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Review magpie murders
Review magpie murders








review magpie murders

The actual manuscript of the 'Magpie Murders', supposedly written by Alan Conway, wasn't a joy to read. It is fairly well clued with a number of red herrings, although I already managed to detect the identity of the killer when I was at page 68 of the second book. The story is a true homage to Agatha Christie (and is much much better than Sophie Hannah’s Poirot continuations). This whodunnit is set in the über-English village of Saxby-on-Avon, where the widely disliked Mary Blakiston has been found dead at the bottom of the stairs in Pye Hall, the grand house where she worked as a housekeeper. That is a question that is difficult to answer, because how should you look at such a book? Should you look at the whole or should you take it apart and look at the two books separately.Īs a whole 'Magpie Murders' is a very satisfying mystery. So, did it work? Did Anthony Horowitz, like a true magician, manage to pull off his trick? Then Alan Conway managed to get himself killed and his editor Susan Ryeland goes in search of the missing chapters and the truth of Conway's demise. Problems arise when his latest mystery appears to be missing the final chapters when he delivers it to his publishers. Pünd, like Poirot, solves crimes in the sleepy English countryside of the 1950s. His detective Atticus Pünd is clearly a derivative of Hercule Poirot, although Conway makes him an Austrian survivor of the Nazi concentration camps. A book within a book.Ĭrime writer Alan Conway is not a very likeable man but has been a bestselling author for a number of years. His 'Magpie Murders' is not one book but two books for the price of one. Anthony Horowitz likes to experiment, or maybe he's just bored.










Review magpie murders