![]() I knew as much as Susan about the real murder and Cecily’s disappearance and, while Susan might have the edge because she knew Conway, I relished the challenge of trying to see what Cecily found before Susan did. Oddly enough, I was more hooked when Susan started to read Atticus Pünd Takes the Case and I got to read it over her shoulder. Moonflower Murders was a little slow to start. ![]() Susan accepts the job-and the £10,000 they offer-and heads off to Suffolk. The Trehernes have come to Susan, Conway’s editor, in the hope that she’ll be able to tell them what Cecily discovered in Conway’s novel. Years after that, Cecily Treherne (one of the owners’ daughters) read that novel and announced that the wrong man had gone to prison…only to disappear herself. Sometime after that, Conway interviewed the employees of that hotel and wrote one of his celebrated novels featuring his signature detective. One of their employees was sent to prison. When the Trehernes show up at the hotel with a strange offer that involves the deceased Alan Conway, it feels like Susan has been sent a lifeline.Įight years before the events of Moonflower Murders, a man was brutally murdered at the Trehernes’ hotel. ![]() Susan and Andreas are too busy to do more than argue. The wifi and the electricity are on the blink. Susan and her partner, Andreas, now run a hotel on Crete. Moonflower Murders, by Anthony Horowitz, takes place two years later. ![]() ![]() Susan Ryeland thought that she was finished with Alan Conway and publishing after the firm she worked for spectacularly burned down at the end of Magpie Murders. ![]()
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