issue of mental health. Estranged from her parents and working as a temp, Katrina Kim blurs the lines between reality and imagination. Driven by compulsive tendencies, she performs shape and number rituals, retreats into an imagined universe based on her favorite children's book, and obsesses over a co-worker named Kurt. After witnessing Kurt jump to his death, Katrina embarks on a search for answers that creates even more puzzles that unfold in a dreamlike unraveling. Speaking in the first-person present tense, Choi creates an intimate and twisty story featuring an unreliable narrator with a unique lens on the world. Choi's pacing and realistic characterizations keep listeners dizzily intrigued and eager to find out what happens. V.T.M. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine
    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2023

      Dong's twisty debut follows Katrina Kim, who struggles with obsessive-compulsive tendencies and an unhealthy fascination with her coworker Kurt. Katrina doesn't think of herself as a stalker, but even so, she searches through Kurt's desk and is sure they have a special connection. When she finds a cryptic message implying that he's aware of her surveillance, she panics. Things get much worse when Kurt apparently dies from suicide and blames Katrina for it. Katrina's world starts to implode, and everything she once thought she knew seems suspect. It is challenging to follow Katrina as her sanity unravels. She is equally frustrating and heartbreaking--the perfect example of an unreliable narrator who actively destroys her relationships and delivers varying versions of the truth, even to herself. Narrator Hannah Choi brings Katrina's story to life with outstanding characterizations and superb pacing. The intimacy of the first-person narration further draws listeners into Katrina's increasingly unsettled mind. VERDICT This fast-paced, surreal tale will hook listeners from the beginning. A perfect fit for fans of Gone Girl and Girl on the Train.--Victoria Kiszka

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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