Tuesday, 14 January 2025

A Serial Killer's Guide to Marriage by Asia Mackay #NetGalley #ASerialKillersGuidetoMarriage @abmackster @Wildfirebks


A Serial Killer's Guide to Marriage by Asia Nackay

Published by Headline (Wildfire)

Publication Date: 14th January 2025


My thanks to the publisher for allowing me access to this book via NetGalley ahead of publication. My thoughts and opinions are my own and are unbiased.

Book Description:

Hazel and Fox are an ordinary married couple with a baby. Except for one small thing: they're ex-serial killers.

They had it all. An enviable London lifestyle, five-star travels, and plenty of bad men to kill. Not many power couples know how to get away with murder.

Then Hazel fell pregnant and they gave it all up for life in the suburbs; dinner parties instead of body disposal.

But recently Hazel has started to feel that itch again. When she kills someone behind Fox's back and brings the police to their door, she must do anything she can to protect her family.

This could save their marriage - unless it kills them first.

My Thoughts:

It was an unusual way to meet your future spouse: two killers, one unsuspecting victim and a dark alleyway. Hazel and Fox definitely had one thing in common when their worlds collided and they realised that they were made for each other: a passion for ridding the world of bad people. 

Fox's history in the US caused his parents to ship him off to Europe to make a fresh start and forget about the life he was escaping. As long as he kept his nose clean and didn't bring his parents squeaky clean image as corporate megastars into disrepute, they would say nothing. Hazel's background was far less glamorous: an addict for a mum left her in social services care, shipped from one foster family to the next and nobody giving a damn about her unless she was prepared to be the victim of their depraved fantasies. Haze was nobody's victim, and found her own ways to protect herself and those who found themselves in her position in life.

So, the serial killer dream team was formed: Haze and Fox against the world! Until they discovered they were to become parents. They agreed that things had to change and their jetset lifestyle whizzing around the posh playgrounds of Europe seeking their next victim had to stop. And so it did, until Haze felt that familiar yearning and by pure chance she found herself in the position of having gone against everything they'd agreed. With a dead body at her feet and nobody to help "cleanse" the scene of her involvement, can Haze get away with her first solo kill in years?

I really didn't like Haze in the first few chapters of this book. Her disdain of everything a "normal" family life comprises, her swift shift into boredom in everyday parenting situations (softplay, mother and toddler groups and the standard mix of new parents and their offspring) I found her criticisms quite patronising. But as the pages moved on, I began to understand her as she worked hard to fit into a mould she wasn't designed for.

The story takes an interesting change of direction when Haze realises she's made an unlikely friend at one of the parenting groups she's taken to frequenting. A friendship which she quickly realises could be her downfall - the other mum is a police detective, currently on maternity leave and under investigation herself for her involvement with a disgraced police officer. Things get even worse when she discovers the amount of effort her friend has been putting in to proving her detective skills, despite being on leave. This woman is getting dangerously close to Haze and Fox's truth. 

The characters are an interesting mix in this book, and the challenges of being a new parent are explored. I think a lot of new mums would be able to relate to the feelings Haze goes through, especially when parenthood has arrived unplanned. The guilt at not feeling like an instinctive mum, not having the knowledge which seems to come naturally to all the other mums - before realising that actually, we're all just winging it! I found all this to be quite relatable (fortunately I've never felt the urge to kill someone to distract those thoughts, just for the record!). 

Probably my only criticism of this book is that I would have liked to hear a stronger voice from Fox throughout the book. We do hear his views but I kind of lost his side of things as Haze's point of view takes the dominant line until later on in the story.

Overall I found this to be a quirky read, something different to the regular serial killer themed books we find on our shelves, and I have to say I love the ending. How can Haze and Fox keep their marriage alive when unaliving people is what keeps them together?

About the Author:



Asia studied Anthropology at Durham University, after which she started a career in television. She presented and produced lifestyle programmes in Shanghai before moving back to London, where she worked for Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman as Project Manager on their round the world motorbike documentaries.

She started writing Killing It on maternity leave and undertook a Faber Academy course to help her finish it. Asia lives in London with her husband, four young children and two dogs. Killing It is her first novel and was the Runner Up in Richard and Judy's Search for a Bestseller competition 2017.

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