Roderick Alleyn Books in Order
Part ofNgaio Marsh Books in OrderBrowse the Roderick Alleyn series by Ngaio Marsh in order, with a full book list, short plot summaries, series background, and guidance on the best Inspector Alleyn mysteries to start with.
Last updated: January 12, 2026
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Publication Order
35 books
Money in the Morgue
by Ngaio Marsh
2018
Set in a remote New Zealand military hospital during the Second World War, this completed fragment finds Alleyn stranded by a storm when the soldiers’ payroll vanishes from a safe. A missing corpse, wartime tensions and a closed circle of staff turn it into a classic locked in investigation.
Still Unsolved
by Ngaio Marsh
1990
An anthology of true murder cases first published under the title Still Unsolved, bringing together essays by Marsh and other writers on notorious or puzzling crimes. It offers brief, atmospheric accounts of real investigations where neat fictional solutions are not guaranteed.
Alleyn and Others
by Ngaio Marsh
1989
This collection gathers Marsh’s shorter work, including several Inspector Alleyn stories, stand alone mysteries and reflective pieces about her detective and his artist wife. It offers compact puzzles and character sketches that echo themes from the full length novels.
Light Thickens
by Ngaio Marsh
1982
At the refurbished Dolphin Theatre, a daring production of *Macbeth* builds toward opening night as backstage superstitions mount. When the leading man dies during a fight scene that looks too convincing, Alleyn has to read both Shakespeare and company politics to find the truth.
Photo Finish
by Ngaio Marsh
1980
On a private island in a New Zealand lake, a temperamental opera diva is hiding from a vindictive paparazzo known as Strix while rehearsing a new work. A storm cuts the estate off just as she is found stabbed, with Alleyn and Troy among the stranded guests.
A Grave Mistake
by Ngaio Marsh
1978
Wealthy, self absorbed widow Sybil Foster dies during a rest cure at an upmarket health hotel, apparently by her own hand. Alleyn suspects otherwise, and soon rare stamps, tangled inheritances and village gossip in Upper Quintern point toward a much colder piece of planning.
Last Ditch
by Ngaio Marsh
1976
Ricky Alleyn, trying to write a novel in the Channel Islands, stumbles on a riding “accident” that looks more like murder and unknowingly brushes against a heroin smuggling operation. When he is targeted himself, his father arrives to untangle both family worry and organised crime.
Black As He's Painted
by Ngaio Marsh
1973
The president of the newly independent African state of Ng’ombwana visits London and insists on staying in his own embassy, despite threats. When an assassination attempt instead kills his ambassador, Alleyn must juggle Special Branch politics, old school ties and a nest of ex colonials next door.
Tied Up in Tinsel
by Ngaio Marsh
1971
Troy spends Christmas painting a portrait at a country house whose owner has hired only former convicted murderers as indoor servants. When a snobbish family valet disappears during the festivities and blood turns up in the snow, Alleyn arrives to unwrap a very odd holiday crime.
When in Rome
by Ngaio Marsh
1970
A mixed tour group explores Rome’s churches and catacombs, shepherded by a charming but unreliable guide who may be tied to a drug ring. Working with the Italian police, Alleyn joins the excursion undercover and must act fast when murder disrupts the carefully staged sightseeing.
Clutch of Constables
by Ngaio Marsh
1968
Troy Alleyn impulsively books a last minute cruise on a small river boat and finds herself among art collectors, tourists and a murderer. As Alleyn later recounts the case to young detectives, a relaxed holiday turns into a chase for an elusive international forger.
Death at the Dolphin
by Ngaio Marsh
1966
A young director is given the chance to restore a bomb damaged riverside theatre and stage his own play, inspired by a delicate glove linked to Shakespeare’s son. When the glove is stolen and a night watchman killed, Alleyn must separate artful illusion from deadly reality.
Dead Water
by Ngaio Marsh
1963
On a small island famed for a supposedly healing spring, pilgrims and profiteers crowd around the holy well. Alleyn’s former schoolteacher inherits the place and tries to end the commercial circus, only to become the target of threats and a violent crime that tests local loyalties.
Hand in Glove
by Ngaio Marsh
1962
A pompous etiquette expert presides over a small country household seething with class anxiety, money troubles and mismatched romances. When his disagreeable housemate is found dead in a ditch after a treasure hunt party, Alleyn must navigate snobbery and forged pedigrees to find the killer.
False Scent
by Ngaio Marsh
1959
Temperamental West End star Mary Bellamy is celebrating her fiftieth birthday when she collapses in front of her guests, apparently poisoned by a luxurious new atomizer. Among agents, relatives and theatre people who owed her everything, Alleyn looks for the one person who wanted her silenced.
Singing in the Shrouds
by Ngaio Marsh
1958
A cargo ship sails from London to South Africa carrying nine passengers and, unknown to most of them, a serial killer. After a body is found on the foggy dock, Alleyn comes aboard incognito, racing to identify the Flower Killer before another victim is claimed at sea.
Off With His Head
by Ngaio Marsh
1956
Each winter the village of Mardian performs an ancient mummers’ dance in a castle courtyard, ending with the beheading of the Fool. This year the Fool stays dead, and Alleyn has to pick apart family loyalties, folk ritual and bitter resentment in a snowbound community.
Scales of Justice
by Ngaio Marsh
1955
In the quiet village of Swevenings, an elderly colonel is found dead by his favourite fishing pool. Alleyn uncovers old diplomatic guilt, village snobbery and a crucial clue hidden in fish scales as he works out who is protecting a long buried scandal with murder.
Spinsters in Jeopardy
by Ngaio Marsh
1953
On a train through southern France, Alleyn, his wife Troy and their son glimpse what seems to be a stabbing in a hilltop castle. The trail leads to a sinister cult mixing black magic and narcotics, where vulnerable women and holidaying spinsters are in real danger.
Opening Night
by Ngaio Marsh
1951
Young New Zealand actress Martyn Tarne finally lands work at a West End theatre, only to see an actor die in his dressing room on opening night. As Alleyn investigates, Martyn’s own family history and backstage tensions prove central to what looked like a suicide.
Swing, Brother, Swing
by Ngaio Marsh
1949
An eccentric peer joins a hot swing band, planning a novelty number where he “shoots” the accordionist on stage with blanks. When the musician dies in front of the nightclub crowd, Alleyn must look past the jazz glitter to a web of blackmail, drugs and family scheming.
Final Curtain
by Ngaio Marsh
1947
War has just ended when painter Agatha Troy takes a commission to paint a legendary actor at his crumbling country house. Family quarrels, theatrical egos and a poisonous practical joke surround the old man’s sudden death, drawing Alleyn into a tangle of stage and domestic rivalries.
Died in the Wool
by Ngaio Marsh
1945
On a remote high country sheep station, an outspoken woman MP disappears and is later found dead, packed into a bale of wool. Fifteen months on, Alleyn arrives on wartime counter espionage duty and has to reconstruct the crime from clashing farm memories.
Colour Scheme
by Ngaio Marsh
1943
At a shabby hot springs resort on New Zealand’s Northland coast during the Second World War, rumours swirl that one guest is a Nazi agent. When a businessman dies in a boiling mud pool, Alleyn must sort espionage from local tensions and family drama.
Death and the Dancing Footman
by Ngaio Marsh
1941
A mischievous host invites a group of people who secretly loathe one another to his country house as a social experiment. A snowstorm cuts the estate off, tempers boil over, and murder follows, while a young footman accidentally witnesses more than he understands.
Death at the Bar
by Ngaio Marsh
1940
A famous barrister is struck by a dart during a pub trick in a Devon fishing village and dies of cyanide poisoning. Alleyn finds that old court grudges, radical politics and a previous fraud trial all lurk behind what looked like a holiday game gone wrong.
A Surfeit of Lampreys
by Ngaio Marsh
1940
New Zealander Roberta Grey rejoins the charming but chronically broke Lamprey family just as their wealthy uncle refuses to rescue them again. When he is found skewered in a lift, Alleyn must decide how far affection, eccentricity and desperation can push an entire household toward murder.
Overture to Death
by Ngaio Marsh
1939
In a Dorset village, an amateur dramatic performance ends abruptly when the spinster at the piano is killed by a booby trapped instrument. Alleyn and Fox arrive from London to trace petty feuds, family secrets and village piety that have built to a single explosive overture.
Death in a White Tie
by Ngaio Marsh
1938
London’s debutante season turns sour when a society blackmailer begins preying on anxious parents and ambitious girls. After a beloved aristocratic friend is murdered on his way to the police, Alleyn has to find which impeccably dressed guest is using scandal as a weapon.
Artists in Crime
by Ngaio Marsh
1938
On a liner heading home from New Zealand, Alleyn notices an absorbed painter on deck. Back in England he meets her again when a model is killed in her art class, in exactly the way students once playfully imagined. Love, jealousy and studio politics complicate the case.
Vintage Murder
by Ngaio Marsh
1937
Recovering from illness in New Zealand, Alleyn falls in with a travelling theatre company whose impresario is killed when a giant champagne bottle drops during a celebration. Amid backstage feuds and Maori motifs, he has to prove the “accident” was carefully staged.
Death in Ecstasy
by Ngaio Marsh
1936
During a strange midnight ritual at the Temple of the Sacred Flame, a beautiful initiate drinks from a communal chalice and dies at the altar. Alleyn probes the cult’s jealousies, financial schemes and home made poisons to discover who slipped cyanide into a moment of supposed ecstasy.
The Nursing Home Murder
by Ngaio Marsh
1935
Britain’s Home Secretary collapses with appendicitis and dies after an emergency operation in a private nursing home. With political extremists, personal grudges and a crowded operating theatre, Alleyn has to work out which member of the medical team turned surgery into an execution.
Enter a Murderer
by Ngaio Marsh
1935
In a packed London theatre, an actor is shot on stage with a prop gun that turns out to be loaded for real. Alleyn, watching from the audience, must sort through backstage rivalries and complicated cue sheets to find who turned a performance into murder.
A Man Lay Dead
by Ngaio Marsh
1934
At a country house weekend, a make believe murder game turns real when a charismatic guest is stabbed with a mysterious Russian dagger. Journalist Nigel Bathgate watches Chief Inspector Roderick Alleyn untangle jealousy, secret societies and a very theatrical alibi.
Series background & context
The Roderick Alleyn novels follow a career policeman who happens to move easily in the same drawing rooms as many of his suspects. Alleyn is a Scotland Yard detective from a well connected family, Oxford educated, with wartime army service behind him and a habit of keeping his wit as sharp as his notebooks.(en.wikipedia.org)
Across 32 books we watch him move from Chief Inspector to Chief Superintendent while the world around him changes from 1930s country house weekends to postwar London and beyond. Early stories often pair him with Nigel Bathgate, a young journalist acting as wide eyed Watson, while later books bring in a quieter circle of regulars from the Yard.(en.wikipedia.org)
The heart of the series is the mix of professional detection and personal loyalties. Alleyn is no lone wolf. Inspector Fox provides steady, dry humoured backup, and family life grows in importance after he falls for the painter Agatha Troy in Artists in Crime. Their marriage, and eventually their son Ricky, give the later novels a lived in domestic backdrop without turning them into pure family stories.(en.wikipedia.org)
Marsh uses Alleyn to walk through a wide range of settings. Classic country house puzzles like A Man Lay Dead and Death and the Dancing Footman sit alongside village tales such as Overture to Death, Scales of Justice and Grave Mistake. Other books head for London’s clubs, law courts or riverside districts, or step onto cargo ships, Channel Islands and even a guided tour of Rome in When in Rome.(en.wikipedia.org)
One of the biggest pleasures is the recurring theatre thread. Alleyn is forever being pulled backstage or into rehearsal rooms, whether at the fictional Vulcan and Dolphin theatres or on tour in New Zealand. Novels like Enter a Murderer, Vintage Murder, Opening Night, Death at the Dolphin and Light Thickens show Marsh writing about stagecraft, actors and audiences with an insider’s confidence.(en.wikipedia.org)
Although each book stands alone, reading in order lets you see Alleyn age, marry and adapt to new eras while his methods stay rooted in clear observation, careful interviews and a quiet sense of fairness. For many readers the series offers both the intricate clueing of Golden Age puzzles and a gently satirical look at the class assumptions of the worlds he moves through.
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