“Swing just might be the best historical thriller of the year. Certainly it is the most creative.”
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Imaginative, smart and impressively elaborate, a sophisticated foray into musical mystery plotting.”
—Janet Maslin, The New York Times
“Holmes’s clever period mystery [gathers together] the bitter and the sweet, and makes the kind of music you want to hear.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“From the first paragraph it’s clear that Swing . . . is subtle and inviting . . . an excellent novel and an impressive tale of intrigue. We are swept along by often beautiful prose in a brilliantly structured story that is fascinating to read as it unfolds its secrets.”
—San Jose Mercury News
“It’s the people, living and dead, who stay in the memory after the last page has been turned, the last letter-perfect description of a vanished world has touched a chord, the last note of swing music has been played.”
—Chicago Tribune
“Saturated in the atmosphere of noir and swing . . . The story moves jauntily, its set pieces staged with theatrical flair and its snappy dialogue recalling Ben Hecht's.”
—New Yorker
“You will want to read Swing. You’ll also want to listen to Swing. I read this book twice and loved it even more the second time. As for the music, well, if you don’t like to listen, you can always get up and dance. Swing swings.”
—The Toronto Globe and Mail
“The story pulses like an orchestration itself, with odd harmonies, varying tempos, witty exchanges, and a poignant leitmotif.”
—Christian Science Monitor
“Swing is no exception to Holmes’ string of successes. Compelling and atmospheric, it’s nostalgic writing at its best, tough, classy, and smart. Clever and stylish, with music, femmes fatale, and a tortured protagonist, you won’t regret taking Holmes’ latest novel for a Swing.”
—Denver Rocky Mountain News
“A tour de force of style and erudition that will delight mystery readers of any sort. A clever, original mystery that’s pure fun to read, listen to, look at, and puzzle out.”
—Publishers Weekly
Praise for Murder Your Employer
“Holmes is a gifted wordsmith whose latest is a top-notch read that both entertains and amuses. . . . Delightfully wicked . . . An amusing and cheeky tale with excellent pacing replete with droll observations.”
—Library Journal (starred review)
“If the illustrations of Edward Gorey came to life, they would be in the same neighborhood as this ‘Poison Ivy League’ college. . . . Although this beautifully designed DIY manual is full of twists, the emphasis is on comedy . . . but the extraordinary Holmes can pull the heartstrings too. . . . You will love this gigglesome guide to the graves of academe.”
—The Times (London)
“How has no one thought of this before? Murders set at an imaginary academy set up to train murderers . . . Holmes delights in wordplay that includes puns, literary terms, cultural references, and twists. . . . As Holmes takes hairpin turns from irony back to sincerity for his three McMasters pupils, his zany storytelling will delight fans of The Twyford Code by Janice Hallett, all Sherlock Holmes stories, and even those who love tales of arcane and Gothic institutions.”
—Bethanne Patrick, NPR
“A funny, fast-paced, flip-the-playbook mystery in which three ordinary citizens are trained in murder on a luxurious hidden estate . . . a fantasy academy laid out like a combination of Hogwarts, Downton Abbey, and a White Lotus–style resort. . . . Holmes can clearly do anything.”
—The Los Angeles Times
“A delightful introduction to the McMasters Conservatory . . . To better understand McMasters, consider it the Harvard of Homicide, the Stanford of Stabbing, or the Princeton of Poisoning. . . . Holmes’ newest novel is a satirical masterpiece. His wry wit and sarcastic sense of humor are on full display. As a mystery writer, Holmes executes misdirection expertly, leading the reader in several directions at once. His stabbing commentary on academia is cut-throat. Holmes kills it in this entertaining tale. For readers looking for a fast and fun book that will slay your funny bone, check out Murder Your Employer. All puns intended.”
—Portland Book Review
“Highly entertaining . . . This clever novel imparts revelations from the clandestine McMasters Conservatory, which provides students of all ages with a well-rounded education on the necessary skills to complete their ‘final thesis’ . . . Warning: readers could die laughing.”
—Shelf Awareness