A Deadly Episode by Anthony HorowitzMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
A producer has decided to film one of Anthony Horowitz's books about the private detective Daniel Hawthorne in Hastings with Anthony and Daniel as consultants. The director has chosen to bring in an external screenwriter who has some unusual ideas, thinking the detective story (about a woman who hits two young children while driving) is the least interesting part of the book and showcasing her own political beliefs.
From the start it appears that the actor playing Hawthorne is almost universally disliked. He has slept with several of the people on set, had the runner fired, treats the actor playing Anthony with contempt, and ignores the director's instructions. Frankly it's no surprise to anyone when he is found murdered, by a sharp Japanese knife in the back of the neck. The Hastings police are not familiar with murder investigations and invite Hawthorne to assist on the case.
I haven't read any of the preceding five books in this series, but I very much enjoyed reading The Marble Hall Murders by the same author earlier this year so I decided to request an ARC when I sat this on NetGalley. This was an odd book for me. A book written by an author which features himself as a character, who is himself being played by an actor in a film about a fictional book which the author is supposed to have written *breathe*.
Horowitz appears to be the bumbling Holmes to Hawthorne's Sherlock, he misses lots of clues, gets the wrong end of the stick, and is being played as an overweight greasy-looking scruff in comparison to the movie star good looks of the actor playing Hawthorne. Generally I am not a fan of Sherlock Holmes (in any of his written or film/TV adaption guises), I find the 'telling' rather than showing (because only he sees the clues) rather wearing. However, I rather enjoyed this, there was a logic to Hawthorne's deductions and most of them weren't too hard to see (in retrospect). I would definitely read more in this series, particularly when they are set in parts of the world that I know.
I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley.
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