The Queen of Poisons

The book cover for Death Comes to Marlow by Robert Thorogood includes the tagline (in a red "sticker") 'A Marlow Murder Club Mystery'.

The cover is mostly white with the title in large lettering in the middle of a spill of green liquid from a black mug which is tipped upside down at the top of the image. The words 'World's Best Mayor" are on the mug.

The Marlow Murder Club is on the hunt for a killer... Geoffrey Lushington, Mayor of Marlow, dies suddenly during a town council meeting. When traces of aconite―also known as the queen of poisons―are found in his coffee cup, the police realize he was murdered. But who did it? And why?...Read more

Death Comes to Marlow

The book cover for Death Comes to Marlow by Robert Thorogood includes the tagline (in a red "sticker") 'A Marlow Murder Club Mystery' and a quote 'I love Thorogood's writing' Peter James. 

The cover is mostly white with the title in large lettering at the top, and a cartoonish view of a duck with only its belly and legs showing out of some blue water images (toes turned up in other words).

It’s been an enjoyable and murder-free time for Judith, Suzie and Becks – AKA the Marlow Murder Club – since the events of last year. The most exciting thing on the horizon is the upcoming wedding of Marlow grandee, Sir Peter Bailey, to his nurse, Jenny Page. Sir Peter is having a party at...Read more

The Marlow Murder Club

The book cover for The Marlow Murder Club has a stylised red "house" on the front with 4 different sized chimneys on top and a series of white squares like a crossword down the front - the title of the book is spread around the squares, as is the image of a woman standing on stairs, shining a torch upwards. There is a tagline 'Some Puzzles can be fatal ...' and a quote 'A hugely enjoyable murder mystery. Utterly delightful' Robert Webb

To solve an impossible murder, you need an impossible hero…

Judith Potts is seventy-seven years old and blissfully happy. She lives on her own in a faded mansion just outside Marlow, there’s no man in her life to tell her what to do or how much whisky to drink, and to keep...Read more