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Goddess of Love
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02 March 2027

Some inheritances you can't refuse. Some killers you can't outrun. Some passions you can't bury.
Washington, D.C., September 1964.
Judy Nightingale and Philippa Dolittle, née Watson, were once each other's whole world. They haven't spoken in years. Then Judy's latest novel, The Savage Kind, drags their shared past into public view and forces an uneasy reunion.
Then comes the shock: Judy's estranged birth mother—the woman who once tried to poison them both—has died, leaving her everything. A house. A fortune. A staff that watches too closely. Soon after, letters begin arriving, each signed "Mother" and enclosing pages from Judy's long-lost radio play, "Frankenstein's Sister." Warnings of revenge from beyond the grave.
The warnings turn real. After a dinner party thick with old grievances, a guest is dead, and Judy's Mercedes is found in a ravine, its brake line cut. Judy is the intended victim.
She turns to the only person who ever truly understood her: Philippa, now married with a child, her past buried beneath a life she has worked hard not to examine. Together they follow the letters back toward everything they never resolved and toward a killer who has been patient for a very long time . . . and still writing letters.
Goddess of Love concludes John Copenhaver's Nightingale Trilogy, following Hall of Mirrors, a New York Times Best Crime Novel of 2024.
Queer, suspenseful, and deeply seductive, this is a murder mystery where love is both the most powerful weapon—and the deadliest risk.
John Copenhaver is an award-winning crime author whose Hall of Mirrors was named a New York Times Crime Novel of the Year and won the Left Coast Crime Award for Best Historical Mystery. His debut, Dodging and Burning, earned the 2019 Macavity Award for Best First Mystery, and The Savage Kind took home the 2021 Lambda Literary Award for Best LGBTQ Mystery. He is also co-editor of Crime Ink: Iconic, a queer-inspired crime fiction anthology. A champion of queer voices, Copenhaver is a founding member of Queer Crime Writers and sits on the board of International Thriller Writers. His stories have appeared in CrimeReads, Electric Lit, and The Gay & Lesbian Review. When he’s not writing, he teaches creative writing and literature, mentors aspiring authors, and lives in Richmond, Virginia, with his husband, ceramist Jeffery Paul Herrity.