The Editor

The Editor by Sara Franklin is an exhaustive biography of Judith Jones.  For over 60 years, she was the ground-breaking editor of authors such as Anne Tyler, John Updike, and Sylvia Plath.  She also worked with a murderers’ row of cookbook authors – Julia Child, Madhur Jaffrey, Edna Lewis, and James Beard.

Jones led a Forrest Gump-like life – from postwar Paris where she came across a manuscript by Anne Frank and she “rescued [it] from the reject pile” and then throughout the years she spent at Knopf. For example, she worked with philosophers and poets, such as Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, and Langston Hughes,

The latter part of the book is devoted to how Jones virtually invented a new genre – that of the literary cookbook. The years Jones spent in France were critical to her success with Child, and Jones also became an expert in the cuisine of India and the Middle East through her work with Jaffrey and Claudia Roden.

It’s a story of sexism – neither Blanche Knopf nor Jones were as well known or compensated (in Jones’ case)  as their male counterparts. It’s a fascinating history of the heyday of big publishing houses in New York, when authors and books had almost unlimited time and attention from their publishers and editors. Franklin goes into minute detail about every stage of the process – from how books and authors are shopped around to how cover art and book titles were chosen. With Child, Jones revolutionized how books were promoted by creating the publicity tour.  These geeky details were perhaps my favorite part of The Editor.

Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz

Agatha Christie was my favorite mystery author growing up, thanks to my grandmother who consistently bought me her books and watched her ‘Marple’ and ‘Poirot’ series on television. The classic whodunit mystery holds a special place in my heart. As a result, I have turned into a picky mystery reader. A mystery novel has to grab my interest quickly, sustain it through the end, and be complex enough that I am unable to predict whodunit. Enter in Anthony Horowitz’s Magpie Murders and I felt like I was back at my grandma’s watching Poirot solve a crime. This book felt like a delicious dive into my childhood.

Magpie Murders is a book within a book, a mystery within a mystery, a murder within a murder. Susan Ryeland is the editor of Alan Conway’s mystery series featuring detective Atticus Pund. This book opens with Ryeland receiving a copy of Conway’s latest book, Magpie Murders, and her decision to read it over the weekend. Such begins the first foray into the book within the book. Conway’s Magpie Murders is the classic whodunit that takes place in the English countryside in a small village in 1955 where a well-known woman has died. Atticus Pund, a German concentration camp survivor who has become famous for his sleuthing skills, decides to head to the small village of Saxby-on-Avon to try to solve this Agatha-Christie like puzzle. A housekeeper named Mary Blakiston fell down a flight of stairs at Pye Hall. Her death had been ruled accidental, but the fiancée of Mary’s estranged son seeks Pund and asks for his help. There are many questions that Pund must answer and after a second crime occurs, Pund decides to visit on his own accord and figure out what exactly is happening in Saxby-on-Avon.

Flash to the present when Susan Ryeland has reached the end of the Magpie Murders manuscript only to discover that the last chapter is missing. Confronting her boss, Charlie Clover, about the missing chapters, both Clover and Ryeland are surprised to learn that the author, Alan Conway, has committed suicide. Conway mailed a letter to Clover before his death explaining why he decided to commit suicide. After reading the letter, Susan decides to look for Conway’s last chapter and sets off interviewing his family and friends to find it and to learn more about Conway’s motives for killing himself. That last chapter will save Magpie Murders and hopefully Susan’s business as the death of Conway will certainly sink the company if that last chapter is never found. As she searches, Susan comes to believe that maybe Conway didn’t kill himself. She soon finds herself becoming sort of a detective as she tries to figure out what exactly happened to Alan Conway.

I really enjoyed this book. Atticus Pund’s story was entertaining enough, but the addition of Susan’s story adds a delightful twist to the whole book. I was thoroughly entertained from beginning to end in both stories. I also enjoyed how the stories intertwined together and how Susan was able to rely on the Magpie Murders manuscript to help her figure out what happened to Conway. There were so many tiny clues and revelations hidden in both Pund’s and Susan’s story that had me on the edge of the seat wondering whodunit.


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