Guess who A novel

Chris McGeorge

Book - 2018

At eleven years old, Morgan Sheppard solved the murder of his Maths teacher when everyone else believed it to be a suicide. Twenty-five years later... Morgan Sheppard wakes up handcuffed to a bed in an unfamiliar hotel room, with five strangers waking up around him. In the bathroom - a corpse. One of the people in the room is the killer and Sheppard has three hours to solve the murder. If he doesn't find the killer, they all die. As everyone in the room panics, Sheppard starts to unravel an impossible case, where the real mystery might stretch all the way back to his childhood.

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MYSTERY/McGeorge, Chris
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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Mystery fiction
Published
Toronto, Ontario : Hanover Square Press 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Chris McGeorge (author)
Item Description
"One room. Five suspects. Three hours to find a killer"--Dust jacket.
Physical Description
362 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781335652829
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

British author McGeorge's debut thriller falls short of the promise of its impressive setup. One day, Morgan Sheppard, the troubled star of a reality TV program, Resident Detective, who achieved renown after solving a teacher's murder when he was only 11, awakes to find himself handcuffed to a bed in a London hotel room. With him are five strangers, including an attorney, an actress, and a hotel employee. The room is locked, with no way out, and there's a bloody corpse in the bathroom. The room's TV set turns on, and someone wearing a cartoon horse mask announces that one of the five is a murderer-and that Morgan has three hours to solve the killing or the hotel will be blown up. After Morgan persuades the others to free him, he discovers that the dead man is Simon Winter, his former therapist. With the clock ticking down, Morgan tries frantically to identify the murderer and the motive for his captivity. Unfortunately, the resolution comes as a letdown. Still, McGeorge's gift for creating suspense augurs well for the future. Agent: Hannah Sheppard, DHH Literary Agency (U.K.). (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In McGeorge's debut thriller, a celebrity detective wakes up handcuffed to a bed in a locked roomand there's a body in the bathroom.Ever since there have been fictional detectives, there have been locked-room mysteries, those seemingly impossible puzzles that hinge not only on whodunit, but how. McGeorge begins by presenting just such a problem to both the reader and the main character, Morgan Sheppard, who has grown rich and successful off "solving" the problems of others, mostly involving cheating spouses and other tawdry concerns. He is a drug addict and an alcoholic; in short, his life is a complete mess. So when he awakens in a room at the Great Hotel in London and finds five strangers locked in with him, they all assume at first that it must be a publicity stunt. Then Sheppard discovers the body of his former therapist in the bathtub and is challenged by a man in a mask to solve the murder before the entire hotel explodes. The novel offers some flashbacks to Sheppard's youth and early career to help us understand how he became the mess that he is, but it mostly focuses on the problem at hand: How will Sheppard get everyone out of the locked room and figure out who killed Dr. Winter? The answer to the mystery lies buried in his past, so he will have to face up to some of his unsavory choices in order to escape with his life. The main problem with the novel is the character of Sheppard himself. Traditionally, the locked room mystery depends on the superior ratiocination of a Hercule Poirot or a Sherlock Holmesnot a self-destructive and bitter attention-seeker. It's hard to get too worked up about either Sheppard's fate or his opportunity for redemption.An interesting premise that falls flat when the detective fails to impress, though the villain is diabolical. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.