About this deal
The fact that The McMasters Conservatory for the Applied Arts has a curriculum to help people do this is surely as shocking to the reader as the fact that it is always recruiting. The Mcmasters Academy does not endorse any murder, only the deletion of people that deserves it and whose demise benefits others without making no innocent suffer.
This is actually a pretty interesting and entertaining murder mystery where the mystery is not who dies or who dunnit; it’s how the would be ‘deletist’ (we don’t say ‘killer’ here) will achieve their goal while not getting caught and still observing the 4 main principles of ‘deletion’ (we don’t’ say ‘murder’): Is this murder necessary?
It follows 1 main character and 2 other potential murderers as they take their courses and learn how to correct past mistakes. With a final thesis before him, Cliff will have to develop the perfect plan to kill someone and ensure that he is not caught. Holmes proves to be highly entertaining in this piece, though things got bogged down and left me wondering what I was reading. Decent character development brings Cliff Iverson to life and helps shape those with whom he comes in contact.
Ever since Hogwarts captured global imagination, an entire genre has developed sometimes referred to as "dark academy" stories. I LOVED the wit with which this book was written - from deep historical knowledge to clever word plays to the delight I felt whenever an asshole got what he/she deserved . It's also a story I didn't want to end, so apparently I'm a touch on the fickle-side about this listen. Murder your Employer follows the stories of three McMasters students as they prepare to, well, murder their employers.
Like, if you run a murder school, I don't think putting so much emphasis on whether a person deserves to die actually serves as any kind of moral absolution. Welcome to The McMasters Conservatory for the Applied Arts - a luxurious, clandestine college dedicated to the fine art of murder where earnest students study how best to "delete" their most deserving victim.