
The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle
4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars | 18,804 ratings
Price: 9
Last update: 01-15-2025
About this item
"Pop your favorite Agatha Christie whodunnit into a blender with a scoop of Downton Abbey, a dash of Quantum Leap, and a liberal sprinkling of Groundhog Day and you'll get this unique murder mystery." —Harper's Bazaar
The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle is a breathlessly addictive mystery that follows one man's race to find a killer, with an astonishing time-turning twist that means nothing and no one are quite what they seem.
Aiden Bishop knows the rules. Evelyn Hardcastle will die every day until he can identify her killer and break the cycle. But every time the day begins again, Aiden wakes up in the body of a different guest at Blackheath Manor. And some of his hosts are more helpful than others. With a locked-room mystery that Agatha Christie would envy, Stuart Turton unfurls a breakneck novel of intrigue and suspense.
International bestselling author Stuart Turton delivers inventive twists in a thriller of such unexpected creativity it will leave readers guessing until the very last page.
The Sunday Times Bestseller!
Costa First Novel Award Winner
Harper's Bazaar's 10 Must-Read Books of 2018
The Guardian's Best Books of 2018
Buzzfeed's 17 Mystery Books You Won't Be Able to Put Down
Country Living's 27 Murder Mystery Books You Won't Be Able To Put Down
Town & Country's 35 Best Books About Time Travel
Distractify's Best Books Like Knives Out
Tor.com's 7 Thrilling Murder Mysteries With SFF Flair
BookRiot's 10 Mystery and Thriller Authors like Agatha Christie
BookRiot's 10 Best Time Loop Books
From the Publisher


The 7 ½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle | The Devil and the Dark Water | The Last Murder at the End of the World | |
Customer Reviews |
4.1 out of 5 stars
18,804
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4.2 out of 5 stars
6,456
|
4.1 out of 5 stars
2,703
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Price | $10.80$10.80 | $14.90$14.90 | $13.99$13.99 |
Mindbending thrillers by Stuart Turton! | Aiden Bishop knows the rules. Evelyn Hardcastle will die every day until he can identify her killer and break the cycle. But every time the day begins again, Aiden wakes up in the body of a different guest at Blackheath Manor. | A murder on the high seas. A remarkable detective duo. A demon who may or may not exist. | On an isolated island, an impossible murder triggers a world-ending phenomenon that can only be stopped by the identification of the killer. |
Top reviews from the United States

5.0 out of 5 stars You MUST Read this book!
The book opens with the following invitation:
You are cordially invited to Blackheath House for a Masquerade.
Introducing your hosts, the Hardcastle Family:
Lord Peter Hardcastle and Lady Helena Hardcastle and their son Michael Hardcastle, their daughter Evelyn Hardcastle.
Notable guests:
Edward Dance, Christopher Pettigrew, and Philip Sutcliffe, family solicitors.
Grace Davies and her brother Donald Davies, socialites.
Commander Clifford Harrington, Naval Officer (retired).
Millicent Derby and her son Johnathan Derby, socialites.
Daniel Coleridge, Professional gambler.
Lord Cecil Ravencourt, banker.
Jim Rashton, Police officer.
Dr. Richard "Dickie" Acker.
Dr. Sebastian Bell.
Ted Stanwin.
Principle Household Staff:
The Butler, Roger Collins.
The Cook, Mrs. Drudge.
First Maid, Lucy Harper
Stable Master, Alf Miller
Artist in residence, Gregory Gold.
Lord Ravencourt's valet, Charles Cunningham.
Evelyn Hardcastle's Lady's Maid: Madeline Aubert.
We ask all guests to kindly refrain from disusing Thomas Hardcastle and Charlie Carver. As the tragic events surrounding them still grieve the family greatly.
Chapter one starts off in the middle of the woods where a man, yet to be named, sees a murder and is shouting the name "Anna." He is then handed a silver compass and told "East." When he goes East, the man stumbles upon a residence and seeks shelter inside. Our main character appears to have suffered a traumatic event and must be told his own name: Sebastian Bell. Over the next few hours, Bell meets a man wearing a plague mask, and that will stay his name until the conclusion of the novel. The man, referred to as the Plague Doctor, tells Bell that he is actually Aiden Bishop, that he has eight days to solve the murder of Evelyn Hardcastle, each day Aiden will be given a "host" to occupy to help solve the mystery, and Aiden must find him by the lake at 11 PM with the answer or risk starting the loop all over again. Aiden can't believe this and ends up "wasting" two of his hosts in denial. Eventually, Aiden buys into what the Plague Doctor is saying and begins attempting to figure out who murdered Evelyn Hardcastle. Without giving spoilers, I want to address why I so thoroughly enjoyed this novel.
First, it was very complex. Some popular authors, take James Patterson for example, do not always provide a complex story. I enjoy being challenged as a read and several times I fought the urge to pull out a notebook and pen to jot down clues. That urge, and the desire to figure out "whodunit" was very powerful and made me not want to book the book down. Between keeping track of which host Aiden was, who talked to who, how interactions from two decades ago bear relevance to the story at hand, as well ad Aiden being able to change the day over time while in different hosts, there is a lot to keep track of in the novel.
Second, the setting was beautiful and tragic at the same time. The book is set on a remote estate called Blackheath. We are not given a specific time period, but it reminds one of the early twentieth century Gothic style. The estate is owned by the Hardcastles: Peter (patriarch), Helena (matriarch), Michael (son), Evelyn (daughter), and Thomas (deceased). As with most Gothic literature, the estate is eerie and holds many secrets. The death of Thomas Hardcastle almost two decades before has tainted the grounds. Most of the novel occurs in dark rooms and tiny spaces, or at night near the woods and the lake. Very foreboding. There are also secret passages ways, boat houses, and carriage houses, and other outbuildings scattered throughout the property that come up. Additionally, there are other elements about the setting, that would be spoilers, and so I will not discuss them. I find these elements brilliant.
Third, I thoroughly enjoy the character development. We are forced, as the reader, to assume 9 different characters: Aiden and all eight of his hosts. Aiden in and of himself is a very complex character. We do not learn why he is at Blackheath until much later in the novel, but we do learn that he is no longer the Aiden he was when he originally came to Blackheath. Aiden has had to reinvent himself and choose who to be. Additionally, as Aiden gets closer and closer to day eight, the character of his hosts increasingly exert themselves on Aiden. Our protagonist is often having to shake off his hosts memories and personal flaws. Some of each host seems to "rub off" on him as the story unfolds.
Finally, the numerous themes throughout the book have given me much to think about, as well as much to continue to think about. Some themes include: good vs evil, betrayal, fate vs free will, injustice, and manipulation to name a few. We are told in the book that Aiden is up against two other rivals. We learn that Aiden must present the final answer to Plague Doctor before the other two in order to escape Blackheath's continuous loop. As time goes on, we assume as the reader that those two rivals are Anna and a dark, murderous character called "The Footman." Aiden is trying to free not only himself, but Anna as well. Anna and Aiden represent "good" and The Footman represent evil. It is a constant cat and mouse game throughout the novel between these two forces. Another theme is the theme of betrayal. The Plague Doctor, and other characters, hint to Aiden that he is being betrayed. The turmoil Aiden goes through in whether to decide to trust others lingers throughout the book. Blackheath's loop is likened to fate; this day has been repeating, ad nauseam, for a lengthy period of time. Yet the Plague Doctor and Aiden attempt to exert their free will on the loop. You will have to be the judge of if they are successful. We see the injustice of not only Evelyn's murder, but Thomas' and others as well; and we see manipulation of events and characters regularly.
I do not think I can praise this book enough as a fantastic murder-mystery and an absolute page turner! I hope you each decide to pick it up for yourselves, and when you do, come back here so we can chat about the mystery that is Blackheath.
Happy Reading!
-Hession

4.0 out of 5 stars 4.25/5 Book Review
Review: This was an excellent book club book! It’s a complex story with a lot to theorize about and unravel. I adored the writing style - every time I picked it up, I was sucked right back in. I love twisty stories, so it would have been just as enjoyable as an individual read for me, but it’s pretty complex and so some readers may enjoy reading it most in a book club-like setting so they can discuss and ask questions. The main character was really interesting, and I’m a sucker for amnesia with a side of identity crisis. It was really fun to try and parse out what parts of his hosts were him and what parts were the hosts - made extra fun because the main character didn’t know either. The plague doctor was an interesting take on a character being a symbol of death without being Death. I’m also a sucker for Death-like characters. Perhaps it shouldn’t have been surprising to me for a time-loop story to have a theme of second chances, but it was. Overall, I’m happy with how it ended, though I do have mixed feelings about Anna, and it does leave some up for interpretation. I would have liked to know what the consequences of the characters’ choices are more clearly, and I would have liked to understand the world of this book better - specifically what time period did this actually take place in and is Blackheath technologically, supernaturally, or magically created?
- Sofia

3.0 out of 5 stars 3 stars out of 5 -- interesting story, terrible prose.
It got increasingly better as it went on. The first half was just okay, and the first time I tried to read it I stopped at Chapter 5 because all the first 4 chapters did were world building by info dumping.
It was florid with clunky metaphors & similes throughout; terribly written. So many painful phrases, some that don't make sense at all.
As such, I feel the author wasn't writing to be read, for normal people, but instead to shout "Hey I'm a writer! I'm in the club! Look at what I can do! Give me accolades! Gaze upon my works, ye mighty!" unfortunately.
This book could've been maybe 40% shorter easily, and not miss anything crucial.
The "OMG twist you'll never see coming" reviewers must be people who haven't experienced much sci-fi media in their lives and also miss blatant context clues.
The twist 80% into the book is good stuff, but not surprising in the least. What made that chapter actually bad was the pure exposition by one character to the main character & reader explaining what this time loop murder solving is about... followed by the main character remembering his former life and just doing exposition on that.
The "gotcha" at the very end regarding the murder (no spoilers of course) simply does the classic mystery novel thing of "You, reader, could never have seen this coming; we pulled this out of left-field to be a surprise." The movie Murder by Death (1976) famously ends by poking fun at all the bad mystery writings which end like this.
No typos and no repetitive use of a single word/phrase which is always nice in 2024.
Overall, I enjoyed it and I loved the ideas!
It's unlikely I'll ever read it a second time nor will I recommend it.