Everybody Lies

Everybody Lies by author Stephen John Komorek is part history lesson, part science class, and part field manual on how to read people when the truth is hiding. Komorek starts with ancient trials by water and fire, moves through physiognomy, polygraphs, and the rise of forensic psychology, then lands in the modern world of intelligence work and behavioral science. The book slowly narrows from broad stories about how societies chased truth to a detailed framework he calls the Komorek Method, a structured way to baseline behavior, spot stress, and read clusters of cues instead of single “tells.” It feels like a guided tour from rituals and torture to disciplined observation, ending in a clear claim. Everybody lies, and you can learn to see it without turning into a cynic.

I found the book surprisingly grounded. Komorek’s tone is calm, almost teacher-like, even when he is talking about war zones and intelligence work. I liked that he keeps saying there is no magic trick, only patterns and probabilities, and that he warns against overconfidence and stereotypes. The structure works for me. Part I gives the long arc of history, Part II digs into emotion, microexpressions, stress, and motivation, and Part III turns all of that into a step-by-step system with baselines, stress diagnostics, and scoring. The chapters are tight, the headings are clear, and I rarely felt lost. The prose can get dense in places, with lists and terminology and clusters of technical labels. I would have loved a few more vivid stories to break things up, even if they stayed anonymized.

I appreciate how firmly the author pushes the idea that lying is normal, even adaptive, and that the goal is not to judge but to understand motive, pressure, and context. That framing felt humane and oddly comforting. I also respect how much he stresses humility, probability, and error, especially in the later chapters where he talks about the Komorek Method as a living framework that must keep evolving and should never be treated as absolute truth. At the same time, the very power of the system made me pause. This is a tool that, in the wrong hands, could easily turn into a way to “score” people and justify decisions that feel more certain than they really are. Komorek nods to that risk, but I still found myself wishing for more explicit discussion of misuse and safeguards, especially outside government work, where standards and oversight can be shaky.

I would recommend Everybody Lies to readers who like serious, methodical books and who are comfortable with some technical depth. It is a strong fit for investigators, lawyers, security and HR professionals, therapists who are curious about deception research, and anyone in leadership who sits through tough interviews or negotiations. If you want a careful, structured map of how deception works in real people under real pressure, this book hits the mark and will probably change how you watch faces, listen to answers, and think about the little ways we all bend the truth.

Pages: 429 | ASIN : B0GDXH9K4V

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on February 20, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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