Thursday Murder Club

Author
Discussion

Derek Smith

Original Poster:

45,676 posts

249 months

Sunday 22nd May 2022
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I often buy books that are in the best-seller list. I infrequently agree that they are the book of the year, but it means normally I don’t buy a dud, Dan Brown notwithstanding. I avoided Osman’s Thursday Murder Club. I had the belief that he’d be like he is on Pointless, trying to impress everyone with his intelligence.

I was loaned the hardback version by a family member with the threat that they’d ask questions about it when I returned it.

To an extent, my prejudice was correct. It does seem as if he’s trying to show that he’s good at all aspects of novel writing, especially character building, and the ‘old people shouldn’t be ignored’ meme was a bit overdone. Otherwise, I thought it was very good.

I thoroughly enjoyed the who-dun-it aspect, along with getting to like the characters, even wishing I’d met them. Oddly enough, I felt a couple of them were sketches of members of my family. I loved the thought-processes of the characters. It wasn’t unputdownable, but I read it in short time.

It’s a bit Aggy Christie, complete with middle class actors populating and dominating the pages, but with the addition of character build-ups, something which I actually said I was looking for back in the day of belonging to a book group.

I’ve got the Kindle version of the sequel, so that says something.

Recommended.

TheJimi

25,001 posts

244 months

Monday 23rd May 2022
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Yep, just great fun - and nicely written too.


Ari

19,347 posts

216 months

Saturday 3rd September 2022
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I came at this slightly backwards. Looking for something to read on a long journey recently, I picked up his second book 'The Man Who Died Twice', which I thoroughly enjoyed.

So I thought I'd give this one a go, and enjoyed it, but felt it wasn't as good. The plot, in particular. I get that you need red herrings, but some of them were left unresolved.

For example (and this is probably a spoiler, but if you've not read it, maybe stop here)







Jason the boxer was firmly in the frame as his car took 30 mins to pass two speed cameras set either side of the victim's house 1/2 mile apart, at the exact time of the murder. We seemed to just gloss over what he had actually been doing.

Also, why did the eventual murderer take so long about it? It was 30 years or something from the motive being created to the murder itself?

nobby c

86 posts

207 months

Saturday 10th September 2022
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I started this book whilst on holiday recently and got to about 50 pages in and gave up. It was too slow for my taste sadly, my wife has enjoyed both these books, but not for me.

Mr Tidy

22,394 posts

128 months

Sunday 16th October 2022
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I saw my sister had one of these when I visited last Christmas so I asked her what she thought of it - she hadn't read it!

So I borrowed it and liked it. I'd rather read his books than watch him on TV. laugh

CopperBolt

805 posts

68 months

Thursday 27th October 2022
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So do you think he actually wrote them and its not a ghost writer then? Not that that really matters if you enjoy them I guess.

akirk

5,391 posts

115 months

Thursday 27th October 2022
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apparently he did write them...

I would agree that book 2 was better - I have book three here as well...
Interesting that my 13 year old nephew also enjoys them

redrabbit29

1,376 posts

134 months

Friday 2nd June 2023
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Read this on holiday and really disappointed by it. For over a year I'd nearly bought it as I was sure I'd enjoy it based on blurb and reviews.

- loads of characters who didn't add much and got confusing

- plot was too slow. So many chapters of nothing

- round the whole "quirkyness" overplayed and repeatedly played out was tiring

Reading the reviews more deeply and others had similar feelings. In fact Amazon's latest reviews are mostly quite negative.


ARFBY

444 posts

134 months

Tuesday 2nd April
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After reading these posts I'm not expecting much of a reply, but I'll ask anyway:

I quite enjoyed the first book (agree it was a slow starter)

I have the third book, "The bullet that missed". I just read a page or two, it seems like I've missed something.

Do I "need" to get the second before I continue with number three? I feel like I'm missing a bit of character development.

Thanks in advance.

TheJimi

25,001 posts

244 months

Wednesday 3rd April
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ARFBY said:
After reading these posts I'm not expecting much of a reply, but I'll ask anyway:

I quite enjoyed the first book (agree it was a slow starter)

I have the third book, "The bullet that missed". I just read a page or two, it seems like I've missed something.

Do I "need" to get the second before I continue with number three? I feel like I'm missing a bit of character development.

Thanks in advance.
There's character and backstory development throughout all three books.

Richard-390a0

2,257 posts

92 months

Wednesday 3rd April
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To quote myself from the 'what are you reading' thread a few months back - "I've just finished 'The bullet that missed', it was a birthday gift & I won't be rushing to read any of the others tbh.
400 odd pages in total. The first 70 pages nothing happens, in fact I think you could remove them from the book & lose nothing from the story. Then 300 odd pages with multiple chapters devoted to a single scene, but we seem to get a version of it from each characters viewpoint & then the last 20-30 pages / chapters seem a rush to conclude the story, again told from every characters viewpoint... This rush to conclude the story seems to make sense once you read the acknowledgements at the end of the book as he was waiting to go on holiday once he'd finished writing it."

Calza

1,994 posts

116 months

Wednesday 3rd April
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I've found the 4 of them light easy reading with some humour sprinkled in. They aren't complex thrillers but are better for it.

Perfect to wind down before sleep!

Upinflames

1,706 posts

179 months

Wednesday 3rd April
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redrabbit29 said:
Read this on holiday and really disappointed by it. For over a year I'd nearly bought it as I was sure I'd enjoy it based on blurb and reviews.

- loads of characters who didn't add much and got confusing

- plot was too slow. So many chapters of nothing

- round the whole "quirkyness" overplayed and repeatedly played out was tiring

Reading the reviews more deeply and others had similar feelings. In fact Amazon's latest reviews are mostly quite negative.
Same. Unresolved plot twists too

ARFBY

444 posts

134 months

Wednesday 3rd April
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Thanks for the replies. I think I'll hold off for now, maybe my wife buys number 2, then I'll have a read next time I have 14hrs to kill on my next trip to England.

dukeboy749r

2,640 posts

211 months

Sunday 7th April
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I’ve read all four and whilst they aren’t Agatha Christie good, they (to me, at least) were balanced, easy reading books that weren’t too cerebral.

In his latest book, ‘The Last Devil to Die’, Osman captures some really poignant examples of love and loss. Perhaps he has lost someone close to him which he has utilised in the book.

Anyway, he now has a new book due out with a crime fighting father and daughter.

Overall opinion; better than just ‘chewing gum’ (ie mindless) for the eyes, probably best defined as quaint, easy and comfortable reading.

zetec

4,468 posts

252 months

Saturday 20th April
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dukeboy749r said:
In his latest book, ‘The Last Devil to Die’, Osman captures some really poignant examples of love and loss. Perhaps he has lost someone close to him which he has utilised in the book.
.
I agree, although I didn't enjoy the 4th book as much, some of the writing about Stephen's dementia was very moving.

ninepoint2

3,308 posts

161 months

Saturday 20th April
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As has been said great light reading, I've done all four now and found them a great light weight read. The last one did seem to strike a nerve with me on Stephen's condition, maybe because I lost my mum to dementia last year. I'm guessing Richard has lost someone recently too.