At sixteen, Hannah Mott has learned how to be obedient.
She knows how to refuse a birthday cupcake, answer a scripture, prepare for meetings, and make herself look faithful even when fear is louder than belief. Raised inside a high-control faith where love, family, and religious control are tightly bound together, Hannah has spent her life learning how to disappear in the name of devotion.
But beneath that obedience, something is beginning to break open.
When Hannah forms a forbidden connection with Min-jun Park, a boy from school who sees her with tenderness and attention, her carefully controlled world begins to shift. What starts as secrecy becomes first love, private hope, and the dangerous possibility that her life might belong to her.
Set in Queens, Outside the Truth is a literary coming-of-age novel about faith and doubt, family loyalty, religious trauma, identity, freedom, and the cost of leaving a life that has defined you. As Hannah begins to question the rules that shaped her, she discovers that leaving is not one dramatic act of rebellion. It is a series of quiet, painful recognitions: the danger of telling the truth, the grief of loving people who cannot accept you fully, and the fear of becoming visible after years of being taught to hide.
Some girls are taught to disappear inside devotion. Hannah Mott is about to find out what it costs to be seen.
Intimate, atmospheric, and emotionally precise, Outside the Truth is a haunting novel about first love, belief, control, family conflict, and the painful work of becoming real.