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Mass Market Paperback Shock to the System Book

ISBN: 044018200X

ISBN13: 9780440182009

Shock to the System

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

$5.99
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Book Overview

Graham Marshall looked upon himself as one of the winners in the rat race, comfortable and content, with a secure future. At 41, he discovered that the rosy future was a mirage and he committed his... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Enjoyable If Slight Wish Fulfillment

Ever wanted to murder someone? Your boss, your rival, your wife? Of course not. But if you'd ever thought of such a thing, you'd get a kick out of this nasty look at a completely unscrupulous, conscienceless cad who finds that murder is just the thing to ensure advancement in business and in life itself. I found this well-written and entertaining, though it lost some steam at the end. Note: A superior example of the same concept can be found in Donald E. Westlake's "The Ax," which I recommend whole-heartedly.

Middle Class Murder

This inverted thriller calls to mind previous British mysteries where the protagonist is a professional man first drawn to murder as a solution for mounting economic and relational problems, only to become more and more embroiled in the unforseen consequences. I am thinking of Middle Class Murder (US title Dead Reckoning) by Bruce Hamilton, the brilliant and satirical Payment Deferred by C.S. Forester, and various titles by C.E. Vulliamy (pseud. Anthony Rolls) such as The Vicar's Experiments. In this case, the murderer is Graham Marshall, an aspiring Human Resources professional for a large oil company (and by the way, I think this is the first time I have seen a major character drawn from the world of HR). He is master of the corporate game, and has acheived worldly success: a large house, a trophy wife and two kids, expensive holidays, a responsible job with the promise of further promotion, the works. Cracks soon appear in this deceptive facade when Marshall discovers he is in danger of losing all: wife, income, and house. A solution is almost accidentally suggested: murder. And the temptation proves too great to resist. Marshall proves himself an excellent plotter, successively ridding himself of those who stand in his way. The book is unsettling because we find ourselves alternately loathing and encouraging the man. We deplore his wholesale discounting of the value of human life, yet some of his prospective victims are in themselves so vile, we are temporarily swayed to Marshall's point of view. Brett keeps us off balance until the very last page. Particulary well done is the over-the-top depiction of the corporate world, where little seems to depend on merit, and all on cut throat power games, an amoral environment that is a natural breeding ground for a killer. If you thought Reggie Perrin's world was bleak, just wait until you read this.

Electrifying!

Graham Marshall is a plodder who has worked his way up the ladder in the place where he works, to be assistant head of his department. Life with his shallow wife, who is becoming more like her ex-celebrity, whining mother, and his two teenaged children with whom he has never bonded, seems to be all that he may expect for the future until that horrifying day that he finds himself passed over at work, in a shake-up of employees. He has overpent on a large, old house in the expectation of a better salary as department head, so that when the job fails to materialise, his pleas that his wife curbs her spending, are totally ignored and drives Graham to a state of pure hatred for her. He now realises that he would be in a much better position financially if he could think of a believable way to kill her and to collect her large insurance policy. He works out an ingenious plan and likes the feeling of power so much that he goes on to plot another murder. It's a fascinating look into the mind of a serial killer and, as the photo on the front cover of the book shows, it was made into a movie starring Michael Caine in the leading role. I can picture, exactly, that cold, dead-pan look he portrays so well and look forward to finding a copy of the movie.
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