Hi mystery fans! I’m handing this in technically right before the New Year (it is me from the past!) and I’m excited that I just selected what will be my first book of 2023, How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures by Sabrina Imbler.
Want to Read Harder? This year you can find the tasks and subscribe to our newsletter for tips and recommendations at Read Harder 2023.
Bookish Goods
Vintage Library Due Date Apron by SheMakesMeLaugh
Are you shopping for an apron and love libraries? Here you go! ($33)
New Releases
The Bandit Queens by Parini Shroff
If you like dark humor and crime novels, run to this one. It’s also a smart take on the revenge tale, and although a different tone and style, it should satisfy fans of My Sister the Serial Killer.
Geeta’s husband disappeared years ago, saddling her with debt. But everyone in her village in India suspects she up and murdered him. So a woman tired of her abusive husband decides to blackmail Geeta into killing her husband for her — after all, she’s already done it before. But Geeta continues to profess her innocence and instead finds herself a pawn while trying to fix her own life. I loved the use of dark humor to explore social issues like the caste system, and also the silly humor of all the characters having random criminal knowledge because they all watch the same popular crime show.
Bonus: Soneela Nankani does an excellent narration on the audiobook.
(TW domestic violence/ mentions child abuse, no detail/ rape stories/ animal cruelty/ metnions past suicide, detail/ sexual assault/ infertility/ colorism/ fat shaming/ mentions past cancer death/ femicide/ pedophiles)
The Blackhouse by Carole Johnstone
If you’re looking for a dual timeline, two POVs, a remote village in Scotland, and slow burn Gothic suspense, here you go! At the age of five Maggie MacKay proclaimed she knew a murder had occurred, and that she was the reincarnation of the murdered man, Andrew MacNeil. As an adult she decides to finally return to Kilmeray, where the murder happened. Even if she’ll be shunned by all the townspeople, she has to finally get to the bottom of what happened. In the ’90s, Robert Reid moves his family to Hebrides, outrunning his past and thinking a new start will work. But he remains an outsider and you can’t really ever outrun your past…
Looking for more new releases? Check out our New Books newsletter!
Riot Recommendations
I’m going to do something a little different with my end-of-year Best Of List. In 2022 I got to read a bunch of great novels in the crime genre that also spoke on what it’s like to be a part of the diaspora, an immigrant, and from an immigrant family. I loved these voices a lot and that seemed a great reason to create a Best Of List for.
Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q. Sutanto — The sequel to the very fun and funny Dial A for Aunties which continues Sutanto’s gift for melding crime and comedy-of-errors, with a Chinese-Indonesian family that has mastered bickering and love.
Portrait of a Thief Grace D. Li — Li has written a crime novel inspired by the real headlines about Chinese art vanishing from Western museums. It’s a character-driven heist novel that takes you into a group of very different characters’ lives as it explores the many different layers of being Chinese American.
Counterfeit by Kirstin Chen — This is a wait-for-it crime novel that takes you into the counterfeit handbag world while following two women as the novel unravels Asian American stereotypes.
The Verifiers by Jane Pek — This is a character-driven amateur sleuth novel with an interesting job of verifying user info on matchmaking apps. The lead, Claudia Lin, is a Chinese American constantly navigating her complicated relationships with her mother and siblings while trying to forge her own path.
Blackwater Falls by Ausma Zehanat Khan — This is the beginning of a procedural series that pairs together Detective Inaya Rahman — who is American, half Afghan, and half Pakistani — and Lieutenant Waqas Seif — who keeps his culture/ethnicity to himself. As they navigate their own identities, they also need to solve the murder of a teen from a Syrian Muslim refugee family.
Secret Identity by Alex Segura — Here we get the exploration of a Cuban American woman moving from Miami to New York in the ’70s while having to navigate the very white male comic book industry, and also deal with a murder investigation.
Undercover Latina by Aya de León — Andréa Hernández-Baldoquín is a 14-year-old girl who discovers her parents work for a world organization of spies and then gets her first assignment: going undercover in a high school. But she’ll have to shed her identity and culture to do so, forcing her to answer complicated questions and do some soul searching.
Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 releases. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!
Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy — you can find me under Jamie Canavés.
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