Get sci-fi news, reviews and features at gamesradar.com/sfx
When one character in The Outsider quotes that famous Sherlock Holmes adage, “Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth,” another retorts, “Wasn’t he the guy who believed in fairies?” And therein lies what’s great and what’s problematic about The Outsider.
Despite dabbling in non-supernatural thrillers in the past, and basing many of his books around mysteries, Stephen King has never written an out-and-out, procedural-based whodunnit. And, ultimately, he hasn’t here, though for a good long while it seems like he has, with many nods to Agatha Christie along the way. And a fine job he does of it too.
An utterly compelling crime conundrum opens the novel, one with the page-turning urgency of a Dan…