The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman
Synopsis /
It’s been a quiet year for the Thursday Murder Club. Joyce is busy with table plans and first dances. Elizabeth is grieving. Ron is dealing with family troubles, and Ibrahim is still providing therapy to his favourite criminal.
But when Elizabeth meets a wedding guest who’s in trouble, kidnap and death are hot on their heels once more. A villain wants access to an uncrackable code, and will stop at nothing to get it. Plunged back into action once more, can the gang solve the puzzle and a murder in time?
My Thoughts /
[Joyce] It’s been a while since I wrote, I know that. I’m ever so sorry.
After a long-awaited hiatus, Richard Osman's Thursday Murder Club team are back and this time the septuagenarian quartet of retirement village dwelling residents find themselves up to their necks in bombs, bitcoin and the requirement to crack an unbreakable code.
Tomorrow is the day. A Thursday wedding? I know. What is it with us and Thursdays?
For those not familiar with the phenomenon that is the Thursday Murder Club, it's a series of novels which feature Elizabeth Best (former MI6 spymaster), retired nurse Joyce Meadowcroft, ex-psychiatrist Ibrahim Arif and, former long-time union activist Ron Ritchie. Together, these amateur sleuths form The Thursday Murder Club – meeting every Thursday in an upscale British retirement community (plagued by an unusually high degree of criminality) known as Coopers Chase to discuss all things mystery and murder.
Osman does an outstanding job of humanising his characters. The recurring group of four are all aging in real time, and in between solving murders, Osman interposes the group to experiences such as grief, loss, friendship and the ever-changing relationships between parents and their adult children.
In this instalment, Elizabeth is gradually re-engaging with the world after Stephen's passing (handled brilliantly by Osman in The Last Devil to Die) and with an upcoming wedding, there's no better way to do it - Joyce's daughter, Joanna is all set to marry her partner, Paul.
While at the wedding, the Best Man, Nick Silver approaches Elizabeth with concerns that someone is trying to kill him. Telling her that he found a bomb under his car just a few hours earlier.
Elizabeth shrugs. ‘An awful lot of murders start at weddings, Joyce.’ ‘I did think you perked up a bit during the reception,’ says Joyce. ‘I should have known killing was involved.’
Arranging to meet the following day, Elizabeth arrives at his office only to discover it's been trashed and Nick Silver is missing. Moreover, when Nick's business partner, Holly, dies in a car explosion, Elizabeth realises Nick's concerns were warranted.
In an effort to locate Nick, Elizabeth digs deeper into the business dealings held by both Nick and Holly, only to discover that the pair held millions of dollars worth of bitcoin in cold storage. The bitcoin could only be accessed at the storage facility by punching in the correct code – half of which was held by Nick and the other half, Holly. The business partners had only recently decided they were going to cash in the bitcoin. So who knew about the decision to sell? Who knew about the codes? Had Holly been murdered for hers? And where is Nick Silver?
As we have come to expect from Osman's writing, there is more than one tightly plotted mystery to unravel. Both Ibrahim and Ron have side plots brewing, with Ibrahim still meeting with drug-lord Connie Johnson, and Ron is dealing with the breakdown of his daughter's marriage. There are some new characters introduced, as well as return appearances by PC Donna De Freitas, DCI Chris Hudson, and Bogdan Jankowski.
Osman has created a wonderfully colourful cast of characters, each with their own quirky mannerisms, they all prove endearing. What I love about his writing is that it’s inclusive. Everyone plays some role in resolving the mystery. They have each other’s back.
[Joyce] It’s been a while since I wrote, I know that. I’m ever so sorry.
PS: Oh, and Joyce? I'm so glad you're back. 🥰