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Suggestions for Book Group book please!!!

25 replies

BaconAndAvocado · 09/10/2018 18:31

Not feeling particularly inspired.............

Our last book was the Tattooist of Auschwitz so I don't want anything harrowing.

We've rarely delved into crime..........any suggestions for an intelligent crime novel?

tia

OP posts:
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sleepismysuperpower1 · 09/10/2018 18:35

The Hollow by Agatha Christie

Killing Floor by Lee Child

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DwangelaForever · 09/10/2018 18:44

More of a psychological thriller but I loved The Date but Louise Jensen, also The Surrogate by the same person.

I do love a good crime book but all of the ones I love are series' so I don't think they would be good for a book club.

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CramptonHodnet · 09/10/2018 19:34

The Dry by Jane Harper, and its sequel (which can be read as a stand alone) are very good.

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SmokeAndBone · 09/10/2018 20:41

I was in a book club at the book which has created the most discussion was 'Veronika Decides to Due' by Paolo Coehlo.

We found if everyone loved (or hated) a book, there wasn't much to talk about. So it's more about being thought-provoking than popular!

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Annandale · 09/10/2018 20:45

Agree re the dry. We didnt all love it but it was a good discussion.

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Cakecrumbsinmybra · 09/10/2018 21:47

The Sealwomans Gift
The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock

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Cakecrumbsinmybra · 09/10/2018 21:47

Oh sorry, just saw you wanted crime....

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mamaduckbone · 09/10/2018 21:52

For a crime novel, Thirteen by Steve Cavanagh.
I’ve heard good things about The Dry but haven’t read it.
Some my book group have enjoyed:

  • Eleanor Oliphant
  • A Man Called Ove
  • How to Stop Time (Matt Haig)
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mamaduckbone · 09/10/2018 21:55

And a couple that created good discussion but were by no means liked by all:

  • Hagseed by Margaret Atwood
  • My Brilliant Friend by Elene Ferrante (good luck if you go for that one though...)
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Killingthebodyguard · 09/10/2018 21:56

I've just mentioned this on another thread but I'm raving about it here too (and no I'm not the author!) because it's so rare I read something ahead of the curve that nobody else has read yet! 'All that was lost' by Alison May out in paperback or Kindle.

It's not crime exactly - it's about a medium (fake or for real?) and two parents of lost sons and what you would do to speak to a loved one, one last time. I found it really thought provoking and there's lots of stuff re grief, lies and psychics that could start lots of discussion.

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MrsPob · 09/10/2018 22:09

Sweet Caress by William Boyd was popular with my book group.

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MrsPob · 09/10/2018 22:10

Oops sorry just realised you wanted a crime one! As you were... Grin

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bellinisurge · 09/10/2018 22:15

The Truth about the Harry Quebert Affair.

Anything by Sara Paretsky.

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Satsumaeater · 11/10/2018 17:04

Pieces of Me by Natalie Hart has just come out. Deals with Iraq war. I think it would work well for a book club.

www.amazon.co.uk/Pieces-Me-Natalie-Hart-ebook/dp/B07D4CR61W/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=pieces%20of%20me&ie=UTF8&qid=1539273840&sr=8-1&tag=mumsnet&ascsubtag=mnforum-21

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Satsumaeater · 11/10/2018 17:04

Sorry I didn't realise you wanted crime but might be worth considering anyway?

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TonTonMacoute · 13/10/2018 12:43

A couple I have read recently, and enjoyed are

Snap by Belinda Bauer, and

The Party by Elizabeth Day

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sparklyfee · 13/10/2018 12:46

Post-mortem by Patricia Cornwell

A Maidens Grave by Jeffrey Deaver

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BookWitch · 14/10/2018 22:49

I'm currently reading the Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair- enjoying it.

Our bookclub read - 7 Types of Ambiguity. It's a clunky title, but not what I was expecting. It's about a depressed ex-school teacher who kidnaps his ex-girlfriend's young son.

here

The narrative is written in seven parts (hence the title) with each part having a different narrator - the mother/ex-girlfriend, the Boy's father, the psychologist interviewing the kidnapper, the kidnapper himself, the prostitute who turns out to be sleeping with both the kidnapper and the boy's father etc
It is complex and a bit more of the full story comes out with each narrator, and no one covers themself with glory.
There is lots to discuss - some of us loved it, some hated it, but it was certainly an interesting one.

Unfortunately not available on Kindle though (we all had to order an actual book!)

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FreshEyre · 18/10/2018 21:14

I've just read 'Murder at the Book Club' Smile

It won't win any awards for writing but might spark some interesting discussion!

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crabapplecrumble · 20/10/2018 14:24

The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz. Horowitz writes himself as the main character/investigator and his sidekick is an ex-police detective who worked as an advisor on a tv show he was writing. It's all fictional but really clever and quite funny in the way it weaves the murder story with autobiographical elements.

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GlasgowWorrier · 21/10/2018 12:38

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton is a brilliantly confusing and well-executed novel - I suspect it's a real Marmite book club read.

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Clawdy · 21/10/2018 17:51

Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz. Great twist!

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carbuncleonapigsposterior · 21/10/2018 19:18

Our House Louise Candlish
Snap Belinda Bauer
Persons Unknown - Susie Steiner
Lie with Me - Sabine Durrant

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bellinisurge · 21/10/2018 21:09

Any Philip Kerr or Sara Paretsky

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Hellohah · 09/11/2018 22:42

What are the requirements for book club?
I second the Truth about the Harry Qubert Affair - loved it.

Have you thought about The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time? It's got a crime in it, and should spark some discussion. He was apparently inspired by Sherlock Holmes. You could then maybe read some Sherlock Holmes?

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