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LAURA GIEBFRIED is the author of seven novels. As a native Mainer, her stories are often set in New England. Giebfried has a master’s degree in Forensic Psychology. She also has three certificates in screenwriting from UCLA, NFTS, and the Film School in Seattle.
STANLEY R. WELLS is a former actor who guest starred on several television series including M*A*S*H, Bret Maverick, Palmerstown, USA, and co-starred in the Emmy winning television production of The Miracle Worker. In the late nineties he opened The Empty Stage Theater in Los Angeles where he wrote and directed the critically acclaimed play Three and directed the improv groups The Transformers and The Waterbrains, who are still performing regularly in LA more than twenty years later. Wells still teaches and directs improv in Bangor, Maine, where he currently lives with his wife, Laura Giebfried, though now he devotes most of his time to writing novels and screenplays.

THE MARLOWE MURDERS  Cover
MYSTERY & CRIME

THE MARLOWE MURDERS

BY • POSTED ON April 1, 2020

A woman with a perfect memory must solve a murder at the center of a wealthy, dysfunctional family in Giebfried and Wells’ mystery, the first in a series.

It’s 1955, and Alexandra Durant’s final year of graduate school isn’t going according to plan. First, she’s kicked out of her psychology program less than a year before completing her dissertation. (The reason? Not being “likable” enough.) Then she’s offered the chance to reenroll—but only if she does a favor for her professor, John Marlowe. Marlowe hires Alexandra to work as a maid for his mother for one month at the sprawling mansion on the family’s private island off Maine’s coast. It’s a strange request, but Alexandra needs to graduate, and the money John offers her will pay for her own mother’s medical treatment. Alexandra arrives on Exeter Island to find things not quite as John described them. First of all, his mother is dead! Her six children and their significant others—all of them quite odd—have descended on the island along with an estranged friend of the family named Isidore Lennox, whose presence causes quite the stir. At least the estate will be easy to sort out. John, the oldest, will inherit everything. Then John is murdered, leaving each of the 12 people on the island a possible suspect. Everyone is suspicious of one another. The only one Alexandra can trust is herself. Luckily, she has spent years developing a photographic memory—indeed, memory is the topic of her dissertation—making her the perfect sleuth to get to the bottom of the crime. She’ll need to hurry. Several of her housemates may be much more dangerous than they initially seemed. In solving his murder, maybe Alexandra can figure out the other mystery that’s been bothering her: Why did John hire her to be his mother’s maid the day after his mother died?

Giebfried and Wells deliver a wonderfully atmospheric murder mystery on foggy, snowbound Exeter Island. The location makes the lead’s circumstances feel even more remote and dangerous, while the incessant bickering of the surviving Marlowes creates an almost unbearable claustrophobia. The prose is exact and attuned to Alexandra’s analytical perspective. Here, before he dies, John gives her instructions for navigating the strange scenario involving multiple overbearing personalities: “Now, you’ll be thrown into certain situations while you’re here, and—like a good psychologist—you need to react appropriately. No judgment. No criticism. Nothing makes you uncomfortable. Understand?” The novel is a long one at over 500 pages, and its shifts in tone—moving easily from suspense to humor to horror to satire—keep the reader from ever getting too comfortable. Alexandra’s virtuosic memory and poor people skills make her a delightful detective, and the people around her provide an endless series of foils. The twists keep coming all the way to a satisfying ending. Perhaps the most exciting development is the promise of future Alexandra Durant cases to come.

A fun, inventive murder mystery set on a wintry Atlantic island.

Pub Date: April 1, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-09-958711-5

Page count: 528pp

Publisher: Independently Published

Review Posted Online: Nov. 23, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2022

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

None Shall Sleep (Damnatio Memoriae Book 1)

At an all-boys boarding school on an island off the coast of Maine, Enim Lund has three goals. One, not to put another toe out of line, which would see him expelled. Two, to drive his new guardian, his uncle, mad enough to quit and force his father to come back home. And three, not to do anything that will remind him of his involvement in the tragic event that took his mother away. But when a local girl's body washes up on the school's shore and the beautiful French teacher is murdered soon after, it's clear that Enim won't achieve his goal. With all signs pointing to one of Bickerby’s students as being responsible for the crimes, Enim’s best friend convinces him to investigate what happened. Yet what starts as a good excuse to distract himself from his demons soon segues into something far more sinister: a dangerous criminal, a coverup of the truth, and an obsession that will haunt Enim as much as -- or more than -- his mother's fate.
Published: Aug. 24, 2014
ISBN: B00N08XL9G
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