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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
10,278 global ratings
5 star
49%
4 star
31%
3 star
13%
2 star
4%
1 star
3%
Magpie Murders: Magpie Murders, Book 1

Magpie Murders: Magpie Murders, Book 1

byAnthony Horowitz
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Top positive review

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Nico Restal
5.0 out of 5 starsExcellent plot, very enjoyable read
Reviewed in Australia on 24 November 2020
Very clever, both mysteries, though I guessed the framing one before it was revealed. I so enjoyed this book, I've bought the sequel.

Two weird errors
I read the Atticus Pund novel with care as I assumed it would contain clues I needed for the main mystery. There were two mistakes in it which I thought were significant - they weren't, so don't worry about spoilers. Were they real errors, or subtle signs that the manuscript needing editing?
1) Joy never said her scooter was pink, but Pund mentions the colour shortly after
2) Pund says that someone can't spell 'building' in a note, but it was correct in the note
If they were there to show that Susan had to edit the novel, then I'd like to have had some confirmation.
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2 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Susanna Lynley
3.0 out of 5 starsToo clever?
Reviewed in Australia on 8 December 2017
In this work, Horowitz has produced a spoof on the classic "whodunit." It's full of allusions to Agatha Christie and numerous others that have followed in her footsteps, including the TV series, Midsomer Murders. Undoubtedly, it's a clever piece of work but initially it can be confusing, if the reader is unaware that it is a story within a story; a plot within a plot.

The story begins with editor Susan Ryeland, receiving the text of a new novel, Magpie Murders, by one of her company's most successful authors, Alan Conway, a man whom personally she detests. Almost half the book engages the reader in Conway's text, which abruptly ends without the murder of Sir Magnus Pye being solved. To her chagrin, Ryeland discovers the last three chapters are missing. At this point, the second story emerges with Ryeland's hunt for the three missing chapters just as the news breaks that Alan Conway is dead. The question is: did he die before the book was finished? Was it suicide? Or was he murdered? Ryeland assumes the mantel of lead detective in order to solve the case and discovers that Conroy hated the genre that had brought him fame and fortune, and in particular, like Agatha Christie, he hated his lead detective, whose mannerisms are distinctly very "Poirotesque".

After having waded through the lives of Ryeland and others associated with Conroy, I found the plot began to drag and I was quickly losing interest in either who had killed Sir Magnus Pye or his alter-ego, Alan Conway. I gave it three stars, partly because of the lame ending, although I acknowledge it may well have been intentional; a tongue in cheek reference by Horowitz to the genre and Midsomer Murders in particular but also as an indicator of own my level of enjoyment.
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One person found this helpful

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From Australia

Nico Restal
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent plot, very enjoyable read
Reviewed in Australia on 24 November 2020
Verified Purchase
Very clever, both mysteries, though I guessed the framing one before it was revealed. I so enjoyed this book, I've bought the sequel.

Two weird errors
I read the Atticus Pund novel with care as I assumed it would contain clues I needed for the main mystery. There were two mistakes in it which I thought were significant - they weren't, so don't worry about spoilers. Were they real errors, or subtle signs that the manuscript needing editing?
1) Joy never said her scooter was pink, but Pund mentions the colour shortly after
2) Pund says that someone can't spell 'building' in a note, but it was correct in the note
If they were there to show that Susan had to edit the novel, then I'd like to have had some confirmation.
2 people found this helpful
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Susanna Lynley
3.0 out of 5 stars Too clever?
Reviewed in Australia on 8 December 2017
Verified Purchase
In this work, Horowitz has produced a spoof on the classic "whodunit." It's full of allusions to Agatha Christie and numerous others that have followed in her footsteps, including the TV series, Midsomer Murders. Undoubtedly, it's a clever piece of work but initially it can be confusing, if the reader is unaware that it is a story within a story; a plot within a plot.

The story begins with editor Susan Ryeland, receiving the text of a new novel, Magpie Murders, by one of her company's most successful authors, Alan Conway, a man whom personally she detests. Almost half the book engages the reader in Conway's text, which abruptly ends without the murder of Sir Magnus Pye being solved. To her chagrin, Ryeland discovers the last three chapters are missing. At this point, the second story emerges with Ryeland's hunt for the three missing chapters just as the news breaks that Alan Conway is dead. The question is: did he die before the book was finished? Was it suicide? Or was he murdered? Ryeland assumes the mantel of lead detective in order to solve the case and discovers that Conroy hated the genre that had brought him fame and fortune, and in particular, like Agatha Christie, he hated his lead detective, whose mannerisms are distinctly very "Poirotesque".

After having waded through the lives of Ryeland and others associated with Conroy, I found the plot began to drag and I was quickly losing interest in either who had killed Sir Magnus Pye or his alter-ego, Alan Conway. I gave it three stars, partly because of the lame ending, although I acknowledge it may well have been intentional; a tongue in cheek reference by Horowitz to the genre and Midsomer Murders in particular but also as an indicator of own my level of enjoyment.
One person found this helpful
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Lee W
TOP 500 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars Worth a Read
Reviewed in Australia on 25 December 2017
Verified Purchase
I found this good fun. The writing was pleasant and the premise excellent. I can see the other reviewer's point in that it was a bit convoluted and sometimes seemed a bit too extended but over all it was a good read and fun solving a mystery and then a mystery within a mystery and all the references to other writers in the genre... good fun. I enjoyed it.
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Anne
2.0 out of 5 stars All a bit formulaic
Reviewed in Australia on 18 May 2021
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I found this who dunnit a trite formulaic and not very gripping. I know he is doing an ironic pastiche of Agatha Christie and Midsummer murders and their like in his murder within a murder but the characters were uninteresting and the central device of the anagram very forced. It would have been better if the character of Conway had been more central and better developed. Underwhelming.
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mattalbi
3.0 out of 5 stars Unduly complicated.
Reviewed in Australia on 30 October 2020
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While the crime in the crime novel linked by the author of that novel to an actual crime is "novel", remembering that what you are reading is itself a crime novel, demonstrates just how convoluted plots must be these days to be original (or should I say "novel".)
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ruth r rosen
5.0 out of 5 stars Clever and a good story
Reviewed in Australia on 6 October 2020
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Magpie Murders is beautifully crafted and the characters both interesting and well-rounded as humans with all the complex traits we know. It keeps us guessing on all levels of the story, or stories. Very enjoyable read.
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Pixie gran
1.0 out of 5 stars Only one star here .
Reviewed in Australia on 20 February 2021
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I found it a bit weary and confusing at times . Love to know what it was all about 🦆🦆
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Jane Bird
3.0 out of 5 stars A good writer having fun with the genre.
Reviewed in Australia on 29 August 2019
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Interesting play in an old tale. Liked to the intertwining of author, genre and traditions of past writers. A little too same same.
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Reader
5.0 out of 5 stars A book within a book within a book. Loved the concept.
Reviewed in Australia on 14 January 2021
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Easy to read whodunnit. Reminds me of Agatha Christie. Kept on reading to reach the final pages to find out whodunit.
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Tamborine Girl
4.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing format.
Reviewed in Australia on 1 March 2017
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Intriguing format. Like most things that Anthony Horowitz tackles it was an enjoyable well observed novel. I can certainly recommend it.
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