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“A wickedly sharp and arresting tour de force that blends a riveting plot and emotional subterfuge with propulsive prose … unputdownable.” Lauren Francis-Sharma, author of Book of the Little Axe, on False Witness

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“Slaughter doesn’t save her twists for the end, instead peppering them throughout the intricately layered story amid stomach-churning near misses and gripping character revelations. Equal parts hyperrealistic thriller and epic tragedy.” Booklist (starred review)

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“A psychological exploration of its characters, a legal thriller and a family drama.” Sun-Sentinel (South Florida) on False Witness

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Karin Slaughter recalls reading about the Spanish flu in high school — passages in textbooks that only skimmed the surface of a pandemic that killed 50 million people worldwide. It wasn’t until she read Katherine Anne Porter’s Pale Horse, Pale Rider, though, that she got a more visceral and emotional understanding of its devastating — and long-lasting — consequences.

The book, a fictional account of the author’s own struggle with the Spanish flu, detailed the disease’s grisly side effects — body temperatures so high that people’s hair turned white, skin that took on a purplish hue, financial insecurity, and so much more.

“All of that stuff is not what they teach about the pandemic,” Slaughter says. “What I read about in the textbooks didn’t impact me psychologically. But fiction can capture details in a way that nonfiction can’t — and shouldn’t. I wanted to talk about the fact that our hand sanitizer smells like tequila and that there are ‘maskholes’ who wear their mask below their nose. Look at the number of divorces in the past year, or the staggering number of kids who are going to lose out on a learning opportunity. I wanted to talk about all of that within the framework of a thriller.”

It wasn’t a decision she took lightly. Slaughter says she spoke to a number of authors at the start of COVID-19 to gauge how they planned to address the pandemic in their contemporary fiction. Most wanted to avoid it altogether.

“Mike Connelly was the only one who said he was going to include it,” Slaughter says. “And so I thought if Mike is going to do it, and he doesn’t catch shit for it, I’m going to do it too.”

A TALE OF TWO ESTRANGED SISTERS

The result is False Witness (William Morrow), a novel with the life-changing impact of the past year and a half at its core. In traditional fashion, Slaughter gives readers a no-holds-barred view of humanity’s dark side as they navigate the pandemic and the issues it has brought to light. But of course, this is not a book about COVID-19, it’s a thriller — a Karin Slaughter thriller — and so fans know to brace themselves. False Witness is a visceral, gut-wrenching page-turner that will have you reading with one eye closed as she works to pry your eyes wide open.

The story is told through two different experiences — sisters Callie and Leigh have each dealt with a shared past trauma in their own way. Callie, an addict, likes to live life on the edge. And as someone who deals with COVID’s increasing death toll on a daily basis, it’s easy to see why she slips into old habits.

Leigh, on the other hand, leads a more privileged existence — she doesn’t lose her job, her kids continue going to school, even her split from her husband is amicable. She’s taking it all seriously, of course, but things are less … complicated for her. More removed from the day-to-day realities of the pandemic.

Though the sisters are estranged, they must work together when their past comes back to haunt them — and through their cracked lens, we are shown an unflinching view of how society, in so many ways, has degraded.

THE CHALLENGE OF WRITING CURRENT EVENTS

“One thing about the pandemic is that it’s brought to light so many things people are sick of and making us question why we continue putting up with this shit,” Slaughter says. “We are seeing the social inequities and how people are being treated in the justice system, for instance. And this has been a good way to talk about trauma, because at the heart of the story, and the pandemic, is trauma. We’re not going to know for decades how this will manifest itself.”

The ever-changing nature of the pandemic was one of the most challenging aspects of writing the novel, Slaughter admits. While she was able to capture the bigger details in a first draft, she had to go back (a few times) and revise as new information was released.

“I had to be the only person in the world that swore when the vaccines came out, because I knew I’d have to go back and incorporate them into the book,” she says, tongue firmly planted in cheek. “But I only had to look at history to predict what the responses would be. I understand hesitancy, but by now we should be able to process the information we’re given and reach some understandings about how to protect each other.”

There’s no shortage of either in False Witness, but it’s never gratuitous. Slaughter’s primary concern is always to do what is best for the story. Luckily, she’s had some experience in that regard.

“If this was my first book, I may have found it difficult not to include everything I researched,” she says. “But with this, I needed to be [disciplined] if I wanted to tell the best story.”

In that, there’s no question Slaughter has succeeded. Again.


This story appears through BookTrib’s partnership with the International Thriller Writers. It first appeared in The Big Thrill.

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Photo Credit: Dr. Jost Hindersmann, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license

About Karin Slaughter:

Karin Slaughter is one of the world’s most popular and acclaimed storytellers. Published in 120 countries with more than 35 million copies sold across the globe, her 21 novels include the Grant County and Will Trent books, as well as the Edgar-nominated Cop Town and the instant New York Times bestselling stand-alone novels Pretty Girls, The Good Daughter, and Pieces of Her. Slaughter is the founder of the Save the Libraries project — a nonprofit organization established to support libraries and library programming. A native of Georgia, she lives in Atlanta. Her stand-alone novel Pieces of Her is in development with Netflix, starring Toni Collette, and the Grant County and Will Trent series are in development for television.

Dawn Ius

Dawn Ius is a novelist, screenwriter, professional book coach and editor, and a communications specialist. She is the author of three young adult novels published by Simon & Schuster — Anne & Henry, Overdrive, and Lizzie. Dawn has also written 16 educational graphic novels, and was a regular contributor to the Nickolodeon Jr TV series, "Rainbow Rangers." She is the former Managing Editor of The Big Thrill, the online magazine published by the International Thriller Writers, and is currently an editor with BookTrib as well as the BookTrib BookClub Coordinator. Dawn is represented by Anne Tibbets at Donald Maass Literary Agency. Connect with her on socials @dawnmius. 

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