Sponsored by the audiobook edition of The Good Sister by Sally Hepworth, read by Barrie Kreinik.
Sally Hepworth delivers a knock-out of a novel about the lies that bind two sisters in The Good Sister. Fern works in her local library. She avoids crowds, bright lights, and loud noises as much as possible. Fern has a carefully structured life and disrupting her routine can be…dangerous. When Rose discovers that she cannot get pregnant, Fern sees her chance to pay her sister back for everything Rose has done for her. Fern’s mission shakes the life she has carefully built for herself and stirs up dark secrets from the past, in this quirky, rich, and shocking audiobook.
Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a bunch of articles and roundups, a great docuseries about a museum robbery to watch, Kindle deals and some of my recent reading.
From Book Riot And Around The Internet
Katie and Nusrah discuss the Edgar Award Nominees and recommend books for you to prioritize from the list on the latest Read or Dead!
5 Sherlock Holmes Comics for You to Investigate
15 Fantasy Mystery Books for Readers Craving a Magical Whodunit
Is it Regular Murder or Vampire Murder?!: 3 Mysteries You Should Read
Crime Writers of Color Podcast: Alexia Gordon–Whiskey, Ireland and Gethsemane Brown
‘This is not an easy treasure hunt’: puzzle book offers readers chance to win €750,000 golden casket
A new mystery book set in Riverwest examines Jewish-Russian identity
(This isn’t based on a book from what I saw BUT mystery readers seem 100% the right audience.) John Stamos To Produce & Narrate True Crime Podcast About Kidnapping Of Frank Sinatra Jr. For Wondery
Read an excerpt from Ace of Spades, this summer’s hottest YA debut
15 Underrated Mystery and Thriller Novels That (Warning!) Will Make It Hard to Sleep Tonight
7 Thriller TV Shows To Watch After Netflix’s ‘Behind Her Eyes’
“Hilarious queer friendship story that’s a bit like Stand By Me… if the body was maybe their fault?” is absolutely the book I want to read RIGHT NOW I have turned into Veruca Salt.
Watch Now
This Is a Robbery: The World’s Biggest Art Heist on Netflix. This docuseries takes a look at the 1990 robbery at Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum where two thieves dressed as police officers stole 13 works of art worth millions. I’m currently watching this and it’s really well done in interviewing everyone involved from museum workers to first FBI agent on the scene, reenactments, some art history, and Boston life. It isn’t based on a book but “The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum has published its first-ever pictorial book, “Stolen,” about the 13 works of art taken from the Museum in 1990 including essays from key staff members.”
A Bit Of My Week In Reading
Bury Me When I’m Dead (Charlie Mack Motown Mystery #1) by Cheryl A. Head
I am thrilled to once again be in the land of being able to read the way I used to, and I inhaled two crime novels. I bought and thoroughly enjoyed Bury Me When I’m Dead, which is the start to a PI series. It’s actually three PIs and a secretary working together at their own agency who take on what seems like a simple-ish case of an employee who got caught scamming and disappeared. But as they rack up expenses for travel, get kidnapped, shot at, and discover a whole nest of secrets, they find more danger than answers. If you like PI stories that walk you through the case piece by piece, with great characters and real relationships, here is your next series. (TW parent early stage dementia/ ableism)
And I read The Lion’s Den by Katherine St. John, which deceptively looks like a regular fiction book but is really a crime book à la Real Housewives (frenemies!) if they were on a boat with MURDER. All books are beach reads for me, but this is the kind those who use the term generally mean. I will note there were aspects of the writing for the Filipina character that I was not a fan of. (TW mentions past domestic abuse/ possible suicide attempt, not detailed/ past suicide mentioned, not detailed but a character imagines different scenarios with details/ rape recounted/ attempted statutory assault on page)
Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake (Winner Bakes All #1) by Alexis Hall
My current read: I absolutely loved Boyfriend Material (hilarious romcom) so you better believe that I grabbed Hall’s upcoming book, which is literally a romcom meets Great British Bake Off. You know when you get the most delicious dessert put in front of you and you have to fight between inhaling it because OMG so good and also eating it super slow because OMG so good. That is this book and me being at the halfway mark.
Kindle Deals
Before She Was Found by Heather Gudenkauf
If you like unsolved murder mysteries and small towns, here’s one for $1.99! (Review) (TW suicide attempt/ talk of pedophile)
The Nothing Man by Catherine Ryan Howard
For a clever cat and mouse fictional serial killer read that strips the perps of their power, this is a great thriller and currently $0.99! (Review) (TW rape/ domestic abuse/ mentions suicide, detail)
The Dinosaur Artist: Obsession, Betrayal, and the Quest for Earth’s Ultimate Trophy by Paige Williams
For fans of nonviolent true crime stories, here’s one that takes a look at who owns dug up dinosaur bones for $2.99! (Review)
Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2021 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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