I couldn't get into Live Your Best Lie by Jessie Weaver. The plot sounds interesting, but the pacing is slow, and to be frank, it's boring.
The villain/protagonist is Summer Cartwright, a rich, spoiled, and evil social media influencer. Her popularity on Instagram garners a book deal. Summer decides to write a tell-all, but since she's under the age of eighteen, what exactly does she have to tell? Her family and friends' personal secrets. Even the secrets that reveal her true personality. Someone has a secret too big to be revealed and kills Summer before her book goes into publication. This sounds interesting, right?
It's not! I enjoy suspense, but I was literally on chapter 22 of 38, wondering when the reader would receive even a sliver of information regarding these secrets that could destroy the characters. Everyone in the story is in High School, so I knew it wouldn't be anything major, but the big reveal was lame.
Murder is bad, try to avoid it, but there's one secret that's worth popping Summer upside the head. It's the biggest part of the book, and Weaver sprints right by it. It's a very weird choice, but after 368 pages, I was over it.
Live Your Best Lie is not a good read, but if you're interested, try it via your local library. I'm fairly certain that this book isn't on KU.