Title: 56 DAYS
Author: Catherine Ryan Howard
Read: August 2021
Expected publication: out now
My Rating: 🌟🌟🌟🌟1/2
Book Description:
No one knew they'd moved in
together. Now one of them is dead. Could this be the perfect murder?
56 DAYS AGO
Ciara and Oliver meet in a supermarket queue in Dublin the same week Covid-19
reaches Irish shores.
35 DAYS AGO
When lockdown threatens to keep them apart, Oliver suggests that Ciara move in
with him. She sees a unique opportunity for a new relationship to flourish
without the pressure of scrutiny of family and friends. He sees it as an
opportunity to hide who - and what - he really is.
TODAY
Detectives arrive at Oliver's apartment to discover a decomposing body inside.
Will they be able to determine what really happened, or has lockdown provided
someone with the opportunity to commit the perfect crime?
What attracted me to this book:
Ever since reading and loving
Catherine Ryan Howard’s earlier novel DISTRESS SIGNALS, I have been looking
forward to being entertained by her clever, original thrillers that always
manage to blindside me. I look for her books when I feel like something that
stands out from the fray of mysteries on the market because there is nothing
ordinary or formulaic about any of her novels. After covid changed our lives, I
have often wondered how writers would deal with this part in our history. Would
all books be forever be set in 2019 until the pandemic is over? Would writers
dare to look into the future and try to predict what life will be in a year or
two? Trust Howard to use the lockdown as a claustrophobic setting for her intriguing
story. For a closed-door mystery the setting doesn’t get any better than this!
My musings:
Ciara and Oliver meet at the supermarket check-out
just as the first cases of covid are making an appearance in other parts of the
world. A coffee turns into a dinner and a string of dates. What do you do when
a global pandemic threatens a budding romance? When Oliver suggests to Ciara
that she move in with him to sit out the imposed two-week lockdown, she agrees,
even though the couple don’t know much about one another. But being confined to
a small space with a virtual stranger makes it very tricky to keep your deep,
dark secrets hidden ...
Now one of them is dead and the
police have been called by a neighbour who noticed an unpleasant smell coming
from the apartment. DI Leah Riordan and DS Karl Connoly are the lucky
detectives tasked with working out what has happened here, and who the victim
is. Accident or murder? Truth or lies? Read on to find out!
In typical Catherine Ryan Howard
style, the timeline in this book is not linear, so we gradually find out the
full truth through three separate POVs and multiple jumps through time, from 56
days ago (when Ciara and Oliver first met) to the present, with a few other
twists thrown in along the way. If you think that this may be confusing, don’t worry, because the author has planned this so cleverly
that there is never any doubt as to what is happening when and to whom. There
is that wonderful “aha!” moment some time before the final reveal when things
take an unexpected turn, but I dare you to predict the full truth!
I loved reading about lockdown in other
parts of the world. This was such a frightening time for most of us, when no
one really knew how this would all play out, and cities turned into ghost towns
overnight. Many of Ciara’s and Oliver’s first responses to the pandemic
mirrored my own confusion and fear, and it was fascinating to try and put
myself in their shoes. Would my younger self have agreed to stay with a virtual
stranger to keep the budding relationship going? Would I have kept this fact a
secret from my family for fear of their disapproval? Yes, probably. This is
what I love about this author, her characters are so relatable!
Summary:
All in all, 56 DAYS was another brilliant mystery from
an author who has swiftly risen to my favourites list. Whilst set in the early
days of the pandemic, the story is not a novel about the pandemic, but the
lockdown provided a perfect claustrophobic backdrop to the mystery. Personally,
I loved the way certain scenes are explored through the different POVs of each
character, allowing us to spot the differences and wondering who is telling the
truth, and who is hiding something. This was a tense, claustrophobic read for
me and one I could not put down. I enjoyed it immensely and look forward to
reading more from this author in future.
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