Skip to main content

The Murder Show

Review

The Murder Show

Matt Goldman begins his new novel, THE MURDER SHOW, with a million-dollar first sentence that guarantees readers will be hooked. It is blood-drippingly gory; that, combined with the humor on the rest of the first page, means we are in for a treat.

It only gets better as we follow Ethan Harris on his visit home to see his parents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the High Holidays. They live in the same house they occupied when Ethan was in high school. As he looks out the kitchen window, he sees his high school friend, Ro Greeman, in the house she lived in 20 years ago. She is arguing with someone, and it looks heated. Ethan debates calling 911 but decides to go over and try to diffuse the situation.

It turns out that the man fighting with Ro is Marty Mathis. She dated him in high school, and Ethan truly dislikes him. Marty leaves, and Ro and Ethan catch up on the last couple of decades. Ro has become a police officer with the Minneapolis Police Department; Ethan is a showrunner who is desperately looking for an idea for the fourth season of his series, “The Murder Show.”

"THE MURDER SHOW is a perfect balance of hard-driving investigation and touching relationships. You'll be hooked until the last page."

Ro wants to talk to Ethan about an idea she has for the program, but he's skeptical. It's not the first time friends and acquaintances have approached him with topics he can't use. Ro suggests that the upcoming season should be based on an actual event that occurred decades previously, which extinguished the spark of romance between them.

Ethan's family moved to Minneapolis when he was in high school. The first time he mows their backyard, he notices Ro, a pretty girl mowing the yard of the house directly behind them. Her yard merges onto theirs seamlessly with no fence or boundary demarcations between them. In fact, from Ethan's house, you could see directly into Ro's. Ro runs out of gas for her mower and asks Ethan for help. On their trip to get gas, he meets some of Ro's friends, including Ricky.

Ricky is the man whose blood is dripping down at the start of the novel. He is a gregarious guy with a Pontiac Firebird that he claims was gifted to him by a rich uncle. He is generous to a fault and treats his friends to dinners and weekends at his cabin. One weekend, they are on a small rural Wisconsin road in the midst of a forest as Ricky drives them to his cabin. That's when his car breaks down. He says he knows of a resort a mile away, and that Ro and Ethan should stay with the car while he goes for help.

When Ricky hasn't appeared after several hours, Ro and Ethan go in search of him. They find the resort, but he isn’t there. It turns out that Ricky is dead, apparently from a car accident. After that, Ro and Ethan's budding romance goes nowhere. The specter of Ricky's death haunts them.

Now Ro reveals that another boy recently died in the same manner as Ricky. She investigated and found many similar deaths of young people along rural country roads. All were from Minneapolis, but they occurred over five different neighboring states. She believes that this could make a great premise for the new season of “The Murder Show” and that they should talk to their old high school friends about Ricky and what might have happened.

Ethan is home for a visit because the writers and actors are on strike; until the strike is over, all production is halted. That means he has a chance to find a blockbuster idea for his show, and he really needs his proposal to be fabulous. The first season was a hit, but subsequent seasons less so. The famous actress who starred in the series has been disenchanted with the long grueling hours. It would take a brilliant script for the studio to give it a go.

Ethan is far from convinced that he’ll be able to use Ro’s idea, but he’s intrigued by the thought of spending time with her and perhaps rekindling whatever it was that had sparked in their youth. The more they investigate, the more Ethan realizes that this could be just the story he needs to tell. Studios love a "based on real events" show, and because he was a part of it, in a way it's "his story." As their investigation progresses, he is mentally writing the script and taking notes.

Matt Goldman is a television writer, and he penned this novel during the 2023 Writers Guild strike. That lends a feeling of veritas to the writing, and the inside look at how a showrunner thinks and plans shows is fascinating. But even more fascinating is the manner in which Goldman creates a cast of characters. Some arrive early in the performance, while others come in as the final acts unfold. All are interesting in their own right.

There are plenty of false leads, a plethora of suspects, and suspicious events galore. While I had my suspicions about the perpetrator, there were many other dubious characters who might have been behind the deaths. For a story filled with violence and danger, Goldman's ability to infuse humor into the narrative is brilliant. Ethan is self-deprecating, and his interactions with his parents are truly funny. THE MURDER SHOW is a perfect balance of hard-driving investigation and touching relationships. You'll be hooked until the last page.

Reviewed by Pamela Kramer on April 19, 2025

The Murder Show
by Matt Goldman

  • Publication Date: April 15, 2025
  • Genres: Fiction, Suspense, Thriller
  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books
  • ISBN-10: 1250325722
  • ISBN-13: 9781250325723