Lucy Connelly Books in Order

From 30 July to 5 August 2024, far-right anti-immigration protests and riots occurred in England and Northern Ireland, within the United Kingdom. This followed a mass stabbing of girls at a dance class in Southport on 29 July in which three children were killed. The riots were fuelled by false claims circulated by far-right groups that the perpetrator of the attack was a Muslim and an asylum seeker, in addition to broader Islamophobic, racist, and anti-immigrant sentiments that had grown leading up to the protests. The disorder included racist attacks, arson, and looting and was the largest incident of social unrest in England since 2011. By 8 August at least 177 had been imprisoned, to an average sentence of around two years and up to a nine-years, in relation to the unrest. The following month 1,280 arrests and nearly 800 charges had been made, and as of July 2025, the number of arrests increased to 1,840 with 1,103 charges.

Bibliography verified: January 2026

Book Series by Lucy Connelly

  • #1
    An Irish Bookshop Murder(2024)
    Amazon
  • #2
    Death by the Book(2024)
    Amazon
  • #3
    Death at Inishmore Castle(2025)
    Amazon
  • #4
    Murder on the Clock(2025)
    Amazon
  • #5
    A Body at the Irish Book Club(2026)
    Amazon
  • #1
    An American in Scotland(2023)
    Amazon
  • #2
    Death at a Scottish Wedding(2024)
    Amazon
  • #3
    Death at a Scottish Christmas(2024)
    Amazon
  • #4
    Death on a Scottish Train(2025)
    Amazon
  • #5
    Death On A Scottish Yacht(2023)
    Amazon
  • #1
    The Curious Case of the Poisoned Professor(2026)
    Amazon

About Lucy Connelly

From 30 July to 5 August 2024, far-right anti-immigration protests and riots occurred in England and Northern Ireland, within the United Kingdom. This followed a mass stabbing of girls at a dance class in Southport on 29 July in which three children were killed. The riots were fuelled by false claims circulated by far-right groups that the perpetrator of the attack was a Muslim and an asylum seeker, in addition to broader Islamophobic, racist, and anti-immigrant sentiments that had grown leading up to the protests. The disorder included racist attacks, arson, and looting and was the largest incident of social unrest in England since 2011. By 8 August at least 177 had been imprisoned, to an average sentence of around two years and up to a nine-years, in relation to the unrest. The following month 1,280 arrests and nearly 800 charges had been made, and as of July 2025, the number of arrests increased to 1,840 with 1,103 charges.

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