Latest news with #SusanRyeland

Wall Street Journal
23-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Wall Street Journal
Mysteries: ‘Marble Hall Murders' by Anthony Horowitz
Fans of the inventive English author Anthony Horowitz have reason to celebrate the arrival of 'Marble Hall Murders,' the third entry in a terrific series started in 2016. This book, like the earlier two, is partly narrated by Susan Ryeland, a London editor who had coaxed the crime writer Alan Conway—a bitter, malicious man who was eventually murdered—through a popular series of detective novels set in the 1950s. After adventures in marriage and hotelkeeping on the Greek island of Crete, Susan is back in London, solo, working for another publishing house and helping a young writer named Eliot Crace continue the series Alan started. Alan based his characters on real-life people in ways meant to expose their most shameful secrets. This led to his death and, for Susan, near-fatal injuries. Eliot is the grandson of Miriam Crace, a phenomenally successful children's author whose books are available in 47 languages, 'including Latin and Welsh.' Contrary to her public image, Miriam, who recently died of an apparent heart attack, was a despicable matriarch who ruled her extended family with an iron claw. Susan detects that Eliot, in his work-in-progress, is mimicking Alan's method of depicting real crimes and scandals. The editor foresees big trouble for Eliot and herself: 'When was I ever going to learn?' she wonders. Few other writers combine suspense and satire as smoothly as Mr. Horowitz, a writer who specializes in clever literary devices. As with its predecessors, 'Marble Hall Murders' is told half in Susan's first-person voice and half in the third-person voice of the manuscript under her purview. Thus we get two separate mysteries, twice the surprise—and double the payoff.


New York Times
19-05-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
3 Nerve-Shredding New Thrillers
Marble Hall Murders Horowitz's diabolically clever MARBLE HALL MURDERS (Harper, 592 pp., $28) begins as Susan Ryeland, a British book editor, starts reading the newest installment in a crime series featuring a Poirot-like detective named Atticus Pünd. The book looks promising — the plot is enticing, the writing sharp, the detective as canny as ever. But Susan soon realizes that what she's reading isn't 'just a cheerful murder mystery bringing back a much-loved character,' as she puts it, but rather a 'bubbling cauldron' of hatred, infidelity, greed and murder drawn from the troubled past of the writer, Eliot Crace. Eliot, who has been hired to continue the series following the untimely death of the original author, is squirrelly, pugnacious and keen to make trouble. 'I've put in a secret message,' he says of his work-in-progress. 'If you can work out the puzzle, you'll know the truth about what happened.' That's only the beginning of Horowitz's multilevel romp, which serves up an elegant plot while lampooning writers, publishers, murderers, rich people and golden-age mystery stories. It's a cliché to describe prolific authors as being at the top of their game (and often seems to suggest the opposite), but it's true here. 'Marble Hall Murders' is as cunning a mystery as you'll read all year. The best thing is Susan herself. Stubborn and fearless, she has high literary standards, a fondness for Garamond typeface — and a dangerous habit of collecting enemies. The Death of Us 'I found out that they had you the day after my 55th birthday,' says Isabel Nolan, the part-time narrator of THE DEATH OF US (Viking, 336 pp., $27), Dean's devastating exploration of the long-term effects of violence. The 'you' in question is a particularly nasty rapist and murderer named Nigel Wood, who attacked Isabel and her then-husband, Edward Hennessy, 25 years earlier in the house they shared in London. They survived, at least physically; many of Wood's other victims did not. Wood, an outwardly unremarkable retired police officer who is now 70, has pleaded guilty and is facing sentencing; Isabel, Edward and others have been invited to provide statements at the court proceeding. Many of them have waited years for this moment. Their stories are devastating. By focusing on the victims rather than on, say, the drama around the police investigation, this wrenching book subverts the normal conventions of a serial killer novel. It's an unusual and effective approach. Threaded throughout is the story of Isabel and Edward's early years together, and the promise of their marriage, blighted forever by that awful night. What's it like for them to meet again like this, years after their divorce? What will happen when Edward finally speaks about something he's never before discussed publicly? 'Life is not a thread that can be unpicked,' Isabel muses, again imagining that she's speaking directly to the attacker. 'But all the same: If I had never met Edward, I might never have met you.' Ruth Run Meet Ruth, a plucky 25-year-old cyber-criminal who learns, via a series of middle-of-the-night phone alerts, that her ingenious scheme has been discovered. 'It was time to delete everything and go,' she says. 'My years of peaceful bank robbery were done.' Thus begins the funny and suspenseful RUTH RUN (Penguin Press, 304 pp., $29), which tells the story of Ruth's efforts to elude capture. Just as you might in such a situation, Ruth scrubs the data from her devices, sets off the fire alarm and sprinkler at her company and drives off in her grubby Honda Civic, buoyed by the knowledge that she has $250 million stashed away in Switzerland, Belize and the Caymans. Her escape is complicated by the efforts of a government official named Mike, who has been semi-stalking her for some time, fantasizing about how she will one day work for him. 'I'd spent five years installing and upgrading surveillance in Ruth's apartment, never imagining having to disassemble it piece by expensive piece while she drove away from me at 67 miles per hour,' he whines. Mike thinks he's a puppet master, but he's really a dummy. As she tries to outsmart him and other pursuers, Ruth runs into a slew of unusual characters, including a long-haul truck driver with a dark secret and a load of explosives, a group of religious zealots on a commune and an elderly dog. We're on her side the whole way. Is it necessary for computer illiterates to understand the technical details of how Ruth deployed (among other things) a 'hacked microchip' to steal from 'legacy mainframes' operated by the nation's banks? Kaufman devotes many pages to complex machinations, but this is one of those times where you'll just have to trust the author.
Yahoo
29-01-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Lesley Manville and Tim McMullan Set for Marble Hall Murders, Conclusion of Masterpiece PBS Trilogy
Lesley Manville and Tim McMullan will once again reprise their respective roles as book editor Susan Ryeland and fictional detective Atticus Pünd in Marble Hall Murders, Masterpiece PBS' trilogy-ending follow-up to Magpie Murders (2022) and Moonflower Murders (2024). The series will begin filming in March in Dublin, Corfu and London, with additional cast to be announced at a later date. More from TVLine Miss Austen: Get Trailer, Premiere Date for Masterpiece on PBS' Heartbreaking Tale of Sisterly Love Miss Scarlet, Minus the Duke, Gets Full-Length Trailer Ahead of Season 5 Premiere on PBS Lesley Manville Loved Grotesquerie's 'Jaw-Dropping Reveals,' Is Open to Revisiting Redd in Possible Season 2: 'I'm Sure They'll Want to Do More' 'I'm so happy to bring the team back – stars, director, producers and crew – for a third installment of what has been a fantastically successful TV series,' says novelist Anthony Horowitz, who adapted is books for the small screen. 'I have a feeling this could be the best yet.' Marble Hall Murders finds Susan Ryeland returning to England, where she is reluctantly drawn into a new Atticus Pünd mystery, this time written by a new, young writer. 'Pünd's Last Case' is a story set in 1955, in an exotic villa in Corfu — but the identity of a real killer is hidden in the book and once again Susan is going to find herself in grave danger. 'Who killed Miriam Crace, the most famous children's author in the world?' is a question both Atticus and Susan will grapple with. 'We are beyond thrilled to once again be partnering with Eleventh Hour Films to bring one of Anthony'sbrilliant novels to life and to have Lesley and Tim return in their roles,' Masterpiece PBS scriptec content chief Susanne Simpson said in a statement. 'The first two series were incredibly successful for us and we can't wait for our audience to see Marble Hall Murders.'Adds executive producer Jill Green, 'Anthony has once again brought his unique and originalperspective to the world of murder mystery. Marble Hall Murders completes the trilogy andthe scripts and lead actors are once again at the top of their game.' Best of TVLine The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More 'Missing' Shows, Found! The Latest on Severance, Holey Moley, Poker Face, YOU, Primo, Transplant and 25+ Others Summer TV Calendar: Your Guide to 85+ Season and Series Premieres


BBC News
29-01-2025
- Entertainment
- BBC News
BBC acquires Anthony Horowitz murder-mystery Marble Hall Murders
The BBC has acquired Marble Hall Murders, an adaptation of the third and final instalment in best-selling novelist Anthony Horowitz's Susan Ryeland series. The follow-up from the acclaimed Moonflower Murders and Magpie Murders will be made by Eleventh Hour Films in association with Salt Films for PBS MASTERPIECE and the BBC. It is adapted by Anthony Horowitz and executive produced by Jill Green. Marble Hall Murders will film in March in Dublin, Corfu, and London, and will see Lesley Manville and Tim McMullan reprise their roles. Also returning are Rebecca Gatward to direct and Suzanne McAuley as producer. Lesley Manville (The Crown, Phantom Thread) stars as Susan Ryeland, a book editor who all too often finds herself involved in baffling murders. Returning to England, she is reluctantly drawn into a new Atticus Pünd mystery, this time written by a new, young writer. 'Pünd's Last Case' is a story set in 1955, in an exotic villa in Corfu – but the identity of a real killer is hidden in the text, and once again Susan is going to find herself in grave danger. Tim McMullan (Patrick Melrose, The Crown) plays Atticus Pünd, the literary detective who steps out of the books to help Susan unravel the real-life mystery of who killed Miriam Crace, the most famous children's author in the world. Moonflower Murders averaged 4.9m viewers across the series, making it one of the BBC's most watched acquired scripted series in 2024*. Anthony Horowitz says: 'I'm so happy to bring the team back – stars, director, producers, and crew – for a third instalment of what has been a fantastically successful TV series. I have a feeling this could be the best yet.' Jill Green says: 'Anthony has once again brought his unique and original perspective to the world of murder mystery. Marble Hall Murders completes the trilogy, and the scripts and lead actors are once again at the top of their game.' Sue Deeks, Head of BBC Programme Acquisition, says: "We are so delighted that there is going to be another adaptation of the intricately plotted and brilliantly entertaining Susan Ryeland murder mystery series for BBC viewers to enjoy'. Marble Hall Murders will be made by Eleventh Hour Films in association with Salt Films for PBS MASTERPIECE and the BBC The drama is executive produced by Jill Green and Eleventh Hour Films and adapted by Anthony Horowitz and is distributed worldwide by Sony Pictures Television and PBS Distribution in North America. *Source: BARB 4 Screens, As viewed, 28 days average audience NH