News
How to weave the perfect murder mystery plot. Read more
now playing
Mysterious Knitting
How to weave the perfect murder mystery plot.
Vanishing Corpses
Where did that dead body go? It was right there!
The Mysterious Affair at Styles
Kathryn Harkup and Caroline reconsider Agatha Christe’s very first detective novel.
Edmund Crispin's Inside Jokes
The creator of amateur sleuth Gervase Fen loved to make fun of detective fiction.
The Box of Delights
Caroline and Guy discuss this beloved children's book by John Masefield.
Father Christmas
The magical spirit of Christmas is the perfect cover for a murder mystery.
Notes & Queries
There’s always more to say about detective fiction.
Whodunnit Centenary: 1925
Reading the mysteries of the past 100 years.
On Gaudy Night
Caroline goes deep on Dorothy L. Sayers’ 1935 masterpiece.
The Missing Moneylender by W. Stanley Sykes (Green Penguin Book Club 7)
Moira Redmond s Caroline to consider a surprising medical mystery from 1931.
Agatha Christie’s Taste in Crime Fiction
She is beloved worldwide for her crime writing. But what did she like to read?
The Lady Vanishes
On 3 December 1926, Agatha Christie vanished.
The Mystery Short Story
A consideration of crime fiction’s more compact incarnation.
Florence Maybrick I
One of the most notorious domestic poisoning cases in British history.
Oxford vs Cambridge
Why do these two historic university cities appear in so many murder mysteries?
Florence Maybrick II
Her trial gripped the nation and tested Britain's legal system to the limit.
Raffles (Green Penguin Book Club 8)
Darryl Jones s Caroline to discuss the first collection of Raffles stories.
The Great Gladys
A reptilian sleuth with a mellifluous voice, and a small amount of witchcraft.
Ranking Christianna Brand
Caroline dives deep into Brand’s work to find her favourite novel.
The Secret Life of Ngaio Marsh
Who was Ngaio Marsh really?
The Crimes of Dorothy Erskine Muir
Fact meets fiction in the work of this unjustly overlooked writer.
The Hay Poisoner
All the best murder mysteries start with a scone laced with arsenic.
The Four Just Men (Green Penguin Book Club 9)
Tom Mead s Caroline to read Edgar Wallace’s 1905 thriller.
E.C.R. Lorac
She wrote over 70 well-reviewed detective novels, yet disappeared from view. Why?
An Inspector Calls
Because sometimes, only a professional will do.