Murder has a way of bringing people together… Harriet Baker thought that when she left Logan Island, she was leaving for good. But after getting fired from her dream magazine job, she finds herself stuck back in the sleepy New Jersey beach town living with her eccentric mother and desperate to escape. And her ticket out might be…murder? When Harriet's extravagant birthday party ends with a dead body, all fingers point to Sara Allbright, the troublesome sister of none other than Nic, Harriet's short-lived fling from years ago that she's been eager to forget. And the feeling is entirely mutual. But murder makes for a good story, and when Harriet is told that she can get her old job back if she writes an article uncovering what really happened the night of her party, she readily agrees. To write her piece, Harriet will need Nic's full cooperation, and if Nic wants to clear his sister's name, he'll need Harriet's investigative skills. But working together? That's less than ideal. As the two team up to find the real killer, they'll uncover the dark underbelly of their seemingly perfect hometown, uncover long buried feelings, and maybe, just maybe, realize that they might work well together after all.
Liz Lawson is the New York Times bestselling author of The Agathas series (co-written with Kathleen Glasgow), Murder Between Friends, and The Lucky Ones. Her books have been translated into fourteen languages, been book club picks for Barnes and Noble, Target, and Read With Jenna, and been written about in national publications like The New York Times (that was a very exciting day).
She lives in the DC metro area with her family and two very bratty cats. It Happened One Murder is her adult debut (and she’s thrilled).
Visit her on TikTok and Instagram @lzlwsn or her website lizlawsonauthor.com
4,5⭐️ This book had no reason to be SO GOOD. I’m not even kidding, it brought me back to my prime where I used to read everywhere, all the time. ✊
After losing her job and having to move back home, Harriet’s mother decided to throw her a birthday party. At the unwanted birthday party, no one seems to be having a good time. Especially the Allbright family. Nic doesn’t get recognised by his long time crush. Sara, his sister, gets in a fight with the host and when he mysteriously dies, she, of course, is the one getting blamed for his murder. Nick can’t let her go to prison but what can he do alone?
The story had the perfect mix of mystery and romance. From the beginning, it had my complete attention and it never lost it. The plot was so balanced between the two categories and it kept just getting better. I loved Nic and Harriet’s past and their personalities. Each of them were unique in their own ways. Harriet is stubborn and strong willed. Whereas Nic is calmer, mature and protective. He is afraid to be hurt again that’s why he stands his ground. It does take him more time to give in but I still had the feeling that everything happened in perfect timing.
The End (and Epilouge) were amazing. It was extremely fitting and satisfying.
Thanks to SOURCEBOOKS Landmark for providing this book via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
I was hopeful about this and after reading wish it was written as a single pov—and little to no romance included.
‘it happened one murder’ is a dual pov mystery / romance that follows harriet and nic as they reunite under not-so-great circumstances.
now the plot of this is good, and I enjoyed the mystery of who the killer was.
I think in the beginning, it was slightly confusing because we were introduced to so many characters that it felt like a hinderance to the flow of the story.
I didn’t really enjoy the dual pov, and at times the characters were very immature and holding grudges over a fling they had as teenagers.
for me it didn’t make sense why there was so much resentment over something that happened as teenagers (and over 2 weeks!).
it felt like it ruined the romance because they were at each others throat over something they could’ve communicated with each other about, and it would’ve been resolved a lot sooner.
and don’t get me started on the epilogue?????
overall I did enjoy the mystery and whodunnit, but the romance felt lacklustre. it would’ve been SO good as a second chance romance if there was actual history between harriet and nic—not just a two week fling that these characters should not have been hung up on for so long.
thank you source books for the advance reader copy in exchange for an honest review!
✨I received an ARC in exchange for an honest review ✨
I don’t think I have ever read a romance-murder-mystery before that I enjoyed as much as this! Harriet bumps into her ex Nic at her birthday party, which quickly turns into disaster when a body is found on the beach. Harriet and Nic are both connected to the murder in different ways and determined to solve the case which is quickly discarded by the police and ruining their lives. It Happened One Murder was such a fun reading experience and I struggled to put it down. Every time I thought I had figured out what happened a new twist appeared! I loved the unexpected enemies-to-lovers-who-got-a-second-chance romance and the falling in love that happened as they went on adventures and tried to solve the crime. This is a great read and my only complaint is that the knife on the cover should have a pretty white handle - if you know, you know!
unfortunately this book was a total miss for me. i did an immersive read with the ebook and audio and the only good part for me was i liked the narrators. the main characters were just very immature and i couldnt get invested in them separately or together, their grudge with one another over two weeks as teenagers was asinine to be quite frank. the murder mystery did nothing for me either.
From page one, this book felt like a tangled web of secrets: a sleepy beach town beneath a shiny veneer, old relationships simmering with unspoken truths, and a murder that refuses to stay buried.
Harriet Baker’s return to Logan Island isn’t just an “I’m home for a while” — it’s a collision course with her past. Losing her job, uprooting her life, and then being thrust into a murder mystery she never signed up for? That alone had me curious. But once the body drops and suspicion lands where she least expects it — on the sister of her old fling — the stakes become deeply personal.
What works wonderfully: the push-and-pull between Harriet and Nic. They have history, baggage, awkward silences, and painful misunderstandings — but also tension, curiosity, and that messy “maybe there’s still something here” energy that never quite dies. Their forced teamwork to hunt down a killer becomes a perfect metaphor for trying to rebuild trust — uncertain, fragile, and potent.
And the mystery itself? Sneaky. Just when I thought I had a handle on who the culprit might be — bam, plot twist. The author drops clues, misleads with subtle red herrings, and still manages to surprise. The small-town setting makes secrets even more dangerous, because almost everyone knows everyone.
Yes — there are moments of frustration. Sometimes the characters’ lack of communication feels like stumbling over the same old problems again. Especially in a slow-burn romance, that kind of repeated miscommunication can feel heavy.
But if you ask me: that messy tension, unresolved frictions, dark secrets under holiday-town lights, and the wild ride of trying to find truth and maybe love again — this book delivers. It’s clever, cozy, twisty, and emotionally messy in the best way.
My Verdict: A solid ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ⭐ (5/5). A wildly fun, addictive blend of cozy-town mystery, tension-filled romance, and dark secrets — ideal if you like your rom-mystery with a side of chaos, chemistry, and “who’s the killer?” suspense.
A cute and light little murder mystery rom com. This had a fun, summery setting and a good cast of characters, although the fmc and mc could be a little inconsistent in their feelings (of course, I don’t read much romance so maybe that’s normal?). Loved the humor and the mystery, which unfolded nicely.
What a fun read! A perfect blend of mystery and romance. An interesting plot about a murder but was there a falsely accused murderer? And was the victim actually innocent?
Really enjoyed the different characters and felt the supporting characters worked in well too! Definitely didn’t see the twist coming, making it an overall enjoyable mystery read.
finished 20% - I think this can be a fun murder mystery with romance on the side. The plot seems like it would be entertaining and has scope, which is what drew me to the book in the first place. I usually enjoy dramatic situational humour in books, but the delivery in this didn't click for me.
I'm a primarily character driven reader, and unfortunately, I did not connect with these characters. Their personalities and presentation felt exaggerated. The extent of the hatred between the main characters didn't add up based on the extent of their past history. Because of that the way they were handling themselves came across as immature, and I found it hard to continue reading.
The dialogues also felt a bit forced and included a liberal use of expletives, which was overdone for my taste. The book was written in dual first-person POV's and I don't usually like that - my preference for multiple character perspectives is third-person limited POV's
If you are a plot driven reader, and find the other elements to your taste - give it a try. I've seen other reviews where people enjoyed reading it for the main mystery plot and have rated the book well.
(I am not leaving a rating, as I didn't finish the book).
Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review the e-arc of this novel. All opinions expressed here are my own.
It Happened One Murder broke me out of my reading slump so quickly! I tore through this book!
Harriet is having an awful time at her own birthday party when she quite literally bumps into an ex-hookup, Nic. She's already shaken up from losing her writing job in NYC, moving back in with her mum and step-father in coastal New Jersey, and running into an ex is not helping the situation! Nic, on the other hand, is busy running his family's catering business, and finding himself in the home of his teenage sweetheart isn't where he wanted to spend his night. Harriet not recognising him is the cherry on top of an already uncomfortable situation. Then, a body is found on the beach out the front of Harriet's house, and both their worlds collide to try to find the truth of what happened.
Liz Lawson writes excellent characters. Harriet is stubborn, strong willed and not afraid to get her hands dirty. Nic is mature, loyal to fault and desperate to protect those he cares about. They have great chemistry, and the will-they-won't-they had me swooning. As for the whodunnit aspect of It Happened One Murder, I thought I had the killer picked early on, but I should have known there'd be many more twists before the final reveal! This definitely kept me on my toes, and the novel has a very satisfying outcome.
A big thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks Landmark for providing me with a copy of this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
I had a great time reading this book! This book is a fantastic blend of romance, mystery, and a few humorous moments. From the intriguing plot to the wonderful characters, I believe the author did a fantastic job of keeping my interest. I adored the love that grew while they embarked on adventures and attempted to solve the crime, as well as the surprising enemies-to-lovers-who-got-second-chance romance. Harriet has a strong will, is obstinate, and doesn't mind getting her hands dirty. Nic is responsible, devoted, and driven to keep the people he loves safe. The couple has had me swooning, and their chemistry is amazing. Regarding It Happened One Murder's murder mystery element, I believed I had identified the murderer early on, but I should have realized there would be a lot more surprises before the big reveal! I was definitely on my toes because of this, and the novel's conclusion is rather rewarding. This book delivers on the complicated tension, unsolved conflicts, hidden histories under holiday-town lights, and the crazy trip of attempting to find truth and possibly love again. In the best manner possible, it's witty, warm, twisted, and emotionally complicated!!! Thanks to Netgalley, the publisher, Sourcebook Landmark, and the author for providing me with the electronic ARC copy. I really enjoyed the book!!!
I have really enjoyed Lawson's YA mysteries with Kathleen Glasgow! But It Happened One Murder, Lawson's debut as a romantic suspense author, wasn't a good fit for me.
The book was not old school romantic suspense based on the Gothic. Instead, it felt like a PG-13 YA mystery. The characters seemed younger than their 26 years and I think the dual his/hers romance POV did not work in a mystery plot.
How was the romance? Sporadically steamy. There was a semi-explicit second base makeout scene and then the romance part got a bit more PG. There was too much dialogue for my taste and the characters were a bit generic and hard to keep straight.
How was the mystery plot, you ask? The best part! Set on what I think was based on Long Beach Island, it kicked off with the murder of an evil land developer (one of the POV characters' stepfather) and delves into small town politics etc. That was a success and I wished the book had used older characters and stuck to that with the romance as a subplot.
Thanks to the publisher for providing an advance copy for review!
This is a fun romance/cozy mystery that grabbed my attention and kept me reading until the end. Harriet has returned home after being fired from her job. She's living with her mother and step father, two very annoying people. Her mother throws Harriet a birthday party, and she finds herself face to face with a caterer, Nic, who she had a two week fling with. Nic's sister is accused of killing Harriet's step father, but Harriet doesn't think she did it, so she convinces Nic that they should investigate and save his sister. Things heat up with Nic and Harriet, and the two of them find the answers they've been looking for.
This was mostly fun! Harriet returns to her hometown in New Jersey, only for her stepfather to end up murdered at her birthday party, with suspicion falling on the sister of Harriet's former fling, Nic. Dun dun dun! Racing against the clock to prove her innocence, the mystery kept me invested, and I liked the fact that the victim was Harriet's wretched businessman stepfather, adding a whole other layer of juicy family drama. Bonus points that I did not guess the culprit at all.
The romance was just ok, though. It's not really a second-chance romance since Harriet and Nic only slept together once eight years ago, but it kind of felt like the book was trying to sell it as one. Like it wanted me to buy into their chemistry as if they shared some deep romantic history. I think having Nic's POV only made that worse at times, since so much emphasis was placed on his heartbreak towards Harriet and the tension between them when I wasn't fully convinced either was warranted.
I really enjoyed this book! This book is a great mix of who done it mystery, romance and a couple of funny moments. I think the author did a great job holding my attention from the interesting storyline, to the great characters. Imagine having to move back home and living with your mom, and her rich husband who throws a party, and you run into a sexy man that you don't realize is the guy you use to hook up with. Oh and her step dad is a murder, and his sister is arrested. Sound interesting?! Then I would highly recommend adding this book to your TBR!!
Liz Lawson first made her mark with some really terrific YA novels, including the Agathas series (more books in that series are needed - hint hint).
Now she is delivering a fun, twisty adult mystery thriller with enough surprises to keep you reading right through the night. No spoilers here, but just know that you are going to love, love love the writing and the mystery. And the ending will leave you asking for more, that is for sure!!
I really enjoyed this book!!! Take murder mystery with humor and touch of romance and that’s what this book felt like to me. It was entertaining from start to finish. I loved the main characters and the storyline kept me guessing at who the murderer really was. I loved that there was romance, but the author used humor to keep it light hearted.
Thank you SOURCEBOOKS Landmark publishing and Netgalley for this Arc!
At first the dual perspective and the present tense was a bit confusing; but when the story sucked me in I didn't notice it anymore. The story looks like a typical who-dunnit but there are a few layers that make it more than that. The romantic storyline wasn't necessary in my opinion, but many readers will disagree with me. the end is very surprising and definitely the icing on the cake.
I loved this! Fast-paced and voicey narration, entertaining cast of characters (particularly Harriet's mom lol), and great balance of sexual tension and how-much-actual-danger-are-we-in? tension.
Thank you to NetGalley, Sourcebooks Landmark and Liz Lawson for sharing this ARC with me, in exchange for my honest review.
It Happened One Murder is a very enjoyable read. Ms. Liz's writing and world building is perfect. The flow was easy. It is truly a page-turner. Just when you think you know who did it, BAM, Ms. Liz hits you with a twist. I also liked the side characters, I feel they were integrated in very well.
So, I have a question for y'all...Do y'all tihink the victim is innocent?
I wholeheartedly recommend this book to all y'all.
It Happened One Murder by Liz Lawson is a fast-paced YA mystery that leans heavily into a locked-room style setup, but with a modern, slightly dramatic twist.
The story follows a group of teenagers stuck together during a storm, where tensions are already high and then a murder happens. What makes it engaging is how quickly suspicion spreads. Everyone has something to hide, and the author keeps shifting your perspective, making you question each character at some point.
One of the strongest parts of the book is the pacing. It doesn’t drag and you’re constantly getting new clues, secrets, or twists, which makes it hard to put down. The atmosphere is also well done; the isolation and unease feel very real, almost like a classic whodunit but with teenage dynamics layered on top.
That said, the characters can feel a bit familiar if you’ve read a lot of YA thrillers - the popular one, the outsider, the one with secrets, etc. Some twists are predictable, but a few still manage to surprise you.
Overall, it’s a fun, easy-to-read mystery. Not overly complex, but very entertaining if you want something quick, suspenseful, and slightly dramatic without being too heavy.
Thank you Netgalley and the publisher for the ARC.
3 ★ - an interesting murder mystery with some romance subplot involved
It Happened One Murder is a dual pov murder mystery, also catalogued as romance. I wouldn’t have catalogued it as romance; sure, there’s pinning between the protagonists, however, the romance is lacking in 90% of the book. Nothing wrong with that, but there just isn’t romance enough to be labelled as one. The story follows the story of Harriet and Nic & the murder that brings them back together. The mystery behind the murder of Harriet’s stepfather reconnects our FMC with Nic Allbright, an old high school hook up, due to the prime suspect being Nic’s sister.
Our FMC Harriet is an ex journalist who comes to live back at her mom’s as a last resort after losing her job. She tries to take nothing seriously due to her high walls that she built in order to protect herself. Which doesn’t work when she has to do something serious for once in her life and help Nic clear his sister’s name.
Our MMC Nic has history with our Harriet, as they used to hook-up back in the day; for one of them not very serious, but for the other, very much serious. Nic is forced to work with Harriet if he wants to get a chance to clear his sister’s name and get her out of prison. Now, the book is trying to also present a slow-burn romance of some sort of second chance between our protagonists, alongside the murder mystery. However, it was lacking in substance; sure, there was a lot of “tension” and pent-up energy between them but some of the grudges and miscommunication felt somewhat childish at points.
The book had a lot of plot twists in its murder mystery and I really enjoyed that aspect of it, was a very good mystery with lots of suspense! I found the epiloque a bit forced; it’s an epilogue that definitely makes sense to the story but I feel the timeframe between the end and the epilogue are too close together, maybe if the epilogue was more in the future it wouldn’t have felt so rushed.
It was a lovely and fun murder mystery which I recommend it for, but don’t expect much romance.
Thank you SOURCEBOOKS for the ARC in exchange for an honest review!
If she’s serving it, I’m going to read whatever she dishes up.
A fired gossip columnists and a cater waiter, who briefly dated 10 years ago and have unresolved feelings for each other, join forces to solve the murder of George George. What could possibly go wrong?!
Enjoyed reading this cozy whodunnit, was a good balance of laughs, near misses, misunderstandings and mistakes in the romance between Nic and Harriet while they tried to clear Sara, Nic’s sister, of the murder of George George, Harriet’s stepfather, and by all accounts a very deserving murder victim.
My only criticism- Blurb for the book describes Harriet’s mother as eccentric, but I didn’t get those vibes from her character, she tends to ignore/blame Harriet more than anything, maybe dismissive or indifferent would be better options.
Thank you Netgallery and sourcebooks landmark for the opportunity to read and review this book.
When I started to read this book I thought it was going to be predictable and cheesy… WRONG. I was a little too confident thinking I had the whole book figured out in the first 30 minutes of reading, but that’s what makes a great murder mystery 🙃 There were a bunch of twists and turns and great plot twists.
I enjoyed that there was still romance mixed into this novel and character development. The murder had just enough suspense to keep you hooked but not enough that I was afraid to go to sleep at night, which I enjoyed.
This book really has something for everyone! Thank you NetGalley for the advanced copy!
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review!
Okay, so normally I wouldn’t DNF a book after only reading two or three chapters, but I just couldn’t do it. If I’m honest, if this wasn’t an ARC, I probably wouldn’t even be writing a review with how little I read. But here we are and honestly I didn’t realize it would be this long.
I was really excited for this book when I got approved to read it. The synopsis sounded really cute, and I love a romantic murder mystery. However, in just the few chapters I read, all of the characters were horrible.
First, we have Harriet, whose birthday party opens the story. We immediately meet her while she’s complaining about everything. I can understand being upset about getting fired, but the way she talks about people is incredibly condescending. At one point, one of the waiters offers her a cucumber sandwich, and she thinks she recognizes him, so she asks if he went to her high school. Her internal thought is basically, “How awful if he did and is now serving all his former classmates.” Sorry, Harriet, but not everyone has a wealthy family with a summer house they can escape to.
The thing is, had this been a one-time thought, maybe I could have overlooked it, but we continue to see this side of her during her interactions with the MMC, Nic.
Before I get into their conversation, though, let’s talk about Nic for a second. You slept with this girl eight years ago, haven’t seen her since, but have apparently been keeping tabs on her online. Then, when your mom gets offered a catering job for her party, you pressure her into taking it just so you can see Harriet again. That’s already strange.
Then, while you’re literally working the event, you corner her in the middle of the party, get upset that she doesn’t recognize you, and throw a mini tantrum because she doesn’t remember your name. Now, yes, I do think it’s weird that Harriet doesn’t recognize someone she spent two weeks with, but putting that aside, Nic’s behavior was wildly unprofessional. If he wanted to reconnect with her, he should have waited until after the event. Instead, he caused a scene while on the clock, and honestly, I would have kicked him out immediately.
Now onto the way Harriet talks to Nic once she finally remembers him. After he tells her his name, she looks at his uniform and says something along the lines of: “Let me guess: you work for the catering company? As a cater waiter? I take it you still live on the island?” The tone came across as so unbelievably condescending. Girl, this is the person you forgot after spending two weeks with. Maybe start with, “I’m sorry I forgot,” or “How have you been?” Instead, it fully feels like she thinks she’s above him. The ironic part is that while Harriet constantly talks about how awful her mother and stepfather are, she comes across just as bad as they do.
The last character I immediately disliked was Nic’s sister, Sara. She’s the chef for the family catering company, yet she acts like a teenager throwing tantrums. I think it’s important to note these characters are around 25–27 years old. These are grown adults, not high schoolers.
Sara is introduced literally screeching at her mother in the kitchen because she’s been asked to work on a cake despite not being a pastry chef. Then, when Nic points out that they ran out of sandwiches too early and suggests putting more on the trays, she snaps at him with, “Maybe you should run the kitchen since you’re the expert.” He was simply pointing out a problem and offering a reasonable solution.
Then the stepfather comes into the kitchen to complain about the food. Yes, he was rude, and yes, chefs take pride in their work, but he is still the paying customer. Sara responding with, “You look like someone who wouldn’t know good food if it crawled its way up your ass.” was completely unprofessional. So when her mother — the owner of the catering company — steps in to mediate and the stepfather demands an apology, Sara refuses. Her mother is then forced to fire her, and Sara has the audacity to say, “You never take my side.”
No, this is a business, and your actions have consequences. Honestly, the fact that Nic mentions Sara has been fired and rehired multiple times for similar behavior says everything.
Maybe the characters improve later in the book, but after only a few chapters, I already hated all of them. And considering how many disappointing reads I’ve already had this year, I just didn’t feel like forcing myself through another one right now.
This was SO much fun. Liz Lawson really said “what if we mixed a murder mystery with unresolved sexual tension, messy family drama, rich people secrets, and two people who desperately need therapy but instead decide to investigate a homicide together?” and honestly… I had a great time!!
This book had the perfect balance of cozy beach town vibes and “oh my god someone literally died...” One second I was giggling at Harriet’s internal monologue and the next I was suspicious of every single person on the page. And trust me.. EVERYONE felt guilty at some point. I was out here creating full detective boards in my head just to get humbled by the next chapter lmao
Harriet and Nic were exactly the kind of disaster pairing I love reading about. They have history and tension because of unresolved feelings and enough stubbornness between them to power the entire town. Their banter was so entertaining because they clearly annoyed each other while also very obviously being obsessed with each other. Which is personally one of my favorite dynamics because I love emotional suffering apparently
Also this book was ridiculously addicting. I kept saying “ok one more chapter” and suddenly I was halfway through the book at 1am questioning every life choice I’ve ever made. The mystery itself was genuinely entertaining, and while I didddd guess a couple things, there were definitely twists that caught me completely off guard
The only reason this wasn’t a full five stars for me is because there were moments where Harriet and Nic felt a little immature and sometimes I wanted to lock them in a room and force them to communicate like normal human beings for five minutes. But honestly? Their chaos also kind of added to the charm
If you love small town murder mysteries, MESSYY rich people, dysfunctional families and main characters making questionable decisions while emotionally spiraling, this is absolutely worth picking up. It felt like reading a murder mystery while eavesdropping on beach town gossip and I mean that as the highest compliment possible
Thank you to the author and publisher for the opportunity to read and review this ARC!
Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks Landmark for providing an eARC in exchange for an honest review.
When Harriet is fired from her tabloid job, she has no choice but to return to her hometown and move back in with her mother and stepfather. During her birthday celebration, her not-so-lovable stepfather meets an untimely end, and when the sister of one of Harriet’s old high school flings is accused of murder, she joins forces with her former almost-boyfriend to uncover the real killer.
On paper, this blend of mystery and romance sounded like the perfect recipe for a fun and thrilling read, but in the end, it felt rather bland on both fronts. I found both main characters quite frustrating, which negatively impacted my overall enjoyment. Many of their early interactions become repetitive, and while the banter is initially entertaining, it quickly starts to wear thin. On top of that, I never fully bought into their romance or how quickly their relationship develops based on what we’re shown.
The mystery itself was interesting, but the pacing felt uneven. The final twist and resolution (or lack thereof) weren’t particularly satisfying because readers aren’t given enough clues throughout the story to reasonably arrive at the same conclusion. Instead, everything seems to hinge on sheer luck.
Although it fell a bit short of my expectations, it’s still a mostly fun and quick read that works well as a palate cleanser between heavier books.