Many deadly returns 21 stories celebrating 21 years of Murder Squad

Book - 2021

Short, sharp and packed with twists, these 21 unputdownable tales showcase Murder Squad's range and talent throughout the years. So why not treat yourself to a slice of murderously moreish fiction, and join us in wishing the squad 'Many Deadly Returns'.

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
Edinburgh : Severn House 2021.
Language
English
Corporate Author
Murder Squad (Writers' Group)
Corporate Author
Murder Squad (Writers' Group) (-)
Other Authors
Martin Edwards, 1955- (editor), Margaret Murphy, 1959 April 14- (writer of foreword), Ann Cleeves (-), Cath Staincliffe, Chris Simms, 1969-, Kate Ellis, 1953-, John F. Baker, 1942-, Chaz Brenchley, Stuart Pawson
Edition
First world edition
Physical Description
229 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780727890931
9781780298191
  • Margaret Murphy - Foreword
  • Martin Edwards - Introduction
  • Ann Cleeves - Wild Swimming
  • Martin Edwards - Lucky Liam
  • Cath Staincliffe - Scorpion
  • Chris Simms - Skeleton Crew
  • Kate Ellis - The Fox and the Hens
  • John Baker - An Old-Fashioned Poisoning
  • Margaret Murphy - Read the Label
  • Kate Ellis - My Oleander
  • Ann Cleeves - The Queen of Mystery
  • Chaz Brenchley - For Kicks
  • Cath Staincliffe - Two Birds
  • Margaret Murphy - Big End Blues
  • Martin Edwards - Bad Friday
  • Chris Simms - The Passenger
  • Kate Ellis - The Confessions of Edward Prime
  • Stuart Pawson - Ultra Violent
  • Cath Staincliffe - Perfect Storm
  • Chris Simms - Gaffed
  • Martin Edwards - The Other Life
  • Ann Cleeves - A Winter's Tale
  • Margaret Murphy - Still Life
  • About the authors
Review by Booklist Review

In his introduction to these 21 bloody tales, British murder-master Martin Edwards remembers a time when the stories' authors tired of glowing reviews and nonglowing sales and formed the Murder Squad. Edwards, whose tongue is never far from his cheek, recalls when a bookstore appearance by the Squad looked to be serving its purpose by drawing a crowd. Turned out the fans were there "for a line-dancing class in an adjoining room." Twenty years and much-improved sales later, the Murder Squad is here to announce they're doing just fine. The most recognizable of the group is Ann Cleeves, who gives her grumpy superstar, Vera Stanhope, a walk-on role in one of the earliest murder tales built around COVID-19. The irrepressible Edwards, in his own contribution, has the murderer in his story note his fondness for killing two birds with one stone: "economy of effort combined with maximum achievement." Cleeves reclaims the stage near the end with "The Queen of Mystery," a fine chiller that displays the degree to which some will go to stay atop the heap.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The fourth anthology from Britain's Murder Squad (after 2016's The Starlings and Other Stories) showcases the group's talents for short fiction with a bite. Each current squad member has contributed three new stories, and three former members add one apiece. Highlights include Kate Ellis's "The Confessions of Edward Prime," which presents a unique solution to the problem of a man determined to confess to a crime he didn't commit, and Ann Cleeves's "Wild Swimming," set just as the Covid pandemic appears to be ebbing, in which Det. Chief Insp. Vera Stanhope probes a drowning during an outing of four friends. Edwards's "Lucky Liam" features an intricate revenge plot concocted by a cuckolded spouse. Impossible crime fans will get a kick out of Kate Ellis's locked-room puzzle, "My Oleander," and historical mystery devotees will find Cath Staincliffe's "Two Birds," set in 1871 Blackpool, memorable. Future such anthologies will be welcome. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Ten current and former members of the Murder Squad (a collective of British mystery novelists) celebrate the group's 21st anniversary with an anthology of 21 mystery stories. When the Murder Squad coalesced in 2000, they were "brilliant--but--unknown writers," Margaret Murphy writes in the foreword; midlist authors who've gone on to receive numerous awards, including two Diamond Daggers (British mystery's highest honor) for Ann Cleeves and Martin Edwards. Current Murder Squad members each contributed three stories to the anthology, and former members contributed one each. From Cleeves, there's one Vera Stanhope story, one Inspector Ramsay story, and a clever stand-alone, "The Queen of Mystery," whose setting at the Malice Domestic convention will be familiar to fans of traditional mysteries. Edwards's story "The Other Life" is about an attempt to take advantage of an elderly woman, while Kate Ellis's readers will recognize her pattern of pairing two similar crimes in "The Fox and the Hens." VERDICT With stories by Cleeves, Edwards, Ellis, and Cath Staincliffe, among others, this anthology is fresh and original.--Lesa Holstine, Evansville Vanderburgh P.L., IN

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An anthology celebrating 21 years of writing by Northern England's Murder Squad with 21 stories, eight of them new. The celebration is largely a private affair, with long-standing members Ann Cleeves, Kate Ellis, Margaret Murphy, Chris Simms, Cath Staincliffe, and editor Edwards contributing three entries apiece. Of the remaining stories by former Squad members, John Baker's "An Old-Fashioned Poisoning" shows a Victorian woman celebrating the passing of Alfred, Lord Tennyson, by arranging another death; the police officer in Chaz Brenchley's "For Kicks" uncovers a lifelong pattern of abuse in the case of a teenager kicked into a coma; and the thrill killer in the late Stuart Pawson's "Ultra Violent" is brought to justice by a highly predictable mistake. None of these outliers can match the best stories by the current Squad members. In Staincliffe's "Scorpion," another abused teenager strikes back at a shockingly unexpected target. "A Winter's Tale" is Cleeves' routine but expert probe into the murder of a rural woman with a reputation. The gangster's widow in Edwards' "The Other Life" comes home from a séance arranged by her cleaning lady to find that two of her late husband's colleagues have targeted her home for robbery. The officer who solves the locked-room poisoning in Ellis' "My Oleander" wastes no time in applying the lessons he's learned on the homefront. Simms' "Gaffed" follows a high-stakes meeting between an informant whose wife's death freed him from a gang's blackmail and the officer who's promised him protection to its logical conclusion. And a pair of hospital patients battling formidable handicaps in Murphy's "Still Life" turn to battle each other till they work toward a resolution as welcome as it is unlikely. Worst feature: too many similar plot twists. Best: the sharply characteristic voices that emerge from all these tales. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.