Member Reviews
My 1st 5 stars for 2024, finally!
This is one of those books I'll think about often. It was SO good. I loved the main character, she was incredibly likable from the start. I never once suspected what was going to happen or who the murderer was.
I loved the dual pov of going back in time to France's time and the present time.
I was so happy to get this ARC - thank you Penguin Random House for it in exchange for my review! Couldn't put this one down!
I really enjoyed this book. It was definitely a slow burn and could have moved faster, but I enjoyed how it all came together in the end! I love a good murder mystery! Thanks NetGalley for the ARC!
HOW TO SOLVE YOUR OWN MURDER by Kristen Perrin is the top pick on the LibraryReads list for March and author Perrin's adult fiction debut offers a diverting mystery set in an English country village. The events toggle between two time periods: mid 1960s and present day. In the past, teenager Francis and friends Emily and Rose receive a disturbing fortune about a death – it takes 60 years for the prophecy to be realized and Frances' great niece, Annie Adams, sets out to solve the puzzle and inherit the estate. Both story lines are suspenseful with multiple complex characters and troubling occurrences. Despite the many suspects, though, there were abundant clues and the murderer was telegraphed fairly early. HOW TO SOLVE YOUR OWN MURDER also received a starred review from Booklist and indications are that cozy mystery fans will have more of Annie's adventures to look forward to in the future.
I thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook! I loved the unique premise - having your granddaughter inherit and live in your castle whilst solving your murder - perfect. Super fun and refreshing.
I love a good cozy mystery and the characters and the plot of this story fit the bill perfectly. I really enjoyed the ride and had no idea who committed the murders until the reveal at the end.
My only issue was that the writing was kind of hard to follow at points. This was amplified by the fact that there were like 100 characters lol. But if you love cozy mysteries, definitely check this one out.
In 1965, Frances Adams has her fortune read at a country fair. With news of her impending murder she spends the rest of her life trying to stay one step ahead of her murderer. Everyone in her village is a suspect and she has files to prove it. When she decides to rewrite her will nearly sixty years later, she invites her great niece, Annie, to meet with her, but the unthinkable happens and Frances turns up dead before the meeting. Annie is now in a race with others to solve the murder in order to determine the outcome of Frances’s estate, but with only a week to succeed will she be able to save Castle Knoll or will she “inherit her aunts fate instead of her fortune”? This was a very fun and clever mystery and Perrin leaves us with hints for more cases to come from the diaries Frances has left behind. Thank you to Penguin and NetGalley for an ARC of this book.
Kristen Perrin is a new author for me, and hopefully we will hear more from her. Very interesting premise that takes us thru decades of family strife.. Best friends are at a faire and decide to have their fortune told. Francis comes out of the tent with fear that goes down to her soul. She will be murdered in the future! She lives her life with this black cloud over her. Suspicious of everyone and everything she does end up married and wealthy. But the future comes to everyone including Francis. Annie is a normal average girl who finds out she is named in her great aunts will. She is to go to her mansion to visit her for the first time in her life. She heard about this eccentric aunt and the stories so she isn’t sure why she has been named in the will but reluctantly goes because her family could use the money. She meets at the lawyers office and is taken to her Great Aunts home where Francis is found dead behind her desk. For once in her life Annie takes charge and decides she will find out who has kept the fortunes promise. Us readers are taken step by step along for the ride.
Ms. Perrin has away with her story, keeping you hopping along with just enough information to keep you guessing to the end. Intoxicating story that keeps the reader on edge.
"Your future contains dry bones. Your slow demise begins right when you hold the Queen in the palm of your hand. Beware the bird, for it will betray you. And, from that, there is no coming back. But daughters are the key to justice, find the right one and keep her close. All signs point toward your murder."
I enjoyed this book. I thought it was a fun murder mystery and unraveling another disappearance from 60 years ago. My only criticism is that I wish it was a tiny bit more fun or funny. But I did like it!! I highly recommend to anyone who loves a murder mystery book.
Thank you NetGalley & PENGUIN GROUP Dutton for an arc of this book. Ow available!!!!
Frances spends her entire life consumed by a fortune she was told at age 16. With flashbacks via her diary, the reader gets insight into Frances’ younger years. When Frances is murdered, it’s up to her great-niece to figure out who did it.
The concept is intriguing, and it reads like a cozy mystery. It is sort of closed-room feel because of its setting in a small town, and the diary pages are a fun change up to the detective work in present time. However, the story reads like a YA. I kept thinking the main character was 15, not mid twenties. The overall story and outcome is good, but the story seems a little naive in execution and slow in repeating clues and giving explanations. At times it felt more tell than show due to the explanations.
Read if you like:
🔎 Cozy Mysteries
#️⃣ lots of characters
🎱 Fortunes
⏳ Two Timelines
When Frances was a teenager, she receives a bone-chilling fortune that she'll be murdered one day. She then spends the rest of her life trying to prevent it. But lo and behold, 60 years later, murder comes for her. Now it's up to her great-niece Annie to find the killer and earn her inheritance.
I was hooked. Especially here because Annie is also looking into the disappearance of Frances' best friend Emily, so we're really getting a twofer for the price of one. The story's certainly not shy about casting suspicions this way, then that way. There's an interesting list of characters, all of whom could be friend or foe. It was a delightful start in the way that only cozy mysteries can be.
It feels like there were all these clues and then they just didn't really go anywhere leading to a lot of misdirection. However, while I love misdirection, the final solution didn't wow me and I'm still not sure I understood how it all went down.
If you love cozy mysteries, you will find this a fun addition to your tbr! Thank you to the publisher for my ARC in exchange for my feedback!
This book was brilliant! Like reading a game of clue as it evolved.
It was a classic whodunnit with a twist. Annabelle was quirky and endearing, with the right amount of anxiety and frealessness. She went full force with everything!
I hope there’s more coming in this series because I’m am completely enthralled with the dueling lives of Frances and Annie.
I would be happy to read entire books from the perspective of Frances, like the diary excerpts. Her story/storytelling were captivating.
This author has a great future ahead of her if she maintains this level of writing!
Alternating between Annie's narration and 1960s diary entries from Annie's recently murdered great aunt, Kristen Perrin's How to Solve Your Own Murder focuses on an eccentric family's tangled web.
Annie arrives in a small village to meet her great aunt for the first time, but before they can say hello, Frances is found dead. Annie and another relative, Saxon, face off to solve the murder; the winner will receive the substantial inheritance.
Perring creates a sharp plot, clearly pulling some inspiration from Christie or Knives Out. I was, however, a little annoyed at how obviously the closing of the novel attempted to set up sequels. It's okay to have a standalone novel and then follow up with a sequel, but there doesn't need to be a very deliberate set up in order for the next one to succeed.
Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC.
How to Solve Your Own Murder is a cozy mystery set in a sweet little English village sporting one very peculiar denizen.
When seventeen-year-old Frances is told by the fortune teller:
Your future contains dry bones. Your slow demise begins right when you hold the queen in the palm of one hand. Beware the bird, for it will betray you. And from that, there’s no coming back. But daughters are the key to justice, find the right one and keep her close. All signs point toward your murder.
Everyone but her thinks it is laughable. After all, the twentysomething who delivered the message was clearly just playing a part. But Frances believes it wholeheartedly, and her faith in the prophecy will guide the rest of her life.
Sixty years later, Annie Adams receives a letter advising her that she needs to meet with her wealthy eccentric great-aunt Frances and that lady’s lawyer. Annie and her mother have always assumed they were the heirs to all Frances owns, so Annie obligingly heads to the charmingly picturesque village of Castle Knoll for the appointment. When she arrives at the lawyer's office, Annie learns that in fact, there are several eligible heirs to Frances’ estate, and they will all be meeting at her sprawling country house for an update on the will. It’s a situation fraught with tension and frustration, made far worse when they arrive to find Frances dead. It is Annie who spots something strange about the arrangement of flowers that Frances was working on at the time of her demise and demands the police start an investigation. Which might or might not work in her favor. It turns out the will doesn’t actually list an heir. Instead, the terms dictate that whichever relative solves the murder (because Frances believed - due to the prophecy - that her death would be murder) within a week will inherit. If the police do, the money will be left to charity. The race is on to see just who can crack the case.
This is a dual-timeline novel, with part of the story taking place in the year or so immediately following Frances’ hearing her fortune and part of it taking place in the present day. The author does a lovely job with Frances, who comes alive in her detailed diary entries. She is vivacious, beautiful and kindhearted but also troubled and contemplative due to the prophecy. As the story unfolds, we learn Frances and her friends have deep, complex relationships, with lots of underlying tensions. Living in a small, English country village all of their lives, they are in many ways myopic, unable to see beyond their immediate reality and entanglements, and subsequently dysfunctional as a result. The author depicts realistically that sense of being trapped by your location/circumstanes, the intense desire to spread your wings and do something meaningful, and the fear of failure mixed with loyalty that keeps one attached to their community.
I really wish the story had focused almost exclusively on the past as the modern segment starring Annie is far less interesting. Annie spends most of her time racing about Castle Knoll meeting the quirky residents, all of whom are strangers to her. The text makes it clear she is the only decent heir available, as the others would either ruin the charming village through modernization, throw out estate dependents, or otherwise disrupt the lives of the locals. Aside from her being worthy of the inheritance, I had no real sense of Annie herself. Other than her love of mysteries, there is nothing that really stands out about her personality.
I struggled with the plot of this story from the beginning. The text tells us that Frances’ fortune came from her husband Rutherford, that the country estate, expensive house in the city, and money were all indirectly inherited by him. I say indirectly because his elder brother was the initial inheritor, and when he died, he left a son, so I couldn’t help wondering exactly why the inheritance did not pass directly to that young man, a boy named Saxon, but to Rutherford. Especially since there is, according to the text, a title involved. Saxon, btw, is one of the potential heirs.
I also struggled with the idea that Annie, who had never met Frances, understood her well enough via reading her diary to solve a murder that the police and those who actually knew Frances could not. And not just solve it but solve it within one week! Let’s not even get started on how much the author strains credulity with official procedures, from the autopsy to having people move into the crime scene to the detective finding Annie cute and sharing clues with her.
The tale itself deals with some dark subjects - emotional abuse, murder, teen pregnancy, cheating on one’s significant other, drug use - but maintains the comfort level of the genre by not delving into details on any of these issues.
Cozy mysteries often play fast and loose with reality, but the contemporary portion of How to Solve Your Own Murder strained my suspension of disbelief to the point that it almost broke it. If you love the genre and are looking for a fresh voice, this might be worth picking up. Otherwise, I would give it a miss.
Very similar vibe to Knives Out. Unfortunately, I never really caught on to the Knives Out train. I understand the concept. I genuinely wanted to like this. A little hard to follow at times with having the different time lines. A bit slow and characters didn’t peak my interest. Overall, I didn’t find myself clicking with this book.
I was really excited about this book after reading the description. However, this one fell short for me. Too slow and didn’t care for any of the characters. Thank you Netgalley and Penguin Group Dutton for this ARC, it just wasn’t for me.
A really cute mystery! Some good red herrings and I enjoyed the past/present storytelling device. I feel like this could have been edited a bit more (some repetitive adjectives, etc.) but overall a clean read.
This book has a fascinating concept and that alone will keep readers going. I was very invested in finding out who killed Frances and Emily. The book is a little difficult to follow with the alternating time lines and many characters in both. Cozy mystery readers will enjoy this one.
Thank you to NetGalley and Dutton books for this eARC!
When Frances Adams was a teenager 60 years ago, she received a fortune that predicted her murder. She spends the rest of her life obsessing over solving and preventing what hasn’t happened yet. Annie, Frances’ great niece receives a letter instructing her to come to Castle Knoll for a meeting about the will. When Annie does arrive, Frances is already dead. Now it’s up to Annie to solve this murder before time runs out.
Such a good cozy mystery! Very much for fans of Knives Out. Sometimes the past/present timelines got a little confusing with as many characters as there were, but overall I enjoyed how it was structured. Highly recommend if you enjoy Christie style mysteries.
I really enjoyed this book! It didn't quite reach the expectations I had conjured up based on the synopsis and the comparisons to some of my favourite mysteries, not to mention the snazzy cover and title (and maybe a smidge of bias because Kristen is an awesome name).
It did fall a wee bit short in some areas, though - there were just too many characters for my easily befuddled brain to keep track of, especially with the two timelines and all the twists and turns. Sometimes, the dialogue felt a bit forced, like the author was steering the story a certain way, but hey, I get that's part of the gig. I just wished I felt more involved, you know? But overall, I didn't dislike it at all. I think I just got a bit lost in the shuffle, especially at the end, but I'd definitely give another book by this author a shot.
“Your future contains dry bones. Your slow demise begins right when you hold the Queen in the palm of your hand. Beware the bird, for it will betray you. And, from that, there is no coming back. But daughters are the key to justice, find the right one and keep her close. All signs point toward your murder.”
When teenaged Frances joins her friends at the fair, they each have their fortune told. It was just a lark. But she takes the prophesy to heart and spends the next sixty years trying to solve and thus prevent her murder. Justice is very important to her and she has also spent those years trying to solve the disappearance of a friend. The title of this fantastic novel is a bit misleading, for in the end, it is left up to someone else to solve the mysteries. Fearing the end is near, she has changed her will and left her fortune to the relative who solves her murder. We follow the protagonist, Annie in in the present day as she sets out to solve the murder, but we also hear from a teenaged Francis in the diary that Annie has located. This fantastic old fashioned mystery may take place in present day, but it has a very Agatha Christie feel. Set in a small English village with a large array of suspects, the reader is drawn immediately in to this compelling cozy mystery. The protagonist, Annie Adams is a well drawn, likable character. The suspects are plentiful and the plot is carefully crafted. The clues are subtle and nothing is as it seems. The story is told in a dual timeline with two points of view. I enjoyed reading a mystery that actually surprised me in the end. I read a review copy of this book from the publisher , but can honestly recommend this book for any cozy mystery fan.