


Six years earlier, Holly (whose father is homicide detective Frank Mackey) was a witness in a murder case, and Moran was the cop who interviewed her now she’s grown into a self-possessed young student at St.

Kilda’s School in search of answers to a murder case turned cold. “The Secret Place,” French’s fifth Dublin Murder Squad novel, pries open the hermetically sealed world of teenagers at a tony girls’ prep school and lets readers peer into the toxic stew of hormones and homicidal rivalries roiling within.ĭetective Stephen Moran is the lucky lad selected by fate - in the form of 16-year-old Holly Mackey - to breach the walls of St. The mysterious depths of human personality are as intriguing to French as are the mysterious deaths that often set her stories in motion. Since each novel is told from a different detective’s point of view, we loyal readers come to know the characters inside and out - both in the way they see themselves and in the (often jarring) way others see them. Her Dublin Murder Squad series (which began in 2007 with “In the Woods,” which won the Anthony, Edgar, Macavity and Barry awards) relies on the simple device of a recurring cast of police detectives, although that device isn’t so simple psychologically. French is such a gorgeous writer: She’s a poet of mood and a master builder of plots that are positively Piranesi-like in their ingeniousness. Whenever someone asks me to name today’s top suspense novelists, my short list always includes Tana French.
