Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Quite Ugly One Evening - Chris Brookmyre



Description

'The plot is breathtaking, the setting beautiful and the characters are written with genuine depth. And smack bang in the middle of this Succession-meets-The Traitors novel is Brookmyre's most iconic character: the monumental Jack Parlabane. Irrepressible, acerbic and positively rubbing this hands with glee. Absolutely brilliant' M. W. Craven

'Brookmyre at his twisted best... Laugh out loud and perfectly conceived. What a bloody triumph' Helen Fields

An Atlantic voyage. A family at war. A secret worth killing over.

Reporter Jack Parlabane thrives on chasing stories in unlikely places, and where could be less likely than a fan convention on a cruise liner celebrating a contentious Sixties TV series? But unlike the media family exploiting their show's renewed relevance, he's not there to stoke controversy: he's there to solve a murder.

Already in deep water with his employer, Jack desperately needs a win, and solving this decades-old mystery could be it. Problem is, he's in the middle of the Atlantic, and someone onboard has already killed once to keep their secret.

And that's not even the tricky part. No, the tricky part is definitely the dead body locked in a stateroom with him, covered in his blood. Now Jack has to solve two murders, otherwise the only way he's getting off this ship is in handcuffs - or in a body bag.

Quite Ugly One Evening is a zeitgesty locked-room mystery that sees the return of rogue journalist Jack Parlabane thirty years after his first appearance in Quite Ugly One Morning.

Review

I recently read the first Jack Parlabane book which is 30 years old. So I was familiar with the main character. Now he is older he has matured, but not in all ways, although that is to the benefit of the reader in the main. 

I had no problem with Jack, I liked his with quick thinking and charm. What I did have a problem with was the many characters who I could not get straight in my head, particularly those with unusual but explained names. I decided to read on and not let it bother me. In the end the Agatha Christie style twist ending meant I wouldn't have had a scooby of working it out anyway. 

There was also a lot of detailed descriptions of the layout of the ship. Some were necessary for the plot but a lot of it seemed to be wasted words. It seemed like there was a lot of down time for Jack where admittedly he was "working" but nothing was happening. 

I haven't read the books in between the first and this one, so maybe I am missing something but it felt like a standalone book to me. Having said that the knowledge of Jack as a younger man did give the character more depth for me.

By the end of the book I was really enjoying it, but felt I had to wade through a lot to get there. I'm giving this book 3 out of 5 stars.

My thanks to Netgalley for the ARC to review. This book is published on 7 May 2026.

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