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The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle

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A brilliantly original high concept murder mystery from a fantastic new talent: Gosford Park meets Inception, by way of Agatha Christie and Black Mirror.

'Somebody's going to be murdered at the ball tonight. It won't appear to be a murder and so the murderer won't be caught. Rectify that injustice and I'll show you the way out.'

It is meant to be a celebration but it ends in tragedy. As fireworks explode overhead, Evelyn Hardcastle, the young and beautiful daughter of the house, is killed.

But Evelyn will not die just once. Until Aiden 鈥� one of the guests summoned to Blackheath for the party 鈥� can solve her murder, the day will repeat itself, over and over again. Every time ending with the fateful pistol shot.

The only way to break this cycle is to identify the killer. But each time the day begins again, Aiden wakes in the body of a different guest. And someone is determined to prevent him ever escaping Blackheath...

Also titled as The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle.

505 pages, Hardcover

First published February 8, 2018

39974 people are currently reading
720078 people want to read

About the author

Stuart Turton

12books11.8kfollowers
Stuart lives in London with his amazing wife and two daughters. He drinks lots of tea.

What else?

鈥媁hen he left university he went travelling for three months and stayed away for five years. Every time his parents asked when he鈥檇 be back he told them next week, and meant it.

Stuart is not to be trusted. In the nicest possible way.

He鈥檚 got a degree in English and Philosophy, which makes him excellent at arguing and terrible at choosing degrees.

Having trained for no particular career, he has dabbled in most of them. He stocked shelves in a Darwin bookshop, taught English in Shanghai, worked for a technology magazine in London, wrote travel articles in Dubai, and now he鈥檚 a freelance journalist. None of this was planned, he just kept getting lost on his way to other places.

He likes a chat. He likes books. He likes people who write books and people who read books. He doesn鈥檛 know how to write a biography, so should probably stop before he tells you about his dreams or something. It was lovely to meet you, though.

Stuart's debut novel is called The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle in the UK and The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle in the US. They're the same book. Don't fret.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 60,186 reviews
Profile Image for Miranda Reads.
1,589 reviews165k followers
December 9, 2020
description

about:

Ten Fabulous Book Reviews and One That Will Make You Go - doesn't that belong to Miranda Reads?

Now that you know this one made the list check the video review to see the rest (and find the stolen surprise)!
The Written Review

Read this one for TCE book club!
description

If this isn鈥檛 hell, the devil is surely taking notes.
Lord and Lady Hardcastle are throwing a "party" at Blackheath, their crumbling British mansion.

This so-called-party takes place on the anniversary of their son's murder (19 years ago), includes the exact same guests as it did so many years ago.

And, during the night, trusts will be violated, truths will be exposed and above all, their daughter, Evelyn Hardcastle will be murdered.

Aidan Bishop, along with two others, are in competition to be the first to discover Evelyn Hardcastle's murderer.
Too little information and you're blind, too much and you're blinded.
Bishop relives the night of Evelyn's murder for eight days, and each day he is in a different body and has a new chance to find the murderer.
Life doesn鈥檛 always leave you a choice in how you live it.
The first day, Bishop wakes up in Dr. Sebastian Bell's body, without a clue as to where he is and what he is supposed to do.

The second day, Bishop wakes up in the butler's body...but "past-Bishop" is also inhabiting Bell's body. Which leads to a lot of confusion and surprise.

The third day, there's current-Bishop, past-Bishop and past-past-Bishop....well you get the point.

Each day Bishop adds another "character" under his belt. He gets eight bodies, and eight days, to piece together the mystery.

The two others who are in competition with Bishop are unknown to him and are also inhabiting bodies (though, unlike him, they cannot swap and every "day" their memories reset).

They are all racing to find out the murderer, because whoever can figure out this mystery is the winner.

And the winner? The winner gets to escape.
How lost do you have to be to let the devil lead you home?
This book was confusing in the best way possible.

I could barely write my summary - there's just so many layers of complexity and betrayals and everything.

So effing impressed.

I was wholly ensnared by the mystery - I hardly knew what to think or where to look - but it was such a fun and wild ride that I didn't care.

Aiden Bishop was a wonderfully fleshed-out character and Turton did a particularly excellent job with the various bodies that Bishop possessed.

In particular, I loved how each body Bishop possessed would begin to influence him. When he was Dr. Sebastian Bell, Bishop was meek, under the butler's influence Bishop became moralistic and so on.

It was fascinating to watch how that played out.

The only thing that threw me slightly was the end. The build to the climax and the ending were superb...but the actual grand reveal was a bit of a letdown.

I honestly don't know what I as expecting, just something a bit "more" - if that makes any sense...

All I know is that this is an author to watch. I cannot wait to see what Turton writes next!!
We are never more ourselves than when we think people aren鈥檛 watching.
Audiobook Comments
Rather well-read, a thoroughly enjoyable book to listen to!

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Profile Image for chai (thelibrairie on tiktok!) 鈾�.
357 reviews173k followers
December 23, 2022
This is one of the most deliciously bonkers and intensely fucked up stories that I鈥檝e ever read鈥攁nd I loved it.

Our narrator wakes up in a dripping forest, with nothing but the shade of an old unnameable fear, and the eerie sensation of being followed, an invisible gaze locked on his back. He has no recollection of who he is and no notion of how he got there. He can only remember one name: Anna.

He later learns that his name is Aiden Bishop and that he鈥檚 trapped inside a stranger鈥檚 body. A masked figure curtly informs him that he must unveil a murder disguised as to not look like one if he wants to earn his release, and he must do so by reliving the day of the murder eight times, but each morning he will wake up in the body of a different stranger. If he fails to uncover the name of the would-be murderer, he will return to the first day, memory mopped clean, and start all over again as he has apparently already done innumerable times before. Matters are made worse when Aiden realizes he isn鈥檛 the only one washed to this strange shore: two other people are also ensnarled inside this time loop, and a knife-wielding Footman is out for their blood. Quickly Aiden realizes that he, Anna, and the anonymous rivals are pieces on the game board with everything at stake. Including their lives.

鈥淗ow lost do you have to be to let the devil lead you home?鈥澨�


So. As I said: it鈥檚 bonkers, alright.

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a dazzling, mind-bending murder mystery鈥� without a murder. It鈥檚 unlike anything I鈥檝e ever read: a brilliantly balanced knife's edge of a book鈥攗nfolding gradually, with secrets unveiled as more lies are told. The whole experience of reading this book felt to me like an elaborate lie, like some made-up fantasyland I was locked in for a set number of hours a day. And like Aiden, I was constantly caught between another dead end and another lead. So many pieces of the story but how the hell do they fit together?

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle听might be focused on the story of Aiden Bishop but the stories of many others are caught up in the wheel of his, and as that wheel turns, so do these many intertwined lives and fates. The narration lingers in the memories and lives of each 鈥渉ost鈥�, dipping in and out of them like toes in a pool. The book makes you question what you know about these characters, their lives and their secrets. Everyone is unreliable, everything is questionable. Aiden鈥檚 very sense of self is threatened to be overruled by the personalities of his hosts, most of which were nasty pieces of work: more than slightly sexist, selfish, mean, manipulative, abusive, more often than not physical and moral cowards鈥攜et still compelling even when you can鈥檛 bring yourself to like them even a little bit.

In inventiveness and richness of ideas, few books in this genre can compare. I was continuously impressed by the novel鈥檚 sense of scope, the minute turnings of characters and their choices and how those ripples affect other players, by the hints strewn like breadcrumbs throughout the narrative and the puzzle pieces that were always moving around. This was genuinely brilliant and so intricately crafted and I鈥檓 still REELING from it.

The ending was simply insane, and I was left astounded into an awed slow-clap at everything the author has accomplished. When I flipped the last page, all I could do was stare at the wall and ask,听with the kind of eloquence and poise perfectly befitting the situation: "What the fuck did I just read?"
Profile Image for emma.
2,443 reviews85.4k followers
October 25, 2019
Well, yikes.

Here are the things I knew about this book before starting it:
1) Its original title (and current UK title) was The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, which, in pure coincidence, is very very similar to The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, and was therefore changed in the US. (I think this is awesome.)
2) It鈥檚 a murder mystery with quite possibly the coolest conceit of any book ever. (I think this is awesome.)
3) It鈥檚 teeming with gratuitous fat shaming. (I think this is one of the less awesome things I've ever heard in my life.)

Add to that list that the style is extremely overbearing and unyielding over the course of 480 pages (which feels like many more), and you have my list of major takeaways from this reading experience.

Let鈥檚 go in order.

NUMBER 1: TITLE THING
Well, we basically already covered this.

But it says a lot that I still think this is the most interesting thing about this book, and it has nothing to do with its contents.

NUMBER 2: PLOT THING
The idea for this book is SO COOL. Which is why it鈥檚 extra lame that I found the first 300-ish pages to be very, very boring, and also found the Big Reveal to be - while not predictable - also boring, and generally speaking was very bored by this whole thing.

Also, the fact that the conceit of this book is what it is (meaning, a guy wakes up in a different person鈥檚 body every day with the task of solving the murder of Evelyn Hardcastle) means there must be Magic involved.

Cool! Who doesn鈥檛 love magic?

Um, apparently this author, because this Magical World goes largely unexplained and then is halfheartedly told at one point but is clearly not the Main Issue.

Which is extra, extra lame.

NUMBER 3: FATPHOBIA THING
Reading this author say that he did not intend to shame fat people in this book is the stupidest, dumbest, most useless excuse for blatant hatred I鈥檝e ever heard.

It鈥檚 actually worse if the fat shaming in this book is not intended, because the idea that someone could go around subliminally thinking things as hateful as this is absurd. The way the fat character in this is written - traitless but for the fact that he is very fat, and therefore lonely and abhorrent and disgusting - is so awful. It鈥檚 to the point of being basically unreadable.

This book got better towards the end, but I still wish I had DNFed it at this point.

NUMBER 4: STYLE THING
I could tell within a couple dozen pages that this style - extremely overwrought, extremely overbearing, and extremely present for the whole book - was not going to work for me.

It never did.

Bottom line: The only cool thing about this book was the idea behind it, and everything about the execution was a major bummer.

-------------
pre-review

well, i didn't hate this as much as i expected.

what a rave review.

rtc / 2 stars

-------------

42 pages into this and already brutally sick of the style. YET ANOTHER PROMISING READING EXPERIENCE
Profile Image for Yun.
607 reviews33.4k followers
September 5, 2024
I'm always up for a good, mind-bending story, something unique and complex I can just sink my teeth into. But even though I enjoyed The 7陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, I actually found it a bit too complicated, which is something I never thought I'd say.

Evelyn Hardcastle will die at 11pm. Aiden Bishop has eight chances to relive the same day, inhabiting a different body each time, to discover who kills her. Only then will he be set free. He has many enemies working against him and also some who claim to be his allies, but who can he really trust? Such is the premise of this story, and it is an intriguing one.

There was so much I liked about this book. The plot is unique, fresh, and interesting. The writing is believable and riveting, and you can tell the author went to great lengths to keep track of everything so that he can correctly weave it all together. And the mystery itself is multi-layered; the more we discover, the more we realize is still hidden beneath the surface.

Yet, this is a case where the story's complexity is a bit too much and works against itself. It was really hard to keep track of everyone and to understand all that is going on. You really have to pay a lot of attention while reading not to feel lost. This was especially so in the first half of the book while we are getting to know all the characters.

The complexity also made revealing the solution in the end confusing, since it wasn't straightforward. Rather, more and more are added to the mystery while bits of it are solved. Even now that I have finished the book, I'm still not sure I understand everything.

I also found the implications of a sequential but also simultaneous timeline to be hard to grasp. Aiden lived sequential days in different bodies while the different bodies (with Aiden in each of them) interacted with each other simultaneously. It raises the interesting question of whether Aiden has control over his actions or is he predestined to do them because he has already observed himself doing so (from a different body). Too bad the story never satisfactorily explores this fascinating dilemma.

Still, even though the book had a few things that fell short for me, I found it entertaining nonetheless. This looks to be Turton's first book, so I look forward to seeing what he comes up with in the future.

~~~~~~~~~~~~
See also, my thoughts on:
The Last Murder at the End of the World
~~~~~~~~~~~~

鉁� Connect with me 鉁� 鉁�
Profile Image for megs_bookrack.
2,037 reviews13.4k followers
January 28, 2025
馃枻 Too little information and you're blind,
too much and you're blinded.
馃枻



The above-quoted line perfectly captures the mindfu literary puzzle that is The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle.

Let's not beat around the bush here, this book is bloody FANTASTIC!



I have never been so excited about being so confused whilst reading a book.



Turton is a Master.

This was completely original, completely out there and completely compelling. I was fully absorbed in every moment and most pleasantly CONFUSED.



There is really not much I can say about the plot without risking spoilers. I recommend going into this knowing as little as possible.

With this being said, you should be aware of the fact that it is okay to be reading it and not understanding anything that is going on.



The longer it goes, the more info you have and therefore the more confusing it can become. It's exceptional in its level of detail.

I had many theories over the course of the narrative. Some panned out, others didn't, but I never stopped guessing right up until the very end.



If you are looking for a completely unique Mystery, look no further. Stop right here! This is the book you need to read.



I cannot wait to read more from Stuart Turton. I am already fan-girling over him after one book.
I just love his ingenuity and style.



Thank you so much to the publisher, Sourcebooks Landmark, for providing me a copy to read and review.

I am blown away!!!
Profile Image for 叠别谤颈迟鈽赌锔忊湪 .
2,086 reviews15.7k followers
February 26, 2019

3.5 maybe it is just me? But never the less confusing stars馃専馃専馃専


The concept of this book was really quite brilliant... A little reminiscent of both Life After Life and Ground Hog Day.... with the added little twist of the body swapping....

Admittedly it is holiday time and I was not as focused on this book as I needed to be.... so as far as me being confused throughout the majority of this book, it could very likely just be a me problem.... I kept needing to go back and reread parts because I really got lost as to what body Aidan was in at what time..... I was also a little bit overwhelmed keeping track of all the characters and what part they played in the story, but again it could have been me!

I liked the premise, I really was intrigued by the mystery, I just was not invested enough to probably grasp the full concept.... additionally I had a huge expectation of a fabulous ending that would make all of this make complete sense to me, and that sadly did not happen for me.....

So while I found this book very clever in concept, I found it a little... ok really a lot confusing for me.... The good news is this book is not released until September, so I might give it another chance this summer when I can be a little more focused and give it the proper attention it probably deserves...

*** i鈥檇 like to thank Net Galley and the publisher for a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review ***

This was a buddy read, that left Norma, Marie Alyce, and myself baffled... truly think it was bad timing, definitely not a holiday read! But thanks ladies for making me realize I was not alone in this! 馃槝
Profile Image for Emily (Books with Emily Fox on Youtube).
627 reviews69.7k followers
March 13, 2018
(4.5) If you鈥檙e looking for a book to keep you awake at night because you NEED to finish it then this is it!

Somebody鈥檚 going to be murdered at the ball tonight. It won鈥檛 appear to be a murder so the murderer won鈥檛 be caught. Rectify that injustice and I鈥檒l show you the way out.

I loved how unique the premise was, a murder-mystery where the main character gets to relive the same day 8 times to try and solve it but every day he's in a different body.
It was also interesting to see how the different bodies/personalities affected the story and there were twists I didn鈥檛 see coming.

I was feeling a reading slump creeping in and this book fixed it so I鈥檓 rounding it up to 5 stars.

Would recommend if you鈥檙e in the mood for a mystery with a sci-fi twist to it!
Profile Image for Beverly.
946 reviews429 followers
July 10, 2019
I really can't express how much I hated this book. It felt like I was taken in, because it promises a lot up front, but it does not deliver. Too many characters, too much going back and forth between the same scenes with no clear road map made my head hurt. 512 pages of confusing gibberish later I thought there might be a stunning conclusion to wrap it all up neatly, no, that was way too much to hope for. Many of my smart 欧宝娱乐 friends did not finish this, I wish I could have been among them.
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,951 reviews57.6k followers
February 28, 2023
I need urgent extra brain cell transplantation right now! What a mind blowing- twisting- bending and also f*cking book! If it wasn鈥檛 so much captivating journey, I wouldn鈥檛 finish it! I loved it so much but I鈥檓 really tired right now. It takes too much of your energy to read it and totally worth it!
Profile Image for Regan.
479 reviews114k followers
June 9, 2023
4.5

So much fun!
Profile Image for Elle (ellexamines on TT & Substack).
1,148 reviews19.1k followers
September 24, 2020
The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a thriller following an investigation into the murder of a girl who is murdered every singe night. The main character switches bodies every day in an attempt to get different points of view. And yes, it is wild.

So the thing I鈥檝e seen praised about this book is that the plot is ridiculously complex, and it very much is. I am in awe over the tight plotting used in this book. This must have taken a very long outline and the complexity certainly makes this stand out. I think, however, that the marketing has been very focused on plot twists - I was only seriously shocked by a few twists reading this book, and I鈥檝e already forgotten what, exactly, it was. The delight in this book is not in plot twists, but in seeing the full story come together. I will say that the actual ending, though I predicted parts of it, had enough surprises that it was still delightful.

As with many adult thrillers, I struggled to connect to or care about any of the characters. The lead character is almost completely lacking in personality, which makes sense given the entire theme of him being absorbed into bodies, but doesn鈥檛 work, as we鈥檙e led to believe that he is in constant danger of becoming something awful but never given details to notice or a reason to care. There鈥檚 a way of writing a compelling character with amnesia; high motivation, people around them we care about, etc, and this book doesn鈥檛 do a great job. I was mostly, however, really disappointed by the bodies Aiden switches into: almost every person he occupies is a dislikable person. Bell is quite boring and later revealed to be terrible, Mr. Collins spends his entire day in agony, Ravencourt is terrible (and for unrelated reasons his section was my absolute least favorite of the book). That鈥檚 just the first three, and I will not be going into the rest because they get much worse.

Something I really enjoyed about this book, however, was the message - this book is very focused on realizing the changeability of people, and though I never cared about any of these characters much, I did find myself believing in and enjoying the message. I think this message is probably the most daring the book ever gets.

..So I actually considered and came very close to rating this book a four star, but I found myself forgetting it very quickly. With a thriller of this type, I usually would have kept my rating a four no matter how much I forgot.

However, the fatphobia in this book was utterly ridiculous. I found it rather disturbing to read such an absolute distate from the narrator and author for the fatness of the character he inhabits: Ravencourt is described as a 鈥減ig鈥� and a 鈥渃ow鈥� over and over, and repeatedly described as 鈥渄isgusting鈥� with seemingly no regard for his humanity. The voyeuristic imagery of fatness is, exclusively and completely, meant to disgust and shock the audience. It is the main thread of a good 20% of the book. a few quotes are stated here, and this reviewer only got to the beginning of this section, at 20%, so can I just say: it鈥檚 like, five times that many. I found this incredibly distasteful from about the third comment on, and the near-constant repetition of this rhetoric had me wanting to put the book down. I'm really wondering what the authorial intent is here, and perhaps more importantly, how the author must interact with overweight people in his own life.

I also felt that rape was used as a plot device in a way that made me somewhat uncomfortable 鈥� SPOILER: This is a huge and very common issue in literary fiction, but I also hated it and it impacted my enjoyment of this as a thriller.

So鈥� despite many good elements, I kind of just want to tell you to read The Westing Game instead. Nothing but respect for MY president.

TW: really intense fatphobia that the author really sounds like he agrees with, suicide, and rape.

鉁�Arc received from the publisher via Netgalley for an honest review.
release date: 8 September 2018
馃挏bro read with Em
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Profile Image for BernLuvsBooks .
1,018 reviews5,109 followers
August 23, 2019
Reading The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle left me MIND BLOWN!馃く What an intricately layered and amazing plot. If you haven't read this one yet, please jump into this book blindly and savor every moment. At times you will feel like you are flailing in the water, drowning in confusion. Just keep reading, treading through the chapters as you go. Grab hold of the bits that are sent your way and store them. It will all make sense in the end!

I thought I was prepared for Turton. I read carefully, giving the book my full attention. I even re-read parts to be sure I understood what I thought I was meant to understand. Still, I did not fully see where I was being led. This was an outstanding literary puzzle! It was not only an expertly crafted whodunnit, it truly ends up being so much more. 5 猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍猸愶笍 and I'd give it more if I could. I love to be challenged and surprised by a book and this one did that and then some. 馃檶馃徑

What a debut! I can not wait to see where Turton's mind takes us next. I'm there for it!

Thank you to Stuart Turton, Sourcebooks Landmark and NetGalley for an advance copy to read in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Paromjit.
3,080 reviews26k followers
January 11, 2018
Stuart Turton has written an extraordinarily original, atmospheric, intelligent and fiendishly complex novel that I really loved! At one level it masquerades as an Agatha Christie style golden age classic crime, and indeed many of the tropes present in that genre are here such as the diverse range of characters at a country house party. It is no exaggeration to say it is so much more, including the presence of time leaps, and absolutely nothing is as it seems. Prior to the murder of Evelyn Hardcastle, there was another death 19 years ago where justice was not fully served. Aiden Bishop is a guest at the party where Evelyn is murdered, he is trapped in a nightmarish Groundhog Day, destined to relive that day until he solves the crime and identifies the murderer. Each day he takes on the body of a different character at the party, with all the consequent complications that ensue, such as the differing friend circles and enemies.

Turton gives us a heavily detailed, inventive and ambitious story with beautiful, and lyrical prose. Whilst I found it compulsive reading, it is not a book for everyone, I can see many finding it frustrating. The author is to be congratulated for penning a tale, which whilst occasionally exasperating, allows the reader to exercise their little grey cells! This is a book for those who enjoy being taken out of their comfort zone, enjoy intriguing puzzles and have a penchant for the curious and the strange. A brilliant and twisted read that is never less than enthralling. Many thanks to Bloomsbury for an ARC.
Profile Image for jessica.
2,637 reviews46.9k followers
December 15, 2018
wow. this book is wild! i swear, i spent the majority of the story whispering 鈥榳hat the heck is going on???鈥� to myself over and over. i still dont even think i know what i just read, i just know i really enjoyed it.

this is a 鈥榳hodunnit鈥� unlike anything i have read before. mainly because of how ambitious it is. there are so many characters, each with their own role and secrets, which creates multiple plot layers and forces different outcomes for various events, all while a murder is trying to be solved! not to mention this story isnt told in chronological order. each 鈥榟ost鈥� wakes up at a different point during the same day, with one man reliving that day eight times. its enough to get anyone confused! but the overwhelming amount of content is what makes this story so exciting! there is just so much to grab onto to that the reader is never left empty-handed.

additionally, i love the writing. the story feels like the words of someone who has written their entire life (can we take a moment to appreciate that this is a debut?!?). not because its distinctly flashy or clever. if anything, its a very subtle kind of writing style. but its also the writing style of someone who is confident in their ability, and that kind of tone works so well this particular story and genre.

i will admit, because this story asks so much by requiring the reader to steadily keep up with everything that is going on (and trust me, theres a lot), you definitely have to be in the right mood/mindset to read this and willing to make the commitment to see this to the end. so if you are looking for a thrilling murder mystery that will constantly keep you on your toes, then this book is exactly what you need!

鈫� 4.5 stars
Profile Image for Charlotte May.
824 reviews1,283 followers
April 16, 2020
Well this is awkward.

Ok so please don鈥檛 @ me, I really wanted to like this. I鈥檒l take part blame - I didn鈥檛 realise the time travel element was quite so heavy, if I had then I鈥檇 probably have skipped it. Too much moving between characters at different parts of the day leaving each other notes and I鈥檓 sat here like what?

There are way too many characters. Even with the list in the beginning, it went straight past enjoyment to just hard work.

The big twist at the end wasn鈥檛 even much cop. It might be because I鈥檝e seen the Black Mirror episode that is similar in that respect so I was like oh that again. Ok.

When we do get the reveal I wanted more info.

The whole thing made me tired 馃槕

The 2 stars are for the beginning, it was quite gripping.

****




Why does the British copy have 7 deaths but the US version has 7 1/2.

Where is the extra half death?!
Profile Image for Melissa 鈾� Dog/Wolf Lover 鈾� Martin.
3,624 reviews11.4k followers
March 15, 2019
Holy crap on a cracker! First chapter and I鈥檓 in crazy town!



Well. That went downhill fast! I鈥檓 totally in the minority here! I usually love this kind of strange book. But I had to slog through this book. Seriously, I need to start dnfing because time is precious!

Sigh!! I鈥檓 happy for almost ALL of my friends that loved this!!



Mel 馃枻馃惗馃惡馃惥
Profile Image for Virginia Ronan 鈾� Herondale 鈾�.
625 reviews35.2k followers
June 12, 2023
鈥滺ow lost do you have to be to let the devil lead you home?鈥�

The answer is VERY! Considering that our MC has no memories and wakes up in a totally foreign body this doesn鈥檛 really come as a surprise though. I guess we鈥檇 all be scared if we鈥檇 experience something like that. I mean at first Aiden doesn鈥檛 even know his own name, all he knows is a name that dropped from his lips before he witnessed a murder. What a way to start your day! And this is just the first one.

8 days.
8 different hosts.
A huge manor.
A murder.
A violent footman.
A mysterious Plague Doctor.
Several rivals.
And innumerable intrigues and lies that entwine around Blackheath like ivy.

鈥漈he future isn鈥檛 a warning my friend, it鈥檚 a promise, and it won鈥檛 be broken by us.鈥�

Who can you trust?
Who is telling the truth?
Who is lying?
Who is desperate enough to cut your throat in your sleep?

鈥滻f this isn鈥檛 hell, the devil is surely taking notes.鈥�

I LOVED this so much! <3 鈥淭he Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥� was some sort of 鈥淕roundhog Day鈥� meets 鈥淓very Day鈥� and 鈥淪herlock Holmes鈥�. There were so many different characters in this book and each and every single one of them had their own agenda. To collect all those hints and breadcrumbs, to keep track of the happenings, to know the right order of things, it was quite a challenge! And boy, do I love myself a decent challenge. *lol* In other words: I had so much fun trying to figure out things! There were times my brain cells ended up twisted like a pretzel but this only made everything even more intriguing! XD I already said it in my pre-review and I鈥檒l say it again: I don鈥檛 even want to know how many hours Turton invested in all those plot lines! It must have taken ages! Also the mysterious Plague Doctor and the character of the footman added quite some thrill to the story. Aiden isn鈥檛 just hunting for the killer but he鈥檚 also hunted by the footman and this gave the story such an urgent vibe that I found myself at the edge of my seat!

鈥滶verywhere I go, he seems to be a step ahead of me. And yet, simply winning isn鈥檛 enough. He needs me to know it. He needs me to be afraid. For some reason, he needs me to suffer.鈥�

All told, I loved the atmosphere of Blackheath, the countless mysteries that floated around in the air like a seemingly impenetrable wall of mist. Easy lies falling like ripe apples from the lips of corrupted souls, truths that vanished like smoke if you scrutinized them too closely, lies within lies and deceptions that could have filled the entire mansion with their presence. In short: This was brilliant!

I won鈥檛 say more! This is a book you just need to experience for yourself and it鈥檚 definitely worth it!
READ IT!! You won鈥檛 regret it! ;-)

For every one of you who followed my updates closely: I managed to solve at least 2 陆 of the main puzzles and I鈥檓 going to share it in the spoiler tag! XD



___________________________________

I absolutely loved this!!! <3
Like seriously, it was so much fun to collect all those puzzle pieces and breadcrumbs!
This book made me think so much and I just loved it for twisting my mind! *lol*
Also at least 2 陆 of my main theories were confirmed, which makes me a happy camper! =))

Full review to come soon! Stay tuned! ;-)

P.S: I don't even want to know how many hours Turton invested in all those plot lines. XD
_______________________________

This is going to be my first Halloween read of 2020 and I hope it鈥檚 going to be a good one!
Technically 鈥淭he Language of Thorns鈥� turned out to be a perfect Halloween book too but this is the first one I actually chose for the spooky time of the year. XD

I really like the idea of 鈥淭he Seven 陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥� and I鈥檓 curious to find out if it鈥檚 done well. Just imagine waking up in the body of the murderer one day. O_o
But then again the murderer doesn鈥檛 want Aiden to find out so this is going to be fun. ;-P

Also can anyone explain to me why it鈥檚 sometimes 鈥淭he Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥� and then it鈥檚 鈥淭he Seven 陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥�?! I鈥檇 really love to know why they changed it.
As it seems the title alone is already a mystery. *lol*
Profile Image for karen.
4,012 reviews172k followers
June 19, 2019
fulfilling my 2019 goal to read (at least) one book each month that i bought in hardcover and put off reading long enough that it is now in paperback.

"Funny how things repeat, isn鈥檛 it?"

i have read a lot of books, but i have never read anything like this.

that鈥檚 one of those glib clich茅s; the book-blurb equivalent of picking a tattoo from the wall, but in this case, it鈥檚 the absolute truth. it鈥檚 a baller of a debut鈥攁n intricately plotted and wholly satisfying mix of sci-fi and mystery; their different-but-complementary flavors as unexpectedly addictive as m&ms in popcorn.

any attempt to summarize this book will probably make me sound bonkers, but if you want a touchpoint-parade, it鈥檚 basically quantum leap meets groundhog day meets meets downton abbey meets memento with more twists than鈥� something really twisty. so twisty.



and this is why no one invites me to pitch meetings.

i鈥檓 glad i *finally* got around to reading this鈥攊 enjoyed trying to keep track of all of the layers of paths and people and timelines; attempting to winnow out the book's secrets before their various reveals, squeaking every time that creepy footman made an appearance, and loving the fact that pretty much every body our poor narrator found himself in was a different kind of terrible.

"How splendid it is to be a gentleman."

this is another book that, if a graphic novel version of it were to become available, OH OR A CHOOSE-YOUR-OWN-ADVENTURE (GRAPHIC) NOVEL, i would be very keen on reading it.

if there鈥檚 ever a pitch meeting to make this happen, feel free to invite me to it. i will supply the snacks and similes. and sibilants.

see you soon, rabbits...



Profile Image for Tadiana 鉁㎞ight Owl鈽�.
1,880 reviews23.2k followers
October 16, 2019
I just finished my September 2019 reread for my IRL book club, and I am still in love with this book! Also, I just came up with a completely different theory on what the 鈥�7 1/2 deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥� REALLY means, and I鈥檓 so curious to know if I鈥檓 right. It鈥檚 horribly spoilery, and it鈥檚 behind spoiler tags at the end of this review.

All the stars! Review first posted on .

Debut author Stuart Turton鈥檚 The 7陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, originally published earlier this year in Great Britain as The 7 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, is an intricately plotted murder mystery, set in an isolated early 20th century English mansion, with a highly imaginative speculative element that is only gradually revealed, as our main character tries to figure out who he really is, and how to solve the mystery of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥檚 pending death 鈥� or has her death already occurred?

**I've avoided spoilers BUT I do discuss a part of the basic concept of the book in this review, some of the things that are disclosed around the 12-15% mark, not to mention in the book's blurb. There's definitely something to be said, though, for going into this book completely cold, like I did. If you're interested in doing that, stop reading this review, don't look at anyone else's, and just go read this book! It's worth your time!**

The plot and setting are worthy of Agatha Christie: Lord and Lady Hardcastle have invited a number of guests to their British country mansion, Blackheath House, for a weekend party to celebrate the return of their daughter, Evelyn, from Paris. (The notable guests and household staff are conveniently listed in a copy of the party invitation at the beginning of the book.) One of the guests, Dr. Sebastian Bell, suddenly comes to himself while running through the forest surrounding Blackheath. The name 鈥淎nna鈥� was on his lips, but he has no idea who Anna is or who he himself is. His memory is completely blank. Bell is horrified to see a man chasing a woman through the forest, and then a scream and a pistol shot.

Eventually Bell, with a little mysterious help, makes his way back to the mansion, where he tries to convince the other guests to search for the woman he is certain was murdered in the forest. But nobody at Blackheath knows (or in any case admits to knowing) a woman named Anna, and they鈥檙e dubious about Bell鈥檚 improbably story, particularly in light of his amnesia. Bell meets several of the other guests, including Evelyn Hardcastle, a blonde woman in her late twenties who quickly strikes up a friendship with him (鈥淚 loathe getting to know people, so whenever I meet somebody I like, I just assume a friendship immediately. It saves a great deal of time in the long run.鈥�) In the late evening Bell sees something that frightens him so much he faints. He wakes up in another person鈥檚 body 鈥� the butler, Mr. Collins 鈥� in the morning of the same day that he just lived through as Sebastian Bell. His day as Collins is even more hellish than it was the first time around. And then he wakes up again, early in the morning of that same day, in another person鈥檚 body. Is there a way out of this nightmare?

I went into The 7陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle without knowing anything about its plot; I had conveniently forgotten the blurb by the time I began reading the book. Normally I hate not having context in a novel, and being confused about what the book I鈥檓 reading is generally about. But in this case going in blind was highly appropriate, because our main character (who does find out his real name eventually) initially has no idea who he actually is or what is going on around him. The light sheds very gradually, but it all comes together in the end with an awesome set of twists and turns that Dame Christie herself certainly would have admired. Characters often aren鈥檛 who they seem, and events that seemed to signify one thing frequently turn out to have an entirely different meaning.

The plot of The 7陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is so layered, with a tremendously tight timeline and so many interwoven elements and characters, that I can鈥檛 help but picture Turton writing this novel in a room filled with vast numbers of Post-it notes and crisscrossing strings tying everything together, like in the old Heroes TV show.

description

(Turton has, in fact, stated that he used a massive spreadsheet, a notepad for each character, and a map of the setting 鈥� as well as the aforementioned Post-it notes 鈥� in the process of writing this book.) The speculative element is fascinating, if slightly far-fetched, but undeniably creative. When the main character realizes that the personalities of his host bodies are leaking through, affecting his thoughts and reactions, it deepens the plot.

On top of this, Turton adds insightful writing that鈥檚 a pleasure to read. I highlighted some sixty passages in the book; some of them were to help me keep track of the plot and characters, but others were simply for the beauty of Turton鈥檚 writing.
She鈥檚 trying to anchor me with words 鈥� but I鈥檓 impervious to reason, consumed by my hatred for the man I was. His flaws I could accept, perhaps even overcome, but this is a betrayal. He made his mistakes and fled, leaving me holding the tatters of his scorched life.
Turton also adds symbolism to The 7陆 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, including the decaying mansion, Blackheath, which echoes the failings and degeneracies of the upper class characters who are the guests at this dubious house party. A chess piece appears and reappears. A person in the costume of a plague doctor shares information with our main character about his situation and his mission.

This compelling murder mystery, wrapped in a soft science fiction enigma, is a truly impressive debut novel. Its combination of classic British mystery, Groundhog Day and Quantum Leap blew my mind! I enthusiastically recommend it, and I seriously can鈥檛 wait to see what Stuart Turton comes up with next.

ETA: So here鈥檚 my theory about the book鈥檚 title. DO NOT open this spoiler unless you鈥檝e read the book.
December 17, 2022
鈥楽even Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle鈥� and seven and half reasons to love this book making it a 5-star read overall. First a short summary of the plot.

The Plot

Evelyn Hardcastle will die every night until her killer is identified. Aiden's challenge is that he has only eight attempts to succeed in solving the riddle, or the mission is handed to someone else. To further complicate matters, Aiden will wake up every morning in the body of a different guest, every day something changes, every day new evidence, and every day new stories and secrets are revealed. However, the killer is one of them but many have motive and opportunity. So who is going to kill Evelyn Hardcastle?

Now 7陆 Reasons to love this book

1. A unique and exceptionally imaginative story and a definite must if you love crime / thrillers but want something different.

2. An intelligent and complex plot, that provides the thrill and suspense from start to finish that will keep the reader totally absorbed and guessing. A real page turner.

3. The reader can relax and enjoy the story and outcome. Alternatively, for puzzle lovers like me, you are invited to play your part and engage with this mind bender to solve the riddle, as the new, repetitive, and less obvious clues, are offered each day. Forget your sudoku or crosswords, this puzzle surpasses the lot and was the standout in the book. A brilliant mind bender. However, keep track of the days because I found myself having to go back until I worked out the structure of the book.

4. I do love a book that is multi-layered, with lots of side stories that come together over the course of the story.

5. Despite the time loop, the story never felt repetitive. I am not into time travel so much or 鈥楪roundhog Day鈥�, but this was a much better version of this concept.

6. The writing style was perfect. Short and sharp which is just what鈥檚 needed because there was so much to keep track off with new clues presented each day.

7. The book was also appropriately themed with greed, love, lust, betrayal, alcoholism, infidelity playing into the plot and the characters. Perfect and relevant and finally 鈥榯he half鈥� goes for the characterisation

7.5 We were presented with such a huge array of interesting but unlikeable characters. However, although they all added to the story, I never felt any deep connection to any of the characters. Hence the 7陆 reasons

Highly recommended if you like crime / thriller and whodunnit novels with a twist, especially if you love mind benders and puzzles. Superb, ingenious, and intelligent but takes effort from the reader.
Profile Image for TheBookSmugglers.
669 reviews1,942 followers
August 26, 2018
about 30% into this and I am super uncomfortable with the amount of fat shaming going on for a quite a few chapters now. I am FLABBERGASTED at so many rave reviews that don't even mention this? wtf?
Profile Image for Norma ~ The Sisters.
680 reviews13.9k followers
April 13, 2025
3.5 stars 馃専

I have no idea how I actually feel about this one!

This was probably one of the most confusing and complex novels that I have ever read. I actually quite enjoyed the premise of this story as it definitely was quite clever and really made me think but in the end I was a little disappointed with the 鈥渨hat just happened?鈥� ending which left me feeling a little unsatisfied. I felt a little bit cheated as I was so hoping the ending would have been just as complex and clever as the rest of the novel but for me it just seemed a little too easy.

This was a Traveling Sisters Read that I read along with Berit and Marialyce. We all ended up having pretty much the same thoughts and conclusions upon finishing this book.

Thank you so much to Edelweiss, Stuart Turton and Sourcebooks Landmark for the opportunity to read an advanced copy of this book in exchange for a review.
Profile Image for Sara.
66 reviews38 followers
November 20, 2018
Please let me give you a piece of advice before you start this. Take notes while reading!! Notes about everything and everyone! And focus hard!

A lot of people loved this book, so I thought I was going to be one of them, because the story sounds intriguing. A woman was murdered and Aiden has 8 days to find the killer. But everyday he wakes up, he is in a different body. I got lost so so many times! Too many people involved, I couldn't even count. So many people, questions, plots, I lost track of everything. It was hard for me to immerse in the story. At some point I stopped caring about any of the characters and story itself, I just wanted to know who is the killer. I did not like the way story was told and the thing with hosts was just too confusing for me. At the beginning I tried to connect the dots and that just kept me from actually enjoying the story. I have a feeling author didn't think the story was complicated enough so he just kept adding more twists and the last few chapters were just ridiculous. I'm so glad this is over.
Profile Image for Holly  B .
931 reviews2,703 followers
November 21, 2018
Get ready for the most unusual, overwhelmingly impressive journey through this puzzle land of听 "Murder at the Masquerade Ball".听

You won't need a ticket to get in, just get a copy of the book (the hard copy so you can enjoy the map of Blackheath, a cozy and quiet place to read (you won't want any distractions), time to ponder all the twists that are going to keep your brain busy!!

I loved it, but needed to pace myself and take my time to enjoy all the twisty turns that the narrator, Aiden Bishop, threw at me during his attempts to stop a murder that has already taken place!

So many times while reading this one, I would have to听just pause听and smile at the action that was taking place because I was just so amused!!

It was so atmospheric and the different players were all very intriguing and kept popping up throughout the story.听 Some favorites were the footman, Anna, Evelyn, and the Plague Doctor!

I enjoyed my time at Blackheath House and this totally unique reading experience.听 I would recommend if you enjoy complex layered mysteries with a large cast of witty characters. It is a book that had me pausing, thinking, and re-reading passages (all the while with a smile :0)


I borrowed this book from my library, listened on Hoopla (some chapters), and ended up buying the kindle version half-way through.
Profile Image for Felice Laverne.
Author听1 book3,342 followers
February 12, 2020
4.5 stars!

Whew, what a ride! Stuart Turton鈥檚 debut novel is the kind of debut we all yearn for: explosive, energetic, engaging and truly something fresh and new on the scene. The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a brilliant, high-concept murder mystery that had the cogs in my mind turning from the very start (imagine waking up in the forest with no memory of who you are and immediately seeing a young woman murdered!). This, in fact, was the first mystery narrative in a very long time that has made me feel like I was part of the story鈥攊mmersed in the environment鈥攁nd the first that pulled me in to such a degree that I felt compelled to actively try to unravel the whodunnit mystery right along with the characters.

Whodunnit and why!

Turton鈥檚 atmospheric world is so moody and immersive you鈥檒l feel you should be smoking a pipe with a monocle as you devour it. It was so deliciously wrapped in a sort of British noir, complete with the 鈥減arty at a country estate鈥� of so many classic murder mysteries. Described by its publisher as 鈥淕osford Park meets Inception by way of Agatha Christie鈥檚 Murder on the Orient Express,鈥� this book lived up to the hype and description in a big way!

Aiden Bishop is destined to relive the same day over and over again, in eight different bodies, until he can solve the murder of Evelyn Hardcastle. If he does not succeed at the end of that time, the loop restarts and he loses all of his memories of the previous loop, forcing him to start over from scratch with even the basics 鈥� who am I? What am I doing here? He realizes that he is both the hunted and the hunter, an innocent and a deceiver, in this highbrow whodunnit.

Until now, I鈥檇 only witnessed my fellow guests in their handfuls, their spite spread thin across the house. To be ensnared among them all, as I am now, is something else entirely, and the further I descend into the uproar, the thicker their malice seems to become. Most of the men look to have spent the afternoon soaking in their cups and are staggering instead of dancing, snarling and starting, their conduct savage. Young women throw their heads back and laugh, their makeup running and hair coming loose as they鈥檙e passed from body to body, goading a small group of wives who鈥檝e grouped together for safety, wary of these panting, wild-eyed creatures. Nothing like a mask to reveal somebody鈥檚 true nature鈥ll of this is wrong. The celebration is too desperate. This is the last party before Gomorrah fell鈥�

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle was both intelligent and intellectual, well-paced and deserving of all 500 pages it took up. In a lot of ways, The Seven Deaths was unlike any novel I鈥檝e read before. Skillfully woven together, it was the ultimate literary puzzle. The plot was complex in a baroque but fascinating sort of way, and all the threads Turton spun came together in the end鈥攏o stone left unturned, no end left loose. With so many plots converging at once, that was quite the high feat to pull off, but you鈥檒l find it done here superbly in this debut novel. Stuart Turton offers veritable craft in the intricacy of his plotting, a kind of craft that I rarely see anymore. The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a mind-bender complete with time leaps and multiple murders seen from multiple angles all on this same day that keeps repeating itself over and over again.

The prose was lyrical鈥攈onestly, leaning toward flowery鈥攂ut it is the intricacy of the plot and the atmosphere surrounding these characters that Turton allows to really shine here. Yes, there were moments when this novel graced the line between intricacy and confusion, but it all unraveled splendidly in the end. It was a puzzle of a read; there were moments when the pieces wouldn鈥檛 fit and you鈥檇 have to scrap it all and start over. For some, that may present as a frustrating experience, but this novel is a real treat to those who love mindbenders, murder mysteries, puzzles and logic games. If that鈥檚 you, I highly recommend this novel! Also, if the 鈥淕osford Park/Inception/Agatha Christie" description got your heart racing, then this is the read for you! The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle grabbed me and held me from the very start, probably the most veritable page turner I鈥檝e encountered so far this year, and that鈥檚 no easy feat. For such high praise and phenomenal plotting, I give Turton鈥檚 debut novel a very strong 4.5 stars. ****

*I received an advance-read copy of the book from the publisher, Sourcebooks Landmark, via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

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Profile Image for Kylie D.
464 reviews594 followers
September 23, 2019
I really don't know how to write a review for this book. Not because I didn't like it, it was fantastic, but because the plot is so intricate and woven I don't want to give anything away. So let's just say it's the story of Aiden, who wakes with no memory at all, just the word 'Anna' on his lips. He finds he's in the middle of a forest, and then manages to stumble across a murder taking place. Aiden is then destined to relive the same day over and over again, until he can solve the murder of Evelyn Hardcastle.

Stuart Turton has done a great job here in his debut novel. As I said the plot is very intricate, but it's never convoluted or confusing, though it may be if you read it over several sittings. My advice is to settle down and read it in a day or two, a big ask I know at over 500 pages, but it would definitely be worth it, just to keep things sharp in your mind. Having said that I found 'The Seven Deaths Of Evelyn Hardcastle' to be one of my best and most rewarding reads this year. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Petrik.
764 reviews58.7k followers
June 5, 2018
3.5/5 stars

The less you know about this mystery thriller book, the better your experience will be.


First of all, take that rating rounding up or down with a grain of salt, this is a 3.5 stars book for me. As for the review, I honestly have no idea how to review this book, not only mystery/thriller is not my usual read or books that I review, I genuinely think that anything I say can be considered a spoiler for a book like this. I鈥檒l keep this review brief, try to go into this one as blind as possible like I did, it will enrich your experience. I鈥檓 going to mention parts that work and didn鈥檛 work for me as spoiler-free as possible in the next two paragraphs but feel free to skip reading them if you鈥檙e already interested in this book.

Let鈥檚 start with the parts that work first. This is a debut and it鈥檚 a very smart book, consisting of a well-structured storyline with everything coming together in the last 20% of the book. The execution of the conclusion was superbly done and unpredictable. Just when you thought you had everything figured out, Turton keeps you surprised and engaged with revelations. It鈥檚 a slow burn but very engaging, I finished this book two days due to how unputdownable it was. I also think the side characters were well developed, especially considering the storytelling method. Prose-wise, this doesn鈥檛 feel like a debut at all, Turton鈥檚 prose is beautiful, sometimes it felt like reading a literature book.

鈥淗ow lost do you have to be to let the devil lead you home?鈥�


For the parts that didn鈥檛 work, I think the main character鈥檚 background should鈥檝e come sooner in the story. It was too late for me to really care about his predicament, I have no idea if this is the usual case with mystery/thriller books though. I mostly enjoyed reading the way the story unfolds but It could've been a better experience if I cared more about the main character. Also, one of the decisions made by the main character near the end of the book need more exposition, it didn鈥檛 make sense and didn't sit well with me no matter how I look at it. Lastly, the book went on for a bit too long; there was one part in the middle section, specifically Day 6 chapters, where I was super bored and fell asleep.

That鈥檚 all. Believe me, this is shorter than my usual reviews and it鈥檚 for many good reasons. Bottom line is that if you鈥檙e a fan of mystery/thriller book, you really should give this debut a try.

You can find and the rest of my Adult Epic/High Fantasy & Sci-Fi reviews at
Profile Image for Anne.
4,611 reviews70.7k followers
March 4, 2025
2.5 stars

I like the ambition of the story.
However, it felt oddly draggy in the beginning, and the ending fell completely apart into some weird I don't even know what.



You've got a guy who wakes up with amnesia, discovers that he's not who he thinks he is, watches the first day play out in a haze, meets some freaky dude in a plague doctor's costume who gives him this weird spiel about how he has X amount of time to solve a murder and escape, and then wakes up in a different body of another houseguest and it starts all over again.
All of that? <--it sounds SO COOL.

description

And it is cool, up to a point. The idea is what kept me interested. Turns out the murder is secondary to getting free of the 'curse', so it doesn't really matter. And I never could figure out if the murder was really solved or if that was just some sort of best guess because...how the fuck could you know whether or not you solved the murder?
Needless to say, I found the ending very unsatisfying, but so many of my friends absolutely loved this that I think you should take my opinion with a grain of salt.
Profile Image for Andrew Smith.
1,211 reviews953 followers
April 3, 2023
I鈥檒l start by saying that this is unlike any other book I鈥檝e read. I鈥檓 not even sure I can categorise it, as the normal genres just won鈥檛 do it justice. If I said crime fiction then it would really only touch the surface. There鈥檚 certainly a strong element of whodunnit about this novel, but it鈥檚 delivered with a very large helping of something else 鈥� something I鈥檓 not willing to delve into here for fear of ruining the experience for future readers.

The crime fiction element is broken down and then stitched together in a fiendishly clever way. There鈥檚 an Agatha Christie style cast and, at heart, you could certainly say that it is an old fashioned murder mystery. The setting too 鈥� that of a country estate, now in a significant state of disrepair 鈥� could certainly fit one of Christie鈥檚 novels. But that鈥檚 pretty much where the similarities end. This tale is a deconstruction of a crime fiction novel, it鈥檚 mind bending and it鈥檚 amazing and it鈥檚 delivered with terrific aplomb.

After spending less than an hour with this book I was spellbound. The only thing that stopped me devouring the whole thing in one sitting was the fact that a good deal of detail is laid down in a short space of time and I needed a little time to assimilate it all (note: I tend to struggle to keep up with any book that has more than five main characters). But soon I鈥檇 gotten my head around how this story was to play out 鈥� but certainly not where it was eventually going to take me. And by then the cast of characters had become old friends.

It鈥檚 a fully satisfying twist on a murder mystery and I absolutely loved it. I鈥檓 full of admiration for the level of imagination needed to put this book together and to keep track of the many twists and turns. In some ways it reminds me of Audrey Niffenegger鈥檚 The Time Traveler's Wife in that it鈥檚 a one-off way of telling a story that just nails it. I believe both books would benefit from a second reading, if for no other reason than to admire, again, the skill of the author and to spot all the little tricks, links and clues missed the first time around.

A wonderful first novel from this stunningly gifted writer. My sincere thanks to Sourcebooks Landmark and NetGalley for providing a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
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