276°
Posted 20 hours ago

The Man Who Died Twice (The Thursday Murder Club Book 2)

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

With Pointless co-host and old university chum Alexander Armstrong in 2015. Photograph: Graeme Robertson/The Guardian Photographer’s assistant: Caz Dyer. Set Design: Sandy Suffield. Assistant: Lucas Aliaga-Hurt. Grooming: Pauline Simmons. Photograph: Jay Brooks/The Guardian

Whether work was going well, or his marriage was going badly, there was another issue nagging away. In his 30s he had an anagnorisis of sorts: went to therapy and was diagnosed with addictive behaviours, the most explicit around food. For years he’d suffered bouts of binge eating, “an absolute compulsion to eat, an inability to stop eating, shame afterwards and then repeat”. The pattern could continue for weeks or months. “I find myself in situations sometimes where my behaviour around food is so absurd, it makes no sense. It’s certainly not self-care.” But when a brutal killing takes place on their very doorstep, the Thursday Murder Club find themselves in the middle of their first live case. They met when she appeared on his show House of Games in summer 2020, and she moved in that October. The following year, he bought a ring and planned his proposal – which was to be in a special restaurant on the third day of a holiday in Oman. Once there, he got in an awful flap and blew the whole schedule by proposing on day one, tears all over his face. Is this an example of his inability to keep a secret? He laughs. “My heart wouldn’t let me. It was absolutely bursting.”I’d buy this more entirely if it weren’t for the faintly barbed quote Brenda gave to the Times about his writing style being “quite staccato”, which suggests she has no qualms chivvying her son. Either way, it paid off. Osman says he was probably the first from his school to go to Cambridge, where he did sociology and politics (although he still regrets not doing American studies at Leeds); his brother, “who is proper clever”, did economics at the London School of Economics. While it doesn’t have the “doomed glamour” of alcohol or drugs, he has said, the behaviour is in essence the same – although “slightly more behavioural and slightly less to do with the substance itself”, as with love or sex addiction. “But the second you go to therapy, you realise that’s just a symptom of the problem. You realise you’re just numbing whatever pain; you’re numbing the things you don’t want to think or talk about.” What also nettles are the copycat swirly font covers that have followed in the slipstream of the Murder Club’s success. “Richard Bravery created the cover – so great, so iconic. Now everyone does the same. We’re working on the next series. The two of us sitting there going, ‘We’ll show ’em. We’ll give them a different cover, a cover that makes them go: Ooooh, that’s what we need to copy now.’” I would have been a terrible spy. I’m too tall, not bright enough, and if I have a secret, I tell everybody. I cannot tell a lie

Does he remember what age he was when it started? “Oh, like 10 years old. Yeah, I wonder what the inciting incident was. And food when you’re 10 is something that you can’t control. You’re not going to become an alcoholic or a drug addict.”Richard Osman was born in 1970, the second child of David Osman and Brenda Wright. He grew up near Hayward’s Heath in West Sussex. He was born with nystagmus, an eye condition which means the world appears somewhat blurred. A building will appear like an impressionist painting, he has said, and he can’t make out the birds in the trees. Whether or not it’s a consequence, he is able to tune in to a multilayered soundscape: “If six different conversations are going on, I’ll hear every single one. So that’s a useful skill.” The Last Devil to Die is no exception. It’s a crime story, yes. But at core it’s a book about dementia and assisted dying. Where his mother lives, residents are over 75 and, “They had a big debate about it, incredibly rational, incredibly polite. Lots of disagreement, [but] everyone listening to each other. People who have been medical professionals, people who’ve been mental health professionals and people who’ve obviously lost loved ones. It’s something that you’re allowed to talk about. It’s not crazy to want to die when you’re in pain with no way of getting out of that pain. I absolutely respect the views of people for whom [assisted dying] would be an impossibility. But it’s an argument that’s not going away. We have such control over our lives, it seems weird that the final bit we have no control over. An awful lot of people would sleep easier if they knew their last few years wouldn’t be very difficult.”

Osman’s murder mysteries belong to a class of fiction known as “cosy crime” – a category that includes Agatha Christie, GK Chesterton, MC Beaton and, doubtless informed by Osman’s success, the Reverend Richard Coles’ Murder Before Evensong. It’s a genre Osman performs with unembarrassed literal-mindedness. Here is a cosy location – a luxury retirement village in a rural idyll. But what’s that, coming over the hill? Surely not – crimes! Each week, his four main characters meet to investigate unsolved murders over Victoria sponge, as fresh bodies pile up around them. They are: Elizabeth, a single-minded ex-MI6 agent; Joyce, a chatty, no-nonsense pensioner; “Red” Ron, a tattooed former union leader; and Ibrahim, a gentle, polite retired psychiatrist. They work with two local police officers, Chris and Donna, but are otherwise routinely underestimated by the criminals, secret agents and mafia bosses they meet. It’s a premise and tone borrowed most obviously from Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple series (the character belonged to her own Tuesday murder club) but also familiar from all manner of rousing British village epics, from The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry to Calendar Girls.Osman always loved crime. He grew up reading Christie and adored Patricia Highsmith, creator of Tom Ripley. He also likes the peculiar Britishness of the worlds created by Barbara Pym and Muriel Spark. It didn’t feel like a jump to write books, having written for TV. Although he has been accepted with open arms by the crime writing community, there is still a trace of the testiness he felt over an early suggestion that he is one of a slew of celebrities turned authors. “There’s certain books that come out and people are open about having a ghost. I get that people know what they’re getting and understand it’s a brand. But there’s also a group of people – Bob Mortimer is one – where we’re just writers. I’ve written my whole career, my whole life. Graham Norton has always written, Dawn French has. It is not a surprise that these people go on and write books. You’re allowed to. Also: no one is a writer. Everyone is something, then becomes a writer. You get to a certain age and think, ‘Well, I want to write a novel. I’ve got stuff in my head that I want to say.’ No one ever buys a second novel if the first one isn’t good.” Purchasing a book may earn the NS a commission from Bookshop.org, who support independent bookshops THE FIRST NOVEL IN THE RECORD-BREAKING, MILLION-COPY BESTSELLING THURSDAY MURDER CLUB SERIES BY RICHARD OSMAN Teasing, I ask how he gets on with Oliver’s mother, Jo Gideon. Osman describes himself as a lefty and she is the Tory MP for Stoke-on-Trent, a red-waller instrumental in ousting Johnson. It’s the only time Osman looks terrified. He doesn’t lie. Instead he says: “Let’s not go there. We won’t go into that.”

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment