Murphy's Law (novel)

Murphy's Law is the first novel of the Martin Murphy series by Northern Irish author Colin Bateman, published on 13 October 2011 through Headline Publishing Group.[1] The novel is adapted from the television series of the same name, created by Bateman and starring James Nesbitt.

Murphy's Law
AuthorColin Bateman
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesMartin Murphy novels
GenreCrime, dark comedy
PublisherHeadline
Publication date
4 November 2002 (2002-11-04)
Media typePrint (Softcover)
Pages345
ISBN9780755302437
OCLC53389672
Followed byMurphy's Revenge
(2005)' 

Plot

The novel surrounds undercover Northern Irish policeman Martin Murphy. Murphy fails a professional assessment due to the murder of his young son by IRA terrorists, and is assigned to work in London. He is assigned a case investigating a North London funeral home, the proprietors of which are suspected diamond thieves.

Development

The novel was written when Bateman realised that the amount of material he had written for the TV series of the same name exceeded what would be produced. Bateman decided to change the name of the protagonist from "Tommy" to "Martin" as "I wanted to be able to control the character if – as it turned out to be true – I was no longer writing the series and someone else decided to take it in a different direction".[2]

Reception

The novel was well received. Reviewing for The Observer, Anthea Lawson stated that "Bateman's writing is hard, fast and funny, and there's a slick sheen to the inevitable violence".[3] Denise Wels, for Reviewing The Evidence, stated "black humour abounds in a plot about funeral directors that fair begs for comic asides"; commenting that "Bateman has created some nasty villains", specifically Hatcher, who she found to be "totally immoral and sadistic finding entertainment in the troubles of others whilst displaying the most touching filial affection for his own deplorable parent".[4] Writer Michael Stone found Murphy to be "charming, witty and dangerous" with "almost Holmesian powers of observation", stating "he is a character with complex issues, but Bateman renders him so humanely we have no problem identifying with him". Stone goes on to state that he found that the writing "is never less than superb". He does comment that "some folks dislike the sudden changes of POV, and I agree that head-swapping can lead to confusion at times" though does go on to conclude that "life's too short to nitpick, and I have another Murphy book to read, Murphy's Revenge".[5]

gollark: Although the current version, as far as I can tell, lacks any issues except a *minor* memory leak.
gollark: Sorry, happen.
gollark: Have you seen my code? Such things definitely happens.
gollark: I think you overestimate people.
gollark: See, most code in the wild is actually awful and bad.

References

  1. "Murphy's law (Book, 2002)". WorldCat.org. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  2. "Murphy's Law". Colin Bateman Official website. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  3. Lawson, Anthea (24 November 2002). "Fiction: Nov 24 | Books". The Observer. The Guardian. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  4. Wels, Denise (August 2003). "Murphy's Law, by Colin Bateman". Reviewing The Evidence. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  5. Stone, Michael (28 March 2008). "A Wee review - Murphy's Law by Colin Bateman". Crime Scene NI. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
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