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Julia Child, Jane Austen, and sleuths of a certain age

Somewhere, Miss Marple is wryly smiling, possibly while industriously knitting something fluffy. 

The women of a certain age crime-solving trend continues to cast a gimlet eye over a world that really should know better, and readers are all the richer for it. This spring offers several new mysteries to test their wits against.

Why We Wrote This

Our picks for spring mysteries include four clever – and transporting – reads starring Austen scions, Julia Child’s chef knife, and a loving, if meddlesome, Chinatown teahouse owner.

A wedding party to celebrate the upcoming nuptials of a local lord ends with said lord crushed beneath a cabinet of his ancestors’ scientific collection in “Death Comes to Marlow,” by Robert Thorogood. More of a “howdunit” than a whodunit, “Death Comes to Marlow” understands the satisfaction that comes from a clever solution.

In “Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers,” Vera runs a crumbling teahouse in San Francisco’s Chinatown. One morning, she comes down to find a body in the middle of her shop. Vera identifies four suspects, all of whom are the beneficiaries of her top-quality meddling and propensity for whipping up eight-course feasts on a daily basis. “Vera Wong” is a total joy and made me hungrier than anything I’ve read all year.

Somewhere, Miss Marple is wryly smiling, possibly while industriously knitting something fluffy. 

The women of a certain age crime-solving trend continues to cast a gimlet eye over a world that really should know better, and readers are all the richer for it.

And while book lovers are waiting for the fourth outing of the consistently outstanding Thursday Murder Club this fall and pining for a sequel to last year’s wickedly funny and feminist “Killers of a Certain Age,” this spring offers several new mysteries to test their wits against.

Why We Wrote This

Our picks for spring mysteries include four clever – and transporting – reads starring Austen scions, Julia Child’s chef knife, and a loving, if meddlesome, Chinatown teahouse owner.

The puzzlingly clever “howdunit”

Judith, Suzie, and Becks are back with more crosswords, wild swimming, and murdered gentry in “Death Comes to Marlow,” by Robert Thorogood. A wedding party to celebrate the upcoming nuptials of a local lord ends with said lord crushed beneath a cabinet of his ancestors’ scientific collection. The door is locked, and the key is in his pocket.

His estranged son, meanwhile, was outside talking to our intrepid trio, giving him a perfect alibi. But Judith, who had a phone call from the groom-to-be the day before his death, is convinced it’s murder. Now, to convince the police.

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