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Available 4.15.24


Murder in an Irish Bookshop

Murder in an Irish Bookshop, March 2021
An Irish Village Mystery #7
by Carlene O'Connor

Kensington
304 pages
ISBN: 1496730798
EAN: 9781496730794
Kindle: B089NDHR36
Hardcover / e-Book
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"Someone's literary taste runs to murder as a new bookshop opens in County Cork"

Fresh Fiction Review

Murder in an Irish Bookshop
Carlene O'Connor

Reviewed by Clare O'Beara
Posted July 17, 2021

Mystery Book Lover | Mystery Cozy | Mystery Woman Sleuth

We return to Kilbane, County Cork, for the latest files of Gardai Macdara Flannery and Siobhan O’Sullivan. In this mystery, visiting authors and a literary agent promising to sign only one of them are the star attraction to the town’s newest venture, a bookshop specialising in literary works. All goes well – at first. Sparks flying among the competing authors are taken as entertainment. Then during a power outage, one of the authors is killed.

MURDER IN AN IRISH BOOKSHOP is one of those delightfully edgy stories which brings us a little way into the world of the independent author compared to the traditionally published one. Deirdre Walsh, Nessa Lamb and Lorcan Murphy have all been moderately successful but would rather be signed by a major house. Agent Darren Kilroy, who represents the hermit and alleged drunk Michael O’Mara with dragon fantasy fiction, is scouting for new talent. But the rivalries and accusations mean when someone kills one of the scribes, the Gardai have to suspect the bitter competition. This includes a comic book store owner who fears losing trade.

Siobhan, who is our confident main character, has plenty of other concerns. She lives at home with a large and busy brood of siblings, some of whom run a bistro. At the start, she’s also trying to decide on a date to marry her fiancé Macdara. And will she or won’t she do this before her thirtieth birthday a year from tomorrow. Yes, the latest major crime occurs on her birthday, a sufficient reason for her not to be as observant as usual.

New characters to the ‘Irish Village Mystery’ series include cheerful couple Oran and Padraig, two men who open a bookshop despite having differing literary tastes. Aretta Dabiri, a new trainee garda, is originally from Nigeria, living in Ireland since childhood, and fairly represents the force’s efforts to be inclusive. Regular readers will be glad to know many of the usual town residents put in appearances, helpful or not as the case might be.

I’m astonished that this is the seventh book in Carlene O’Connor’s series, as it means I’ve missed a few, and I shall have to go find them. Wit, charm, and plenty of goings-on accompany MURDER IN AN IRISH BOOKSHOP, with characters who are at once larger than life and quite sympathetic. This is a small-town police procedural with a cosy feel and more than one twist in the tale.

Learn more about Murder in an Irish Bookshop

SUMMARY

The grand opening of a new bookstore in the County Cork Irish village of Kilbane becomes the closing chapter of an author’s life—and a whodunit that tests even Garda Siobhán O'Sullivan’s deductive reasoning . . .
 
Between training the new town garda and trying to set a wedding date with her fiancé, Macdara Flannery, Siobhán is feeling a bit overwhelmed. She’s looking forward to visiting the new bookshop and curling up with an exciting novel—only to discover the shelves contain nothing but Literature with a capital L. The owner not only refuses to stock romances, mysteries, and science fiction, but won’t even let customers enter his store unless they can quote James Joyce or Sean Hennessey.  
 
Despite the owner deliberately limiting his clientele, he’s hosting a reading and autographing event featuring up and coming Irish writers who will be taking up residency in Kilbane for a month. Among them is indie author Deirdre Walsh, who spends more time complaining about the unfairness of the publishing industry and megastar bestsellers instead of her own creative works, causing a heated debate among the writers. She seems to have a particular distaste for the novels of Nessa Lamb.
 
Then Deirdre’s body is found the next day in the back of the store—with pages torn from Nessa’s books stuffed in her mouth. Now, Siobhán must uncover which of Kilbane’s literary guests took Deirdre’s criticisms so personally they’d engage in foul play . . .
 


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