Glenmore Park Mystery Books in Order
Part ofMike Omer Books in OrderBrowse the Glenmore Park Mystery series by Mike Omer with books in order, summaries and reading tips for these small city police procedural crime novels.
Last updated: January 12, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
A Death Not Foretold
by Mike Omer
2017
When Glenmore Park psychic Jacqueline Mune is shot in what looks like a simple robbery, Detectives Hannah Shor and Bernard uncover a tangle of jealousies, debts, and grudges. Almost everyone around her had a reason to want her gone, and one of them is a killer.
Web of Fear
by Mike Omer
2016
Detective Hannah Shor's world tilts when a friend's twelve year old daughter is kidnapped and a ransom image hits Instagram. As the case goes viral and the family's secrets emerge, Hannah races to find the girl before public hysteria and hidden motives derail the investigation.
Spider's Web
by Mike Omer
2016
In Glenmore Park, the brutal murder of Kendele Byers is followed by another woman's death, both preceded by cryptic warnings. Detective Mitchell Lonnie hunts a serial killer who taunts his victims, even as the investigation drags his own family into the line of fire.
Deadly Web
by Mike Omer
2016
A murdered internet troll and a strangled gaming addict give Glenmore Park detectives Hannah Shor and Jacob Cooper two cases rooted in online life. To catch the killer, they must wade into toxic social media, obsessive virtual worlds, and the real world grudges hiding behind screens.
Series background & context
The Glenmore Park Mystery series is set in a fictional Massachusetts city that feels big enough for serious crime yet small enough that everyone’s paths keep crossing. Rather than following a single hero, the books track a team of detectives in the local police department as they handle cases that turn their quiet precinct into a pressure cooker.
The series opens with Spider's Web. When Kendele Byers, a young woman with a troubled history, is found brutally murdered and buried in a shallow grave, Detective Mitchell Lonnie catches the case. Another woman soon dies under similar circumstances. Both victims received ominous hints shortly before they were attacked, suggesting a killer who enjoys warning his prey. As Mitchell and his partner close in, the investigation pulls Mitchell’s own sister into the orbit of the case, making the hunt intensely personal.
Deadly Web shifts the spotlight to two very different victims and two detectives. Hannah Shor is assigned the stabbing of a middle aged man who spent his time trolling and harassing women online. Jacob Cooper investigates the death of a young woman who almost never left her apartment, spending her life inside a violent online role playing game. The deeper they dig, the more their cases intersect, taking them into the darker corners of social media, online misogyny, and immersive games that blur the line between fantasy and real life.
In Web of Fear, Hannah faces every detective’s nightmare when a friend’s twelve year old daughter, Abigail, is kidnapped. A ransom image posted on Instagram goes viral, turning the crime into a public spectacle. Internet vigilantes, rumors, and armchair detectives begin to interfere with the work of the police. As Hannah works with the FBI, she uncovers secrets in the family’s past and realizes the kidnapping is about more than money, all while the clock on Abigail’s life keeps ticking.
The novella A Death Not Foretold expands the world between the main novels. Hannah and her colleague Bernard investigate the shooting of Jacqueline Mune, a tarot reader who sold charms, oils, and advice to a wide circle of clients. What starts as a straightforward case in a rough neighborhood becomes a study in motive, because nearly everyone around Jacqueline had a reason to want her silenced.
Across the Glenmore Park stories, the focus stays on day to day police work in a tight knit department. The detectives are capable but imperfect, juggling family obligations, insecurities, and office politics along with their caseloads. Crimes often grow out of modern pressures, from online harassment to viral notoriety, and the fallout ripples through the community.
For readers, this series offers grounded ensemble procedurals with a recurring cast you get to know over time. It also plants early seeds for Omer’s wider universe, since characters introduced here echo later in the Zoe Bentley and Abby Mullen books.
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