Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Book Review: Dissection of a Murder

Title: Dissection of a Murder

Author: Jo Murray

Publisher: Dutton

Publication Date: May 5, 2026

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

Set in the northeast English county of Durham, this British legal thriller was a fascinating departure from the American legal thrillers I'm more accustomed to—think Lincoln Lawyer —and the differences in the legal system are both illuminating and integral to the plot. Here, barristers cannot simply refuse a client, even one who won't speak to them. That single detail sets up everything that follows.

The central premise is deliciously tense: Leila Reynolds is handed her first murder case—the killing of a well-respected judge—by a defendant who refuses to tell her anything. Challenging enough. But the masterstroke is that her opponent across the courtroom is her own husband, a far more experienced barrister who was once her mentor. Husband versus wife, mentor versus protégée, prosecution versus defence. It's an extraordinarily compelling dynamic, and Murray mines every ounce of tension from it.

The characters are complex and morally ambiguous in all the right ways. Nobody here is entirely clean, and that keeps you guessing throughout. The novel builds like a freight train gathering speed—what starts at a controlled pace becomes an unstoppable rush toward the finish line. 

What truly elevates this novel, though, is the ending. The twist blindsided me completely. I hadn't seen it coming at all, and when it landed it recast everything I'd read in an entirely new light. And then the resolution itself—sublime is the only word for it. I genuinely wasn't sure how Murray could wrap everything up satisfyingly, but she manages it with precision and elegance.

A big thank you to Dutton and NetGalley.  I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

#DissectionofaMurder #NetGalley

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