So, for the letter "H", my choice was The Word Is Murder, by Anthony Horowitz. This is a murder mystery like no other. A woman walks into a funeral home and makes arrangements for her own funeral. Later that day, she is murdered. Coincidence ... I don't think so! And neither does ex-policeman Hawthorne, who now works as a consultant for the force, as well as consulting on TV crime dramas such as Foyle's War, which is how he knows Anthony Horowitz, as he is the scriptwriter for it. Hawthorne approaches Horowitz (yes, the author has placed himself into this fictional novel) with a proposition - to write a book about his investigation into the murder of this woman, a Mrs Cooper. Horowitz doesn't really like the man or his idea, but is finally persuaded to give it a try, and so begins a twisty-turny story with trawler loads of red herrings. Hawthorne is brusque, sweary and not much fun to be around, and Horowitz thinks he's made a big mistake in becoming this man's "Watson". But as time progresses, the investigation takes hold and he puts up with all the irritations of this modern day "Sherlock", as he really wants to solve it - becoming almost gleeful when he thinks he's found a clue that Hawthorne has missed. When Damian, the famous actor son of the murder victim is also found dead within a couple of hours of her funeral, things really begin to heat up. Everything points to these violent crimes being an act of revenge for something that happened 10 years ago, but that would be too easy ... wouldn't it, or would it, or wouldn't it???? The investigation is interwoven with what purports to be real events from Anthony Horowitz's real life - like a meeting with Stephen Spielberg and Peter Jackson regarding a film script for another Tintin movie. The reader doesn't really know whether none, some, or all of these things are made up - but they all help to make the lives of the two protagonists, and how they interact, totally believable. Excellent characterisation and a crime thriller that keeps you guessing right to the very end. I can highly recommend this book, especially the audio edition which is brilliantly narrated by the fabulous Rory Kinnear.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 400 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.84.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; audio CD; ebook.
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