<b>I absolutely love this series of fiendishly clever literary mysteries</b>[...] and I wolfed this new one down
Good Housekeeping
<b>MOONFLOWER MURDERS showcases Horowitz's full battalion of strengths: the whiplash plotting, the leather-smooth prose, the bold energy and, above all, the bright spark of joy that ignites the best fiction. Sophisticated, literate novels aren't supposed to be so much fun</b>
A. J. Finn
<b>It is amongst the most ambitious formats I've ever read</b>, as, essentially, Horowitz writes not one but two fully-fledged, distinct stories. There is the 300-plus page present-day Susan Ryeland story mystery, and the 200-plus page Golden Age style Alan Conway murder mystery, <b>and both of them are brilliantly executed as exemplars in their respective genres and fields</b>
NB Magazine
A <b>clever, engaging book </b>that keeps you hooked until the end
Socialist Worker
A devilishly clever, multi-layered total joy of a novel
Miranda Dickenson
The prolific novelist's latest work is <b>a mind-bending murder mystery to tie readers in knots</b>
BBC News Online
Magnificent
Bestsellers Podcast
It's a complex plot, a novel within a novel, where the reader gets to grapple with the whodunnit both in the main narrative and through an entirely separate detective story [...] <b>They are both gripping reads, a clever conceit by Horowitz, who pulls off the tricky structure beautifully</b>.
Irish Times
<i>Moonflower Murders</i>, is a <b>superbly intricate</b>608-page murder mystery [...] <b>An intellectual challenge with a smile attached is</b>pretty much the Horowitz oeuvre in a nutshell. The gleeful boy seems to shine through even the darkest tale
Sunday Times Ireland
A <b>genius </b>mystery within a mystery which is <b>perfect for any book lovers and murder mystery fans</b>
Hello! Magazine
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Anthony Horowitz is responsible for creating and writing some of the UK’s most loved and successful TV series, including Midsomer Murders and Foyle’s War. He is the author of the teen spy series, Alex Rider, which has sold more than twenty million copies worldwide.
He has been widely praised for his murder mysteries which began with two highly acclaimed Sherlock Holmes novels and continued with the bestselling Hawthorne series in which he appears as the former detective’s hapless sidekick. In January 2022 he was awarded a CBE for his services to literature.
His novel, Magpie Murders, was made into a BBC drama starring Lesley Manville as editor Susan Ryeland. The sequel, Moonflower Murders, also starring Lesley Manville, was a BBC drama in 2024. Marble Hall Murders continues the story…