Toru has started to integrate himself with the club, closing the distance between himself and his sister, Minato, but it seems that her ex, Karasuma-san, still has regrets...and decides to use the information Minato shared for his benefit? Was Karasuma-san a different person all along, or is he just now becoming an imposter? The web of love continues to unravel in volume 6.
Minato's largest and lie is finally exposed! Will this drive a wedge between her and Toru or bring them closer together? The lies both of them spread are laid bare at last. And even if Toru accepts Minato after everything she's done, what about everyone else? The truth starts to unfold in Liar x Liar volume 9.
Minato and Toru have finally come clean to not only each other, but those around them! With only the truth remaining, their family and friends come forward to support this budding couple, and as things wind down, their friends start to face their own futures after graduation as well. The heart of things is revealed in the 10th and final volume.
Mina and Toru finally end their relationship?! And Toru has finally found his special someone?! Meanwhile, Minato is looking to move out and face the future head on, all while running away from the present. The web of lies keeps weaving in volume 7.
IF YOU TELL A LIE Twenty years ago, ex-beauty queen Didi Storm worked the Vegas strip as a celebrity impersonator. Now, in death, she’s finally getting the publicity she always craved. To the police, it looks like suicide, or a stunt gone wrong. Her estranged daughter, Remmi, knows the answer isn’t so simple. Though dressed in Didi’s clothes and wig, the broken body on the sidewalk isn’t Didi . . . THERE’S NO DOUBT Remmi was fifteen when she last saw her mother. En route to meet her crush, Noah Scott, Remmi secretly witnessed Didi handing over one of her newborn twins to a strange man. Then Didi disappeared, as did Remmi’s other half-sibling. Remmi pleaded with the authorities to find them, with no success. Yet she’s always sensed that someone is watching her . . . YOU WILL DIE Noah, now running his own PI firm, resurfaces in Remmi’s life, determined to find out what happened that long-ago night. As they dig deeper, the truth about Remmi’s family begins to emerge—a story of greed and twisted lies that someone will kill again and again to keep hidden . . .
The author recounts his experiences on the lucrative Wall Street bond market of the 1980s, where young traders made millions in a very short time, in a humorous account of greed and epic folly.
This book is about one of the most baffling of all paradoxes--the famous Liar paradox. Suppose we say: "We are lying now." Then if we are lying, we are telling the truth; and if we are telling the truth we are lying. This paradox is more than an intriguing puzzle, since it involves the concept of truth. Thus any coherent theory of truth must deal with the Liar. Keith Simmons discusses the solutions proposed by medieval philosophers and offers his own solutions and in the process assesses other contemporary attempts to solve the paradox. Unlike such attempts, Simmons' "singularity" solution does not abandon classical semantics and does not appeal to the kind of hierarchical view found in Barwise's and Etchemendy's The Liar. Moreover, Simmons' solution resolves the vexing problem of semantic universality--the problem of whether there are semantic concepts beyond the expressive reach of a natural language such as English.