Tag: Mystery
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“Moonflower Murders” by Anthony Horowitz

After solving the mystery in “Magpie Murders,” Susan Ryeland rode off into the sunset – she retired from the publishing business and moved to Greece with her boyfriend. Together they run a small hotel in Crete, but it’s not a smooth ride. Struggling with constant repairs, unreliable deliveries, and demanding guests, Susan misses her life…
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“A Line to Kill” by Anthony Horowitz

Anthony Horovitz’s mystery novels are like the proverbial potato chips – it’s impossible to just have one. “A Line to Kill” is the third installment in the “Hawthorne and Horwitz.” I enjoyed reading the first two, and fortunately, the author enjoyed writing them enough to continue the series. Daniel Hawthorne is the private investigator who…
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“The Sentence is Death” by Anthony Horowitz

In the second book of the “Hawthorne and Horowitz Mystery” series, the detective/writer duo returns to solve a new mystery. The celebrity divorce lawyer, Richard Pryce, was found bludgeoned to death in his home, and the murder weapon was a bottle of expensive wine, a gift from his client. Soon, Pryce’s old friend dies in…
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“The Word is Murder” by Anthony Horowitz

After enjoying “Magpie Murders,” I decided I’d like to read more mysteries by Anthony Horowitz. So I came to another one, “The Word is Murder,” the first one in the “Hawthorne and Horowitz” series, and I wasn’t disappointed! Daniel Hawthorne, a former Detective Inspector, approaches Anthony Horowitz, the author of “The Word is Murder,” with…
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“Devil’s Delight” by M.C. Beaton and R.W. Green
Agatha Raisin is a free-spirited and elegant woman in her 50ties who runs a private detective agency in the Cotswolds village of Carsely. She is on a new case, and this time the case literally bumped into her. While driving with her assistant Toni to a wedding, a naked man suddenly dashed in front of…
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“Magpie Murders” by Anthony Horowitz

A charming 1950 English village Saxby-on-Avon is the setting of Anthony Horowitz’s whodunit “Magpie Murders.” It’s a little bit of Sherlock Holmes, a nod to Agatha Christie, and perhaps a tad of “Midsummer Murders” (the analogy mentioned in the book.) This story within a story has a book editor, Susan Ryeland, trying to solve an…
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“The Guest List” by Lucy Foley

If only a person’s evil deeds could be seen in a portrait, as in the case of Oscar Wilde’s Dorian Gray, whose picture looks worse and worse following the moral decline of Dorian… But in Lucy Foley’s mystery, “The Guest List,” when the man with no ethical rules, Will Slater, looks in the mirror, his…
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“The Maid” by Nita Prose

Molly works as a maid in the Regency Grand, a five-star hotel. In her words, this is the work she was born to do. Every morning she puts on her maid uniform and gets her trolley. “There’s nothing quite like a perfectly stocked maid’s trolley early in the morning. It is, in my humble opinion,…
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A Killing in Costumes by Zac Bissonnette
Imagine a cute, Old Hollywood memorabilia store in Palm Springs: here, a customer can browse vintage film magazines while sitting at the authentic horror movie table, stained with fake blood, and admire legendary costumes, perhaps even try on a green beret worn by John Wayne in “The Green Berets.” This is a dream come true…
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The Rising Tide: A Vera Stanhope Novel, by Ann Cleeves

Every five years, for almost fifty years, a group of friends comes to Holy Island, a quiet place off Northumberland’s coast, frequently cut off from the mainland because of the tides, for a weekend full of memories, good food, and drinking. They agree with the phrase “60 is the new 40” and subconsciously still see…