To Name the Bigger Lie
A Memoir in Two Stories
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Narrado por:
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Natalie Naudus
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De:
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Sarah Viren
“Has the page-turning quality of a thriller.” —NPR
“Strange and wonderful…A book for our times.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Propulsive…mesmerizing…breathtaking.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
This unforgettable memoir traces the ramifications of a series of lies that threaten to derail the author’s life—exploring the line between fact and fiction, reality and conspiracy.
In To Name the Bigger Lie, Sarah Viren “has pulled off a magic trick of fantastic proportion” (The Washington Post), telling the story of an all-too-real investigation into her personal and professional life that she expands into a profound exploration of the nature of truth. The memoir begins as Viren is researching what she believes will be a book about her high school philosophy teacher, a charismatic instructor who taught her and her classmates to question everything—eventually, even the reality of historical atrocities. As she digs into the effects of his teachings, her life takes a turn into the fantastical when her wife, Marta, is notified that she’s being investigated for sexual misconduct at the university where they both teach.
To Name the Bigger Lie follows the investigation as it challenges everything Sarah thought she knew about truth, testimony, and the difference between the two. She knows the claims made against Marta must be lies, and as she attempts to uncover the identity of the person behind them and prove her wife’s innocence, she’s drawn back into the questions that her teacher inspired all those years ago: about the nature of truth, the value of skepticism, and the stakes we all have in getting the story right.
An incisive journey into honesty and betrayal, this memoir explores the powerful pull of dangerous conspiracy theories and the pliability of personal narratives in a world dominated by hoaxes and fakes. An “ouroboros of a book” (The New York Times) and a “bold new approach to the genre of memoir” (The Millions), To Name the Bigger Lie also unfolds like the best of psychological thrillers—made all the more riveting because it’s true.
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I felt like I was there
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Love this
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However, Ms. Viren's efforts to figure out how combine these two tales into one fell flat for me. It was never clear to me where the segments about her teacher and her high school were going, or why she looked her classmates up decades later. The second half of the book worked much better then the first, and the narrator did a fine job, but ultimately I gave up on this book.
I wanted to love this book
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Very good read
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So complex
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the questions at the heart of this book…
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It started great and then…
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A must read! a definite page turner for me!
The lengths a human is willing to go to cover up their own hole! Unbelieveable!
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The This American Life story was better than the book
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There’s no doubt that Viren is well-read and a skilled wordsmith, but this book exemplified White feminist victimhood. While the author attempts to examine power and patriarchy through philosophy, anecdotes about an anti-Semitic and homophobic teacher, and the story of false SA claims against her wife, she NEVER acknowledges her privilege and complicity in these events.
This book felt therapeutic for the author to write— in it, she explores every time she has been made to feel lesser-than, ostracized, or disrespected. I am highly empathetic to her trauma, and I am glad she was able to tell her story, BUT I do NOT think it was responsible to publish this book as it is. Unfortunately, it completely ignores the fact that she is a privileged, cis white lady who grew up wealthy, was raised by academics, went to a college prep school, felt entitled to her place in academia, and surrounded her adult self with mostly white academics. To then publish a text that positions her as a victim of a false accusation, and to go to great lengths to prove that the accusation was part of a conspiracy, furthers the idea that MANY accusations of misconduct are false. I know this wasn’t her intent, but it is the inevitable impact of this book. There is also NO POINT in this book where she genuinely depicts herself as anything other than an innocent victim. Even when she “stands up” to her teacher’s anti-semitism, it never goes beyond virtue signaling.
This one should have stayed in the drafts.
White feminist victimhood
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