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MURDERS AND ACQUISITIONS by Thomas Dunne

MURDERS AND ACQUISITIONS

by Thomas Dunne

Pub Date: April 28th, 2026
ISBN: 9798874863838
Publisher: Blackstone

For one family-held business, personal decisions have global implications.

The novel opens in Manhattan with the death of 95-year-old Werther Maybach Meyer, the most powerful American stakeholder in Omnium, a century-old, family-owned international corporation with banking, financial, and media arms. Who will take charge now that Werther is gone? In his lifetime, Werther was a dodgy figure, having been involved in international money laundering, and he had understandably racked up some enemies. Reports the book’s omniscient narrator: “Word of Werther Maybach Meyer’s demise, though not unexpected, was of great interest in certain government, crim­inal, and elite financial circles,” and his death does indeed set off a chain of events with geographically far-reaching repercussions. This years-spanning novel takes readers around the world (Germany, London, Moscow) and back again, during which time the body count rises. The novel’s Manhattan-set chapters center on Werther’s “charity-case niece,” Betty Maybach, who is underestimated by those around her at their peril, and on the people of Albion, part of Omnium’s book division. Throughout the Albion chapters, author Dunne, the former head of his namesake imprint at St. Martin’s Press/Macmillan, unleashes, with satirical pistons firing, his take on the state of American book publishing. (Albion has a sensitivity department with “volunteer outriders” known as the Vigilance Committee.) Readers should anticipate meta touches; like this novel, the one that an Albion insider is writing concerns “a bunch of different things. Mystery, intrigue, a few murders, a love story.” Dunne’s novel can occasionally feel like a narrative exercise in the butterfly effect, which is a touchstone in the book, and odds are good that readers will be less absorbed by chapters revolving around finance-world machinations than by more character-driven sections devoted to publishing-world skulduggery. Nevertheless, they should expect a high return on investment.

A blackly humorous feat.