Thursday, October 23, 2025

The Lies They Told

Title: The Lies They Told
Author: Ellen Marie Wiseman
Published: July 29, 2025, by Kensington
Format: Kindle, Paperback, 417 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction
Source: My thanks to Netgalley and the Publisher for the opportunity to read an advanced copy of this book.

Blurb: In rural 1930s Virginia, a young immigrant mother fights for her dignity and those she loves against America’s rising eugenics movement – when widespread support for policies of prejudice drove imprisonment and forced sterilizations based on class, race, disability, education, and country of origin – in this tragic and uplifting novel of social injustice, survival, and hope for readers of Susan Meissner, Kristin Hannah, and Christina Baker Kline.

When Lena Conti—a young, unwed mother—sees immigrant families being forcibly separated on Ellis Island, she vows not to let the officers take her two-year old daughter. But the inspection process is more rigorous than she imagined, and she is separated from her mother and teenage brother, who are labeled burdens to society, denied entry, and deported back to Germany. Now, alone but determined to give her daughter a better life after years of living in poverty and near starvation, she finds herself facing a future unlike anything she had envisioned.

Silas Wolfe, a widowed family relative, reluctantly brings Lena and her daughter to his weathered cabin in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains to care for his home and children. Though the hills around Wolfe Hollow remind Lena of her homeland, she struggles to adjust. Worse, she is stunned to learn the children in her care have been taught to hide when the sheriff comes around. As Lena meets their neighbors, she realizes the community is vibrant and tight knit, but also senses growing unease. The State of Virginia is scheming to paint them as ignorant, immoral, and backwards so they can evict them from their land, seize children from parents, and deal with those possessing “inferior genes.”

After a social worker from the Eugenics Office accuses Lena of promiscuity and feeblemindedness, her own worst fears come true. Sent to the Virginia State Colony for the Feebleminded and Epileptics, Lena face impossible choices in hopes of reuniting with her daughter—and protecting the people, and the land, she has grown to love.

My Opinion: Ellen Marie Wiseman is a new-to-me author, but if The Lies They Told is any indication of her storytelling power, she’s earned a permanent spot on my “must-read” list.

What first drew me in was the subject of eugenics, a dark and often overlooked chapter in American history. But what kept me turning the pages was the way Wiseman wove that history into a deeply human story. The pacing was tight, the characters vivid and raw, and the emotional weight? Unrelenting. I found myself needing to read it in small doses, not because it lagged, but because it hurt.

The opening hit especially hard. My own grandparent came through Ellis Island, and I had no idea of the gauntlet some immigrants faced. Reading about the so-called medical inspections, where people were poked, prodded, and interrogated in a language they didn’t understand, felt eerily reminiscent of something far more sinister. It wasn’t just about health. It was about worth. About who was deemed “fit” to enter and who was cast aside. Families were torn apart by the stroke of a pen, and the idea that someone could be labeled a burden to society by a stranger with a clipboard made my stomach turn.

This book broke me. Again and again. I couldn’t look away, and I couldn’t pretend it was just fiction. Wiseman made me feel every injustice Lena and Silas endured. Every betrayal. Every moment of despair. And when they shattered, I shattered with them.

The pain didn’t end with the final chapter. The author’s note was its own kind of gut punch. In school, we’re taught that eugenics was a Nazi horror. What we’re not taught is that the Nazis took their cues from us. That silence, that omission, is part of the lie.

The Lies They Told isn’t just a novel. It’s a reckoning. And it will stay with me for a very long time.

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