She wakes to find a manuscript on her desk. She has no memory of how it arrived.Dr. Margot Sutherland is a translator living in isolation on the windswept coast of Whitby, England. When a water-damaged Romanian manuscript appears in her flat, she begins to translate it-despite having no conscious knowledge of Romanian. The text describes a woman "who translated herself into extinction." With each page she translates, her reality fractures.The manuscript contains photographs of her sleeping. Descriptions of murders in a psychiatric hospital. Architectural diagrams of rooms she's never seen but somehow recognizes. And details about her own life that no one else could possibly know. She discovers she has lost three days. Then four. Then six.As Margot races to finish the translation, she uncovers evidence of twelve missing women-all bearing an identical birthmark, all last seen at the same hospital, all seemingly connected to her. Detective Constable James Harding believes Margot holds the key to their disappearances. But the deeper he investigates, the more reality itself seems to dissolve. The manuscript is not what it appears to be.Margot begins to suspect she is not translating a confession-she is writing one. In a language she doesn't speak. About crimes she doesn't remember. And the twelve missing women may not be missing at all. Some translations destroy more than meaning.As Margot climbs toward a devastating truth, she must confront an impossible question: Can you be both the murderer and the victim? Can twelve people exist in one body? And what happens when you finish translating yourself into nothing? "A masterwork of psychological horror that will leave you questioning the nature of identity itself.""Disturbing, brilliant, and utterly unforgettable. This is what happens when language becomes a weapon.""None of It Is True is a descent into madness so meticulously crafted, you won't realize you're fragmenting along with the protagonist until it's too late." For readers who loved The Silent Patient, Shutter Island, and House of Leaves.A psychological thriller about identity, memory, and the terrifying space between languages where meaning-and self-dissolves.