Wally Lamb is actually a woman. She's Come Undone is secretly Oprah's biography. Elvis Presley is still alive.
These things are all lies, and not very good ones at that. We'd do well to study under Dolores Price, who becomes quite an accomplished liar over the course of the novel. She lies to her parents, to her friends (well, if she had any), therapists, teachers—pretty much everyone—in order to make it seem like her life is better than it is. Maybe it's all the TV she watches and she just wants to be Queen for a Day. Or a week. Or her whole life… Given her run, we can't say we'd blame her.
Questions About Lies and Deceit
- Why does Dolores lie? Does she learn to lie from someone else?
- Who else in the book lies? How do they react to Dolores's lies, despite being liars themselves?
- Dolores enters her relationship with Dante on false pretenses, and Dante lies to her about losing his job and having an affair. Who tells the more egregious lie? Why?
- When is Dolores actually honest? How would these situations have been different if she lied?
- How would certain situations be different if Dolores told the truth instead of lying?