TEHRAN – The Persian translation of Ellie Griffiths’ P.S. Murder has been released in bookstores across Iran.
The book was translated by Noura Navapour and published by Camac Publishing in 402 pages, ISNA reported.
Originally written in 2020, this novel by internationally bestselling author Ellie Griffiths is a literary mystery perfect for fans of Anthony Horowitz and Agatha Christie.
In “The Postscript Murders,” DS Harvinder Kaur and her colleagues investigate the death of a 90-year-old woman named Peggy Smith, who loved reading murder mysteries and detective stories. Peggy suffered from heart disease, so at first glance there seems to be nothing unusual about her death.
When Peggy’s caregiver Natalka and her former friar friend Benedict are held at gunpoint in Peggy’s apartment and the perpetrator steals an obscure crime novel from the Golden Age, it begins to appear that there may have been more to Peggy’s death than meets the eye.
When it is revealed that Peggy was a murder consultant for various prominent crime novelists, and one of them dies from a gunshot wound to the head, Harbinder finds himself on the hook for a complex case that unfolds rapidly.
Things escalated further, with writers being targeted from Aberdeen literary festivals to the streets of Edinburgh. DS Kaul embarks on a road trip across Europe and examines how exactly writers can come up with such realistic crimes.
P.S. Murder is a multi-layered murder mystery that celebrates and reflects the golden age of detective fiction.
Ellie Griffiths (62 years old) is a British crime novelist. She wrote three series: one featuring Ruth Galloway, one featuring Inspector Edgar Stevens and Max Mephisto, and the Harbinder Caul series.
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