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A Plot to Die For by Ardal O’Hanlon

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A Plot to Die for by Ardal O'Hanlon front cover

Few settings are more deceptively dangerous than a picturesque rural community. As many have found to their misfortune, beneath the herbaceous borders, parish council meetings and carefully maintained public image lurk old grudges, quiet humiliations and lives that have curdled into resentment.

A Plot to Die For taps expertly into that tradition, combining the petty intrigues of the classic village mystery with distinctly Irish wit and sensibility. What’s more, Ardal O’Hanlon follows in the cosy footsteps of Richard Osman, particularly when capturing the absurdities and tensions of community life.

Set in the fictional Irish small town of Abbeyford, the novel introduces Finn O’Leary, a well-known television gardener whose fame and likeability have never quite erased his awkwardness or sense of displacement. There’s no way to avoid picturing O’Hanlon when following Finn’s many misadventures.

Watch our fun little first look video for A Plot to Die For here:

Returning to Abbeyford to help care for his convalescing mother after living in London for years, Finn is immediately absorbed back into the rhythms of local life: committees, gossip, simmering rivalries, parish politics and endless discussions about flowers, litter, civic pride and appearances.

While escorting his mother to choir practice, old friend Aoife Prendergast ropes Finn into assisting with the horticultural side of Abbeyford’s entry for the annual Tidy Towns competition. Even more onerous, when Aussie incomer Michael Dunlop collapses and dies during choir practice, Finn finds himself embroiled in a murder investigation.

Cosy crime lives or dies by atmosphere, and A Plot to Die For has atmosphere to spare. O’Hanlon fills Abbeyford with eccentric personalities, simmering resentments and the kind of small town politics that can make a local environmental competition feel as emotionally charged as a national election.

There is constant chatter, endless local history and the unmistakable sense that everyone knows everyone else’s business… or at least thinks they do. The town itself becomes central to the mystery because the investigation depends less on forensic breakthroughs than on understanding the complicated social web holding the community together.

The Tidy Towns competition, which might sound rather whimsical to outsiders, provides a surprisingly effective backdrop for a murder mystery because O’Hanlon understands exactly how much emotional investment a small community might place in it. Beneath the hanging baskets and carefully maintained verges lurk resentments and old wounds.

As a consequence, the strongest aspect of A Plot to Die For is undoubtedly its sense of place. Abbeyford feels lived-in – for the good and the bad – from the outset. O’Hanlon captures rural Irish life with obvious affection but also with a sharp eye for its claustrophobia and absurdity.

It’s the perfect setting for a cosy crime novel, but not the aggressively sanitised variety where murder feels oddly consequence-free. Instead, O’Hanlon balances warmth with melancholy. Aside from Michael’s death, Finn’s return home prompts reflections on ageing, loneliness and the uneasy awareness that life in Abbeyford has moved on without him.

Still, his mother, Maura, is a treat: sharp-tongued, emotionally unpredictable and frequently hilarious. Her Nigerian carer, Happiness, threatens to steal the entire novel through sheer force of personality. Together, they provide much of the depth that elevates the story beyond a straightforward whodunnit.

The humour – unsurprisingly given O’Hanlon’s background – is excellent. The comedy grows naturally from character interaction and social observation. Finn’s internal anxieties, the committee politics surrounding Tidy Towns and the sheer theatricality of village gossip all generate genuine laughs.

As for the crime, the mystery surrounding Michael’s death is cleverly structured, if occasionally sprawling. O’Hanlon enjoys populating Abbeyford with eccentric side characters, and there are moments where the sheer number of personalities and subplots threatens to overwhelm the central investigation.

Yet this approach suits the story. The fun lies as much in spending time in Abbeyford as in solving the crime itself. O’Hanlon understands that, in traditional village mysteries, the community is the real subject. Murder simply exposes existing tensions. By the time Finn begins uncovering secrets, the town’s emotional geography is clearly established.

Plus, the mystery contains enough red herrings and reversals of fortune to remain engaging throughout. O’Hanlon does a solid job of concealing motivations without resorting to outright implausibility. Finn’s search for the truth is consistently entertaining because the characters are so vividly drawn.

Finn himself makes for an appealing amateur sleuth precisely because he is not especially brilliant or glamorous. He succeeds through empathy, patience and the fact that people instinctively confide in him. That quality firmly situates both Finn and A Plot to Die For in classic cosy crime territory.

Beneath the jokes and eccentricity lies a novel about homecoming, ageing, community and the strange intimacy of small town life. O’Hanlon writes with warmth and generosity, and while the mystery itself is satisfying, it is the richly realised world of Abbeyford that lingers the longest. The novel is already being sold as book one in the Blooming Mystery series, so it seems Finn will be back with us before too long.

For more cosy crime fiction, dive into these recommended series.

Simon & Schuster
Print/Kindle/iBook
£10.00

CFL Rating: 4 Stars


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