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Moonflower Murders

Moonflower Murders

Featuring his famous literary detective Atticus Pund and Susan Ryeland, hero of the worldwide bestseller Magpie Murders, a brilliantly complex literary thriller with echoes of Agatha Christie from New York Times bestselling author Anthony Horowitz.

Retired publisher Susan Ryeland is living the good life. She is running a small hotel on a Greek island with her long-term boyfriend Andreas. It should be everything she's always wanted. But is it? She's exhausted with the responsibilities of making everything work on an island where nothing ever does, and truth be told she's beginning to miss London.

And then the Trehearnes come to stay. The strange and mysterious story they tell, about an unfortunate murder that took place on the same day and in the same hotel in which their daughter was married—a picturesque inn on the Suffolk coast named Farlingaye Hall—fascinates Susan and piques her editor’s instincts. 

One of her former writers, the late Alan Conway, author of the fictional Magpie Murders, knew the murder victim—an advertising executive named Frank Parris—and once visited Farlingaye Hall. Conway based the third book in his detective series, Atticus Pund Takes the Cake, on that very crime. 

The Trehearne’s, daughter, Cecily, read Conway’s mystery and believed the book proves that the man convicted of Parris’s murder—a Romanian immigrant who was the hotel’s handyman—is innocent. When the Trehearnes reveal that Cecily is now missing, Susan knows that she must return to England and find out what really happened.

Brilliantly clever, relentlessly suspenseful, full of twists that will keep readers guessing with each revelation and clue, Moonflower Murders is a deviously dark take on vintage English crime fiction from one of its greatest masterminds, Anthony Horowitz.  

Reviews
  • A book within a book!,,

    Amazing

    By Eric real name. Waste of $

  • Moonflower Murders

    Interesting but convoluted mystery.

    By olddue1

  • Moonflower Murders

    Entertaining. 3.5 stars

    By WedgeKenobi

  • Too Meta

    Please no more books within books

    By j_a_x_

  • Clever structure

    A mystery novel within a mystery novel is a very clever device and very engaging. I doubt, unless you are a master of literary references or for that matter, Poirot, or Agatha Christie, few if any readers would actually figure out the clues from the inner novel that solve the outer story. But, it’s fun trying.

    By Jerrman

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