Author:Lawrence Osborne
Wealthy dead American. Beautiful young widow. This case has PI Philip Marlowe’s name written all over it. Is it enough to bring him back for one last adventure?
The year is 1988. The place, Baja California. Private Investigator Philip Marlowe is living out his retirement sipping margaritas and playing cards when in saunter two men dressed like undertakers with a case that has his name written all over it.
His mission is to investigate Donald Zinn – supposedly drowned off his yacht, leaving a much younger and now very rich wife. Marlowe’s speciality. But is Zinn actually alive? And are the pair living off the spoils?
'Osborne and Chandler are a perfect match' William Boyd
Discover the rest of the inimitable Philip Marlowe series – nine classic Chandler adventures, from The Big Sleep to The Long Goodbye, available now in paperback and ebook from Penguin Books.
A highly distinctive writer who quickly becomes addictive… I loved it
—— John Gray , New Statesman, **Books of the Year**Splendid
—— Mail on SundayA brilliant Raymond Chandler continuation novel with an ageing Philip Marlowe. Osborne and Chandler are a perfect match
—— William Boyd , GuardianIt's a joy to see Philip Marlowe lured back for one last job by the gleefully unsentimental Lawrence Osborne... If you like noir, pour yourself something cool and enjoy one final dark night of the soul
—— Joseph Knox, author of SirensThe decayed grandeur of the setting, the mystery of an alluring femme fatale, an old man's tussle with his conscience and his ageing body, and a healthy number of spectacular set-pieces work a subtle magic... both a convincing Marlowe and a seedily satisfying thriller
—— Andrew Holgate , Sunday TimesThis is the best Marlowe novel I have read apart from the master's own works... it's the only one I can imagine Chandler liking
—— Jake Kerridge , Daily Telegraph, **Books of the Year**Osborne succeeds brilliantly... captures the dreamlike quality of the original Marlowe novels
—— Bruce deSilva , Daily MailSuperb... Osborne's dialogue and description echo Chandler's wit and world-weariness with uncanny skill
—— Mark Sanderson , Evening StandardAn exhilarating talent...one of our finest writers
—— Francesca Angelini , Sunday TimesLawrence Osborne, an accomplished writer of fiction and nonfiction, has been asked to imagine a new case for Philip Marlow and -- have a smell from the barrel, all you gunsels and able grables -- it crackles...brisk and disarming
—— Laura Lipman , New York Times Book ReviewThe tone here is elegiac, the pace relaxed. If you’ve missed Marlowe, you’ll find this a worthy addition to the canon
—— Barry Forshaw , GuardianPhilip Marlowe is back in a seedily satisfying thriller on the US-Mexican border
—— Sunday TimesOsborne does a fine job in giving Marlowe a fresh assignment in this evocative, melancholy homage… Only to Sleep is more than a detective story. It is also a meditation on ageing and how, even in the autumn of a man’s life, he still is driven to pit his skills and courage against dangerous adversaries
—— Adam LeBor , Financial TimesOsborne's brilliant innovation is to show us Philip Marlowe as an old man in the late eighties, retired to Mexico. Marlowe's got one last job: looking for a man called Zinn
—— Mail on SundayA gripping, elegantly written crime story about age and decline… with its blend of mystery and humanity it’s exactly the sort of novel [Raymond Chandler] would have been pleased to inspire
—— Tom Williams , SpectatorObviously a lover of Chandler’s work, Osborne has written a novel of excellence, with a good, slightly chaotic plot (as, often, were Chandler’s) and some wonderful atmosphere
—— Marcel Berlins , The TimesThe most enjoyable book I’ve read in a long time… I enjoyed it more than the original… it’s Lawrence Osborne being just brilliant
—— Katie Law , Monocle Culture ShowI’m lost in admiration for what Lawrence Osborne has done here… he’s created a brilliant standalone novel… it’s a wonderful book
—— John Mitchinson , Monocle Culture ShowA new Philip Marlowe story based on Raymond Chandler's creation. Marlowe is the man I want to be, both the book character and as played by Humphrey Bogart on film. Here is Marlowe at 72... which just happens to be my age
—— Terry Deary , Daily MailA valedictory investigation, complete with sinister bad guys and a memorable femme fatale
—— John Williams , Mail on SundayOsborne has mastered Chandler’s gift for metaphor…and deepens Marlowe’s psyche as he responds to “a sad summons from the depths of his own wasted past”
—— Publishers WeeklyOsborne’s continuation of Raymond Chandler feels like the real thing
—— i[Only to Sleep] is compelling and Osborne often captures Marlowe’s voice
—— Paul Connolly , MetroOsborne gets Chandler and his version of the enduring detective, Philip Marlowe, is the best I've read... This mystery is well plotted and plays out with a twist to satisfy the readers who figure things out for themselves but still like to be surprised… if Osborne were to write another Marlowe thriller… I will be there to read it
—— NudgeI felt compelled to read on and find out what would happen next
—— GNTxReadsA timely and powerful literary thriller which makes for a thought-provoking and unsettling read
—— Hair Past a Freckle blogThought provoking and intelligent . . . I cannot recommend highly enough.
—— Amanda Duncan, My Bookish BlogspotOffers a really interesting perspective on how women are represented in life
—— VarietatsIt is insidiously unnerving in such a clever way . . . had me well and truly hooked!
—— Bookish ChatDark, unforgiving, suspenseful and thought-provoking
—— Emma's Bookish CornerCampus novel satire and the high drama of a thriller combine in a fiendishly readable interrogation of the allure of violent fiction
—— SARAH MOSS, GuardianOne of the most believable heroines I've seen on the page in a long time. The final chapters deliver the heart-in-mouth genre denouement we’ve been waiting for
—— TLS