Ann Granger attended the Northern Grammar School for Girls, and had thoughts about becoming a veterinarian, but discovered women were not accepted into vet schools because they were not believed to be strong enough. Instead she earned a Modern Languages degree at the University of London, where she first developed a desire to become a writer. worked in British embassies in various parts of the world. She met her husband, who was also working for the British Embassy, in Prague and together they received postings to places as far apart as Munich and Lusaka. They had two children.
Her first novels were historical romances published under the nom de plume Ann Hulme.
In 1991, Granger made the decision to switch to crime novels, saying, "Basically, there is only one plot in love stories: You can describe it in different ways, but you always come back to the subject of man and woman. Crime fiction opens up a world of possibilities for the writer. It lets you tackle deep and difficult issues." Her first crime novel, Say it with Poison, centred on the protagonists Meredith Mitchell, a consular clerk, and police officer Alan Markby. The book proved popular and Granger wrote 14 more Mitchell & Markby novels between 1991 and 2004.
Granger also wrote other crime novel series & in 2021, in recognition of thirty years of crime novels, Granger released a collection of eighteen short stories, Mystery in the Making.
On 24 September 2025, her publisher Headline announced that Granger had died at the age of 86
This autobiography was added to with information from Wikipedia & Encyclopedia.com.
Quick easy read. Fairly unremarkable story I thought. The plot is slight and very thin with nothing for the reader to really engage with. Reading the novel is a very passive activity and nothing about the plot made me think. The best part of the novel were the characters , both series protagonists and the ‘locals’. Quite well drawn and easy to spend time .
So overall not terrible, but nothing new, original or interesting in a detective/mystery novel
This is quite possibly the worst book of the year. The plot is really thin, most of the book is made up of introducing characters and explaining their relationships, plus the overly repeated fact ; no one liked Jerry Harrison. To me, it felt like the author wrote this for people with onset of dementia, by the amount key points that were repeated.
This was my first Ann Granger novel and I really enjoyed it. A great mystery. with interesting characters but not too taxing. Lovely to curl up with on a long winter's evening, I will definitely look for more by this author!
This was the first book by Anne Granger that I had read. I found it rather uninspiring with stereotyped characters, and fairly predictable culprits, though with an unexpected twist at the end. It won't put me off reading more of her books in the hope that others have more appeal.
After a visitor to his cottage, Jerry ends up dead. When the police start investigating they find his aunt was more popular than him. Nobody liked him. Nobody really knew him. Can they figure out who would want to kill him?
Clever plotting, but perhaps a bit too much time spent with dialogue between the villages. Not enough time spent with the police solving the crime. The end was strange.