'What on earth are you on about?' she said. 'How are we going to catch the Yorkshire Ripper, when the police haven't even managed to?'
I sighed. Her questioning my ideas was a recent and unwelcome element to our friendship. But it was a valid point. How would we catch him? We needed some sort of plan, a way of gathering clues and putting them into order.
I thought about what the policeman had said about structure, and then about Aunty Jean and her notebook, and the idea I had hardened like toffee. I knew exactly what we needed to do.
'We'll make a list,' I said. 'A list of the people and things we see that are suspicious.
And then . . . And then we'll investigate them.'
The List of Suspicious Things is a tender and moving coming of age story about family, friendship and community. Sometimes the strongest connections are found in the most unlikely of places.
It’s 1979 and in the UK Margaret Thatcher has just become Prime Minister, (forever remembered by many as ‘The Milk Snatcher)’. More worryingly however, in particular for the women of Yorkshire, a monster known as ‘The Yorkshire Ripper’ was making a name for himself by routinely and viciously killing young women, thereby leaving every woman feeling terrified and vulnerable, frightened to even venture out at night. It’s against this backdrop that The List of Suspicious Things is set.
Miv lives with her Dad, her Mum (when she’s not having one of her regular spells in hospital, having completely withdrawn from life) and auntie Jean. She caught her Dad and auntie Jean talking about moving away from Yorkshire, citing the Ripper as one of the reasons, so if Miv can discover the identity of the killer, maybe she won’t have to move away from her dear friend Sharon, and so it is that 11 year old Miv decides she’s going to catch The Yorkshire Ripper, and persuades her best friend Sharon to help her. Auntie Jean likes structure in her life and makes lists for everything, and Miv begins a list of her own, of all the suspicious things about the people she comes into contact with, and that might lead her to The Ripper!
Gosh this is a fantastic coming of age story, and a debut novel to boot (hard to believe). Having grown up in Yorkshire I recognise and felt connected to many of the characters, this may be a small community but there is much going on and plenty of women who can’t wait to spread the gossip, but they make for amusing characters (mostly!) I also remember the level of fear that the murders generated and the impact it had on local communities. Peter Sutcliffe (The Yorkshire Ripper) didn’t just rob women of their lives, he also robbed thousands of women of their right to feel safe going about their daily lives in the 1970’s.
A heartwarming, and moving experience, and I loved it. I shall be very surprised if this debut novel isn’t a runaway success, and one that the author justly deserves.
*Thank you to Netgalley and Random House UK, Cornerstone, Hutchinson Heinemann for my ARC in exchange for an honest unbiased review *
When I reached the end of The List of Suspicious Things, I snapped the book closed as one normally does upon finishing a book. As I glimpsed at the cover, my attention was drawn to the bird. Why is this bird on the front cover and featured so prominently on the stencilled edge?
Then, it clicked.
Page 3 of Daemon Voices by Philip Pullman, […] the raven, that picker-up of bits and pieces here and there.”
Very clever.
Set in the late 1970’s, the Yorkshire Ripper is at large! Mavis “Miv” a 12-year-old girl is on the hunt! Together with her best friend, Sharon Parker, they develop a list of suspicious people/places and begin to investigate.
However, people in her local village aren’t nearly as simple as they appear on the surface. And, some truths are difficult to face.
This charming and stirring tale is powerful and heartwarming. It has many characters with depth, leaning into the beauty of human complexities, good people doing “bad” things and “bad” people doing good things.
Currently, The List of Suspicious Things is not available in the United States, and it is decidedly British. However, I enjoyed learning a bit more about the British vernacular. But, my American friends, don’t be surprised if you have to look up Horlicks, waltzers, kitchen roll, ginnel, chippy, biro. But I have confidence you will survive!
Plus, the mere mention of glitter lip gloss makes me happy!
On the other hand, this book does move a touch too slow. To be clear, this isn’t really a murder mystery—that’s more in the background while Miv is discovering more about herself and her community. The paragraphs and sentences are a bit long for the mystery/thriller genre (although Godfrey’s prose is impressive), and it is a bit too verbose overall.
In regard to Sharon, the foreshadowing is too heavy handed, and the narrative voice of Miv is faintly underwhelming. Where are the 12-year old snarky comments? Where are the laser eyes at Aunt Jean or Dad?
Miv is supposedly very scholarly. Why doesn’t she drop in a line or two from her books? Miv’s character reads a bit like a very self-aware, watered down adult than an intelligent, slightly impulsive 12- year-old. And what happened to Mr. Ware?
And of course….
The ending. Ugh! Come on! It is overly sentimental, not very strong, and predictable. Some of the best endings have come out of the UK (The Golden Compass/Northern Lights, The Magician’s Nephew) that made me want to immediately and compulsively rip open the second book. Godfrey could have at least teased readers with a new quest for Miv.
A timely work gently challenging the readers’ paradigm.
The Green Light at the End of the Dock (How much I spent): Hardcover Text - £29.99 purchased at Goldsboro Books – The PREM1ER Edition (signed by the author and has a stencilled edge)
I saw this book all over Twitter for the last nine months, Jennie Godfrey has a debut hit on her hands for good reason. A coming-of-age mystery set against the backdrop of the 80s while the Yorkshire Ripper does his bad deeds The List of Suspicious Things captures the essence and time and place brilliantly. Godfrey's characters are wonderful and I felt something for every one of them, I either loved them or loved to hate them.
Our spunky, pre-teen protagonist, Miv deals with a lot of issues in her life and community, there are of course the murders but there is also depression, suicide, racism and domestic abuse to name but a few. Miv has to deal with these issues at home, school and even during her playtime. To give herself a sense of control over what is happening in her life she decides to make a list and investigate The Ripper herself with her best friend Sharon.
Godfrey is realistic in her writing and sensitive to the issues she writes about and I loved the friendship between the kids in this story not to mention first loves. It was so endearing and the book also showed how The Ripper and all the other things in their family lives gave them each a loss of their innocence. Wonderfully done and so different from the usual mysteries out there and the ending was simply shocking.
Margaret Thatcher has just been elected (imagine a woman as Prime Minister!!) and the Yorkshire Ripper is terrorizing Northern England.
And, now Miv’s father feels like a move away from Yorkshire might be what’s BEST for his family, threatening to move them all “Down South”.
12 year old Miv has already lost her mother (for all intents and purposes) and she doesn’t feel like she could survive losing her best friend, Sharon too. Inspired by her favorite adventure books, “The Famous Five” by Enid Blyton, she comes up with a plan…
If she and Sharon can solve “The Ripper” case, maybe she won’t have to move away.
They make a “list of all the suspicious people” and begin investigating.
What they discover is that many of the neighborhood boys and men are up to “no good” but could they also be responsible for bludgeoning prostitutes with hammers and stabbing them to death?
This book progresses “suspect by suspect” and is filled with late 70’s/early 80’s NOSTALGIA which I both remember and love. (especially the songs!!)
The denouement is both shocking and unexpected.
It’s part “coming of age” story, part Historical Fiction, and part mystery and it brought back my own memories of reading Trixie Belden and Nancy Drew mysteries. Even the hardback book with its striking blue dust cover feels reminiscent of those times, and will become a cherished addition to my book shelf.
The heart of the story is the friendship between the two girls! This book was a gift from my good friend Susan- whom I met late in life-but we share so many interests that I bet we would have also been “thick as thieves” if we had met as young girls!
So glad she shared this book with me!
A brilliant debut novel which will be published in the U.S. in December 2025! Available to read to NG members now!
I'm afraid it's one of those awkward times when you review a book everyone loves...and you don't.
The List of Suspicious seems to be getting 5 stars from one and all but I'm an outlier on this one.
It's a coming-of-age story set in Yorkshire around the time of the Ripper murders. A young girl called Miv decides to try to solve the mystery of the murderer.
A nice set-up, but the execution left me feeling like a dispassionate observer of the story, rather than reeling me in. Miv is a good central character but some of the other characters were thin, to the point I often forgot who was who.
I think my main two issues with the book were the pacing and the unremitting bleakness.
In terms of pacing, i almost DNF'd the book around a third of the way through because it was dull. Then in the last 20% of the book suddenly no end of crazy shit starts happening. Perhaps if some of these events had happened earlier it would have got me invested. It would also have prevented the climax of the book feeling somewhat unrealistic, with a huge amount of stuff suddenly happening concurrently. It was exciting, but also felt a bit silly.
In terms of bleakness, if this is Yorkshire life, I'd recommend Miv, and everyone else, moves to another area. Life can throw challenges at us from time to time but Miv appears to be fucking jinxed! Over the course of the few months the book covers she encounters severe mental illness, adultery, racism, arson, manslaughter, paedophilia (which felt bizarrely levered in as a sub-plot near the end), deviant vicars, domestic abuse, suicide and tragic death.
It wouldn't have been surprised to find out the postman was a Nazi war criminal in hiding. I certainly hope Miv's following few months were a little more chilled.
The List of Suspicious Things had some good things going for it but ultimately seemed suspiciously like a list of melodramatic YA events, which felt uncomfortable alongside the very serious subject matter.
Thanks to the publisher, author and NetGalley for an ARC in return for an honest review.
‘There’ll be trouble at t’mill’, there sure will Aunty Jean. It’s 1979 and Aunty Jean is in full flow about Margaret Thatcher being elected Prime Minister, she’s not happy about the “milk snatcher“, it’ll spell the end for Yorkshire that is if the Ripper doesn’t do that first, our own homegrown West Yorkshire bogeyman. Not that Miv entirely understands what’s going on, especially about his victims, after all, she’s only eleven but when 19-year-old building society clerk Josephine Whitaker from Halifax is killed, she takes more notice as she’s not that many years older than her. The dark cloud of the Ripper looms large over Yorkshire, especially to the west. When it’s mooted that Miv’s family may leave Yorkshire, cricket and all, she is determined to stay especially for her best friend Sharon. What if …. what if… she could solve the murders? So she starts to make a list of the suspicious things she notices around her and ropes Sharon into her investigation. This stunning debut is told over a period of about 2 to 3 years by Miv with alternating chapters from the adults around her, offering some illumination of sharp eyed Miv’s observations.
You know when you just know a book is going to be huge, that a talented new author has burst on the scene?? Well, here we have it. First of all, the characterisation is exemplary. I love Miv and she’s an unforgettable character and yes, you could say she’s obsessive but she’s only looking for distraction from difficulties at home. Miv has good instincts even if she doesn’t entirely understand what she sees which is certainly true at the start when her naivety is clear to see but not at the end. Her friendships are a thing of beauty especially with the lovely Sharon, the “Terrible Twosome” and their friendship is wonderful. It isn’t all plain sailing by any stretch as they witness some cruelty and meanness that beggars belief but sadly is all too believable. All the characters spring to life, even the ones you’d rather didn’t.
The hunt for the evil Yorkshire Ripper inevitably means there are some dark themes and the storyline also includes racism, bullying and some domestic violence too. It captures West Yorkshire to perfection especially in the context of the late 70’s and early ‘80’s with its derelict satanic mills of Blake’s poem, with its ghosts of the past, the attitudes and gossip of a small town with firmly entrenched views. You definitely feel the tension and fear of the hunt for Peter Sutcliffe, I was in Yorkshire at the time though not the West, but we all felt the fear. Yet, despite all the obvious darkness, there’s Miv, wonderful Miv. You watch her grow up and you just know she’s going to be a fine young woman and one you’d most certainly want to know.
This is a superb coming of age story cleverly entwined with the mystery of the identity of a serial killer, it’s a story of unbreakable friendships, a life that is better just for knowing that person and the strength we derive from them. It’s beautifully written and I will not deny I have tears rolling down my face at times, this book is truly an experience and one to savour. It isn’t hard to imagine this will be one of the smash hits of 2024. Highly recommended, obviously!!
With thanks to NetGalley and especially to Random House U.K., Hutchinson for the much appreciated arc in return for an honest review.
If this is a debut I can't wait to read more by this author.
I could probably write a list of why I thoroughly enjoyed this book: I'm from Yorkshire (not far from Dewsbury), I was around the same age as Miv when the Ripper terrorised the streets, I too had a pretty friend who boys were attracted to but she was nicer than Sharon so there the similarity ends. However the main reasons are the plot, the characters and the dialogue of this great first novel.
Jennie Godfrey has drawn on her own life to produce Miv, an immature, nervous little girl who is trying to deal with the unexplained withdrawal of her mother from her life, her father's increasingly worrying behaviour and having a best friend who she is desperate to keep (without knowing she doesn't have to try at all). But Miv is not the only totally believable character - from Mr Bashir who has lost his wife, moved from Bradford and is trying to deal with the NF element that is threatening his life and livelihood or Mrs Andrews whose charming and handsome husband, Gary, is not quite all he seems to much lesser characters like Jim whose Newcastle accent makes him a target for a while after the Wearside Jack tapes.
All of these events were blurry in my mind but as the book unfolds they came back to me with startling clarity. But this is not a book about The Yorkshire Ripper it is about the people in a small Yorkshire town dealing with their own demons be they the National Front, racism, the changing nature of the streets, alcoholism, domestic violence, mental health. Lift the rooves of any street and you'd find the same problems but Jennie Godfrey has given them a voice, made them real through the eyes of Miv, whose desire to catch the Ripper is sometimes funny, sometimes ridiculous and sometimes somewhat terrifying as she tries harder and harder to keep Sharon close and her family together.
I don't think I've done this book justice with this review. It is seldom dark, despite the issues revealed. Miv is a wonderful vibrant character who positively bursts off the pages as do so many of Ms Godfrey's characters. I mentioned the dialogue earlier and that too rings true. It's an art writing believable dialogue and Ms Godfrey pulls it off with aplomb.
Highly recommended. It'll keep you spellbound to the end.
Thanks to Netgalley and Random House UK Cornerstone for the advanced reading copy.
As a child of the 80s and a born and bred Yorkshire lass, as soon as I read the first line of this book, I knew I was going to love it. It invoked childhood memories of growing up in Yorkshire - the dialect, the accents and growing up in a small community.
The main character, Miv, is a very strong willed not quite teenager, who gets it in her mind that she can solve the case of the Yorkshire Ripper. She begins to make a list of suspicious characters and places in her town, roping in her not-so-keen-on-getting-involved friend, Sharon. Along the way, we meet the other residents of their small town, with many giggles and traumas along the way.
This is a book not to be spoiled by a long review. I want you to meet the characters and experience them for the first time within the pages of the book, just like I did. And what a wonderful journey you will have. You'll laugh, you'll gasp out loud and you'll cry (more than once!).
A book so full of heart that your own will explode with the sheer joy of the goodness of humans, even when faced with pure evil in its many guises. And on top of all that, it carries a message to women that we should remember every day.
Making a list... Checking it twice... Gonna find out who's naughty and nice*
The List of Suspicious Things is a love story. Not limited to romance, it encompasses the love of family, best friends, and community. And like most beautiful love stories, it also includes heartbreak.
I was enthralled with this book. So lyrically written, it brings to life a pre-teen’s growing up years in 1970’s Yorkshire and had me smiling and shedding tears alternately.
I highly recommend this uniquely written novel which I found elevated in every respect. Not only a favorite for this year, but for many to come.
My hardback copy purchased at Blackwell’s is sitting at the forefront on my shelf.
* Santa Claus is Comming to Town written by Haven Gillespie
This is a book that’s been endlessly hyped all over social media and yet it did nothing for me.
The main character, Miv, is annoyingly naive and frustrated me massively. The book itself was slow - it started out okay but dropped off shortly after the sample chapter ends … and then the ending is insane! Everything happens at once; characters we’ve barely been mentioned to you are outed as paedophiles and alcoholics, children die, a young man hangs himself, the bloke obviously abusing his wife gets arrested, the shop burns down … It was bizarre, to say the least. I can’t say I enjoyed it much.
And the constant Yorkshire-isms; “laiking out”, everyone drinks tea, there’s “trouble at t’mill” … you know the sort of thing. Then it isn’t consistent. Sometimes it’s written in a Yorkshire accent, sometimes it isn’t. It just wound me up.
Finally … We know that the Yorkshire Ripper was called Peter Sutcliffe; the book is set during the search for him, when nobody knew his actual name, so the first time a character called Peter is mentioned (offhandedly, we never see anything this Peter does or says, and we never learn his surname), I immediately went, “that’s him! That’s the Ripper they’re looking for!” Then another character called Peter turns up. As it happens, my first guess was right, but calling two characters Peter in a book about the Yorkshire Ripper is an odd choice.
But yeah. Alcoholism, death, suicide, paedophilia, bullying, racism, affairs, depression, domestic violence, homelessness and lies. This book’s got it all (except good writing).
Not for me. Too trite, too unbelievable and too slow.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I really enjoyed the majority of this book, but at the end, it really bothered me how the severe mental illness of Miv's mother was dealt with. A person who has been completely mute and almost catatonic with depression and PTSD for two years doesn't just
You know how you see a book everywhere, and think HOW CAN THIS DESERVE SO MUCH HYPE? Then you start reading, and you think IT DESERVES THE HYPE. Then you finish, and know it NEEDS EVEN MORE HYPE! Brava Jennie Godfrey! This book is gorgeous ❤️
Oh WOW 😮 that ending! I was SO not prepared for that…🥺😭🤐
The title doesn’t even begin to give this book justice! It is SO much more than just a mystery; it is a heartfelt, tender and emotional read, that I would highly recommend to anyone!
In fact, the author’s note at the beginning says it all: ‘The list of suspicious things is my love letter to God’s Own Country.’ 🥰
And so, the story begins with a 12 year old girl named Miv. She is our main POV throughout the course of the story, however the narrative does occasionally switch to the POV of other characters. It is 1979, Miv and her family live in Yorkshire, England where there happens to be a murderer on the loose (based on the real-life Yorkshire Ripper!). Curious Miv wonders “What if we decided to try and find him?"
Little by little, Miv and her best friend, Sharon, begin their list of suspicious things. And alongside this process, we slowly get to know the members of their close-knit community. Everyone from a school teacher to the owner of the corner shop. However, overtime Miv’s questioning becomes an unwelcome element to the friendship. But sometimes the strongest connections are found in the most unlikely of places…
This is a truly original take on a mystery and is probably one of the most heartfelt and touching mysteries I have ever read; unexpectedly, it very nearly had me in tears! It is beautiful coming-of-age story explores topics ranging friendship, racism and mental health. What a fantastic debut novel! The pacing was perfect, the characters felt real and relatable and I am sorry to be leaving the whole community behind. I look forward to seeing what Jennie Godfrey has in store for next… 📚💖🌟
I'm going to be in the tiny minority of readers who weren't completely ecstatic about this book.
Although I thought the author captured the period brilliantly - Jackie magazine and Wagon Wheels - and there were some wonderful characters, especially Omar and Arthur, I found the story being set against the backdrop of the horrific real life serial killing of women distinctly uncomfortable. Sharon summed it up well when she says to Miv, 'I just worry about what we're doing here, and why... It feels, I don't know, like a game. And it's not a game, what's happened to these women. It's not.' Yes, you could say Miv is naive but visiting sites similar to where actual bodies were found and visiting the area where attacks occurred were, for me, just morbid.
I appreciate the author may have been trying to communicate how the wider fears of a community can mask what's going on under their noses. However, in this respect they seemed particularly unlucky that this involved alcoholism to zenophobia and seemingly everything in between.
Miv, age 12, lives in West Yorkshire during the late 1970s, after the mills have closed and when the Yorkshire Ripper was running rampant. Miv decides that she and her best friend Sharon should investigate suspicious occurrences and people and find the Ripper themselves and they discover so much along the way, both good and bad.
Oh, book lovers. If you were ever a twelve year old girl (and even if you weren’t) there is so much to love here. The book is told from Miv’s perspective (mostly) and she is so perfectly twelve. There are many characters with compelling stories and they are nearly all well done (if maybe all a little either too good or too bad) and the life of a former mill town in decline in the late 1970s is also rendered well. I couldn’t quite tell if this was a debut, but, either way, wow. I was absolutely charmed by this, and I don’t normally go for the type of books that you would use the word “charmed” about. Highly recommended.
Set in Yorkshire during the Thatcher years and under the shadow of the Yorkshire Ripper, this novel is told through the first person narration of 12/13 year old Miv, with regular third person accounts of other characters.
This is a coming of age story, a mystery, a romance ... a bit of everything and it just didn't work for me. I admired the scene setting, the historical time period reconstruction complete with mentions of the events of the day including Thatcher's end to school milk, the mines and declining industry etc. That said, the Yorkshire accents came and went and there was an overuse of the signature phrases. I could not come at the early teen desire to catch the Yorkshire Ripper which felt like one of the famous five novels the protagonist so admired. Yes intentional I am sure - but it just didn't work for me. There were serious subjects here, domestic violence, alcoholism, mental illness, racism ... but it all felt juvenile and poorly written. I obviously read a different book than the majority! I'm just angry at myself that I kept reading in the hope of it getting better, it should have been a dnf.
Yorkshire 1979, The Yorkshire Ripper is on the loose and the police are struggling to capture him. The hunt for the ripper captures the imagination of two young friends Sharon and Miv and they are determined to start their own secret list of suspects and in doing so they unearth a neighborhood of secrets.
This novel started out strong and I enjoyed many aspects of the book. The characters were enjoyable and very likable but the story became tedious after 300 hundred pages and I plotted to the end. I felt it was repetitive and it ended up just being an OK read for me.
The List Of Suspicious Things is the first book by British author, Jennie Godfrey. The audio version is narrated by Mark Noble, Asif Khan, Gemma Whelan, Simon Harvey and Joanne Froggatt. It’s about two years since Mavis Senior’s mum, Marion stopped talking, now spending her days in the armchair or her bedroom. In that time, Dad’s sister, Aunty Edna has come to help out, Maggie Thatcher has become Prime Minister (and Aunty Edna has plenty to say about that), and Sharon Parker, at first sort of co-opted, has become her best friend.
The other thing is the murders: young women are being brutally killed by the man everyone calls the Ripper, and the police don’t seem to be getting any closer to catching him. When twelve-year-old Miv hears Dad and Aunty Edna talking about moving away from Yorkshire, away from it all, she dreads the idea of losing everything familiar, including her best friend. She reasons that, if she could investigate, work out what the police are missing, and catch the killer, they would be able to stay.
Miv is a fan of the Famous Five books and, following Aunty Edna’s example, she buys a notebook and, after carefully studying the newspaper reports about the murders, starts listing the suspicious things she observes around her. Sharon is a bit sceptical that they can catch him, but indignance at the way the victims are described in the press gets her over the line.
Everyone in their small Yorkshire town, Bishopsfield, comes under scrutiny, but dark-haired, dark-eyed men with moustaches, especially if they “aren’t from around here”, drive a certain car, or have a certain accent, qualify for entry into Miv’s notebook. The pair check out places suitable for hiding a body and where the Ripper might find his victims. When the press mention “hiding in plain sight” and “the women in the Ripper’s life” the range of people they feel need watching expands.
After each new killing, “the streets themselves felt unsettled, as though the news had seeped into the bricks and mortar of the town. Whispers of the news seemed to be all around us: women were outside their houses in small groups, muttering his name, their eyes darting around as if he might appear at any moment.”
As they investigate suspicious behaviour and gradually eliminate various suspects, they learn quite a lot about the people of their town: some of it sad, some of it surprising, some of it disturbing. When Sharon’s enthusiasm for their project wanes, she tells Miv “I don’t know if any of the people we know are suspicious or whether they’re just trying to live their lives.” Miv realises “a growing awareness that behind every grown-up was a story I knew nothing about.”
In trying to catch the Ripper, they discover that Bishopsfield harbours: some right-wing thugs who like to intimidate; an arsonist; sexists, racists and xenophobes; a paedophile. There’s infidelity, domestic violence, bullying and cruelty, alcoholism, divorce and suicide.
But they also encounter plenty of ordinary people leading ordinary lives: people grieving losses, trying to cope with life’s challenges, keeping secrets and telling lies, showing concern and kindness and care. The pair make assumptions and jump to conclusions; there are few narrow escapes and some tragic deaths; new bonds of friendship are formed and there are budding romances.
Godfrey’s debut is somewhat reminiscent of Joanna Cannon’s The Trouble With Goats And Sheep, but this is by no means a copy of that. Her descriptive prose is marvellous: “though Aunty Jean’s hearing was less than sharp, her other senses were razor-like, and she would have smelled my inattention like a hunting dog.”
She gives her characters wise words and insightful observations. Omar, the Pakistani shop-keeper: “He heard talk about everyone in the shop, so often he wondered if people knew he could speak English, the things they would say to each other in his presence.”
Omar on surviving grief: “I suppose what I do is try not to think too far ahead,’ he said eventually. ‘If I’d considered for a second that I had to live months, or even years, without her . . .’ Omar stopped for a moment and cleared his throat. ‘I’m not sure I could’ve . . . kept going. But if I only think about the day in front of me, sometimes the hour, or even the minute, then I can do it. I can keep living.”
And Miv on adults: “I had already discovered by then how much people would reveal when you stayed quiet” and “Adults were always doing this in my experience, saying one thing and meaning another, the truth a blur in between” and “I was used to grown-ups having conversations that left the important things unsaid, they happened in my family all the time.” This is a brilliant debut and more from Jennie Godfrey is eagerly anticipated.
This book is set in Yorkshire, England, during the period of the serial killer dubbed "The Yorkshire Ripper" - a truly terrifying time for all women in the area. Two school friends decide that they are going to track down the "Ripper" themselves. This is the theme running throughout, however, lots is going on otherwise for the two girls, not all of it good. The author captures the girls' naivety nicely, and we see them having to grow up as the story progresses.
I loved this book. It reminded me of "The Trouble With Goats And Sheep" by Joanna Cannon, but darker.
The List Of Suspicious Things is a brilliant, moving, tender coming of age story and I absolutely loved it. Unforgettable, well-written, fully pledged cast of characters. A well conceived sensitively written story that tackles some really dark issues. Jennie Godfrey gave us a poignant book that made me cry and laugh and then cry some more and that will stay with me for a very long time. Highly recommended.
Powieść Jennie Godfrey była dla mnie niezwykle przyjemnym zaskoczeniem i idealną odskocznią od książek o nieco cięższym kalibrze. Świetnie sprawdzi się jako lekka, a jednocześnie angażująca lektura na letnie wieczory albo te parne popołudnia, gdy powietrze staje się tak ciężkie, że trudno skupić się na czymkolwiek innym. Historię Miv i jej najlepszej przyjaciółki Sharon śledzi się z dużą lekkością i rosnącym zaciekawieniem, kiedy dziewczynki decydują się założyć swój mały "klub detektywistyczny", próbując rozwiązać zagadkę serii morderstw w Yorkshire, za którymi stoi niesławny Rozpruwacz.
Jennie Godfrey doskonale oddaje atmosferę końca lat 70., czerpiąc inspirację z własnych wspomnień z dzieciństwa. Zanurzenie się w perspektywę dwunastoletniej Miv wywołuje delikatne poczucie nostalgii, gdyż autorka umiejętnie ukazuje dziecięcą naiwność i nieskażone jeszcze spojrzenie na świat dorosłych, który – jak się okazuje – często bywa mniej skomplikowany niż sądzą sami dorośli. Miv i Sharon odkrywają sekrety swojego miasteczka, przy okazji stykając się z różnorodnymi traumami i problemami, które okazują się warte poruszenia i przepracowania.
W pewnym sensie „Lista podejrzanych spraw” to opowieść terapeutyczna, która w lekki sposób porusza trudne tematy, takie jak rodzinne dramaty, zaburzenia psychiczne czy traumy ukrywane pod pozorami normalności. Szczególnie poruszający jest wątek matki głównej bohaterki, jej emocjonalnego wycofania, mutyzmu i depresyjnych stanów. Godfrey z dużym wyczuciem buduje obraz nieidealnej rodziny i poranionych dorosłych, pokazując, że mimo wszystkich popełnianych błędów najważniejsze jest to, że każdy pozostaje człowiekiem ze swoimi słabościami i potrzebą wsparcia.
Autorka balansuje między przytulną atmosferą "cozy crime" a poważniejszymi zwrotami akcji, które niekiedy prowadzą nawet do tragicznych wydarzeń. Robi to jednak z wyczuciem i nie przekracza granicy realizmu, tworząc przekonujący portret dorastania, konfrontacji z trudnymi prawdami o świecie oraz pogodzenia się z rozczarowaniami, które stanowią nieodłączny element dorosłości.
Wszystkie te elementy składają się na historię pełną ciepła, ale też głębokich emocji, wzruszeń i momentów refleksji, przy której łatwo uronić łzę. Jestem przekonany, że "Lista podejrzanych spraw" ma potencjał, by stać się bestsellerem, a popularność książki w Wielkiej Brytanii zupełnie mnie nie dziwi. Jeśli cenicie twórczość Fredrika Backmana, znajdziecie tu podobną wrażliwość, subtelność i głębię. Życzę Jennie Godfrey podobnego sukcesu komercyjnego – z pewnością na niego zasługuje!
The List Of Suspicious Things is the first book by British author, Jennie Godfrey. It’s about two years since Mavis Senior’s mum, Marion stopped talking, now spending her days in the armchair or her bedroom. In that time, Dad’s sister, Aunty Edna has come to help out, Maggie Thatcher has become Prime Minister (and Aunty Edna has plenty to say about that), and Sharon Parker, at first sort of co-opted, has become her best friend.
The other thing is the murders: young women are being brutally killed by the man everyone calls the Ripper, and the police don’t seem to be getting any closer to catching him. When twelve-year-old Miv hears Dad and Aunty Edna talking about moving away from Yorkshire, away from it all, she dreads the idea of losing everything familiar, including her best friend. She reasons that, if she could investigate, work out what the police are missing, and catch the killer, they would be able to stay.
Miv is a fan of the Famous Five books and, following Aunty Edna’s example, she buys a notebook and, after carefully studying the newspaper reports about the murders, starts listing the suspicious things she observes around her. Sharon is a bit sceptical that they can catch him, but indignance at the way the victims are described in the press gets her over the line.
Everyone in their small Yorkshire town, Bishopsfield, comes under scrutiny, but dark-haired, dark-eyed men with moustaches, especially if they “aren’t from around here”, drive a certain car, or have a certain accent, qualify for entry into Miv’s notebook. The pair check out places suitable for hiding a body and where the Ripper might find his victims. When the press mention “hiding in plain sight” and “the women in the Ripper’s life” the range of people they feel need watching expands.
After each new killing, “the streets themselves felt unsettled, as though the news had seeped into the bricks and mortar of the town. Whispers of the news seemed to be all around us: women were outside their houses in small groups, muttering his name, their eyes darting around as if he might appear at any moment.”
As they investigate suspicious behaviour and gradually eliminate various suspects, they learn quite a lot about the people of their town: some of it sad, some of it surprising, some of it disturbing. When Sharon’s enthusiasm for their project wanes, she tells Miv “I don’t know if any of the people we know are suspicious or whether they’re just trying to live their lives.” Miv realises “a growing awareness that behind every grown-up was a story I knew nothing about.”
In trying to catch the Ripper, they discover that Bishopsfield harbours: some right-wing thugs who like to intimidate; an arsonist; sexists, racists and xenophobes; a paedophile. There’s infidelity, domestic violence, bullying and cruelty, alcoholism, divorce and suicide.
But they also encounter plenty of ordinary people leading ordinary lives: people grieving losses, trying to cope with life’s challenges, keeping secrets and telling lies, showing concern and kindness and care. The pair make assumptions and jump to conclusions; there are few narrow escapes and some tragic deaths; new bonds of friendship are formed and there are budding romances.
Godfrey’s debut is somewhat reminiscent of Joanna Cannon’s The Trouble With Goats And Sheep, but this is by no means a copy of that. Her descriptive prose is marvellous: “though Aunty Jean’s hearing was less than sharp, her other senses were razor-like, and she would have smelled my inattention like a hunting dog.”
She gives her characters wise words and insightful observations. Omar, the Pakistani shop-keeper: “He heard talk about everyone in the shop, so often he wondered if people knew he could speak English, the things they would say to each other in his presence.”
Omar on surviving grief: “I suppose what I do is try not to think too far ahead,’ he said eventually. ‘If I’d considered for a second that I had to live months, or even years, without her . . .’ Omar stopped for a moment and cleared his throat. ‘I’m not sure I could’ve . . . kept going. But if I only think about the day in front of me, sometimes the hour, or even the minute, then I can do it. I can keep living.”
And Miv on adults: “I had already discovered by then how much people would reveal when you stayed quiet” and “Adults were always doing this in my experience, saying one thing and meaning another, the truth a blur in between” and “I was used to grown-ups having conversations that left the important things unsaid, they happened in my family all the time.” This is a brilliant debut and more from Jennie Godfrey is eagerly anticipated. This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Random House UK Cornerstone.
Nie do końca wiem co sądzić o tej książce. Oczekiwałam chyba więcej wątku kryminalnego, ale jednak jak już się pojawiał to czułam lekkie zniecierpliwienie. Główna bohaterka w opowieści ma 12 i 13 lat na przestrzeni całej historii, tymczasem czułam jakby mentalnie zatrzymała się kilka lat wcześniej i zapomniała dorosnąć. Jej zabawa w śledztwo dość szybko robi się niebezpieczna, po drodze faktycznie wychodzi na jaw wiele sekretów, ale Miv większość z nich pojmuje dość późno, nie rozumie rzeczy, które widzi przez co miałam tu duży zgrzyt. Bo miałam tu praktycznie nastolatkę, która nie potrafiła rozpoznać pijanego człowieka, o próbach molestowania mówi bardziej jak sześciolatka niż dorastająca dziewczyna i na wszystko patrzy tak naiwnie jakby pół życia trzymano ją w zamknięciu w odcieciu od swiata, telewizji, wiadomości, rozmów dorosłych.. Rozumiem, że to nie były realia internetu, mediów i rozmów z dziećmi na trudniejsze tematy, ale wydawało mi się to kompletnie nierealistyczne, nawet jeśli pod koniec zdarza jej się kilka dojrzałych decyzji (aż dwie :p)..
Inną rzeczą, która mnie kłuła w oczy była mnogość tych wszystkich tragedii dotykających małe miasteczko a wręcz bardzo wąskie grono ludzi wokół dziewczynki.. Bo mamy tu szalejącego po ulicach rozpruwacza, a do tego rasizm, prześladowania, podpalenia, pedofilię, samobójstwa, przemoc domową i w zasadzie każdą inną tragedię.. Ok, życie nie jest lekkie, ale to po prostu nie było w moim odczuciu realistyczne i zamiast pokazać jak młoda osoba widzi takie sprawy, radzi sobie z nimi i układa w głowie to robił się jakiś absurd, po którym bohaterka powinna wylądować na solidnej terapii.
Niby słuchało mi się tego dość przyjemnie i tak niezobowiązująco, ale kompletnie nie rozumiem dlaczego ta historia zbiera tak dobre oceny i co właściwie (poza zakonczeniem) tak porusza ludzi.. Dla mnie była raczej nijaka i za tydzień nie będę jej pamiętać..
**Spoiler alert**
I muszę, bo sie uduszę, ale wątek matki głównej bohaterki pogrążonej w katatonii, ciężkiej depresji, po próbach samobójczych, która tak nagle pewnego dnia doznaje ozdrowienia i o wszystkim opowiada i żyje jakby nic się nie stało?? No kaman! To najbardziej naiwne i leniwe rozwiązanie na świecie...
I first heard about The List of Suspicious Things on booktwitter and decided to read it as the premise was interesting. I’m glad I did as it will be one of my favorite reads this year. It’s been receiving a lot of well-deserved praise and is on bestseller lists in the UK.
This is a beautiful, heartfelt coming-of-age story set in 1979 in Yorkshire, England. It is about 12-year-old Miv whose family seems to be falling apart, with her mother sick, her father distant, and her aunt unfeeling and cold. Miv hears about a string of murders of young women (the real-life Yorkshire Ripper) and that her father may move the family to another town for their safety. Miv, feeling bereft, decides that can’t happen so she determines, with the help of her best friend, Sharon, to investigate who in their town might be the murderer. And so begins Miv’s writing of a list of things/people she thinks are suspicious.
As Miv and Sharon observe those around them, the veil of childhood starts to lift as they come to learn about the secrets in the town. Miv, in particular, starts to understand that there is both good and bad in people and that things and people aren’t always as they might seem. Told primarily from her point of view, we also see life in 1970s Yorkshire unfold through the eyes of a few others, including Omar, a Pakistani newcomer dealing with racism and Helen, a woman being abused by her husband but whose neighbors choose to turn a blind eye.
This is a story about self-doubt, friendship, family, loss, discrimination, being young and trying to figure out who you are, and about the fact that life can be difficult at times. But it is also about hope and resilience - one line near the end in particular really stuck with me: “..and I realized, just for a moment, that it was possible to come back from the worst thing that ever happened to you.”
Kudos to the author on this, her debut (!) novel. The characters seem real, particularly Miv who is a funny, likeable person, the setting feels authentic (the references to 1970s politics, Margaret Thatcher, and culture are spot-on), the pacing is very good, and the plot culminates in a bittersweet ending. I enjoyed being in Miv’s world and was sorry to leave it when I turned the last page. Highly recommend this moving and emotionally fulfilling read.
Oh how I thought this would be a guaranteed 5* read and I’m so disappointed that *for me* it just wasn’t. About halfway I was thinking 3* will do it but I can’t even give it that.
It was a slog and a chore to get through this which is so disappointing because it started off well, there’s a lot of positive reviews and social media hype but it just missed the mark for me in the end.
Miv was very annoying, the ending really didn’t do it for me at all. Honestly if the book had of focused more on Omar and Ish it could’ve maybe been more my cup of tea but just seemed things were happening for the sake of writing something about *insert trope/ trigger here*.
2.5* is my rating but I can’t justify rounding it up.
What a fantastic book. I adored the main character, Miv, and her incredibly different attitude to all the grown ups around her. What I loved most is that it showed just how accepting and lush children can be (sometimes!!!). Many adults/teenagers we came across in the book were racist, but it was the Miv and Sharon who didn’t even see Ish for their race but for who they were.
I enjoyed the community and since I grew up in the 2000s I was shocked to see how lax parents were, especially when there was a serial killer on the loose. 🥲
I think this will be a very hard to beat book club book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Warum Sharon und Miv beste Freundinnen sind, wissen sie nicht mehr so genau, aber eben das sind sie. Es ist die Zeit als der Yorkshire Ripper umgeht, Nicht nur die jungen Mädchen haben Angst, alleine auf die Straße zu gehen. Man muss etwas dagegen unternehmen. Was wäre, wenn Miv und Sharon den Ripper finden und das Leben wieder sicher ist. Beobachtung ist alles. Wer könnte ein so übles Geheimnis verbergen. Der erste Verdächtige ist der Mann, dem der Eckladen gehört. Da lässt es sich leicht ermitteln, denn sein Sohn geht mit den Mädchen in die selbe Klasse.
Zwei junge Mädchen am Beginn der Pubertät, für die die Jagd nach dem Mörder ein Abenteuer zu sein scheint. Besonders Miv ist von dem Gedanken angetan, ein Verbrechen aufzuklären. Was Sharon und Miv jedoch zunächst eher erreichen ist, dass sie ihre Nachbarschaft besser kennenlernen. So ist der Mann aus dem Eckladen ein netter verwitweter Familienvater und sein Sohn ein toller Kamerad. Dass Vater und Sohn aus Pakistan stammen, stört dabei nur die Idioten. Die drei Jugendlichen kommen gut miteinander aus. Doch so langsam merkt Miv, dass sich die Zeit der Kindheit langsam dem Ende entgegen neigt.
Ein Coming of Age Roman, der einen mit einem warmen Gefühl zurücklässt. Die Freundschaft von Miv und Sharon ist einfach sehr schön beschrieben. Man kann genau nachempfinden, wie sie ein eingespieltes Team sind, dass sich jedoch mit den Monaten leicht auseinander entwickelt. Sie werden eben älter und besonders für Sharon ist das Detektiv spielen nicht mehr ganz so interessant. Sie überlegt, was sie mit ihren Ermittlungen vielleicht anrichten könnten und manchmal ist sie auch einfach lieber mit Ishtiaq zusammen. Die klaren Gedanken von Miv gehen da eher in Richtung Nachforschungen. Sie braucht eben eine Ablenkung von Daheim. Zwei tolle Mädchen, die für immer beste Freundinnen bleiben wollen, auch wenn die Zeiten sich ändern und sie älter werden. Eine Lektüre mit Charakteren zum gerne haben. In einem Moment hätte man sich einen anderen Schritt gewünscht. Aber schließlich ist der Ripper wie allgemein bekannt gefunden und das Leben der jungen Menschen hat sich geändert. Besonders mit hat einen großen Schritt Richtung Erwachsen sein getan.
Die Liste der seltsamen Dinge wird in einem Notizbuch eingetragen, was gut zum Cover passt. Dieses widerum hat so etwas Britisches mit den Milchflaschen, die damals regelmäßig vor die Türen gestellt wurden.
A wonderful, emotional novel. Felt I was living Miv & Omar’s story as I listened (the narration was excellent!); with a tonne of 70s nostalgia - rollerball lip gloss, mounds of hair spray, Thatcher bashing… - but also some less wonderful topics covered with great skill.
It was particularly hard to listen to safeguarding issues being raised by children where adults wouldn’t listen and/or wrote them off as “soft”.
I really loved Miv & Sharon’s friendship, and their bond with Ishtiaq & Mr Bashir. 4.5*