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Molly Murphy Books in Order

Below is the complete list of Rhys Bowen’s Molly Murphy books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.

Molly Murphy Books in Publication Order
with Clare Broyles

  1. Murphy’s Law (2001)
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  2. Death of Riley (2002)
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  3. For the Love of Mike (2003)
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  4. In Like Flynn (2005)
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  5. Oh Danny Boy (2006)
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  6. In Dublin’s Fair City (2007)
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  7. Tell Me, Pretty Maiden (2008)
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  8. In a Gilded Cage (2009)
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  9. The Last Illusion (2010)
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  10. Bless the Bride (2011)
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  11. The Amersham Rubies (2011)
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  12. Hush Now, Don’t You Cry (2012)
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  13. The Face in the Mirror (2013)
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  14. The Family Way (2013)
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  15. Through the Window (2014)
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  16. City of Darkness and Light (2014)
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  17. The Edge of Dreams (2015)
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  18. Away in a Manger (2015)
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  19. Time of Fog and Fire (2016)
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  20. The Ghost of Christmas Past (2017)
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  21. Wild Irish Rose (2022)
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  22. All That Is Hidden (2023)
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  23. In Sunshine or in Shadow (2024)
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  24. Silent as the Grave (2025)
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  25. Vanished in the Crowd (2026)
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About Molly Murphy

Rhys Bowen’s Molly Murphy books are one of the defining historical mystery series of the past two decades, and they are built around a heroine who gives the genre both momentum and heart. Official series pages place the books in turn-of-the-century New York, where Molly begins as a young Irish immigrant and gradually becomes one of the most appealing amateur sleuths in historical crime fiction. That immigrant starting point matters. Molly is not solving mysteries from a position of comfort or inherited security. She arrives in America carrying vulnerability, nerve, and a fierce instinct for survival, and those qualities shape the entire series.

What makes the series work is the way Bowen balances period atmosphere with character growth. The early books draw much of their force from Molly’s outsider status in New York. She is navigating class, nationality, gender expectations, and the rough unpredictability of city life while repeatedly finding herself near danger. That gives the mysteries a strong social dimension without ever turning the novels into lectures about history. The period setting feels lived in because Molly has to work through it, not simply admire it from a safe distance. Over time, the books broaden from immigrant struggle into a richer portrait of marriage, family, and community, but they never lose the energy that comes from Molly’s original toughness.

Publication order matters here because the series depends heavily on emotional accumulation. Molly changes in meaningful ways. Her relationships deepen, her domestic life grows more layered, and the city around her becomes more familiar without ever becoming tame. This is not a static mystery line where the heroine resets after each case. One of the pleasures of reading the books in order is watching Molly move from a young woman making her way alone to Molly Murphy Sullivan, with a fuller family and social world around her. The official series page itself reflects that long arc, including later titles written by Rhys Bowen with Clare Broyles, which continue Molly’s story rather than replacing it.

That continuation is worth noting because it shows how central Molly remains to Bowen’s bibliography. The series did not stop with its earliest successful run. It expanded into a long historical line that still keeps the same core appeal: a smart, impulsive, compassionate heroine in a rapidly changing New York. The collaboration with Clare Broyles belongs to the later phase of the series, but it still sits within the same official Molly Murphy sequence, which is the clearest way to understand the books as a whole.

The setting is just as important as the heroine. New York at the turn of the century gives the books unusual range. Bowen can move from immigrant neighborhoods to high society, from city politics to family life, from street-level danger to larger historical change, and Molly remains believable in all of it because she is both participant and observer. The novels are historical mysteries, but they are also immigrant stories, marriage stories, and city novels. That blend is what gives the series its depth.

Within Rhys Bowen’s body of work, Molly stands beside Lady Georgiana in Her Royal Spyness as one of her signature creations, but the two series satisfy different instincts. Georgie offers aristocratic comedy and royal entanglement; Molly offers grit, warmth, and upward movement through a much rougher social world. If Georgie sparkles, Molly endures. That endurance is what gives the series its lasting power.

Taken as a whole, the Molly Murphy series is best understood as a historical mystery sequence about more than crime alone. It is about making a life in a new country, building love and family without losing independence, and meeting danger with equal parts courage and stubbornness. Read in publication order, the books offer not just clever mysteries, but the full shape of Molly’s remarkable life as it grows richer with every return.

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