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Over My Dead Body: The Next Thriller from the Sunday Times Bestselling Author, the Latest Must-Read New Book of 2021 Hardcover – 13 October 2021
Jeffrey Archer (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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THE CLOCK IS TICKING IN THIS ROLLERCOASTER RIDE OF A THRILLER…
In London, the Metropolitan Police set up a new Unsolved Murders Unit – a cold case squad – to catch the criminals nobody else can.
In Geneva, millionaire art collector Miles Faulkner – convicted of forgery and theft – was pronounced dead two months ago. So why is his unscrupulous lawyer still representing a dead client?
On a luxury liner en route to New York, the battle for power within a wealthy dynasty is about to turn to murder.
And at the heart of all three investigations are Detective Chief Inspector William Warwick, rising star of the Met, and ex-undercover operative Ross Hogan, brought in from the cold.
But can they catch the killers before it’s too late?
Praise for Jeffrey Archer:
‘Probably the greatest storyteller of our age’ Mail on Sunday
'Peerless master of the page turner' Daily Mail
'If there were a Nobel Prize for storytelling, Archer would win' Daily Telegraph
‘Archer is a master entertainer’ Time
Jeffrey Archer’s previous novel Nothing Ventured was a No.1 Sunday Times bestseller w/c 28th March 2020.
- Print length384 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperCollins GB
- Publication date13 October 2021
- Dimensions15.9 x 3.8 x 24 cm
- ISBN-100008474273
- ISBN-13978-0008474270
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Product description
Review
‘A fabulous read for any newcomers, written by a masterful storyteller’ Sunday Express
‘A cracking read’ Daily Mail
‘A bold, rollercoaster thriller’ Platinum
Praise for Jeffrey Archer:
‘Probably the greatest storyteller of our age’ Mail on Sunday
'Peerless master of the page turner' Daily Mail
'If there were a Nobel Prize for storytelling, Archer would win' Daily Telegraph
‘Archer is a master entertainer’ Time
Book Description
The Next Thriller from the Sunday Times Bestselling Author, the Latest Must-Read New Book of 2021
About the Author
Jeffrey Archer was educated at Oxford University, where as a world-class sprinter he represented Great Britain in international competition. He became the youngest member of the House of Commons in 1969, was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party in 1985, and was elevated to the House of Lords in 1992.
All of his novels -- from 1974's Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less to 1991's As the Crow Flies -- have been international bestsellers. Mr. Archer is married, has two children, and lives in Cambridge, England.
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Product details
- Publisher : HarperCollins GB (13 October 2021)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0008474273
- ISBN-13 : 978-0008474270
- Dimensions : 15.9 x 3.8 x 24 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 23,221 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 484 in Heist Thrillers
- 677 in Hard-Boiled Mystery
- 905 in Historical Mystery
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jeffrey Archer is one of the world’s bestselling authors, with sales of over 275 million copies in 97 countries, and is the only author ever to have been a number one bestseller in fiction (twenty times), short stories (four times) and non-fiction (The Prison Diaries). He was born in London, and brought up in the West Country. He gained a Blue in Athletics at Oxford, was President of the University Athletics Club, and went on to run the 100 yards in 9.6 seconds for Great Britain in 1966. Jeffrey has served five years in the House of Commons as a Member of Parliament, and thirty years as a Member of the House of Lords.
He has written 27 novels, 7 sets of short stories, 3 prison diaries, 3 plays (all of which have been performed in London's West End) and a gospel. His first novel, Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less was sold to 17 countries within a year. It was also made into a successful serial for BBC Radio 4, and was later televised in 1990 by the BBC. He won the Prix Relay du Roman d’Évasion, a prize that rewards a novel in which readers can ‘escape from everyday life’, for his novel Paths of Glory, and the Prix Polar International Prize for the best international thriller of the year, for his novel A Prisoner of Birth. The Clifton Chronicles, a series of seven novels published between 2011-2017, topped the bestseller lists around the world.
Famous for his discipline as a writer who works on up to fourteen drafts of each book, Jeffrey also brings a vast amount of insider knowledge to his books. Whether it’s his own career in politics, his passionate interest in art, or the wealth of fascinating background detail – inspired by the extraordinary network of friends he has built over a lifetime at the heart of Britain’s establishment – his novels provide a fascinating glimpse into a range of closed worlds.
Jeffrey is also an amateur auctioneer, conducting up to 20 charity auctions a year. He has been married to Dame Mary Archer, Chair of the Science Museum Group, for 55 year, and they have two sons, two granddaughters and three grandsons. He splits his time between London, Cambridge and Mallorca - where he writes the first draft of each new novel.
The fifth book In his new William Warwick novels - the first of which, Nothing Ventured, was published in 2019 - is NEXT IN LINE which will be out in September 2022.
Photo credit: Toby Madden
www.jeffreyarcher.com
Follow Jeffrey on Instagram - Jeffrey_Archer_Author, Facebook and Twitter @Jeffrey_Archer
Customer reviews
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Top reviews from Australia
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I still remember reading Kane and Abel in one sitting years ago, and I alway enjoy sitting back with a “good friend” as I commence each new book from Jeffrey!
Top reviews from other countries

How very curious. For a long time, with 12 'Likes', I was topping the amazon.co.uk reviews, then after a minor edit, of no great significance, I end up almost bottom of the entire chart on amazon.co.uk; yet I'm still topping it elsewhere eg on amazon.com (top of reviews in 'other countries'), and via kindle. Summat not quite right there...?
ANYWAY (16 Oct 2021 as amended):
It's been a while since I read the earlier volumes in the William Warwick series, but even so I think I would remember anything that put me off them. Has Archer's style changed dramatically of late? I find the conversations, of which there is an abundance, in this his latest WW book contrived, belaboured and hifalutin.
Take, for instance, in the course of a conversation, the emergence of a discourse - take a deep breath, one sentence, all of 41 words - on the origins of 'a feather in his cap'. I switched off, however interesting the explanation might be. It is so unrealistic, a testament more to Archer's erudition than to his craftsmanship.
Elsewhere we are fed lists of names of artists (and museums/galleries), about whom I'm left not much the wiser, or, indeed interested; the same might be said of just the two that are germane to the plot. Compare that with the subtler manner in which Michael Connelly weaves into one of his 'Bosch' novels the intriguing significance of the owl in the paintings of his protagonist's mediaeval namesake. Suffice it to say, I now have a volume of reproductions of that magnificent artist's output...
Moreover, in Archer's book I sense an occasional whiff of moralising, and though I have yet to spot any of the usual kind of product placement, I suspect it can be found nevertheless in all that name-dropping.
I'm still soldiering on with it in the hope that its merits will outweigh its faults, but my reaching the end is open to doubt. Frankly, give me instead the 22 or so volumes of Connelly's Bosch any day.
POSTSCRIPT (some time before April 2022):
I've started so I'll finish. I did. Ugh.
Maybe some worthy souls tackling the Lyke Wake Walk feel likewise...
Archer thinks he leaves us with a cliffhanger, enticing us to gobble up the next (final?) WW volume. Some, having plodded along his path, might prefer the walk to the cliffs at Ravenscar than fall for that one...


To have a new character come along was good but.... For him to tie everything up seemed disingenuous to the whole series of books.
Further, It was set in 1988 - there were no mobile phones that fitted into your pocket yet this was a key elemenent in one of the shootings BUT the unforgiveable act was the ending. What happened? What happened to the wife the lawyer? I feel so cheated and after reading his first book when I was 16 and I'm now 52, I expected better of such an amazing author.

