
Publication: 27th March 2025 – Quercus
Annie thought the murders were over.
She was wrong.
It is autumn in Castle Knoll and Annie Adams is busy settling into her new home. She doesn’t find Gravesdown Hall particularly cosy, especially since she found two dead bodies there over the summer. What’s more, ever since she arrived in the village, Annie has had the creeping sense she’s being watched.
Lonely, and desperate for some company, Annie starts talking to a stranger she meets in the grounds of the estate. The striking old woman introduces herself as Peony Lane, the fortune-teller who predicted Great Aunt Frances’ murder all those years ago. And now she has a fortune to tell Annie.
Desperate not to fall into the same trap as Frances, Annie flees Peony Lane, refusing to hear any of her grim predictions. But she can’t outrun Peony for long, as hours later she finds her, dead on the floor of Gravesdown Hall, a ruby-hilted dagger plunged into her back.
But who killed the mysterious fortune teller and why? And can Frances’ library of evidence help Annie solve the case?

How To Seal Your Own Fate is the fantastic sequel to one of my favourite books from last year, How To Solve Your Own Murder.
As in the first book, the story alternates between the present, with Annie Adams solving another mystery, and the past, in the 1960s, told in the form of a diary from Annie’s great aunt, Frances. There is mystery in the form of murder, right in Annie’s garden, and there are family secrets to uncover as Annie tries to figure out the past of her formidable great-aunt.
I loved how the author deftly alternates between the past and the present, between two different points of views, keeping me intrigued from the first to the last page. In the present time, Annie has now settled down in Gravesdown Estate and Castle Knoll, even though people have not been exactly welcoming and her great-aunt’s personality seems to haunt the big house she lives in all alone. To distract her there is yet another murder. Peony Lane was the same fortune teller who had predicted Frances’ murder and, right before she was found murdered in Annie’s solarium, gave her a mysterious message. Now, it’s up to Annie to figure out who wanted her dead and to do that she needs not only to investigate the people of Castle Knoll, but also look into her great-aunt’s diaries. In the past, a young Frances Adams is still trying to figure out her future, but, in the meantime, she keeps herself busy looking into a car crash that may have not been an accident.
I enjoyed How To Seal Your Own Fate as much as the first book. I loved the small-town setting and the amateur detectives and the complex and twisty mystery kept me guessing until the end. How To Seal Your Own Fate is a smart, gripping, and compelling read and I am really hoping there will be yet more mysteries to solve!
A huge thank you to Quercus and NetGalley for providing me with a proof of the novel.

Kristen Perrin is originally from Seattle, Washington, where she spent several years working as a bookseller before moving to the UK to do a master’s and a PhD. She lives with her family in Surrey, where she can be found poking around vintage bookstores, stomping in the mud with her two kids, and collecting too many plants. How To Solve Your Own Murder is her debut adult novel.