Book Review – Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz

About the Book

Book cover of Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz

Crime writer Alan Conway has been a bestselling author for years. Readers love his detective, Atticus Pünd, a celebrated solver of crimes in the sleepy English villages of the 1950s.

But Conway’s latest tale of murder at Pye Hall is not quite what it seems. Yes, there are dead bodies and a host of intriguing suspects, but hidden in the pages of the manuscript lies another story: a tale written between the very words on the page, telling of real-life jealousy, greed, ruthless ambition and murder.

Format: Paperback (552 pages) Publisher: Orion
Publication date: 16th November 2017 Genre: Crime

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My Review

Magpie Murders has been in my TBR pile since 2017 and was included in my list for both the 20 Books of Summer 2022 and 2023 reading challenges. It’s satisfying to have finally read it, especially since I have a feeling it was a birthday or Christmas present.

As you’d expect from Anthony Horowitz, it’s a very clever book with an extremely intricate, skilfully crafted plot and his trademark wit. Magpie Murders pre-dates his Sherlock Holmes inspired books such as The House of Silk so it’s interesting to see allusions to Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories. For instance, Alan Conway lives in Abbey Grange, the title of a Sherlock Holmes story. And there’s a squabble over the title of a book which also features in his recent ‘Hawthorne & Horowitz’ crime series in which he plays the role of the hapless sidekick to brilliant but eccentric detective Daniel Hawthorne. (Follow the links to read my reviews of The Word Is Murder, The Sentence Is Death, A Line To Kill and The Twist Of A Knife.) And he indulges himself in a few references to his other work, such as the TV series Midsomer Murders.

Structured as a story within a story, the first half of Magpie Murders is the manuscript of a period murder mystery entitled, you guessed it: Magpie Murders. It’s written very much in the style of Agatha Christie and features a detective who you feel could easily have stood in for Hercule Poirot if needed. It has all the classic ingredients of a golden age crime novel and, to be honest, I could have happily enjoyed this in its own right. The second half of the book involves editor Susan Ryeland trying to discover whether there are clues in the manuscript that might help solve a real life crime that threatens the future of the publishing business where she works. As in the period mystery, there are plenty of suspects and the identification of the culprit turns on a small detail which I’m proud to say I spotted.

The book is lot of fun but I felt it was a little long. I found the solution of the period mystery and the motivation of the culprit far more satisfying than that of the modern day one. However, there’s no doubting the author’s cleverness and his seemingly effortless ability to pull off many different genres.

Magpie Murders is book 6 of my 20 Books of Summer 2024.

In three words: Clever, witty, assured
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About the Author

Author Anthony Horowitz

Bestselling author Anthony Horowitz has written two highly acclaimed Sherlock Holmes novels, The House of Silk and Moriarty; three James Bond novels, Trigger MortisForever and a Day and With a Mind to Kill; the acclaimed bestselling mystery novels Magpie Murders and Moonflower Murders and the Detective Hawthorne novels, The Word is MurderThe Sentence is DeathA Line To Kill, and the latest A Twist of Knife.

He is also the author of the teen spy Alex Rider series, and responsible for creating and writing some of the UK’s most loved and successful TV series, including Midsomer Murders and Foyle’s War. In January 2022 he was awarded a CBE for his services to literature.

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Book Review – In the Garden of Sorrows by Karen Jewell @KarenJewellBook #20booksofsummer24

About the Book

Book cover of In the Garden of Sorrows by Karen Jewell

Isabel Fuller, a strong, once passionate woman, is deadened with grief by the death of her oldest son in the First World War, haunted by visions of him dying alone, and bitter at her husband for encouraging him to enlist.

When a young, charismatic preacher arrives for a revival one summer, he awakens in Isabel an intense attraction and feelings long forgotten. When she finally succumbs to his seduction, their affair pushes Isabel’s marriage to the breaking point.

Format: eBook (279 pages) Publisher: MindStir Media
Publication date: 26th April 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Officially I’m closed to review requests except from authors I’ve worked with before. However, occasionally a book comes along that makes me break my rule. If you read my Q&A with author Karen Jewell, you’ll get a sense of why I did just that in the case of In the Garden of Sorrows.

Isabel is a woman consumed by grief at the loss of her eldest son, Carl. Although she carries on with the daily routine of household chores, her sorrow – that she describes as ‘her familiar companion’ – has given rise to an emotional distance which sees his bedroom become a sanctuary but also a place of retreat. However Isabel has not been completely hollowed out emotionally or become blind to the plight of others, in particular a young girl living in a nearby shanty town.

Gripped by a kind of madness and ignoring the voices that tell her she’s on the road to self-destruction, Isabel allows herself to be led into a passionate affair with the Reverend Micah Kane. It risks destroying both her marriage and her relationship with her three remaining sons. I’m sure I’m not the only reader to wonder if Kane’s affair with Isabel is the result of genuine attraction on his part or mere opportunism? Whichever, for a time, the affair fulfils Isabel’s needs – both physical and emotional – in a way her husband Edward can’t. That’s because she blames him for Carl’s death, angry that he did nothing to stop him enlisting or may even have encouraged him. Her grief is so overwhelming that she fails to consider the possibility that he is experiencing the same intense sorrow and regret as her. She can’t see – or chooses not to see – the small attempts he makes to reach out to her in the effort to repair things between them. Although not everything he does is laudable, I actually found Edward a very sympathetic character.

In the Garden of Sorrows is described as an ‘erotically charged story’ and there are scenes of intense sexual intimacy but these are depicted in a way that is sensual rather than, shall we say, anatomical. I found myself completely absorbed in Isabel’s story and the book’s conclusion both intensely moving and uplifting. This is an author who has a gift for storytelling.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of the author. In the Garden of Sorrows is book 5 of my 20 Books of Summer 2024.

In three words: Passionate, moving, immersive
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About the Author

Author Karen Jewell

Karen Jewell is a former trial attorney and author of numerous pieces of nonfiction. She has an undergraduate degree in English, a Master’s in Business Administration, and earned her Juris Doctorate degree at the University of Michigan. Karen lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband. In the Garden of Sorrows is her first novel.

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