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The Suicide Club
The Suicide Club
Sep 1, 2025 10:49 PM

Author:Rhys Thomas

The Suicide Club

Craig Bartlett-Taylor was always trying to kill himself, but when he took an overdose at the back of Mrs Kenna's classroom, Richie thought he'd finally succeeded: it was a real-life Worst Case Scenario. But then the new kid, Freddy, steps in and saves Craig's life, and for Richie the lure of this mysterious newcomer is irresistible.

Freddy is like nobody Richie has ever met. Dark, sardonic and dangerous, he gives flight to Richie's imagination, introducing him to a way of life he'd never thought possible. But when a night-time prank goes gut-wrenchingly wrong, Richie begins to question Freddy's motives, and all too soon he finds himself committed to a sinister pact, with inescapably tragic consequences. It's true that Freddy saved a life - but could he take one, too?

With great wit and an unflinching eye for the muddle and drama of adolescence, The Suicide Club is a pitch-perfect portrait of teenage disaffection that sets boy against boy, imagination against reason - and, ultimately, life against death.

Reviews

Rhys Thomas shakes concepts of "normality" to the core. It is a challenge indeed for an author to capture authentic teenage dialogue, and [this is] compelling subject matter.

—— Independent on Sunday

Something of a SECRET HISTORY set among 15 year-olds...A riveting and often moving read...this is the best of its type that I've read in a long while. I'll be very interested to see what Thomas writes next.

—— John Boyne

A masterpiece - a classic of twentieth-century fiction

—— New York Times

Compassionate and beautifully written

—— Woman & Home

Intricately plotted and thick with intrigue, Savage Lands gives us an insight into an overlooked era

—— Stephanie Bishop , Times Literary Supplement

Clare Clark writes with the eyes of a historian and the soul of a novelist.

—— Amanda Foreman

This densely textured story forces readers to ask: who are the savages?

—— Elizabeth Buchan , Sunday Times Culture

As Clare Clark's third novel so lushly illustrates, Louisiana has never been the safest place to live... this eye-opening account of Louisiana's early history conjures up a nicely gothic landscape

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent

'Splendid news...Captain Matthew Hervey of the 6th Light Dragoons and ADC to the Duke of Wellington is back in the saddle...A marvellous read, paced like a well-balanced symphony. This is more than a ripping yarn...I look forward enormously to hearing more of Hervey's exploits; he is as fascinating on horseback as Jack Aubrey is on the quarterdeck'

—— The Times

A book of great maturity, beautifully alive to the fragility of happiness and all forms of violence... Everyone should read Saturday

—— Financial Times

The supreme novelist of his generation

—— Sunday Times

Dazzling... Profound and urgent

—— Observer

A brilliant novel.It is McEwan writing on absolute top form

—— Daily Mail

Refreshing and engrossing, dense with revelation. Superb

—— Independent on Sunday

A rich book, sensuous and thoughtful... McEwan has found in Saturday the right form to showcase his dazzling talents

—— The Times

McEwan is word-perfect at handling the awkward comedy of this relationship and, as ever, turning it into something far more disturbing

—— Observer

Two characters so vibrant they step straight off the page

—— Yvonne Cassidy , The Tablet

McEwan's brilliance as a novelist lies in his ability to isolate discrete moments in life and invest them with incredible significance

—— Tim Adams , Observer

McEwan's style is lean and clear...every sentence feels carefully crafted, the words all perfectly in place

—— John Harding , Daily Mail

A tightly focused human drama... McEwan gives the reader access to both characters' thoughts with his usual skill, and the comedy of embarrassment, or of the kind of erotic misunderstanding that Milan Kundera used to specialise in, quickly disappears as the marital bed begins to seem more and more ominous... The bedroom scene itself is carried off brilliantly

—— Christopher Taylor , Sunday Telegraph

A fine book, homing in with devastating precision on a kind of Englishness which McEwan understands better than any other living writer, the Englishness of deceit, evasion, repression and regret. In On Chesil Beach McEwan has combined the intensity of his narrowly focused early work with his more expansive later flowered to devastating effect

—— Justin Cartwright , Independent on Sunday

McEwan is the kind of author who can say more in a sentence than most can say in a chapter...This is a thoughtful book which provokes thought. But more immediately than that, this is a book which, while managing to be very funny, gives us a wonderful and moving portrait of a specific time, and two of its hostages, and of how to make a mess of love

—— Keith Ridgeway , Irish Times

McEwan conveys the near-numinous significance of a single moment with quiet, almost unbearable grace

—— Metro

A heavenly read

—— Marie Claire
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