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I Have Lied, and You Call Me a Liar Why You Ask Questions That Don’t Concern You—and Then Judge the Answers
Coles
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I Have Lied, and You Call Me a Liar Why You Ask Questions That Don’t Concern You—and Then Judge the Answers in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $8.99


By None
I Have Lied, and You Call Me a Liar Why You Ask Questions That Don’t Concern You—and Then Judge the Answers in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $8.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
What if the lie wasn't born from deception—but from pressure?
In I Have Lied, and You Call Me a Liar, Vusimzi Ishmael Faku confronts an uncomfortable truth society rarely acknowledges: not every lie is born from bad character. Sometimes lies emerge from invasive questions, unsafe conversations, entitled curiosity, and environments where honesty is punished rather than respected.
This provocative and thought-provoking book explores the hidden social pressures that push ordinary people toward dishonesty—not to manipulate, but to protect their privacy, preserve their dignity, or escape judgment.
With sharp cultural insight and unfiltered reflection, Faku challenges readers to reconsider the boundaries between curiosity and intrusion, honesty and vulnerability, silence and guilt.
This is not a defence of lying.
It is a confrontation with entitlement.
If you have ever felt pressured to explain yourself, judged for protecting your privacy, or forced into conversations that crossed personal boundaries, this book will challenge the way you think about truth, judgment, and respect.
What if the lie wasn't born from deception—but from pressure?
In I Have Lied, and You Call Me a Liar, Vusimzi Ishmael Faku confronts an uncomfortable truth society rarely acknowledges: not every lie is born from bad character. Sometimes lies emerge from invasive questions, unsafe conversations, entitled curiosity, and environments where honesty is punished rather than respected.
This provocative and thought-provoking book explores the hidden social pressures that push ordinary people toward dishonesty—not to manipulate, but to protect their privacy, preserve their dignity, or escape judgment.
With sharp cultural insight and unfiltered reflection, Faku challenges readers to reconsider the boundaries between curiosity and intrusion, honesty and vulnerability, silence and guilt.
This is not a defence of lying.
It is a confrontation with entitlement.
If you have ever felt pressured to explain yourself, judged for protecting your privacy, or forced into conversations that crossed personal boundaries, this book will challenge the way you think about truth, judgment, and respect.

















