There are several reasons you’re getting the recap of 2020’s debut of The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. I read 67 pages of a novel with one of the most malevolent characters I ever read. She was manipulative and just horrific, and I couldn’t handle it anymore. I just hated her. I’m sure that’s what the author intended, but I wasn’t going to read moe about her. So, I quit.
Instead, I went for a walk in the nearby park with my sister, Linda, and her dog. Then, I went to her house for dinner and a movie, “The Thursday Murder Club”. I’ve seen various comments, including some that said it was better not to have read the books because of the slight changes. I read it five years ago when it first came out. I remember the four main characters. I remembered one of the murders, but I didn’t remember “whodunnit”. Linda and I both enjoyed the movie. It was funny at times, and I thought the members of The Thursday Murder Club were perfectly cast.
Since I dumped the book I was reading, and watched a movie instead, here’s my review from five years ago. If you, too, forgot what happened, there are no spoilers, just a brief recap.

“Killing someone is easy. hiding the body, now, that’s usually the hard part.” It’s even harder to keep that killing a secret when The Thursday Murder Club takes an interest. In his funny, sometimes poignant debut mystery, Richard Osman introduces a savvy quartet of septuagenarians who are intrigued by cold cases and murder.
Joyce, part-time narrator and retired nurse, is often overlooked. She’s sees that as her skill, that she appears to be harmless and chatty. Elizabeth, the leader of The Thursday Murder Club, invites Joyce to join the small group who investigate cold case files left by Detective Inspector Penny Gray, the woman Joyce is replacing. Penny’s now in The Willows, a place where the residents of Coopers Chase Retirement Village, a luxury retirement home, go to die. The other members of the group are Ibrahim, a psychiatrist, and Ron Ritchie, a famous trade union leader. Elizabeth? Is she a former spy, or something else? There are rumors about Elizabeth’s past, and she’s notorious for exaggerating those stories.
There are clubs for every interest at Coopers Chase, which was once a convent. The Thursday Murder Club is kept a secret, scheduled into the room once a week as a Japanese Opera study group. The visit of a young ambitious police constable, Donna DeFreitas, interests all of them. But, when the contractor who renovated Coopers Chase is murdered just after he was fired by Ian Ventham, the owner, the quartet turn into amateur sleuths. Elizabeth has a plan to put PC DeFreitas on the investigating team at the police station. It’s left to Joyce and the men to tell the police how they witnessed an argument between Ventham and the dead man.
Ian Ventham can’t leave well enough along, though. One day, his contractor is murdered. The next, he shows up with a new contractor, Bogdan, and equipment to dig up the caskets and bones in the convent cemetery. There are no protesters as wily as experienced seniors, though, and they block the path to the cemetery. By the time the police arrive, Ventham is furious. Although DCI Chris Hudson tries to calm him down, the man dies on the way to his Range Rover. By the estimation of the members of The Thursday Murder Club, there are seventy seniors who could have killed Ian Ventham.
Two murders, files of cold cases. The Thursday Murder Club is in its glory. But, Bogdan contacts Elizabeth, asks her to accompany him to the cemetery, and digs up, for the second time, a body on top of a coffin. Another mystery at Coopers Chase! It just gets better and better for the sleuths, but they’re soon digging into the past secrets of drug dealers and retired residents of their community. While Hudson and DeFreitas would like to keep them on the sidelines, Elizabeth skillfully manipulates the two police officers to keep the group in the loop.
Elizabeth, Joyce, Ibrahim, and Ron. The four seniors have a lifetime of experience to buoy up their investigations. They’re intelligent, manipulative sleuths. The character-driven mystery couldn’t have a better cast of characters. It’s a humorous, sometimes laugh aloud story with intelligence and wit. At the same time, it’s bittersweet. The members of the group are all too aware of their own mortality, of the loss of memory of their loved ones, of the time when they themselves might suffer from dementia or illness. Death stares them in the face on a daily basis, so a murder investigation has nothing to scare them.
The four members of The Thursday Murder Club are in their seventies and eighties. Let’s hope they live long lives to investigate more murders in England.
The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. Viking, 2020. ISBN 9781984880963 (hardcover), 368p.
*****
FTC Full Disclosure – I received a .pdf to review for a journal.



I’ve enjoyed the four books a lot, although not as much as my usual police procedurals. Looking forward to the movie.
Kim, I’ve seen different reactions to the movie. Linda and I really enjoyed it. I’m always interested to see what others think, as long as there aren’t spoilers.
I’m a big fan of the series and thought, in general, that they did a nice job with the movie, with minor caveats. The casting was mostly excellent, down to Daniel Mays as the slovenly Chris. Of course, you can’t read the book(s) without seeing Helen Mirren as Elizabeth, can you? But Pierce Brosnan and the others did a great job too. I still think it would have worked better as a four hour mini-series, but it could have been a lot worse.
I agree with you, Jeff. A little abrupt at the ending, but I love the cast. And, Helen Mirren is perfect as Elizabeth. Didn’t you love the twinkle in Joyce’s eyes? She was having so much fun!
Okay, so I am might be the only person in America who read–maybe– fifty pages of this book long ago and was bored out of my mind. So, I bailed. Call me weird. Just make sure you call me for dinner.
Have not seen the movie yet because of FOOTBALL, as well as COUNTDOWN, NCIS: TONY AND ZIVA, TERMINAL LIST.
Everyone has different tastes, Kevin. Last night was a perfect night to watch it. My brother-in-law sat on the porch and watched baseball. Best place with his cigars. Linda and I enjoyed the movie.
I liked Tony and Ziva on NCIS, but just can’t picture them in a series.
Goodness – I question your judgment about the book. I loved it the first time I read it. I also read it again waiting for the second installment of the series. I don’t know what malevolent character you are referring to. If it’s Elizabeth, I think if you read the complete book you’d have a more nuanced opinion.
I think you misread Lesa’s post. It was an unnamed, unfinished book that drew her ire.
Thank you, MM. You’re right.
Kathy, MM is right. I really liked The Thursday Murder Club, both the book and the movie. You misread my blog. It was another book that I dumped, and I won’t name it because others may like it. I know the author is popular. But, I never finished it, even though I read the ending to see if it got better. It did not, so I won’t name the book.
I liked the book and thought they did a good job with the movie. My husband enjoyed it too.
I agree, Sharon. I thought they did a good job condensing it to 2 hours.