This book can be found here.
Turton’s novel is his debut. It won
the First Novel Award at the 2018 Costa Book Awards and is a Sunday Times
bestseller; so head’s up, it won’t be bad. As an aside, before I get into the
book, in the United States it is known as ‘7 ½ deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle’.
Whether that gives anything away or not to you; I don’t know.
‘We have work to do,' he says. 'I have a puzzle which requires a
solution.'
'I think you've mistaken me for someone else,' I say. 'I'm just a
doctor.'
'You were a doctor,' he says. 'Then a butler, today a playboy,
tomorrow a banker. None of them are your real face, or your real personality.
Those were stripped from you when you entered Blackheath and they won't be
returned until you leave.'
Great quote, right? That’s why I
used it. And it will draw you in to the story you are going to want to read.
The story is about a character
called Aiden who has been told he needs to solve a murder at Blackheath House.
As simple as any crime novel? Except that at the end of each day, the day
repeats and Aiden finds himself in another guest at Blackheath House, with what
clues he has remembered. That is correct. He inhabits the bodies of guests at
Blackheath House to solve a murder.
As far as the plot goes, it can be
disorientating, but it is very solid. There is an historical setting to the
novel, which is interesting given the way the main character Aiden moves
through the novel (science-fiction-like, if you will). However, it is
well-paced, and it isn’t drenched in description. In fact, the plot is much
denser than the description, which helps the pace. This therefore makes it more
complex than an Agatha Christie novel, though the same “whodunnit” theme can be
found across. But it is a nice step up from Christie if you are used to reading
her.
In terms of character … because of
how Aiden works, and so I do not give too much away, I cannot say much about
Aiden himself. However, all the characters at Blackheath are well-developed,
different from each other and sordid. Surely that’s a Christie word, right?
Most characters have dark secrets and character traits that make them
unlikeable; so, it also makes it hard (at least for me) to really tell who did
commit the crime until the end. Yet it also adds depth to the characters, the
setting and the plot, as all these characters appear multi-layered.
This book was a very solid first
novel; and reads like it isn’t. There is crime, action, deception, science
fiction elements, mystery … it’s almost an all-rounder, making it a good
suggestion for any reader.
Links for you:
Title read-a-likes in the
Library:
Kate Atkinson
This novel has an historical setting,
is structurally complex and has a main protagonist who lives days over and over
again. It is more humourous than Turton’s and removes the mystery / crime
element from it.
Author read-a-likes in the Library:
Minette
Walters’ books
Tends to write in a similar style with stylistically complex writing,
intricate plots and a creepy tone. A lot of the items in the list (there is a
trilogy there) have historical settings; and others are more suspenseful.
Author read-a-likes in cloudLibrary:
Paula Hawkins
Hawkins tends to write in a similar style with stylistically complex
writing, intricate plots and a creepy tone.
Sophie Hannah
These were chosen as Hannah was commissioned to write new Poirot novels
in the vein of Christie (she also writes her own suspense / thrillers). These will be typical “whodunnits” with the crime and
mystery elements similar; though possibly less suspenseful, yet with historical
elements and intricate plots.
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