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MOONFLOWER MURDERS

The most over-the-top of Horowitz’s frantically overplotted whodunits to date—and that’s no mean feat.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT


  • New York Times Bestseller


  • IndieBound Bestseller

Susan Ryeland, the book editor who retired to Crete after solving the mind-boggling mysteries of Magpie Murders (2017), is enticed to England to try her hand at another Chinese box of a case.

Eight years ago, the wedding weekend of Cecily Treherne and Aiden MacNeil at Branlow Hall, the high-end Suffolk hotel the bride’s parents owned, was ruined by the murder of Frank Parris, a hotel guest and advertising man who just happened to be passing through. Romanian-born maintenance man Stefan Codrescu was promptly convicted of the crime and has been in prison ever since. But Cecily’s recent disappearance shortly after having told her parents she’d become certain Stefan was innocent drives Lawrence and Pauline Treherne to find Susan in Crete, where they offer her 10,000 pounds to solve the mystery again and better. Susan’s the perfect candidate because she worked closely with late author Alan Conway, whose third novel, Atticus Pünd Takes the Case, contained the unspecified evidence that convinced Cecily that Detective Superintendent Richard Locke, now DCS Locke, had made a mistake. Checking into Branlow Hall and interviewing Cecily’s hostile sister, Lisa, and several hotel staffers who were on the scene eight years ago tells Susan all too little. So she turns to Atticus Pünd Takes the Case, whose unabridged reproduction occupies the middle third of Horowitz’s novel, and finds that it offers all too much in the way of possible clues, red herrings, analogies, anagrams, and easter eggs. The novel within a novel is so extensive and absorbing on its own, in fact, that all but the brainiest armchair detectives are likely to find it a serious distraction from the mystery to which it’s supposed to offer the key.

The most over-the-top of Horowitz’s frantically overplotted whodunits to date—and that’s no mean feat.

Pub Date: Nov. 10, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-06295-545-6

Page Count: 608

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Sept. 7, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2020

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NO ONE WAS SUPPOSED TO DIE AT THIS WEDDING

Sometimes smart writing can be too clever to be something more.

A threatening note sends a mystery writer into investigative mode to protect those closest to her from danger.

Clever thinking and a knack for storytelling make author Eleanor Dash the perfect fit for her job. Well, that and her ability to write from her own life experience, which is quite a robust source of information. Sometimes too robust, as she finds while on the set of the movie adaptation of her novel When in Rome. Eleanor is thrilled that her longtime best friend, Emma Wood, will be playing the film’s lead opposite big-time movie star Fred Winter. The Catalina Island setting is remote and romantic, the perfect place for Emma and Fred to fall in love for real. In the wake of a preproduction fling turned serious, the two are surprising their colleagues and friends with a post-wrap wedding. The filming of Eleanor’s first novel awakens all sorts of personal memories of roguish playboy Connor Smith, the simultaneous hero and villain of her Vacation Mysteries series and her real life. Though her boyfriend, Oliver Forrest, is otherwise secure, seeing Connor show up in the flesh as the filming ends is a bit of a trigger. A bigger trigger is a vague anonymous note announcing that “someone is going to die at the wedding.” Eleanor switches into problem-solving mode, but she can’t do much to prevent the murders from piling up. Can she find the killer, or will her nearest and dearest be at risk?

Sometimes smart writing can be too clever to be something more.

Pub Date: May 13, 2025

ISBN: 9781250326133

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: March 8, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2025

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RICH JUSTICE

Sturdy legal thrills for readers willing to go the distance with a flawed hero in an even more flawed world.

Now that he’s won two high-profile murder cases, Alabama “billboard lawyer” Jason Rich takes on his most challenging client: himself.

When methamphetamine lord Tyson Cade is gunned down outside a grocery store moments after clerk Marcia “Dooby” Darnell spurned his latest advance, you’d think the woods would be full of suspects, from Matty Dean, the distributor who immediately seizes violent control of the Sand Mountain meth operation in Cade’s absence, to the hard-used Dooby herself. But newly appointed Marshall County Sheriff Hatty Daniels and newly reelected D.A. Aloysius Holloway “Wish” French ignore all the others to concentrate on Jason, whose two earlier brushes with Cade brought him nothing but grief, who was seen nearby and caught on camera a few minutes later, and whom Cade identified as his killer with his dying breath. Insisting against all advice on defending himself, Jason accepts an inspired suggestion as his advisory counsel: Shay Lankford, the career prosecutor Wish French defeated in the last election. After rooting around endlessly in local secrets and scandals that take a heavy toll on Jason’s allies, profiler Albert Hooper comes up with enough evidence to guarantee a mistrial. But Jason doesn’t want a new trial; he wants to win the trial he’s in, and eventually he does, though not without spending a good deal of time relitigating the painful legacies of his first two murder cases. And although this case seems designed to avoid the very possibility of a surprise ending, Bailey closes by pulling a rabbit as big as a kangaroo from his hat.

Sturdy legal thrills for readers willing to go the distance with a flawed hero in an even more flawed world.

Pub Date: May 7, 2024

ISBN: 9781662516634

Page Count: 527

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

Review Posted Online: Feb. 17, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2024

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