Burn After Reading by Catherine Ryan Howard is competent and engaging mystery with an intriguing premise, even if it is not a perfect novel.

by Catherine Ryan Howard
Book cover
Title | Burn After Reading |
Writer | Catherine Ryan Howard |
Series | Standalone |
Publisher | Blackstone Publishing, Inc. |
Publication date | 4th March 2024 |
MBR star rating /5 | ⭐⭐⭐ |
Genre | Contemporary Mystery Crime |
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I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
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Synopsis: Burn After Reading
Burn After Reading is a Tense and twisty thriller about the stories we tell to survive.
One year ago, Jack Smyth’s wife was killed in a violent attack, before their home was set ablaze.
Once a beloved professional cyclist, Jack is now the prime suspect in the court of public opinion, though he has never been charged.
Is Jack innocent man Trying to desperately to clear his name, or a killer hiding the truth?
Emily Joyce thinks she’s simply landed a lucrative ghost-writing job:
Spend a week with Jack in an eerie, half-abandoned town of Sanctuary, Florida, and capture his side of the story.
But the tale Jack tells isn’t what she expected and as his version of events unravels, Emily finds herself caught in a chilling game of deception, danger, and survival.

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Review: Burn After Reading
In Burn After Reading Catherine Ryan Howard has taken inspiration from one of the most famous murder cases of the late 20th century.
The result is a compelling mystery that blends scandal, media manipulation, and the unreliable nature of personal narratives.
Premise
The story centers on Irish sports star Jack Smyth, whose wife tragically died in a house fire that many believe he started.
In an effort to reclaim his reputation, Smyth decides to tell his side of the story, with the help of ghostwriter Emily Joyce, a once-successful author who is now struggling with writer’s block.
If this setup sounds familiar, it’s because the premise is loosely based on the O.J. Simpson case, where Simpson was acquitted in criminal court but later found liable in civil court and controversially went on to write the book If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer by O.J. Simpson
Structure and Style
Catherine Ryan Howard shapes the novel into more than just a true-crime reimagining. Much of the narrative unfolds through Emily’s perspective.
Navigating the murky waters of Smyth’s public image and private reality. Flashbacks from Jack’s deceased wife add another layer, slowly filling in the gaps of what happened before the fire.
The interplay of voices keeps the tension simmering and allows readers to question not just who is telling the truth, but how much of it.
Strengths
- Compelling characters: Emily, in particular, comes across as a fair yet flawed narrator, and even secondary characters have their own moral complexities.
- Twists and turns: The plot holds enough surprises to keep readers uncertain about the final outcome.
- Familiar yet fresh: For those who remember the O.J. Simpson case, the echoes add an extra layer of intrigue.
Weaknesses
While solidly written, Burn After Reading doesn’t quite land a knockout punch. Despite the twists, there isn’t enough in the novel to elevate it into a must-read of the genre.
While the writer Catherine Ryan Howard, does enough to keep enough reader you start to read it, despite It’s what the premsis offers at the start is not one thet will necessarily linger in your memory after completion.
Conclusion
Why Read Burn After Reading?
If you’re drawn to:
- Thrillers inspired by true-crime scandals
- Stories that explore the line between truth and spin
- Characters who blur the boundaries of reliability
…then Catherine Ryan Howard’s Burn After Reading is worth adding to your reading list.
Final Verdict:
A competent and engaging mystery with an intriguing premise, even if it is not a perfect novel.

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Mark.