Scorched Grace: A Sister Holiday Mystery

Scorched Grace: A Sister Holiday Mystery

by Margot Douaihy

Narrated by Mara Wilson

Unabridged — 9 hours, 55 minutes

Scorched Grace: A Sister Holiday Mystery

Scorched Grace: A Sister Holiday Mystery

by Margot Douaihy

Narrated by Mara Wilson

Unabridged — 9 hours, 55 minutes

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Overview

Notes From Your Bookseller

The sacred meets the profane head on in Margot Douaihy’s debut mystery. It’s funny. It’s touching. Its honesty is refreshing, and we hesitate to compare the writing or the plot to anything prior. At times poetic and other moments full of zest. The Sisters of the Sublime Blood are an order of four nuns – and Sister Holiday breathes life into every scene and moment of this book

Sister Holiday, a chain-smoking, heavily tattooed, queer nun, puts her amateur sleuthing skills to the test in this “unique and confident” debut crime novel (Gillian Flynn). When Saint Sebastian's School becomes the target of a shocking arson spree, the Sisters of the Sublime Blood and their surrounding community are thrust into chaos. Unsatisfied with the officials' response, sardonic and headstrong Sister Holiday becomes determined to unveil the mysterious attacker herself and return her home and sanctuary to its former peace. Her investigation leads down a twisty path of suspicion and secrets in the sticky, oppressive New Orleans heat, turning her against colleagues, students, and even fellow Sisters along the way. Sister Holiday is more faithful than most, but she's no saint. To piece together the clues of this high-stakes mystery, she must first reckon with the sins of her checkered past-and neither task will be easy. An exciting start to Margot Douaihy's bold series for Gillian Flynn Books that breathes new life into the hard-boiled genre, Scorched Grace*is a fast-paced and punchy whodunnit that will keep readers guessing until the very end.

Editorial Reviews

MAY 2023 - AudioFile

In this new audiobook series, the audacious heroine, Sister Holiday, is a queer tattoo-covered nun brimming with a talent for solving mysteries. Jack, the janitor at St. Sebastian's School, where Sister teaches art, falls to his death from the school gym window, and the gym bursts into flames. Narrator Mara Wilson gives an incredible performance as she portrays the chain-smoking Sister Holiday and gives the other characters distinct voices, as well. Listeners will be delighted with the depth of Wilson's emotional range as she delivers Sister's dialogue with changes in tone and intensity bringing them right into the story. It's a hard-boiled, sexy, and sometimes very funny whodunit. May we hear more of Sister's stories and more of Mara Wilson as her messenger. E.E.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 12/05/2022

Sister Holiday Walsh, the narrator of poet Douaihy’s stunning fiction debut and series launch, calls herself “the first punk nun.” This cursing, chain-smoking queer nun who wears gloves and a heavy scarf to hide her tattoos is unlike any nun encountered on the page or in real life. Yet Holiday is most sincere about her faith in God, her devotion to the Catholic Church, and finding a home among the Sisters of the Sublime Blood in New Orleans. When Saint Sebastian’s School where she teaches is targeted by an arson attack in which a beloved janitor dies, Holiday turns sleuth to find the attacker and save the school, which is in danger of being closed by the diocese. More fires—and deaths—occur as Holiday’s investigation heats up, pitting her against her fellow sisters and staff. Given her background, she becomes a prime suspect. This briskly plotted master class in character development makes the most of its New Orleans setting, “the crucible... of miracles and curses.” Douaihy (Bandit/Queen: The Runaway Story of Belle Starr) is off to a terrific start. Agent: Laura Macdougall, United Agents. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

A USA Today Bestseller
Indie Next Pick
A New York Times Best Crime Novel of the Year
A New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice

A Guardian Best Crime and Thriller Novel of the Year
One of Apple's Best Books of 2023

Boston Magazine’s Best Author of 2023
An Amazon Editors’ Pick for Best Mystery, Thriller & Suspense
Winner of the 2023 Pinckley Prize for Crime Fiction
A 2024 ITW Thriller Award Finalist for Best First Novel
2023 New England Book Award Finalist

A Left Coast Crime 2024 "Lefty" Award Nominee for Best Debut Mystery Novel
Longlisted for the 2024 Mass Book Awards
A 2024 Anthony Award Finalist for Best First Novel

One of the Most Anticipated Books of 2023
Goodreads • Barnes & Noble • Electric Lit • LGBTQ Reads • Book RiotCrimeReadsBookPage Novel Suspects Autostraddle

“Sister Holiday, the protagonist of Margot Douaihy’s showstopper of a series debut Scorched Grace isn’t what you’d imagine a nun to be like, even in laissez-faire New Orleans . . . I cannot wait to read the sister’s next investigation, of mysteries and of her own self.” —Sarah Weinman, New York Times

“A whodunnit with an unforgettable mystery solver . . . Sister Holiday isn’t your average nun: She’s a headstrong, thoroughly-tattooed chain smoker who sets off on a one-woman investigation through New Orleans to find out who is behind an arson attack at her school.” —Jillian Ortiz, TODAY

“The prose really sings . . . Such lyricism in the service of setting the scene betrays the author’s background as an established poet.” —Jim Ruland, Los Angeles Times

“The book critiqued institutions, foregrounded sexuality and retained some lyricism, without losing the compulsive page-turning playfulness of a breezy read . . . its prose would set Dashiell Hammett’s Sam Spade or Robert B. Parker’s Spenser at ease.” —Christopher Borrelli, Chicago Tribune

“Within five pages, I was in love with this novel. The voice is unique and confident, the sense of place deeply present, and the plotting completely assured: every time I was about to ask a question about Sister Holiday, her background, her drive, the mystery—the answer magically appeared. Sister Holiday is simply a joy of a narrator—and definitely my kind of character: flawed, dark, buoyant, and often laugh-out-loud funny. I feel like she and Camille Preaker from Sharp Objects should go on a road trip together. This novel is so much more than a mystery (which is my favorite kind of mystery), it's an exploration of faith, love, and the worthy struggle to be a better human. I just loved it!" —Gillian Flynn, Gillian Flynn Books

“A badass, brilliant queer nun solving a murder mystery in New Orleans? How could I not fall in love with this book? You will, too!” —Mara Wilson

“Margot Douaihy’s bold entry into the hard-boiled genre revitalizes it for our times. Skillfully plotted, propulsive, and deeply engaged with the communities it represents, Scorched Grace is one of the best crime fiction debuts I’ve come across in a long while.” —Don Winslow, #1 internationally bestselling author of The Power of the Dog and City on Fire

“One chapter into Margot Douaihy’s Scorched Grace and you’ll be ready to follow Sister Holiday wherever her instincts take her. Vibrant, crackling and deliciously insubordinate, it’s a mystery full of trapdoors and surprises but with a keen emotional force that leaves you shaken, hooked.” —Megan Abbott, New York Times bestselling author of The Turnout

“Douaihy's prose is fresh and energetic, and she brings the delightfully original character of Sister Holiday vividly to life. Holiday believably leads her own investigation, and the story satisfies right up until the very twisty end.” —Karin Slaughter, New York Times and internationally bestselling author

“Harrowing and gorgeously written, with an unforgettable protagonist—Sister Holiday, ‘the first punk nun’—Margot Douaihy’s Scorched Grace takes readers on a searing journey through faith, fire, and female rage. A brilliant debut mystery.” —Elizabeth Hand, author of Hokuloa Road and Generation Loss

“Margot Douaihy’s Scorched Grace is pure, hard-boiled delight, and so is its protagonist, Sister Holiday. I can’t wait for the next installment.” —Kelly Link, MacArthur Fellow and bestselling author of Pulitzer Prize finalist Get in Trouble

Scorched Grace burns with the wholehearted energy of faith, love, and transgression. Sister Holiday embodies the frailties of faith, the contradictions of humanity, and the joy of sisterhood in all its forms.” —Sophie Ward, Booker Prize–longlisted author of Love and Other Thought Experiments

“Fearless, ebullient, and twisty as hell, Scorched Grace remixes the crime novel for our current age, and debuts a magnetic noir heroine, whose brash wit and profound soulfulness command our instant and utter devotion.” —Debra Jo Immergut, author of You Again and The Captives

"I inhaled this book. Sister Holiday drew me in with attitude and world-wisdom that, as she herself says, holds a kind of grace; meanwhile the hot, gnarly, beautiful world of New Orleans and all the edgy, intimate characters of the convent, school, and investigation (and, of course, the series of deadly arson attacks that drive Holiday and the book), had me turning the pages. Margot Douaihy gives Sister Holiday a sharp tongue and a body blessed by ink, and in this story Douaihy’s writing is the fuel, the spark, the oxygen. It is the fire and the ashes." —Elizabeth K Reeder, MacDowell Fellow and author of An Archive of Happiness and Ramshackle

“In the American tradition of hard-boiled detectives, this was full of sweat, heat, and a lingering acrid smoke that pervaded the whole book. I could almost feel the grime under my fingernails as I read it. Sister Holiday is utterly unique—a gold-toothed nun with a history of addictions that still haunts her and a faith that is real, passionate, and anything but saccharine. She is a courageous truth-teller, even when she needs to tell the truth about herself.” —Georgina Clarke, author of the Lizzie Hardwicke series and The Dazzle of the Light

“Stunning fiction debut and series launch . . . This briskly plotted master class in character development makes the most of its New Orleans setting.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“Douaihy, a poet and professor who shares Sister Holiday’s punk sensibility, immerses the reader in her hyperlocal New Orleans setting and the murky depths of Sister Holiday’s tormented soul. Her prose is frequently lyrical and often lacerating, her characters layered and intriguing. It’s not surprising in the slightest that this series starter is the first book published by Gillian Flynn’s eponymous new imprint. Scorched Grace is both entertaining and devastating, dominated by a queer sleuth with a clever, curious mind and a fatalistic yet somehow still hopeful heart.” —Linda M. Castellitto, BookPage, starred review

Scorched Grace marks the ferocious prose debut of Margot Douaihy, who introduces us to perhaps the most unique heroine in the history of the hard-boiled mystery genre. Sister Holiday is both devout and profane, caring deeply about her God and her faith and her mission, even if she doesn’t have much patience for the trappings of orthodoxy and tradition. I’m really interested in seeing where the rest of the series goes, in this first offering from Gillian Flynn’s publishing imprint.” —Doreen M Sheridan, Criminal Element

“A powerful story about religion and sin, family, and secrets . . . Scorched Grace is a unique and emotional novel, set against the backdrop of New Orleans in all its sticky, sweaty heat and unrelenting beauty and charm . . . When the ending hits, it is delightfully unexpected, bringing all the plot’s twists and turns to one satisfying finale. Scorched Grace has all of the makings of an award-winning novel, and I see Douaihy skyrocketing to fame. Her novel is similar to creative, renowned works by authors like Douglas Stuart, and Douaihy’s unique and modern writing should receive similar accolades.” —Erin Clemence, Mystery & Suspense Magazine

“The rough, sarcastic, first-person voice of Scorched Grace seizes the reader in a headlock from the first page . . . Holiday is prayerful, funny, cruel, and exhausted: in short, excellent company . . . Though the history of hard-boiled detective novels skews undeniably toward one kind of identity, Scorched Grace blazes a queer path forward for the genre. Here’s praying for a long series with Sister Holiday at the helm.” —Laurel Flores Fantauzzo, Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine

“[A] confident, well-paced thriller—presenting a wide assortment of possible suspects, and never giving away too much at once . . . we are kept guessing about the identity of the killer until the final pages . . . a welcome introduction to the queer detective nun whom we didn’t know we needed.” —H Felix Chau Bradley, Xtra magazine

Scorched Grace is brutal and brilliant and one hell of a prose novel debut.” —Elliott Eatinger, Defunkt Magazine

Scorched Grace is like no other book you’ve ever read.” —Gwendolyn Kiste, The Lineup

“If you’re not sold by a punk rock nun solving mysteries then can your soul even be saved?” —Michelle Hart, Electric Lit

“If you’re looking for something new in crime and whodunits, take note.” —Book Riot

“Holiday is an interesting character, and her story is well plotted." —Michael Cart, Booklist

“Margot Douaihy’s chain-smoking nun Sister Holiday may be the most original character you’ll come across for quite some time. Douaihy wanted to reclaim pulp tropes for a female protagonist, and I have to say, Sister Holiday is punk AF. Set in New Orleans, Scorched Grace takes place at a Catholic school where an arson attack has harmed several students. Sister Holiday, a fan of detective fiction, is ready to solve the case (or else face suspicion herself).” —Molly Odintz, CrimeReads “The Most Anticipated Crime Books of Fall 2022 (and Beyond!)”

"The sacred meets the profane head on in Margot Douaihy’s debut mystery. It’s funny. It’s touching. Its honesty is refreshing, and we hesitate to compare the writing or the plot to anything prior. At times poetic and other moments full of zest. Sister Holiday breathes life into every scene and moment of this book.” —Barnes & Noble Editors, Most Buzzed About 2023 Debuts

“A noteworthy entry. The mystery-novel debut of Lebanese-American Margot Douaihy, Scorched Grace tells the story of Sister Holiday, a hard-boiled, much-tattooed nun with a troubled past who joins a convent in New Orleans . . . By focusing on family and secrets, Douaihy offers a new take on the figure of the hard-boiled detective.” —Marcia Lynx Qualey, Esquire Middle East

“The first novel by poet Douaihy, coeditor of Cambridge’s Elements in Crime Narratives series, features punk rocker–turned–music teacher Sister Holiday, the only chain-smoking, tattooed, queer nun of the Sisters of the Sublime Blood in New Orleans . . . The first book from suspense novelist Gillian Flynn’s imprint at Zando . . . has already been acquired for a prestige-television adaptation.” —Library Journal

“Margot Douaihy has created an instantly memorable character—edgy, headstrong, hardboiled, deeply flawed, darkly funny, with a voice that crackles and burns with passion and wit. Sister Holiday may not know where she’s headed, but you’ll follow her anywhere.” —Neil Nyren, Book Trib

“What do you get when you mix a poetic writer with the mystery genre? More metaphors than you can shake a stick at. Laugh out loud metaphors. Stunningly beautiful metaphors. All interlaced within an exciting mystery that is as different as it is classic in feel. . . . The twisty plot, gorgeous language, and the renegade nun as a main character bring this novel into its own category. . . . Scorched Grace is a novel both exciting and profound. The crisp pacing keeps things moving briskly forward while the writing takes you deep. I can’t ask for more than that.” —Anne Laughlin, Lambda Literary

“Colorful and surprising, Scorched Grace is one seriously heavenly mystery . . . With its scenes of austere convent life and gritty crime in a city lush with jasmine, Spanish moss, and strolling peacocks, this whodunit is a surprisingly fun and funny read.” —Apple Books

“The author’s writing style is dynamic, with a skilled approach to building each chapter. . . . Scorched Grace is, at times, irreverent and laugh-out-loud hilarious, but it delivers an interesting mystery with an unforgettable cast of characters.” —Amy Wilson, Novels Alive

“What’s cooler than a tattooed, chain-smoking punk lesbian nun? A tattooed, chain-smoking punk lesbian nun turned detective—that’s what!” —GCN, 19 captivating LGBTQ+ books to read this spring

“The writing is so good, and Sister Holiday is such a magnetic character. I loved it, and I’m pretty sure I will love subsequent books.”—Sarah Weinman, Zed

Library Journal

02/01/2023

DEBUT The first novel by poet Douaihy, coeditor of Cambridge's Elements in Crime Narratives series, features punk rocker—turned—music teacher Sister Holiday, the only chain-smoking, tattooed, queer nun of the Sisters of the Sublime Blood in New Orleans, who tends to confiscate her students' cigarettes. She's sneaking a smoke in the alley beside the convent when the school erupts in fire and the janitor's flaming body drops from a second-floor window. Sister Holiday rushes in, finds two students trapped in a classroom, and helps save them. When she overhears the fire investigator declaring the blaze an arson, Sister Holiday turns investigator to expose the firebug; though she never went to college, her father was a cop, and she's read plenty of old PI novels. Then the police rule a second death accidental, and Sister Holiday concludes that only she cares enough to find the arsonist who seems determined to shut down her small religious order. VERDICT The first book from suspense novelist Gillian Flynn's imprint at Zando. Sister Holiday's violent, sexually provocative past life and her current language and behavior might be too outrageous for some readers, but the series has already been acquired for a prestige-television adaptation.—Lesa Holstine

MAY 2023 - AudioFile

In this new audiobook series, the audacious heroine, Sister Holiday, is a queer tattoo-covered nun brimming with a talent for solving mysteries. Jack, the janitor at St. Sebastian's School, where Sister teaches art, falls to his death from the school gym window, and the gym bursts into flames. Narrator Mara Wilson gives an incredible performance as she portrays the chain-smoking Sister Holiday and gives the other characters distinct voices, as well. Listeners will be delighted with the depth of Wilson's emotional range as she delivers Sister's dialogue with changes in tone and intensity bringing them right into the story. It's a hard-boiled, sexy, and sometimes very funny whodunit. May we hear more of Sister's stories and more of Mara Wilson as her messenger. E.E.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2023-01-12
A nun with a wild past investigates crimes close to home.

Sister Holiday has a somewhat unusual background for a Catholic nun: former punk musician, lesbian with a chaotic romantic history, enthusiastic substance abuser, and survivor of family tragedy. But she’s been welcomed into the tiny order of the Sisters of the Sublime Blood (total members: four nuns) and is doing her best at “serving the impossible truth of queer piety” as a music teacher at a struggling parochial school in New Orleans. Then someone sets a fire at the school that results in serious injuries to two students and the death of one of the school’s janitors. Sister Holiday is horrified but also galvanized—she’s determined to solve the crime despite having no background in investigation. As the number of suspects multiplies, more fires and more deaths occur, and Sister Holiday’s mission becomes more urgent. All of this adds up to a promising premise, but it never gels. Sister Holiday is terrible at investigation, mishandling physical evidence and hiding it from the police, and quickly becomes a prime suspect herself. The plot often stalls, the tone veers from zany to noir to confessional, and seemingly important characters disappear without explanation. The book does little with its New Orleans setting except remind the reader every few pages that it’s hot and humid there, and that’s just one repetitious element in the prose. Sister Holiday can be an engaging narrator, but she deserves a better book.

The main character is intriguing, but she’s not enough to lift this muddled debut.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176832631
Publisher: Dreamscape Media
Publication date: 02/21/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 572,697
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