By Anthony Horowitz
Harper 2017
496 pages Mystery
I finally got around to reading Magpie Murders,
which has been on my Kindle for the last five years, and I am so glad that I
did, even though it took me nearly two weeks to get through the book. When you
read a book on a Kindle, you have no idea how long the book is—the major
disadvantage of a Kindle. However, I kept reading and loving every moment. I
wanted to get it read before it becomes a series on PBS Masterpiece in October.
Agatha Christie was the queen of mystery novels, and
Horowitz follows in her path with his first murder mystery novel, after having
written many mysteries for television. The NY
Times says, “Mr. Horowitz makes gleeful use of the Christie format by
creating a 1950s mystery within a mystery set in contemporary London.” You may
want to read the rest of the newspaper’s interview with Horowitz.
Here is a brief summary from Time
magazine. “Why is it that we have
such a need for murder mystery,” asks Susan Ryeland, the narrator of British
author Anthony Horowitz’s new novel, Magpie
Murders, “and what is it that attracts us — the crime
or the solution? Do we have some primal need of bloodshed because our own lives
are so safe, so comfortable?”
If anyone should be able to answer these questions, it’s
Susan. As an editor at a publishing house, she works with the massively
successful Alan Conway, a writer of Agatha
Christie-style whodunits. Magpie Murders is
one mystery novel wrapped in another: we peruse Alan’s latest manuscript
alongside his editor, while another crime plays out in Susan’s life. Evidence
mounts that finding the guilty party in the book will shed light on the case in
real life.”
All of the characters are very firmly drawn—in the novel and
in Susan’s life. I had a bit of trouble remembering characters from the back
and forth between the two settings, especially when Susan began investigating
the characters in Alan Conway’s life and how they compared to the characters in
his novel. I did a lot of “Oh, Yeah! That’s the vicar! Or, “Oh Yeah! That’s the
doctor’s secretary!” Did I figure out who was the killer in each of the cases?
Nope! It was all just so much fun!
I particularly loved how Susan wades through the information
on her way to solving each of the crimes. I can’t wait to see how her character
is played by Leslie Manville when the PBS series comes out.
I had read the second book in the series,
Moonflower
Murders early in 2021. Not sure why I didn’t go right back and read
Magpie
Murders. I love Susan. She wades into this mystery with little
hesitation. She is a bit surprised at herself, but she knows she has to solve this crime!
So, if you get a longing for traditional murder mysteries
with a modern twist, check out these two masterpieces.