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Murder Club
Murder Club
Oct 22, 2024 8:29 PM

Author:Mark Pearson

Murder Club

Detective Inspector Delaney is looking forward to spending Christmas with Kate Walker and his young daughter Siobhan, but the past always had a way of ruining Jack's best-laid plans. And this holiday season is no different!

A year previously, Delaney was responsible for the arrest of Michael Robinson, a viciously violent rapist. Robinson always claimed he was set up by the police but before he could be brought to trail he was brutally attacked in prison and left for dead. He didn't die, however, and a year later, out of hospital and fit for trial - he is pointing the finger squarely at Delaney for the assault that nearly killed him. And not only that - it looks like he has a case!

And everything is about to get a whole lot worse for the Detective Inspector when Robinson walks free from court

There are new faces at White CIty - and with them come old crimes, old bones and old scores to settle!

It seems that Delaney is not the only one in West London with a past they'll take any measures to hide. And as the body count starts to climb - it looks like Jack himself might be about to join the club.

Reviews

A very good writer ... Mark Pearson really brings to life the gritty underbelly of London

—— James Patterson

Jack Delaney is hard to forget

—— Time Out

A masterful performance from one of Britain's finest thriller writers

—— Time Out

Monumental, DeLillo at his chilling best. Concentrates on the inner life of the people who shaped the Kennedy assassination. He constructs the very human faces behind a monstrous event, creating fiction which trespasses on reality

—— Time Out

An audacious blend of fiction and fact

—— The Times

If you prefer your thrillers to be gripping not grisly, Bolton is a name to remember . . . spine-tingling tale

—— Grazia

Bolton expertly balances the gothic supernatural elements with a crackling psychological plot, leaving readers breathless until the last page

—— Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Part Wicker Man, part League of Gentlemen... Moody and creepy, with a killer twist

—— Financial Times (Books of the Year)

Spine-tingling suspense! S.J. Bolton ups the chills and thrills factor with her compelling blend of ghostly possibilities layered upon very real world crimes

—— LISA GARDNER

S J Bolton's frission-generating Blood Harvest is a satisfyingly atmospheric 500-plus pages; a clever synthesis of two sure-fire strategies: the slow burning mystery...and the dark psychological crime narrative.

—— Good Book Guide, Oct 11

Combines the expert suspense manipulation skills of a Daphne du Maurier romance with those of a John Le Carre thriller

—— The New York Times

A real page turner, full of surprises to the very end

—— Woman's Weekly

An intriguing plot, clever twists, surprise elements, believable characters and unexplained history explored... A real page-turner

—— Choice

One of Britain's finest thriller writers

—— Time Out

This guy can write.

—— James Ellroy

Neville has the talent to believably blend the tropes of the crime novel and those of a horror, in the process creating a page-turning thriller akin to a collaboration between John Connolly and Stephen King...

—— The Sunday Independent

A brilliant thriller: unbearably tense, stomach-churningly frightening.

—— The Observer

A no-frills thriller that barrels along at a ferocious pace, pausing only to offer the occasional nod to 1970s paranoid classics such as William Goldman's Marathon Man.

—— Declan Burke , Irish Times

Stuart Neville's third novel effortlessly exceeds the high expectations created by the first two installments... Stuart Neville's latest novel is a thrilling masterpiece. From its gripping and well paced plot to its well defined and intriguing characters, Stolen Souls is a powerful novel, which does not shy away from exploring the new literary landscape for Northern Irish fiction.

—— Kellie Chambers , Ulster Tatler

With echoes of The Thomas Crown Affair, spectacular storytelling and a beautifully judged super-twist, it confirms Nesbo's place at the pinnacle of thriller writers and, inevitably, a film version will be with us next year. It's that good.

—— Geoffrey Wansell , Daily Mail

Harris is a master of pace an entertainment, and The Fear Index is a thoroughly enjoyable book . . . Read the book. If I die tomorrow, blame the computer.

—— Observer

Like all Harris's books, this one is readily enjoyable as a suspense story . . . But what makes Harris's thrillers so much more rewarding than those of his rivals is that they all, whatever their ostensible subject, come out of his deep and expert interest in politics, broadly conceived - which is to say, in power, in how power is taken, held and lost; how some people are able to dominate others; how wealth and status, fear and greed, work . . .The Fear Index (which has a lot to say about the very rich - a group to which Harris himself now belongs but doesn't like) is ultimately a study in the total lack of morality of those who manipulate the markets . . . By focusing thus on a rogue algorithm and a pure scientist, Harris is not really fronting up the true authors of our current financial plight, perhaps. But, in its own carefully conceived terms, The Fear Index is certainly another winner.

—— Evening Standard

This latest nail-biter from the author of The Ghost will keep fans of suspense up all night.

—— Good Housekeeping

To crawl by bus through rush-hour traffic is not something that would normally appeal to a busy person. Unless, like me, that person was in possession of Robert Harris's new thriller The Fear Index. Then they would certainly relish the potential for escapism such a slow journey could provide and there was nowhere else I wanted to be then in that story, which delivers pure pleasure with every page.

—— The Lady

Harris is a master of pace and entertainment, and The Fear Index is a thoroughly enjoyable book . . . Read the book.

—— Observer

The Fear Index is an escapist thriller to rank with the best of them, and as a guide to what hedge funds actually do, it is surprisingly clear and instructive.

—— Economist

There are moments when this book feels so up to date it could have been written next week... spookily exciting.

—— Express

Perhaps the greatest thriller writer around, Harris has delivered his best work yet. A modern classic.

—— Irish Examiner

Mock-gothic variant on Frankenstein relates what happens when a computer programme goes rogue and ravages the money market. Suspense and satire combine in a book that is as up to the minute as a news flash.

—— Sunday Times

If you didn’t catch it in hardback, grab it now in austerity-Britain paperback. Harris’s latest bestseller is a gripping, funny and timely tale of money – losing it or, more terrifyingly here, making too much of it… A high-speed plot, deft characterisation… and Harris even manages to explain what a hedge fund is.

—— The Lady

Populist fiction at its best.

—— Spectator

I would recommend The Fear Index. The writing is as elegant as ever.

—— Lionel Barber , Financial Times

Harris writes with a deceptively languid elegance, so that the novel straddles not only the crime and sci-fi genres but also that of literary fiction. A satisfying read on a number of levels, it is strongest as a character study of a man who discovers, pace Hemingway, the true meaning of the phrase "grace under pressure".

—— Irish Times

The Fear Index is a frightening book, of course, as, with its title, it intends. Harris has an excellent sense of pace, and understands as much about fear in literature as Hoffman does in markets.

—— Telegraph

Like Frankenstein, his novel is a tale of the catastrophic consequences of galvanising inanimate matter into uncontrollable life . . . The Fear Index is both cutting edge and keenly conscious of its literary predecessors. Reworking classic texts is a large-scale literary industry these days. Harris's tongue-in-cheek flesh-creeper (whose most chilling moments are its reminders of our present financial woes) is a virtuoso specimen of it.

—— Sunday Times

Harris is a master of pace and entertainment, and The Fear Index is a thoroughly enjoyable book . . . Read the book. If I die tomorrow, blame the computer.

—— Observer

A nail-biting listen - the financial world has never seemed so thrilling - beautifully read by Phillip Franks

—— Kati Nicholl , Daily Express

There is a cool edge to Franks' voice as he tracks Alex's surging paranoia to a blockbuster climax

—— Daily Telegraph
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