“It's Boxing Day lunch at Cooper's Chase,
where our resident septuagenarians Elizabeth, Ron, Ibrahim, and Joyce learn
about the murder of antiques dealer, Kuldesh Sharma (who had a cameo in the
previous book), who also happens to be a friend of Stephen, Elizabeth's
husband. Of course, DCI Chris Hudson and Donna were determined to keep the
members of the Thursday Murder Club out of their current murder investigation,
but this proving hard to do. They’re quickly, however, get drawn into the
dangerous world of drug dealers, art forgery and antiques. As the team
investigates, Chris and Donna find themselves off the case, replaced by someone
up the chain of command, which implies to them that there is more going on than
anyone thought. Meanwhile, Elizabeth and her dementia suffering husband Stephen
have come to a crossroad and nothing will be the same again.”
As The Thursday Murder Club further expands its caseloads beyond the confines of Copper’s Chase, including adding (and saying goodbye) to recurring characters, it comes to a natural breakpoint with The Last Devil To Die. A more emotional entry in the series, author Richard Osman still gives up a complex mystery, a dark look into some antique dealers business where forgery, deception, and murder seem to be the routine. We also get a B plot involving a lonely fellow resident, Mervyn, who has become the target of an online romance scam, and who refuses to believe his Tatiana is fictitious.
Despite some dark things (and a lot of death), Osman continues to give these wonderful characters a sense of humor. There are some laugh-out-loud moments, ones that are needed, mostly as the medical issues of Stephen and the couple’s solution to his dementia is a gut punch (and I wonder if there will be residual effects in later volumes). So goofy-fun Joyce steps up during a good portion of the operation, with Bogdan also playing a bigger, yet sympathetic role and Ibrahim also proves a vital part to play in the Murder Club's investigations.
While everything sort gets tied up neatly, there are a few dangling plot threads, but a fifth volume will be on the way –probably in late 2025- as Osman began a new series this year, We Solve Murders, with new characters and settings. Which means I’ll not read it until 2026.
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