The Last Murder at the End of the World

Available
Product Details
Price
$27.99  $26.03
Publisher
Sourcebooks Landmark
Publish Date
Pages
368
Dimensions
6.1 X 9.1 X 1.5 inches | 1.2 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781728254654

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Stuart Turton is a freelance journalist who lives in West London with his wife. Stuart is not to be trusted-in the nicest possible way. The 71/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is his first novel.
Reviews

GQ's Most Anticipated Books Of 2024

The New Scientist's Most Anticipated Books

Polygon's Most Anticipated Science Fiction Books Of 2024

Goodreads's Most Anticipated Books Of 2024

CrimeReads's Most Anticipated Speculative Crime Novels of 2024

Sunset Magazine's Books That Will Be On Everyone's Spring List

BBC News's Most Anticipated Books Of 2024

The Guardian's Most Anticipated Books Of 2024

The Observer's Best Crime & Thrillers Of The Month

The Sunday Times's Best Thrillers of the Month

The Independent's Best Books Of The Month

Glamour's Best Books, According to Literary Experts


"[A] dazzling postapocalyptic thriller that blossoms into a race against time whodunit...This dystopian detective story fires on all cylinders." -- Publishers Weekly, STARRED review
"A unique, intricate murder mystery absolutely full of heart, The Last Murder at the End of the World is a heartbreaking exploration of what it means to be human." -- Vikki Patis
"Believe the hype about this book. I absolutely raced through. Such a great sharp little jigsaw of a sci-fi mystery." -- Alice Bell
"Stu Turton has done it again. I finished The Last Murder at the End of the World last night and it might just be his barmiest, cleverest and creepiest mystery yet. Buckle up, because you've never read a whodunnit like this one." -- Tom Hindle
"Set in a post-apocalyptic world, with a literal village full of incredible characters, this is an original take on the murder mystery and I loved it. Unique, thought-provoking but, above all, addictive." -- Louise Hare
"Even better than The Seven 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle. Turton's cemented his reputation as the king of the mind-blowing mystery." -- Gareth Rubin
"Stu Turton has done it again with The Last Murder at the End of the World, the mad, alchemy-embracing bastard. A murder-mystery wrapped in a sci-fi allegory, it's utterly gripping, constantly confounding and will be another monster hit." -- Adam Simcox
"Stu Turton is the master of intricately plotted, brilliantly imaginative murder mysteries. His latest delivers all that wonderful head-scratching complexity in a darkly drawn future world with a message about what makes us human at its heart. I loved it." -- C. J. Tudor
"An extraordinary novel. Midsommar meets Station Eleven meets The Mist meets a fresh post-apocalyptic murder mystery. Audacious and utterly mind-blowing. Stu Turton is one of the most inventive writers working today." -- Will Dean
"The Last Murder at the End of the World is wildly inventive. Stuart Turton is a unique talent." -- M. W. Craven
"A mind-bending, genre-blending, boy-that-ending mystery unlike any I've ever read...as though Agatha Christie and Stephen King had jointly rebooted Lost." -- A.J. Finn
"Stuart Turton's literary pyrotechnics are on full display in this magnificently sly novel. Part Holmesian deduction, part Shyamalan level twists--Turton somehow manages to reinvent both himself and the mystery genre with every book. An absolute blast." -- Benjamin Stevenson
"A postapocalyptic sf/fantasy/murder mystery that's as imaginative as it is dazzling and mind-boggling...An extraordinary, thought-provoking book that will appeal to mystery and sf buffs and general-fiction fans looking for a unique and unforgettable read." -- Booklist, STARRED review
"A complex world and characters in a page-turner centered on what it means to be human and whether those qualities are worth preserving." -- Library Journal, STARRED review
"A fresh twist on dystopian fiction with its share of surprises." -- Kirkus Reviews