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The Thursday Club
The Thursday Club
Author: Vincent Murano, Richard Hammer
The Thursday Club is tough, hard-hitting, suspenseful fiction, one of those rare novels about cops that reads like the real thing. It begins with the discovery of a body in a Staten Island garbage dump - the body of a woman killed and buried over twenty-five years ago. Hardly an event that seems likely to stir up much interest in the Big Apple, ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780671738648
ISBN-10: 067173864X
Publication Date: 6/1/1994
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
 4

3.4 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Pocket
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

annalovesbooks avatar reviewed The Thursday Club on
Helpful Score: 3
ISBN 0671734482 - The best mysteries keep you guessing, trying to get a step or two ahead of the main character. The Thursday Club doesn't do that. Oddly, it's still a really good book.

The body of a hooker who's been dead for 25 years turns up in a landfill. The lab guy looking at the bullet ends up dead. The cop he called before he died ends up dead. The cop HE called before he died, however, doesn't. Ben Rogers, once the partner of Felix Palmieri, the dead cop, is determined to figure out how a smart cop like Felix walks into a dead end alley and gets shot point blank in the chest. He takes up all of Felix's open cases, looking for a clue to his killer. At the same time, he's called upon by the new mayor to look into a possible problem with a political appointee.

If you can read this, without being several steps ahead of Ben, you must be new to the genre. The hooker is presented first thing, and the clues for the rest of it are all too clearly laid out on the book flap. Even the very final riddle, one that isn't even mentioned until it's solved in the final five words of the book, is given away in the text. That's not what makes this good. The characters, the ones you like and those you don't, are what turns The Thursday Club from a mediocre whodunit into a worthwhile read. From Ben's grandmother to the snitches he uses, from his boss to the boss of bosses, the characters and their motives are clear and well-written. Murano and Hammer are a fantastic team.

- AnnaLovesBooks
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