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The Serpent In The Garden
The Serpent In The Garden
Jan 13, 2026 11:01 AM

Author:Janet Gleeson

The Serpent In The Garden

Summer, 1765. The renowned portrait painter Joshua Pope is eager to escape London and his unhappy past and accepts a commission to paint a wedding portrait for Herbert Bentnick and his bride-to-be, Sabine Mercier.

Joshua learns that the couple are avid horticulturalists. Bentnick's country house, Astley, in Richmond, is famous for its verdant gardens, designed by the master landscape artist Capability Brown. Sabine Mercier, who has lived most of her life in the Indies, is an expert in growing pineapples, the fruit of choice at the grandest dinner parties and an inspiration to artists and craftsmen.

But soon after Sabine begins to cultivate pineapples in the vast conservatory at Astley, she discovers a body among her plants. Why, wonders Joshua Pope, is so little attention paid to this bizarre death? Why do Bentnick's children regard their future stepmother with suspicion and fear? And what connection does Sabine's daughter Violet have with the dead man?

Outraged that any life can be valued so lightly, Joshua begins to investigate the death. But then Sabine's valuable emerald necklace disappears, and he is implicated. His need to discover what has happened at Astley suddenly becomes more pressing. Can Joshua solve the mystery before his reputation is ruined? And, more immediately, can he stay alive long enough to do so?

Following her acclaimed début, THE GRENADILLO BOX, Janet Gleeson has written another compelling tale of murder and mystery set in an exquisitely and authentically rendered Georgian England.

Reviews

'Gripping...Gleeson's evocation of the period is meticulously researched and her plotting is neat and controlled...a good yarn'

—— Independent on Sunday

An irresistible follow-up to acclaimed THE GRENADILLO BOX:
'Colourful and wildly entertaining...A wonderful read'

—— Guardian

'As attractively crafted as the box itself'

—— Independent on Sunday

'A delicious five-course banquet: a murder mystery is succeeded by an abandoned infant weepie, a love story, a social history and, finally, a richly flavoured, full-bodied, 18th-century whodunnit...You'll be kept guessing right up until the last page in this splendid novel'

—— Harpers & Queen

'A compulsive page-turner which will appeal especially to anyone who was spellbound by Charles Palliser's The Quincunx'

—— Daily Mail

'Masterful...the sheer weight of events carries you on...a cheerful whodunnit'

—— The Times

'An auspicious fiction début...engaging and enjoyable'

—— Observer

'A delicious tale of crime'

—— Home & Country

Full of Chippendale-style hidden compartments...her narrative is absolutely enchanting'

—— Literary Review

As unremittingly bleak as her characters' lives are, Mathis has not produced a grim novel: it is as much about our need for joy as it is about our struggles against bitterness. Written with elegance and remarkable poise ... memorable and with the hint of something formidable glinting under the surface.

—— Guardian

This is an impressive debut: tender, tough and unflinching.

—— Daily Mail

This rich debut couldn't be further from the straightforward 20th-century American family saga it appears at first to be . . . Spanning many decades, it is an intricate portrait not only of complex family ties, but also of one quietly strong woman who heads this complicated tribe of siblings, children and friends. With each chapter narrated by one of Hattie's children, the power of Brooklyn author Ayana Mathis' novel is in its ability to create distinctive yet precise characters brimming with recognisable humanity.

—— Psychologies Magazine

Dazzling… Royle attended last year’s Man Booker Prize ceremony as editor of one of the shortlisted titles, Alison Moore’s The Lighthouse… I wouldn’t bet against Royle having to dry-clean the tux on his own account next time.

—— Anthony Cummins , Sunday Telegraph

Royle’s coup is to deliver the pithy sting of a good short story many times over the course of a whole novel.

—— Claire Lowdon , New Statesmen

I admired it so much and wanted to go back and see how it was all put together. His book absolutely enchanted me.

—— Jenn Ashworth , Independent

This may be a tricksily metafictional novel but Royle hasn’t forgotten his readers.

—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail

5 stars, gripping, innovative and fluent.

—— Bookmebookblog

Nicholas Royle has produced the holy grail: a literary page-turner. Although it’s published in January, I’ll be astonished if it doesn’t make the short list of many a prize at the end of the year.

—— Bookmunch

A strange, unsettling brew that simply entertains at first before revealing darker and more dangerous depths as it progresses; a dark and delicious treat for lovers of literary fiction who like to have their grey cells tickled.

—— Justwilliamsluck

A vertiginous murder mystery with echoes of JG Ballard, David Lodge and Alain Robbe-Grillet

—— Sunday Telegraph

If writing about creative writing is to risk a novel eating itself, we can be thankful that a writer of Royle's skills put himself in charge of the banquet

—— Gerard Woodward , Guardian

A brilliant, eerie mix of campus meta-novel, whodunnit, failed-love story and existential contemplation

—— Peter J. Smith , Times Higher Education

This just might be the exceptional book which should be judged by its cover

—— Liam Heylin , Irish Examiner

An ingenious tale

—— Observer

Cleverly metafictional, humorously perverse, and impressively original

—— Courtney Garner , Yorker
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