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The Locked Room

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Pandemic lockdowns have Ruth Galloway feeling isolated from everyone but a new neighbor—until Nelson comes calling, investigating a decades-long string of murder-suicides that's looming ever closer, in USA Today Elly Griffiths' penultimate novel in the beloved series.

Three years after her mother's death, Ruth is finally sorting through her things when she finds a curious relic: a decades-old photograph of her own Norfolk cottage—before she lived there—with a peculiar inscription on the back. Ruth returns to the cot­tage to uncover its meaning as Norfolk's first cases of Covid-19 make headlines, leaving her and Kate to shelter in place there. They struggle to stave off isolation by clapping for frontline workers each evening and befriending a kind neighbor, Zoe, from a distance.

Meanwhile, Nelson is investigating a series of deaths of women that may or may not be suicide. When he links a case to an archaeological dis­covery, he breaks curfew to visit Ruth and enlist her help. But the further Nelson investigates the deaths, the closer he gets to Ruth's isolated cot­tage—until Ruth, Zoe, and Kate all go missing, and Nelson is left scrambling to find them before it's too late.


PRAISE FOR ELLY GRIFFITHS AND THE RUTH GALLOWAY SERIES

Winner of the Edgar Award for Best Novel

Winner of the Mary Higgins Clark Award

Winner of the CWA Dagger in the Library Award

"Galloway is an everywoman, smart, successful and a little bit unsure of herself. Readers will look forward to learning more about her." —USA Today

"Elly Griffiths draws us all the way back to prehistoric times . . . Highly atmospheric." —New York Times Book Review

"Forensic archeologist and academic Ruth Galloway is a captivating amateur sleuth—an inspired creation. I identified with her insecurities and struggles, and cheered her on." —Louise Penny

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    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2022

      Puzzling over a photograph found among her late mother's belongings, forensic archaeologist Ruth Galloway travels to Norfolk with daughter Kate and winds up in COVID-19 lockdown. She forges a socially distanced friendship with neighborly Zoe, but when DCI Nelson (also Kate's father) breaks quarantine to pursue a crime spree extending to Norfolk, he learns that Ruth, Kate, and Zoe are missing. From Edgar Award winner Griffiths; with a 40,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 9, 2022
      The Covid pandemic provides the backdrop for Edgar winner Griffiths’s meandering 14th mystery featuring forensic archaeologist Ruth Galloway (after 2021’s The Night Hawks), set during the first few months of 2020. Ruth is asked to examine a skeleton found at the site of a medieval cemetery near Norwich Cathedral. Meanwhile, her on-again, off-again lover, Norfolk Det. Chief Insp. Harry Nelson, is looking into the death of a part-time librarian. All signs point to the middle-aged woman’s suicide, but Nelson isn’t convinced of this, “because who puts a Weight Watchers’ chicken and lemon risotto in the microwave if they’re planning to kill themselves”? His investigation turns up the names of other local women—all seemingly happy churchgoers—who have recently died by suicide. Ruth eventually joins Nelson in the search for a connecting thread between the victims, which touches on such personal matters as relationship breakups, rapprochements, family reunions, loved ones in hospital with Covid, lonely lockdowns, and Zoom meetings. A surfeit of detail about the impact of the pandemic slows the crime solving. Established fans will best appreciate this one. Agent: Kirby Kim, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc.

    • Library Journal

      May 27, 2022

      Griffiths's latest "Dr. Ruth Galloway" mystery (following The Night Hawks) starts as a COVID shutdown around the world. Forensic archaeologist Ruth is still missing her mother, Jean, gone five years now, and is cleaning out some things when she finds a picture of Ruth's Norfolk cottage, dated before she was born. Why is this among her things, especially when Jean didn't seem to like the cottage? Then Ruth learns that her new neighbor has a checkered past, which also raises some questions. Meanwhile, Harry Nelson and Judy Johnson, Ruth's friends on the police force, are investigating a series of suicides, but one victim is found in a room locked from the outside. They are trying to figure out if there's a serial killer staging suicides, and if so, they wonder how to thoroughly inspect during lockdown. Griffiths certainly has her characters down pat, yet still allows them to grow with this new global situation and how it affects their community. Different story lines, including an archaeological clue, twine together perfectly, slowly building suspense until the satisfying reveal. VERDICT Readers new to this series and longtime fans will not be able to put this down, as long as they aren't put off by the pandemic story line.--Sarah Sullivan

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from June 1, 2022
      Many authors have avoided bringing the isolation and fear of the COVID pandemic into their stories, but Griffiths wades right in. In this fourteenth Ruth Galloway mystery (after The Night Hawks, 2021), Ruth is trying to conduct anthropology classes online from her living room while struggling to home-school her daughter, Kate, now a restless and inquisitive 11 year-old. Then Inspector Harry Nelson, her on-and-off-again lover, involves her in a series of murder/suicides. Ruth has also been working on a mystery of her own. While clearing out her late mother's effects, she finds a photo of her (Ruth's) cottage with the annotation, "Dawn 1963." This is the same mother who abhorred Ruth's home, "miles from everywhere . . . facing the Saltmarsh, inhabited only by migrating birds and the ghosts of lost children calling from the sea." Meanwhile, her Druid friend Cathbad contracts the virus and is fighting for his life, and Ruth places herself in great danger by venturing out to deal with a situation involving the unearthing of a medieval plague victim and rumors of a ghost called The Grey Lady of Tombland. Ruth proves endearing in her insecurities and inspiring in her fierce determination as she copes with a perilous world. The Galloway series has achieved both critical acclaim and widespread popular success, and this latest installment will only enhance its reputation.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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