Author Spotlight: Richard Osman

The British author Richard Osman burst onto the mystery book scene in 2020 with The Thursday Murder Club, the first title in what would become a bestselling series. The video production of this novel, now streaming on Netflix, was able to nab big-name stars, who are very well cast: Helen Mirren, Ben Kingsley, Celia Imrie, and Pierce Brosnan. Osman’s narrative adapts well to the screen, since it’s heavy on snappy, clever dialogue.

There are four sequels to The Thursday Murder Club novel, and throughout the series, various romances provide side interest. Osman, who is in his fifties, is somehow able to enter the minds of characters who are a generation older than he is. Be warned: you must read all the Thursday Murder Club novels in order; after the first book, Osman doesn’t provide much background to his characters. (A standalone Osman mystery, reviewed below, seems poised to develop into another series.)

How did it all start? As I noted several months ago in my review of The Thursday Murder Club, Osman sets his septuagenarian characters in a posh retirement community, Coopers Chase, in present-day England. Meeting every Thursday to discuss long-abandoned local cold cases are the four leads: a firebrand retired union organizer (Ron), a thoughtful psychiatrist (Ibrahim), a fearless ex-spy (Elizabeth), and a cautious former nurse (Joyce). Each of them is a hoot. When a contractor who has worked on the site where they live is found murdered, the Murder Club jumps into the not-at-all-cold investigation, to the chagrin of the police. The narrative starts out slowly but then rapidly picks up the pace, for a rollicking, witty murder investigation.

In the next book, The Man Who Died Twice (2021), three characters who were introduced in the first book become sort of honorary members of the Murder Club. Bogdan is a construction worker with a shady side but a heart of gold. Donna is an ambitious police constable who has figured out how clever those Coopers Chase retirees are. And Chris, Donna’s boss, is a sad-sack DCI who might finally be finding love. The plot in this novel, suitably complex, involves jewel thieves, the Mafia, Elizabeth’s ex-husband, and MI-6, the British foreign intelligence agency. There are numerous violent murders, but I wouldn’t call the book scary.

In The Bullet That Missed (2022), the Murder Club is examining a decade-old case in which a woman, Bethany Waites, was presumed dead even though her body was never found. The woman was a television journalist, so the Murder Club members find themselves angling to interview various British television personalities. (Note that author Richard Osman is himself a popular British television producer and presenter, so this is his bailiwick.) The club members also have to contend with serious threats against Elizabeth, related to her career with MI-6. Hmmm, is international money laundering somehow linked to the death of Bethany Waites?

The Last Devil To Die (2023) begins with the Murder Club grieving the death of an antiques dealer who is an old friend of Elizabeth’s husband, Stephen. This entry into the Thursday Murder Club series takes readers more deeply into Elizabeth’s marriage, even as the crew contends with powerful drug-smuggling cartels. There’s also an amusing sub-plot about online fraud aimed at the elderly. The body count surrounding the Murder Club activities is, again, quite high, but the tone of this novel remains like the previous ones: cozy, with amateur sleuths and mostly off-stage deaths. Osman doesn’t shy away from including in his story the infirmities of old age, and his treatment of a character with dementia is honest and moving.

As The Impossible Fortune (2025) opens, Joyce is planning the wedding of her only child, Joanna. At the wedding reception, the best man, Nick, confides to Elizabeth that someone has threatened to kill him. The next day, Nick disappears, and the Murder Club is off and running, to solve a mystery that goes deep into the intricacies of cryptocurrency. As usual, each member of the club has a part to play in the solution.

And now for the standalone novel from Richard Osman. We Solve Murders (2024) introduces the characters of Amy Wheeler and her father-in-law, Steve Wheeler. I wouldn’t classify this one as a cozy mystery; it’s rather a thriller that travels the globe, from Britain’s New Forest to the South Carolina coast, from Dubai to Dublin. Amy works as a bodyguard for an international private security firm. Steve is a retired cop who wants nothing more than to pet his cat and take part in a weekly quiz night at the local pub in rural Britain. But when three clients of Amy’s firm are murdered and Amy herself is attacked, she and Steve take off on whirlwind flights to get to the bottom of the crimes. The plot only works because Steve and Amy are able to fly on private jets thanks to wealthy Rosie D’Antonio, a famous author of murder mysteries, whom Amy has been assigned to protect. Rosie is an adventure-seeker, so she tags along and helps with the investigation. I guessed some of the plot, but that didn’t diminish my enjoyment of the story, since Osman’s lively dialogue again drives the narrative.

Novels about Elderly People

The Thursday Murder Club     Richard Osman     (2020)  In a posh retirement community in present-day England, four residents meet every Thursday to discuss cold cases from the local police department. When a contractor who has worked on the site where they live is found murdered, they jump into the investigation, to the chagrin of the police. The characters in this cozy mystery are almost caricatures of themselves:  the firebrand retired union organizer, the arrogant real estate developer, the brash and fearless ex-spy, the greedy builder, the cautious former nurse, the ambitious police constable, and so on. Each of them is a hoot. The narrative starts out slowly but then rapidly picks up the pace, for a rollicking, witty murder investigation. (A movie version of this novel is due out on Netflix in 2025.)

Frankie     Graham Norton     (2024)  Crusty octogenarian Frances (“Frankie”) Howe, who lives in London, has broken her ankle. Her friend Norah hires Damien, a young home-health aide (“carer” in Brit-speak), for the night shift at Frankie’s apartment. Frankie and Damien begin to bond when they learn that they both grew up in County Cork, Ireland. Gradually, Frankie tells Damien the story of her eventful life, including a restaurant career in New York City from the 1960s into the 1980s. Well, put several gay characters in NYC in the 1980s and you get a devastating inside look at the AIDS epidemic. But this novel is primarily about Frankie, whose resilience and strength help her to survive the nasty machinations of the people she encounters over the decades. Author Graham Norton has previously worked in the genres of memoir and mystery (see my review of his mystery Holding, one of my favorite books of 2018). With Frankie, Norton has ventured successfully into historical fiction, producing a sweet and sensitive novel that kept me turning the pages with anticipation.

And here are two novels about the elderly that I’ve previously reviewed and put on my “favorites” list:

Our Souls at Night     Kent Haruf     (2015)  A widow and a widower, neighbors in a small Midwestern town, carve out their own version of happiness in spite of setbacks. Readers can tuck this story away as a tutorial in how to cope with the inevitability of mortality. (The 2017 movie of the same name starred Robert Redford and Jane Fonda.) Click here for my full review.

Henry, Himself     Stewart O’Nan     (2019)  This is a quiet, introspective portrait of a year in the life of Henry Maxwell, a retired engineer who lives in Pittsburgh with his wife, Emily. The novelist is able to turn everyday events into drama that drives his narrative in a highly effective way. Click here for my full review.