3.92 AVERAGE


This took me back to Nancy Drew and teen mysteries I used to (and still) read. There was a lot to be desired and fulfilled but was enjoyable and I wasn’t fully able to figure it out.
adventurous challenging dark mysterious fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

I was MEGA looking forward to this book! I’m already obsessed with Agatha Christie, and then a novel is announced about a MC who adores Agatha Christie and makes it her mission to solve her former best friend’s murder? SOLD!

This book truly had me guessing until the very end. Even though the authors did a great job leaving breadcrumbs, I still couldn’t sort the details; everyone was a suspect! I loved how two diverse main characters from totally different worlds came together to solve a murder. Alice and Iris were totally relatable and human, and that was my favorite part of the story.

The only thing I found myself wishing for was more consequence to Alice and Iris’s actions. They do some pretty shady stuff but rarely face repercussions from authorities or antagonists. This created less limitations and less tension. But I overall really enjoyed it! Congrats Kathleen and Liz!
adventurous mysterious medium-paced
Strong character development: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I enjoyed this mystery romance YA novel. The plot twists and keeps you guessing and the characters were believable and realistic. I am looking forward to the next book in the series and I think this is a definite must purchase for my students.

Thank you for the advanced copy.

I am going to write my review for both book one and book two, The Night In Question here. Book one was fantastic and I was quickly sucked in. Book two was just as good and I am hoping for a third book. The writing goes back and forth between two main characters Alice and Iris, two friends with a talent for solving mysteries. Both have their own issues but their friendship softens the edges of the difficulties they each deal with.

Book one introduces us to the two main characters and is the beginning of their friendship. Alice introduces Iris to her favorite author Agatha Christie and the two develop an unlikely alliance. When Iris gets sucked into the drama in Alice's life, it reminds her how nice it is to have friends and her solidary life becomes a little brighter.

Book two continues along the same line. With their success in solving a mystery, they once again have to help the bumbling local police so that another innocent person is not wrongfully charged. The writing moves at a fast pace, the characters are fun and the mysteries that delve into the past are interesting. I specifically liked the quotes from the movie star and from Agatha Christie books in book two.

Maybe with some encouragement YA readers may opt to challenge themselves and try an Agatha Christie novel?

lighthearted mysterious medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
adventurous challenging dark emotional funny mysterious reflective tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

Loved this book. A perfect mystery. 

Zipped through it in an afternoon. An easy read. Like it enough to read the follow-up.

I started listening to this at work (I work in a library) as I thought it was a junior audio and would be safe for customers not to get offended by. It wasn't until a few swear words popped up that I realised it was in fact a young adult audio and had to quickly take it off loud speaker! I decided to carry on listening to it in my car as my curiosity was heightened as to the story and the development of the 2 main characters.

Having never read an Agatha Christie novel, I wondered if I'd get lost in any comparisons or miss Easter eggs mentioned throughout and have the typical "if you know you know" quotes. I was pleasantly surprised that there was absolutely none of that! I didn't feel left out in the slightest as every mention to Agatha's life or her novels was thoroughly explained which I liked. I wonder if I'd have read any of them though, that I'd be able to compare this book's storyline to a mash-up of some of hers?

We have 2 points of view in this book, one of Alice who is a typical popular rich girl at school, who seems to have lots of friends, hot boyfriends, big house but also has a very lonely existence when it boils down to it with her parents never being around and her relationships with boys and girls always seeming to be on again off again.

Then we have Iris, one of the down and outs at school, not seen as popular but has a small tight nit group of friends she can rely on, no money, lives a humble lifestyle, a mother who loves her very much, but has this deep dark secret which turns out to be the horrifying situation of her dad being a domestic abuser. She ultimately is looking for ways to save up to move her and her mum far away so he can never find them again.

I really did grow to like both these characters, even though when you're looking at it from Iris' point of view, Alice comes across as waaaay more annoying than she does when you're looking at it from Alice's point of view. I guess it helps to know what's going on in Alice's head rather than just seeing what she says and does.

The main reason that this is only 3 stars and not more, is that it was a typical Agatha style "whodunit" where you're guessing throughout who it could've been and you're mind changes from one person to the next, until the very last moment where all is revealed. It was revealed in such a typical "oh yeah you called me out, now I'm just going to tell you every single thing I did from start to end so you can piece together all these little clues you've picked up along the way, so that you're not left wondering about anything, and it's all tied up super neatly, no need for prompting, no need to cover up my actions or intentions or be in denial about any of it." kinda way. I know this needs to be done for the sake of finishing the story, and I guess it's because it's a bridge book into adult crime novels. Maybe that's why there's no mystery left for the reader to ponder over or anything. It saves having to think of ways for them to answer all their burning questions purely through interviewing other suspects and evidence and DNA etc, much easier to hear it from the horses mouth I guess (ironic terminology as horses are very much involved in the last scene)

So yeah, that's why it was a good book, but not fantastic. I felt like it dragged on a bit too long with everyone blaming Alice in the beginning for going missing years before (much like Agatha did) and thinking her friend Brook was just being a copycat. The police were really annoying in that regard, and their lack of interview and investigation skills were also annoying, but I guess that's maybe a nod to Agatha Christie as her main characters were always assisting the police, who seemed to lack those investigative skills too maybe? I don't know. Judging by the amount I enjoyed this book (or didn't as the case may be), I'm not rushing to read any Agatha Christie books, that's for sure. Not really my bag I don't think, I don't like the chase of trying to figure out for myself who did it, I just want to get to the end to find out, especially as I know that these stories always try to point it to the person it's definitely NOT going to be in the end, even though everyone in the book is convinced near the beginning and in the middle.