Poison Flowers

by Natasha Cooper

Published March 1991

Three people die, in agony, each the victim of a different person. The police are convinced that there is no connection.

Inspector Tom Worth disagrees. So does Willow King. Risking not only the secrets of her double identity, but also her own life, Willow races to unmask the serial killer before anyone else is murdered.

From the dreariness of her part-time job in Clapham to the luxury and extravagance of her life in Belgravia, this most unusual female sleuth takes up the challenge and becomes involved in an exciting but near-fatal adventure.

‘Willy and elegant . . . an excellent read’ Publishing News

‘A well written, consistently enjoyable English antidote to the sometimes over-muscular American fashion’ Marcel Berlins, The Times (Bitter Herbs)

‘Willow is a beguiling heroine’ Francis Fyfield, Evening Standard (Bloody Roses)


Fruiting Bodies

by Natasha Cooper

Published 1 April 1996

Fruiting Bodies is a compelling novel featuring female sleuth, Willow King, set within the fraught corridors of an NHS hospital.

Just as Willow is giving birth to her first child, her obstetrician is found dead, face-down in his own birthing pool. To her he has always been charming, supportive and reassuring, but someone hated him enough to hold his head under water until he drowned. She has to find out why.

Her husband, Superintendent Tom Worth, warns her that it is neither easy nor safe to pre-empt a police murder investigation, but Willow cannot stop. Interviewing a hospital administrator at one moment and a leading member of WOMB (Women Overtake Male Birthing) the next, Willow starts to find out what lay behind the obstetrician's facade of charm and professional competence.

When she and her baby are released form hospital, the scope of her enquiry widens. But she soon discovers that Tom was right and, in a violent confrontation, she pays a high price for her curiosity.

In Fruiting Bodies Natasha Cooper once more mixes an entertaining, light-hearted mystery with a sidelong glance at some of the more intractable antagonisms of contemporary life and a shrewd psychological insight into the minds of those who love, those who hate, and those who cannot believe that they have to abide by the same rules as the rest of us.


Bloody Roses

by Natasha Cooper

Published 18 May 1992

Willow is sure Richard Crescent couldn’t commit murder. The police, finding him drenched in his colleague’s blood in the locked Corporate Finance department, are sure he did.

Rushing back from a Tuscan idyll with Chief Inspector Tom Worth to help her friend, Willow uses all her romantic novelist’s imagination, her own experience as a high-powered woman in a man’s world, and her understanding of an uneasy double life, to put herself in the other woman’s shoes and learn why Sarah Allfarthing had to die.

And as well as the high-tension world of merchant banking, conflict with Tom, and personal danger, Willow has to face the terrible possibility that the police could be right . . .

‘This sparkling whodunnit effectively blends mystery, sophistication and a dash of romantic melodrama’ Publishers Weekly

‘Well plotted – and immense fun to read’ The Times (Poison Flowers)


Rotten Apples

by Natasha Cooper

Published 6 March 1995

Death . . . and taxes

Willow King, civil servant, and Cressida Woodruffe, author of sweeping romances, are one and the same. But it is the former who's called into play when she is asked to probe the case of Fiona Fydgett, a famous art historian whose tax affairs are under investigation by Inland Revenue. By all accounts, Fiona killed herself—and whispers of harassment by the tax office needs to be explored.

But when Willow's police officer husband is mysteriously shot, and a fire in the tax office kills the investigator on the Fydgett case and nearly kills Willow, a simple case turns both urgent and very personal . . .

'A strong heroine, an inventive plot with an unexpected climax . . .' Booklist

'. . . clever, unpredictable and thoroughly absorbing.' Publishers Weekly

'An elegant sleuth.' Cosmopolitan


Sour Grapes

by Natasha Cooper

Published 7 July 1997
When studying the case of a fatal hit-and-run for her thesis on lie detection, criminology student Emma Gnatche finds inconsistencies in it. Emma's consequent probing gets her into more trouble than she bargained for, and she is forced to call on Willow King for help.

Bitter Herbs

by Natasha Cooper and Daphne Wright

Published 24 June 1993
Passions run high in the world of publishing, but they rarely lead to murder - or do they? Gloria Grainger, wealthy bestselling novelist, is found dead in her room one morning. Everyone assumes she died of natural causes - except for Willow King. Despite Chief Inspector Tom Worth's mockery of her suspicions Willow is determined to uncover the sinister truth. She finds herself investigating a particularly nasty murder case, in which there seems no limit to the amount of emotional damage people can inflict upon each other. Then Willow herself becomes a target for the same murderous hatred that surrounded Gloria . . . 'This sparkling whodunnit effectively blends mystery, sophistication, and a dash of romantic melodrama' "Publishers Weekly" (Bloody Roses)The Times" (Poison Flowers)

Festering Lilies

by Natasha Cooper

Published 19 March 1990
The Department of Old Age Pensions is not noted for drama. Nor for scandal, corruption or even the odd leak to the tabloids. Not until Algernon Endlesham, its high-flying Minister, is brutally bludgeoned to death. Willow King, Assistant Secretary (Finance), is noted for her formidably enquiring mind. Though an enquiry is the last thing she could wish for. Especially if daunting ex-SAS Inspector Worth uncovers her figment of an alibi and well-kept secret. Disconcertingly for Willow, however, someone has a very violent means of silencing the curious . . . 'A smart plot with some clever twists' "Oxford Times" 'Festering Lilies is witty and elegant. It is a pleasure to light on a new talent' "The Bookseller" 'Instead of the physical violence in which heroes of thrillers usually engage, Willow proves her superiority by verbal decimation . . . as she effortlessly trumps male condescension' "Observer"