



Death in the Air
A Novel
-
-
3.5 • 22 Ratings
-
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
“Glamorous, gripping, absolutely heaps of fun. I loved this.”—Lucy Foley, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Guest List and The Paris Apartment
"Unexpected delights await on every page of Ram Murali’s impressive and captivating debut. Crisp as a gin and tonic and delightfully wicked, this smart, smart novel delivers a sophisticated, subversive murder mystery set in the highest stratosphere of the international idle rich. I had to force myself not to binge it in one night so I could savor it like the rare and exquisite meal that it is." —Kevin Kwan, New York Times bestselling author of Crazy Rich Asians
The White Lotus meets Knives Out meets Crazy Rich Asians in this devilishly entertaining debut novel: both a sophisticated locked-room mystery in the tradition of Agatha Christie, and a provocative literary whodunit for the twenty-first century.
Ro Krishna is the American son of Indian parents, educated at the finest institutions, equally at home in London’s poshest clubs and on the squash court, but unmoored after he is dramatically forced to leave a high-profile job under mysterious circumstances. He decides it’s time to check in for some much-needed R&R at Samsara, a world-class spa for the global cosmopolitan elite nestled in the foothills of the Indian Himalayas. A person could be spiritually reborn in a place like this. Even a very rich person.
But a person—or several—could also die there. Samsara is the Sanskrit word for the karmic cycle of death and rebirth, after all. And as it turns out, the colorful cast of characters Ro meets—including a misanthropic politician; an American movie star preparing for his Bollywood crossover debut; a beautiful heiress to a family jewel fortune that barely survived Partition; and a bumbling white yogi inexplicably there to teach meditation—harbors a murderer among them. Maybe more than one.
As the death toll rises, Ro, a lawyer by training and a sleuth by circumstance, becomes embroiled in a vicious world under a gilded surface, where nothing is quite what it seems . . . including Ro himself. Death in the Air is a brilliant, teasing mystery from a remarkable new talent.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Attorney Murali debuts with a clever closed-circle whodunit about a disgruntled lawyer's vacation from hell. Ro Krishna has left his job at a London tech firm after a disagreement with his racist boss over the design of a company-funded cultural center in Prague. After Ro complained to higher-ups about the incident, he received a lucrative settlement. He takes his money and decamps for Samsara, a Himalayan spa where the Beatles studied meditation. There, he meets an eclectic group of fellow guests, including a film star, his CIA-connected wife, a bumbling meditation instructor, and an Indian politician. Shortly after Ro arrives, someone is killed, and several other deaths follow. Mrs. Banerjee, the resort's owner and a family acquaintance of Ro's, asks him to investigate discreetly on account of his legal expertise. As he does so, Murali gradually reveals more of Ro's own history, which intersects with the investigation in unexpected ways. The ending, while juicy, doesn't completely satisfy, but there's enough originality and atmosphere on offer to keep readers on tenterhooks for Murali's sophomore effort. This is a nerve-jangling good time.