A Novel
by Louise Hegarty
For fans of Anthony Horowitz and Lucy Foley, a wonderfully original, genre-breaking literary debut from Ireland that's an homage to the brilliant detective novels of the early twentieth century, a twisty modern murder mystery, and a searing exploration of grief and loss.
A group of friends gather at an Airbnb on New Year's Eve. It is Benjamin's birthday, and his sister Abigail is throwing him a jazz-age Murder Mystery themed party. As the night plays out, champagne is drunk, hors d'oeuvres consumed, and relationships forged, consolidated or frayed. Someone kisses the wrong person; someone else's heart is broken.
In the morning, all of them wake up—except Benjamin.
As Abigail attempts to wrap her mind around her brother's death, an eminent detective arrives determined to find Benjamin's killer. In this mansion, suddenly complete with a butler, gardener and housekeeper, everyone is a suspect, and nothing is quite as it seems.
Will the culprit be revealed? And how can Abigail, now alone, piece herself back together in the wake of this loss?
Gripping and playful, sharp and profoundly moving, Fair Play plumbs the depths of the human heart while subverting one of our most popular genres.
"Brilliant...Readers, especially fans of Richard Osman, will happily go along with the plot's many reversals and take heart in its surprisingly tender conclusion. Hegarty's wonderfully eccentric characters, expert knowledge of classic whodunits, and ability to balance silly hijinks and serious emotional stakes mark her as a writer worth keeping tabs on. For mystery lovers, this is a joy." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Like The Secret History, Hegarty's debut loves to braid the brainy with the earthy...When it comes to whether you're in the hands of someone phenomenally talented here, who has constructed something entirely original, there's no mystery."
— Sunday Times (London)
"Louise Hegarty's genre-splicing debut is a treat—clever, confident, and always surprising, a mystery story that ingeniously escapes the locked room of the genre to take on the biggest questions of life and death." —Paul Murray, author of The Bee Sting
"A fiendishly designed, intricately layered, psychologically astute tale, and so elegantly written too. I've never read anything like it ... a story of striking originality. I am full of admiration. —Emma Stonex, author of The Lamplighters
This information about Fair Play was first featured
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Louise Hegarty's work has appeared in Banshee, the Tangerine, the Stinging Fly, and the Dublin Review, and has been featured on BBC Radio 4's Short Works. She was the inaugural winner of the Sunday Business Post/Penguin Ireland Short Story Prize. Her short story "Getting the Electric" has been optioned by Fíbín Media. She lives in Cork, Ireland.
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