The Murder Game: Play, Puzzles and The Golden Age
By (Author) John Curran
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins Crime Club
30th December 2025
11th September 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Historical crime and mysteries
Biography: arts and entertainment
809.38720904
Hardback
480
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 33mm
270g
From The Murder of Roger Ackroyd to Magpie Murders, and related diversions including cryptic crosswords and Cains Jawbone, The Murder Game examines the games authors played with their readers and the importance of puzzles in Golden Age whodunits.
With books flourishing in the 1920s and 30s like never before, no genre was more innovative or popular than detective fiction. It was an era that saw the emergence of Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, John Dickson Carr, Ellery Queen and dozens of other authors who became household names for a generation of readers.
The Golden Age of Detection has enjoyed a great resurgence of interest in recent years, with publishers mining back catalogues to bring the best of yesteryear to very receptive new audiences. What is it about a literary movement that took off in the 1920s that still appeals to book lovers in the 2020s
In this authoritative new study, John Curran reveals that it is the ludic qualities of classic crime fiction that continue to intrigue. At its heart is the whodunit game between writer and reader, but there is also the game between detective and murderer, between publisher and book-buyer, even between the writers themselves.
Coinciding with an increase in leisure time and literacy, the Golden Age also saw the development of the crossword, the growth of bridge and Mahjong, the enduring popularity of jigsaws and the emergence of Cluedo all activities requiring the little grey cells. The Murder Game considers all of these, and many other sporting and competitive recreations, helping to explain the reading publics ongoing love affair with the Golden Age.
'Curran knows his subject backwards' Guardian
John Curran is the long-time literary advisor to Agatha Christie's estate, often giving talks and appearing on documentaries about her life. He has spent the last few years unpicking the notebooks and deciphering Agatha Christie's handwriting for this, his first book.