Short Suspense Thriller Story Collection: How Ladder to Murder Builds Tension Scene by Scene
Not every crime novel is written the same way. Some build through sprawling narratives, long arcs, slow reveals across hundreds of pages. Ladder to Murder is different. Patrick Gillan writes in tight, self-contained scenes, each chapter its own unit of tension, each one ending with something shifted, something lost or something quietly, irreversibly changed.
The novel opens in a graveyard at midnight. One scene. A stranger, a shovel, a body dropped without ceremony into a borrowed grave. No character introduction, no context, no comfort. By the time the brake lights disappear into the dark, the reader already knows this is not a book that will hold anything back.
That scene-by-scene intensity is what gives Ladder to Murder its particular momentum. Gillan moves between perspectives, Philippa Abbott in the church, DCI Alexander at the crime scene, Donna Bridges at the lychgate with a phone and shaking hands, and each switch resets the tension rather than releasing it. Readers who are drawn to intense suspense short fiction for the way it drops you directly into a moment and holds you there will find that same discipline running through every chapter of this novel.
The short form’s greatest strength is precision. Gillan applies that precision across 82 chapters and never loses it.