If you’re into mysteries that feel like puzzles, 'The Longest Con' is a solid pick. The pacing starts slow—almost cozy—but ramps up into this intricate web of lies and red herrings. I adore how the setting (a crumbling theater) becomes its own character, with hidden passages and eerie lighting adding to the tension. The protagonist’s backstory unfolds in snippets, making every revelation hit harder.
That said, the middle drags slightly with forensic details, but stick with it; the payoff is worth it. Compared to classics like 'The Maltese Falcon,' it’s less gritty but just as smart. Perfect for rainy-day reading with a cup of tea.
'The Longest Con' hooked me with its title alone—how could I resist? It’s a love letter to heist films and Agatha Christie-style plotting, blending wit and suspense effortlessly. The dialogue crackles, especially during interrogation scenes, and the final act ties up loose ends in a way that feels satisfying but not too neat. My only gripe? The villain’s motive could’ve been fleshed out more. Still, it’s a standout in recent mystery releases. I’d slot it next to 'Knives Out' on my favorites shelf.
I picked up 'The Longest Con' on a whim after seeing it recommended in a mystery lovers' forum, and wow, did it deliver! The plot twists are so cleverly layered—just when you think you've figured it out, another curveball hits. The protagonist's dry humor kept me grinning, and the way the author plays with classic whodunit tropes feels fresh. It's not just about solving the crime; it's about the wild ride getting there.
What really stuck with me was the secondary cast. Each character has these tiny, telling details that make them feel real, like the bartender who always cleans glasses mid-conversation or the rival detective with a vendetta against paperclips. If you love mysteries that balance brains and personality, this one's a gem. I finished it in two sittings and immediately loaned my copy to a friend.
2026-03-27 15:04:11
14
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Love, Lies, and Billion-Dollar Secrets
Onyx
0
1.1K
She thought she had it all—a peaceful life, a loving relationship, and a future she could finally count on. But everything shattered the moment she discovered the truth.
He never planned to stay. He never planned to love her.
He only wanted the child.
Forced to make an impossible choice, she vanished, determined to protect the life growing inside her. For years, she lived in silence, hiding the truth, raising a secret no one could ever know.
But fate has a cruel way of circling back.
When the past resurfaces in the most unexpected way, everything she fought to protect hangs in the balance.
The lies. The love. The billion-dollar secret.
Some stories aren’t meant to stay buried.
And some truths refuse to stay hidden.
Valentina Moretti has survived by her wits, her beauty, and her lies. A conwoman with no family and no loyalties, she trusts only herself—until a scheme gone wrong puts her in the hands of Dante Romano, heir to one of the most feared crime families in New York.
Dante should have ended her. Instead, he gives her a choice: work for him… or be destroyed.
What begins as a dangerous game of control and defiance soon twists into something neither of them can resist. Dante is ruthless, magnetic, impossible to escape—and Valentina discovers that the closer she gets to him, the more she craves the very danger he embodies.
But the city is a kingdom of liars, and Valentina is about to uncover a secret buried in blood and shadows—one that will shatter everything she thought she knew about herself.
Love and betrayal collide as Dante and Valentina are drawn into a war that could destroy them both. And in a world ruled by wolves, crowns are forged not in gold… but in lies.
The rules were simple: marry Max Hult and bring us the documents.
That was the deal Mia agreed to, one year to uncover a secret buried deep within the estate of Max Hult, the reclusive billionaire who shuns the spotlight. But the deeper she gets into his world of quiet power and hidden scars, the harder it becomes to remember which side she’s on.
What began as a scam marriage soon spirals into something far more dangerous, something that could cost her not just her freedom, but her heart.
When Lila Hart’s father dies during a hospital clinical trial, she’s told it was a tragic complication.
But the records don’t match.
After breaking into the hospital archive, Lila discovers her father signed a withdrawal form days before his death — yet someone altered the date.
And the man whose signature is on the file?
Lucien Cole. Billionaire CEO. Untouchable. Dangerous.
As leaked documents ignite a media storm, Lucien claims he approved the withdrawal — and that someone forged the records to frame him.
If he’s lying, he destroyed her family.
If he’s telling the truth, someone more powerful is hiding in the shadows.
Now Lila must decide:
Expose the man she hates…
Or trust the only person who might survive the war that’s coming.
Stealing from desperate men is easy for Xania, but what happens when she steals from the wrong one? Theo, a billionaire's son who makes a name for himself, unlawfully, and Xania, whose slippery fingers dug into the wrong pocket. The duo are wrong in every way, but they can't fight the attraction they feel for each other.
Three people who are best friends from childhood end up in a deadly triangle and everyone has their scheme to break that triangle but never expected the turn of events in their lives.
Join the journey of their schemes and the result which was never expected by any of them.
----
Prathap, a 28-year-old who recently started to follow his dreams instead of the path laid before his way has been in a one-sided love with his best friend as fas as he remembers who in turn is in one-sided love with their other best friend.
He never gave up but then the day he felt everything is going to end gave a new problem which he never expected but that was the result of the schemes he plotted long back for his love.
I picked up 'The Big Con' expecting a dry business manual, but it turned out to be this wild ride through the psychology of deception—way more gripping than I anticipated! The book dives into historical cons and how they mirror modern corporate scams, which got me thinking about how often we see 'too good to be true' schemes in startups today. It’s not a step-by-step guide, but the parallels between old-school grifts and Silicon Valley 'disruption' are eerie.
What stuck with me was the analysis of trust as a vulnerability. The author frames it like a magic trick: once you know the mechanics, you spot the sleight of hand everywhere—from inflated crypto promises to those shady 'limited-time offers' in your inbox. Made me side-eye every cold call afterward! If you enjoy narratives that blend history with sharp social commentary, this’ll give you fresh lenses for boardroom BS.
I picked up 'The Big Con: The Story of the Confidence Man' on a whim after hearing a podcast mention its deep dive into the psychology of grifters. What hooked me wasn’t just the historical accounts—though those are fascinating—but how it mirrors modern scams. The book’s pacing feels like a noir film, peeling back layers of audacious cons from the 1920s to today. It’s not just about the tricks; it’s about the charisma, the vulnerability of marks, and how little human nature has changed.
What surprised me was how relatable some of the smaller cons felt. Ever gotten an email from a 'prince'? The book traces that lineage back to street hustlers. The prose is sharp, almost conversational, but packs a punch when dissecting the ethics of deception. I found myself reading passages aloud to friends, sparking debates about trust and gullibility. If you enjoy true crime or social psychology, this one’s a gem—though it might make you side-eye every too-good-to-be-deal afterward.
I picked up 'A Shameless Little Con' on a whim after seeing it recommended in a book club, and wow, it was a wild ride! The protagonist’s sharp wit and the fast-paced plot kept me hooked from the first chapter. It’s one of those stories where you’re never quite sure who’s playing whom, and the twists hit just right. The dialogue is snappy, and the morally gray characters add so much depth—it’s not often you find a con artist story that makes you root for the schemer.
That said, if you’re looking for a cozy or straightforward read, this might not be it. The tone leans into dark humor, and the stakes feel real. I loved how the author wove in themes of trust and survival without getting preachy. By the end, I was flipping pages like mad to see how it all unraveled. Definitely worth it if you enjoy clever, unpredictable narratives.
If you loved the layers of deception in 'The Longest Con,' you’ve got to check out 'The Lies of Locke Lamora' by Scott Lynch. It’s got that same deliciously intricate web of cons, but with a fantasy twist—think Renaissance-era thieves pulling off heists with flair. The dialogue crackles with wit, and the twists hit like a gut punch when you least expect it.
Another gem is 'Six of Crows' by Leigh Bardugo, where a ragtag crew plans an impossible heist in a gritty, magical underworld. The camaraderie and betrayals mirror the vibe of 'The Longest Con,' but with more knives and magic. For something darker, 'Red Rising' by Pierce Brown blends political scheming with brutal survival games—it’s like the con never ends, just escalates. I still reread these when I need that adrenaline rush of outsmarting the system.