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Magic for Liars: A Novel Hardcover – June 4, 2019
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A 2020 LOCUS AWARD FINALIST FOR BEST FIRST NOVEL
Sharp, mainstream fantasy meets compelling thrills of investigative noir in Magic for Liars, a fantasy debut by rising star Sarah Gailey.
Ivy Gamble was born without magic and never wanted it.
Ivy Gamble is perfectly happy with her life – or at least, she’s perfectly fine.
She doesn't in any way wish she was like Tabitha, her estranged, gifted twin sister.
Ivy Gamble is a liar.
When a gruesome murder is discovered at The Osthorne Academy of Young Mages, where her estranged twin sister teaches Theoretical Magic, reluctant detective Ivy Gamble is pulled into the world of untold power and dangerous secrets. She will have to find a murderer and reclaim her sister―without losing herself.
“An unmissable debut.”―Adrienne Celt, author of Invitation to a Bonfire
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTor Books
- Publication dateJune 4, 2019
- Dimensions5.53 x 1.28 x 8.59 inches
- ISBN-101250174619
- ISBN-13978-1250174611
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Review
Praise for Magic for Liars
"A private investigator takes a job investigating a murder at a magic school in California. Our PI never developed magic ability, much to her dismay―so we enter that world with the same longing for specialness that she does. Whether it’s the 'murder investigation' part of that summary that grabs you or the 'magic school' part, this winsome, clever book will definitely engage you."--Veronica Roth, #1 New York Times best-selling author of the Divergent series
“A queerer, older, quicker-paced Harry Potter, concerned with the childhood grudges that adults can't get over.”―Refinery 29
“We can’t wait to see what Sarah Gailey does next!”―Crimereads, the most anticipated crime books of summer
“With winks to multiple genres, Sarah Gailey’s Magic for Liars shows that their talent has no trouble extending to a full-length novel.”―Culturess
“In a very short time, Sarah Gailey has distinguished themself as one of science fiction's best new writers.” ―BoingBoing
“The world has little mercy; but it does have heart, and like Ivy, it carries on despite its scars.”―NPR
“Magic for Liars is a perfect, spare, delectable novel that features a masterful narrative structure, terribly human characters occupying realistically magical settings, and more. The prose is spot-on and paints an intimate, flawed portrait of how a world like Gamble’s would function, from the moment she tells the disbelieving bartender magic exists to the moment she walks out on her sister. I can’t recommend it highly enough.” ―Tor.com
“There's something for almost all readers here... Gailey shows us that humans are humans, even when they are magic, and they are still flawed, damaged, and oh-so-interesting” ―Booklist (starred review)
“Clever and fast-paced... a wonderfully quirky mystery filled with inviting characters and gripping surprise twists.” ―Publishers Weekly
“A poignant and bittersweet family tragedy disguised as a mystery but with a magic all its own.” ―Kirkus
“Veronica Mars with a bit of Harry Potter” ―The Nerd Daily
“Sarah Gailey mashes hard-bitten detective noir into the magical YA world of Harry Potter in Magic For Liars… a Syfy series waiting to happen.” ―AV Club
“The sharpest female protagonist of the summer”―The Mary Sue
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Tor Books; First Edition (June 4, 2019)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250174619
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250174611
- Item Weight : 14.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.53 x 1.28 x 8.59 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #910,340 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #29,097 in Women Sleuths (Books)
- #30,325 in Paranormal & Urban Fantasy (Books)
- #42,656 in Suspense Thrillers
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Hugo award winner Sarah Gailey is an internationally published writer of fiction and nonfiction. Their nonfiction has been published by Mashable and the Boston Globe, and they are a regular contributor for Tor.com and Barnes & Noble. Their most recent fiction credits include Fireside Fiction, Tor.com, and The Atlantic. Their debut novella, River of Teeth, was published in 2017 via Tor.com and was a 2018 Hugo and Nebula award finalist. Their adult novel debut, Magic For Liars, was published by Tor Books in June 2019. Their Young Adult novel debut, When We Were Magic, will be published by Simon Pulse in Spring 2020. You can find links to their work at www.sarahgailey.com; find them on social media @gaileyfrey.
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I didn’t know what to expect from Sarah Gailey’s Magic for Liars. Not when I purchased it. Not when I began reading it. And not on page 100, nor 200, nor 300. It’s safe to say that I haven’t been this continuously surprised by a book in quite a while.
There are so many different things at play in this book. It hits on so many familiar themes, it feels like it should be completely cookie-cutter. But it isn’t. Gailey brings so much more to these pages than just that. Somehow, though, even at that last page turn I couldn’t quite shake those cookie-cutter expectations.
It had been a while since I’d cracked a spine not knowing what to expect. This wasn’t up for an award, or from an author I’ve known, and I hadn’t heard it discussed a thousand ways from Sunday by the time I pulled it from the shelf. I just picked it up and started reading.
And those first few pages blew me away.
The prologue reminded me of Strange the Dreamer, in its poetic descriptions and dreamy air. I was immediately hooked. I knew in those first few pages that I was not going to be able to walk away.
And then the prologue ended and I started chapter one. And I was reminded again of Strange the Dreamer. Of all the reviews that mentioned how they struggled with the tonal shift from prologue to story. Here was that same tonal shift. Here was that same jarring struggle. Here, again, I was so distracted by the loss of that beautiful and evocative prose that I had trouble getting into the real story.
Reading the prologue, I was so sure I was holding The Magicians meets Harry Potter. Immediately, however, it became clear: this was The Magicians meets Harry Dresden.
That disappointment clearly stayed with me throughout my reading of the book. And it kept my expectations falsely low, even though Gailey proved, time after time after time, that she was bringing far more to the story than I was willing to accept.
It’s no secret that I annotate my books as I read them. The story my notes tell is a roller coaster of expectations. And as much as I want to bemoan how disappointed I was to get Dresden Files instead of Harry Potter, I can’t. Because Magic for Liars is a great read! Expectations or no I was engaged the entire time (as soon as I got over that first tonal shift). I was eager to know more, I was placing bets with myself about my predictions, I was emotionally invested in the development of the characters. This was a great read!
And as easy as it is to dismiss a book like this as being just “pulp”, it’s more than that, too. There’s serious depth to the characters, and intense intrigue that doesn’t feel like plot-service but like actual human experience. I mean, it’s also pulp – in the most delicious way. But there’s weight and consequence to it: in the way Gailey doles out the rules of her universe to serve the story (not reader’s curiosity), and the unexpected relationships between characters. She steps so close to tropes and then … doesn’t subvert them so much as simply write above them, elegantly, simply, without pretense.
It doesn’t hurt that Magic for Liars might be the closest we’ll ever get to the Platonic ideal of queer representation, fwiw.
In the end, it’s not the best book I’ve ever read. But I desperately wish there were 10 more just like it already on my shelf. I would read every one.
Ivy is excited when she gets a visitor. The woman was impressive and was a headmaster, and most thrillingly, wants to hire Ivy to solve a murder. Ivy only hesitates a minute when she realizes the woman is headmaster of the magic school where Tabitha is now teaching. She has been anxious to do more with her career and a successful murder case will do wonders for it.
Ivy goes to the school where she is expected to reside until she is through with her investigation. The murdered woman was Sylvia whose mutilated body had been found in the library. Of course, being a magic school, the books in the section where the body was found spend their time whispering clues just out of range to be understood. Ivy starts interviewing school faculty and staff as well as the students. She uncovers a 'mean girl' clique headed by school queen Alexandria as well as a teenage boy who is convinced he is destined to be a once in a lifetime mage to outperform all mages. On the staff side, there are rivalries and love affairs and Ivy develops an interest in one of the male teachers. More importantly, she and Tabitha slowly start to rebuild their relationship. Will Ivy be able to solve the case?
This was an interesting cross-genre novel. The juxtaposition of science fiction and mystery intersect well and provide more depth. The author has managed to avoid the twin sister cliché of good twin, evil twin and several of the characters are gay or bisexual. The ending is surprising and the reader will have fun following the twists and turns. This book is recommended for fantasy and mystery readers.
Top reviews from other countries
It is an excellent example of showing how fantasy books don't have to be epics, they can be contained one book stories. Which are as long as they need to be and no more.
The general basic plot is very good, I love a bit of genre busting and having a private dectective investigating a crime in a magical boarding school was a really enjoyable story.
The character interactions are very good and the secondary characters well drawn.
There definately is a good emotional depth and weight to the story in spite of my facetious description of the plot.
It was very well written and very well constructed.
What was a bit meh for me
I'm 50/50 on the main character, but I'm not sure if it was because she occassionally was geniuniely very annoying or if it was because she was a mirror on the wall to some characters flaws that I don't enjoy being reminded of. When she was the dectective I enjoyed her, when she was a nurotic mess I was a bit put off.
Its set in a magical boarding school. I'm fine with never reading another magical boarding school book ever again. Thaicnkfully the book was not set from the pov of a student but rather an adult outsider and so the fresh angle made it bareable.
Overall my reaction was positive, there are parts where I really felt I was not this books auidence, but I could see many strong elements and finished it with a sense of enjoyment.
I wanted to read about a Murder Mystery with a fun twist of Magic, but I found this book distasteful and disturbing (in a way not meant by the author).
I wish i could get a refund and have the memory of this book erased from my memory. Its also unprofessional to reference other books in a negative manner as tis author does.
Avoid.
Worth a read if you don’t expect too much of it.













