Well known for his long-running series The Thursday Murder Club, We Solve Murders is the first entry in a new series featuring completely new characters, stories and themes. Despite the fresh start, in many ways We Solve Murders is quite similar in tone and style to The Thursday Murder Club as a light-hearted cozy murder mystery novel filled with subtle cheeky humor. I haven’t read the subsequent books in The Thursday Murder Club series to compare to, but We Solve Murders feels like a more polished, refined, and focused novel that has a clearer direction for the kind of reading experience its trying to do. Unlike his past novels that were firmly in the cozy mystery territory, We Solve Murders crosses over into the thriller genre (on paper anyway) with elements of spies, mobs, hitmen, fraud, etc. That being said, I personally found We Solve Murders to be a bit overwritten and slow at times, and the characters/focal mystery felt a little underwhelming and too cozy for my personal taste. I previously commented in my review for The Thursday Murder Club that I enjoyed Osman’s writing style and tone but felt the plotting and story was trying to do too…
Author: Richard Osman
-
-
Richard Osman’s series has already been heavily read and reviewed so I won’t be quite as detailed as I usually do since the major points of discussion have already been covered. Despite what the genre and synopsis of the book may imply, The Thursday Murder is as much of a senior citizen themed character drama as it is a murder mystery novel and therefore one must adjust their expectations to its crossover intentions. If reading and reviewing this novel purely as a murder mystery investigation procedural story, The Thursday Murder Club is generally an above average, light-hearted affair that’s quite cozy and easy to pick up (although also just as easy to put down and leave down as it’s a bit slow in places). Taken at face value, the murders reveals and movements are mostly functional, albeit slightly convoluted with certain plot developments coming a bit out of left field. I found it to be fine personally, but too ambitious and twisty for its conclusion to pull the whole case back together. However, The Thursday Murder Club’s strongest element in my opinion is the moments where Osman focuses on the lowkey laughs and allows its senior characters to reflect on…