We know what will happen. The protagonist knows what will happen - the problem is how to stop it.
Aiden Bishop is tasked with a seemingly simple objective - he must stop the murder of Evelyn at the end of the day, or else the day will restart and he will be in another guest's body. He has only so many attempts before he is stripped of his memories and the whole process restarts. Will he be able to solve the mystery in time? Is all what it seems? Who are the hosts whose bodies he inhabits? Can he solve the riddle before he himself is in danger? The novels pulls us through various perspectives, repeating the day over and over again and yet flawlessly aligning events so that the picture becomes clearer with each passing host. Not so clear however, that we are ready for the ingenious twist at the end.
Will we discover who Aiden Bishop is? That's what kept me hooked to the novel until the end. The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a novel that reminds me somewhat of Agatha Christie. The setting of Blackheath is familiar, but we have here something more than simply a mystery that must be solved. Aiden Bishop must solve the enigma of the murder, and we must solve the enigma that is Blackheath.
Aiden Bishop is tasked with a seemingly simple objective - he must stop the murder of Evelyn at the end of the day, or else the day will restart and he will be in another guest's body. He has only so many attempts before he is stripped of his memories and the whole process restarts. Will he be able to solve the mystery in time? Is all what it seems? Who are the hosts whose bodies he inhabits? Can he solve the riddle before he himself is in danger? The novels pulls us through various perspectives, repeating the day over and over again and yet flawlessly aligning events so that the picture becomes clearer with each passing host. Not so clear however, that we are ready for the ingenious twist at the end.
Will we discover who Aiden Bishop is? That's what kept me hooked to the novel until the end. The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a novel that reminds me somewhat of Agatha Christie. The setting of Blackheath is familiar, but we have here something more than simply a mystery that must be solved. Aiden Bishop must solve the enigma of the murder, and we must solve the enigma that is Blackheath.