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  1. Oct 6, 2016 · A mystery novel about a mystery novelist and his editor, featuring a classic detective and a modern twist. Magpie Murders is the first book in the Susan Ryeland series by Anthony Horowitz, author of Alex Rider and House of Silk.

  2. Question about Magpie Murders: “Did they ever explain the anagram for the book titles in the Atticus Pund series?

  3. 151 quotes from Magpie Murders (Susan Ryeland, #1): ‘You must know that feeling when it's raining outside and the heating's on and you lose yourself, utt...

  4. Aug 20, 2020 · A literary thriller featuring Atticus Pund and Susan Ryeland, who investigate a real-life murder based on a fictional book. Read ratings, reviews, quotes, and more on Goodreads, the world's largest community for readers.

  5. A series of books featuring Susan Ryeland, the editor of Atticus Pünd mysteries, and the book-within-book stories by Pünd. The series includes Magpie Murders, Moonflower Murders and Marble Hall Murders.

  6. A user asks if the anagram for the titles of the Atticus Pund series is ever explained in Magpie Murders. Another user answers that the anagram is AN ANAGRAM and it is revealed later in the book.

  7. Did anyone figure out the hidden meaning inside the names of Atticus Pund Takes the Case? Here's the list to refresh your memory: John Waterman, Parker Bowles Advertising, Caroline Fisher, Carla Visconti, Professor Otto Schneider, Elizabeth Faber.

  8. To answer questions about Magpie Murders, please sign up. George There IS one perfectly obvious meaning: The sequence of the story sections in the manuscript, matching the old rhyme (which is quoted) Sorrow, Joy, A Girl, A Boy, Silver, Gold, with the final chapter A Secret Never to Be Told.

  9. Find out more about Anthony Horowitz, the creator of Alex Rider, Foyle's War and Sherlock Holmes novels. Browse his books, ratings, reviews, blog posts and ask him questions on Goodreads.

  10. George Clearly not aimed at the YA market. But like most of the other respondents, I'd say that if a young person enjoys Christie and Sayers, despite or because of their very dated milieus, there's no impediment to their reading this one.