Categories
Unusual Suspects

Obama And Biden Return For Another Mystery

Hi mystery fans!


Sponsored by Hanover Square Press and The Lady from the Black Lagoon by Mallory O’Meara.

The Lady From the Black Lagoon cover imageThe Lady from the Black Lagoon uncovers the life and work of Milicent Patrick – one of Disney’s first female animators and the only woman to create one of Hollywood’s classic movie monsters—the Creature from the Black Lagoon. For someone who should have been hailed as a pioneer in the genre there was little information about Milicent available. Patrick’s contribution had been claimed by a jealous male colleague, her career had been cut short and she soon after had disappeared from film history. The Lady from the Black Lagoon restores Patrick to her place in film history while calling out a Hollywood culture where little seems to have changed since.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

American Spy cover imageRincey and Katie recommend spy novels, list new releases, and talk about the history of mysteries/thrillers in the latest Read or Dead.

Read Harder: A Book Of Nonviolent True Crime

5 Books With Female Serial Killers

The Accidental Crime Novelist: Laura Lippman never meant to become a bestselling author. But when the former newspaper reporter began considering life as a private investigator, the stories began to flow.

Flynn Berry On Her True Crime Inspiration, Writing “Unlikeable” Women, And Why She Loves Thrillers

Crime Fiction Empathy and E.A. Aymar’s The Unrepentant

News And Adaptations

Hope Rides Again cover imageExclusive preview: Obama and Biden return as action heroes in Hope Rides Again

Kumail Nanjiani has boarded the spy action comedy No Glory which Sam Bain is adapting from a yet to be published manuscript.

‘Agatha Raisin’ Returns For Third Season As SVOD Service Acorn TV Marks First Original Renewal

‘Sherlock Holmes 3’ Moved Back By A Year To Christmas 2021

Kindle Deals

Land of Shadows cover image: sunrise LA city image blended into a dark street image with a silhouette of a person walkingIf you’re looking to start at the beginning of a great procedural series Land of Shadows by Rachel Howzell Hall is $2.99! (Review)

If you like mysteries set at prep schools I loved All These Beautiful Strangers by Elizabeth Klehfoth and it’s $1.99! (Review) (TW suicide/ domestic abuse/ rape)

Tess Gerritsen’s The Bone Garden, a past and present thriller, is $2.99!

And for historical mystery fans, and my purchase, Ovidia Yu’s The Frangipani Tree Mystery is $3.99!

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

Categories
Today In Books

(3/8)Dyslexia-Friendly Harry Potter Companion Books: Today In Books

Sponsored by our What’s Up in YA Giveaway of a $100 gift card to Amazon! Enter here.


The Harry Potter Franchise Aims To Be More Accessible

The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Quidditch Through the Ages and Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them are now available in the UK with dyslexia-friendly fonts and printed on paper that offers maximum contrast with reduced glare. The novels have been approved by the Royal National Institute of Blind People and there are plans in the works for similar treatment for all the books in the Harry Potter series. Here’s hoping making them available in other countries is top priority.

Native Son Trailer

We are in an amazing time filled with adaptations! Richard Wright’s 1940’s novel Native Son has gotten the adaptation treatment and will premiere on HBO on April 6th. Pulitzer Prize winner Suzan-Lori Parks wrote the script, keeping the same characters navigating the city of Chicago but updated it for the 21st century. Check out the trailer here.

The First All-Women-Of-Color Production Of Richard II

You can catch a production of Richard II with a cast and crew of all women of color at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse in London. The play is co-directed by Lynette Linton and Adjoa Andoh and Andoh also stars as King Richard II. You can read the review here and hear about it on BBC Radio’s Woman’s Hour.

Categories
Today In Books

Amazon’s 87 Pop-Up Shops Will Be No More: Today In Books

Sponsored by our What’s Up in YA Giveaway of a $100 gift card to Amazon! Enter here.


Amazon Is Closing Its 87 Pop-Up Shops

The Amazon pop-up stores that had been located in grocery stores, Khol’s, and shopping malls–which usually sold Amazon devices such as Kindles–are closing by the end of next month. Its plans to continue with storefront bookstores continues.

New Tolkien Trailer

The biopic starring Nicholas Hoult as John Ronald Reuel Tolkien and Lily Collins as Edith Tolkien, his wife, has a new trailer you can see here. The film will be in theaters on May 10th.

Rachael Denhollander’s Upcoming Books

Rachael Denhollander–former gymnast, current lawyer, and the first public accuser of Larry Nassar’s sexual abuse–has an upcoming memoir and children’s book. In her memoir, What Is a Girl Worth?, Denhollander will discuss the devastating impact the abuse had, her path to finding the courage to speak publicly, and “illuminate the path to a better way forward.” In her children’s book, How Much Is a Little Girl Worth?, Denhollander will help children see their value so they can learn to develop confidence.

 

Categories
Today In Books

Look Up The Best-Selling Book From The Year You Were Born: Today In Books

Sponsored by Flatiron Books, publishers of Girls Burn Brighter by Shobha Rao, now in paperback.

Girls Burn Brighter cover image


Look Up The Best-Selling Book From The Year You Were Born

Today in doing something fun: The UK-based online bookshop Wordery launched a new tool that lets you type in your age and find out the best-selling book from the year you were born. I am The Matarese Circle years old.

One Hundred Years of Solitude Will Be A Series

Gabriel García Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude will be adapted by Netflix into an original series en español. The series will be filmed in Colombia and the executive producers will be Márquez’s sons Rodrigo Garcia and Gonzalo García Barcha.

Good Omens Trailer

Have you been waiting for some Heaven and Hell? Amazon just dropped the trailer for the adaptation of Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman’s novel Good Omens. You can see the trailer here and watch the series on Amazon Prime starting May 31st.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

The Past Is Coming To Get You

Hello mystery fans! This week I have a great historical mystery from a series I adore, a character driven procedural set in Canada, and a small-town murder mystery for you.


Sponsored by The Line Between by Tosca Lee

The Line Between cover imageIn this frighteningly believable thriller from New York Times bestseller Tosca Lee, an extinct disease re-emerges from the melting Alaskan permafrost to cause madness in its victims. For recent apocalyptic cult escapee Wynter Roth, it’s the end she’d always been told was coming. Filled with action, conspiracy, romance, and questions of whom—and what—to believe, The Line Between is a high-octane story of survival and love in a world on the brink of madness. “The perfect blend of spellbinding and heart stopping.” -NYT bestselling author Nicole Baart


Such A Great Historical Mystery Series! (TW suicide/ addiction/ PTSD)

Smoke and Ashes cover imageSmoke and Ashes (Sam Wyndham, #3) by Abir Mukherjee: I adore this series and this is the best one yet! The series follows a Scotland Yard detective, Sam Wyndham, who left Scotland for Calcutta hoping to flee his PTSD from the war, his wife’s death, and his opium addiction. I adore this series in part because even though we get the addicted detective trope it feels different than others, and the setting of British ruled Calcutta offers so much history to explore. This time around Wyndham has found himself in two difficult spots: while fleeing an opium den during a raid he stumbled across a dead man whose body later disappears; it’s now 1921 and the British are trying to stop the surge of Indians protesting for independence, led by Mahatma Gandhi, and Prince Edward is visiting so Wyndham is asked to help strategize against the movement. When a woman is murdered similarly to the first body Wyndham encountered, he knows he has a killer he has to stop, but he can’t say anything without revealing his addiction. Quite a pickle he’s put himself in! The book navigates brilliantly between focusing on the unrest, the mystery, and Wyndham’s personal struggles. I really like Wyndham’s character as he seems caught between being British and understanding the horrible treatment of Indians, and I love Sergeant Banerjee, his now roommate and one of the only Indians in the CID. I can’t recommend this series enough!

Character Driven Canadian Procedural (TW alcoholism/ child abuse/ past suicide briefly mentioned with detail/ sexual assault/ pedophile)

the birds that stay cover imageThe Birds That Stay (A Russell and Leduc Mystery, #1) by Ann Lambert: Look at me starting at the beginning of a series! Okay, I don’t really get props since it’s the first one just released. This one did a really nice job of mixing a procedural with a character driven novel and exploring Canadian history. When an older woman is murdered in a small village north of Montreal the reader follows a few unrelated characters, with the focus on a detective and an almost sixty-year-old woman. Chief Inspector for Homicide Roméo Leduc, a divorcé with a daughter who has dropped out of college to move to another country with her boyfriend, takes the puzzling murder case which he looks into as either a robbery or possible hate crime. Also divorced is Marie Russell, a marine biologist and author, who is currently caring for her mother who has entered a stage of dementia that needs more intense care. This was a really good read for fans of watching everything come together while exploring characters’ lives, and readers who love the-past-is-coming-to-get-you mysteries. Also a great pick for fans of Lisa Jewell and Fiona Barton.

Small-Town Murder Mystery (TW attempted homophobic attack/ addiction/ pedophile/ talk of suicide)

Orient cover imageOrient by Christopher Bollen: This was a great mystery perfect for literary fans. Set in an isolated town in Long Island there’s a culture clash amongst the residents, between the locals and the new residents coming from New York and new money. There’s a war with a nearby research facility that’s surrounded by plenty of rumors. And one of the residents has brought a nineteen-year-old gay man home with him to help around the house. When the town caretaker is found dead the already heightened emotions get cranked up even higher, with many pointing a finger at the newest “resident.” A town filled with new and old rich, secrets, affairs, conservatives and liberals, and a push for a historic village, it’s only a matter of time before this small-town is no longer safe to be in…

Recent Releases

Fallen Mountains cover imageFallen Mountains by Kimi Cunningham Grant (Currently reading: Small-town mystery where the past comes calling.) (TW suicide/ domestic abuse)

A Friend is a Gift You Give Yourself by William Boyle (Crime writer I love.)

Auntie Poldi and the Vineyards of Etna by Mario Giordano, John Brownjohn (Translation) (I love Poldi’s character and can’t wait to read this one.)

The Reign of the Kingfisher by T.J. Martinson (A noir detective mixed with superhero fantasy that I’m excited to read.)

Beautiful Bad by Annie Ward (Psychological thriller.)

The Stranger Diaries by Elly Griffiths cover imageThe Stranger Diaries by Elly Griffiths (Modern gothic mystery.)

The Mystery of Black Hollow Lane (Black Hollow Lane #1) by Julia Nobel (Currently reading: middle grade mystery set in a boarding school.)

A Question of Holmes (Charlotte Holmes #4) by Brittany Cavallaro (Charlotte Holmes, the great-great-great-granddaughter of Sherlock Holmes, and Jamie Watson, the great-great-great grandson of John Watson team up once again to solve another mystery.)

Drawn and Buttered (A Lobster Shack Mystery #3) by Shari Randall (New England cozy mystery.)

Fatality in F cover imageFatality in F (Gethsemane Brown Mysteries #4) by Alexia Gordon (Fun cozy mystery starring American musician in Irish town who sees ghosts.)

Call Me Evie by J.P. Pomare (Australian psychologist thriller.)

Her Father’s Secret (Ilka #2) by Sara Blaedel (New series I’ve been looking forward to starting about a Danish woman who inherits her father’s funeral home in the U.S. and finds herself in danger.)

If You’re Out There by Katy Loutzenhiser (YA mystery.)

The Last Woman in the Forest cover imageThe Last Woman in the Forest by Diane Les Becquets (Serial killer thriller.)

The Wolf and the Watchman by Niklas Natt och Dag (Historical mystery.)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

Categories
Today In Books

Nobel Prize In Literature Returns With Two Awards: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Disney Publishing Worldwide.

Everlasting Rose cover image


The Nobel Prize in Literature Award Returns

There will be two Nobel prizes in literature awarded: One for 2018 and one for 2019–2018 having been cancelled last year after the Swedish Academy basically fell apart following rape accusations against the husband of one of its members. In order to earn back trust, the Swedish Academy, and the Nobel Foundation, have listed the steps they’ve taken and will continue to implement.

Libraries Going Green

The New York Library Association created the Sustainable Library Certification Program so that libraries who choose to participate can do their part for the environment. Lindenhurst Memorial Library is the first Long Island library to get their Green Business Partnership status and the third in the state. Read here for how they’re achieving a more green status and, ya know, maybe get some ideas to implement yourself.

The Audie Award Winners Announced

Last night at the Audies Gala, the winners for the 2019 Audie Awards were announced in 24 categories that ranged in genres including Romance and Fantasy to categories including Audiobook of the Year and Multi-Voiced Performance. Check out all the winners here, including sound clips.

Categories
Today In Books

Principal Reads Books Live On Facebook: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Penguin Random House.

We Are Okay and Hold Still ad


Principal Reads Books Live On Facebook

You can find elementary school principal Belinda George live on Facebook every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. reading a book as a bedtime story, which she calls “Tucked-in Tuesdays.” What a great way to encourage reading and make sure every kid gets tucked in with a bedtime story.

New Legal Trouble For Roger Stone

Over a book, of course. Seems Stone has a book about to publish and his legal team failed to mention it to U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson who had placed Stone, who is accused of obstruction of justice and lying to congress, under a gag order. This will continue to be a developing story.

The 2019 Women’s Prize For Fiction Longlist!

From 163 entries 16 finalists for the longlist were selected, including seven debuts and a range of genres. Immediately spotted some Rioter favorites–An American Marriage, CirceFreshwaterMy Sister, the Serial Killer–and the top of my TBR list just grew!

Categories
Today In Books

Story Land Will Have Adults Only Night: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by HQN Books.


Leave The Kiddos At Home

If you’re in New England and want a Peter Pan night of never growing up, your wish is about to come true. Saturday, June 22nd Story Land will hold a 21 and older only night from 6-9 p.m. and tickets will go on presale from March 15th-17th.

The Villains Are Coming

Serena Valentino’s Disney Villain book series will be adapted for the upcoming Disney streaming platform. Info on Book of Enchantment is still pretty scarce but Michael Seitzman is reported to be the showrunner “currently hiring writers, with a writers room slated to open in April.

The Misty Copeland Biopic Gets A Director

Based on Misty Copeland’s memoir Life in Motion: An Unlikely Ballerina, the biopic will be directed by Nzingha Stewart. Stewart, who has directed episodes of Pretty Little Liars, Grey’s Anatomy, and How to Get Away with Murder,  said “As an African American woman, I know firsthand that when Misty Copeland leaps, we all soar. As a filmmaker, I am thrilled to bring this hopeful, triumphant, and cinematic story to the big screen.” So ready the popcorn and the tissues.

Categories
Today In Books

The Baby-Sitters Are Back: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Amazon Publishing and The Fever King by Victoria Lee.


Do Your Homework And Eat Your Veggies

Ann M. Martin’s The Baby-Sitters Club will once again be adapted! This time we’re getting a ten-episode series on Netflix. “’The themes of The Baby-Sitters Club still resonate 30 years after the original book series was released and there has never been a more opportune time to tell an aspirational story about empowering young female entrepreneurs,’ said Melissa Cobb, vice president of Kids & Family at Netflix.”

Serial Box + Marvel

Serial Box, a publisher that serializes stories that read like a television series broken down into episodes but, all together, make up a season, has partnered with Marvel. So we’re going to get new original stories, not based on films or comics, for Black Panther, Black Widow, Jessica Jones, and Thor in the Serials form. Cool!

New Play Adaptation!

Erika L. Sánchez’s I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter will be a play at Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago in 2020. Isaac Gomez will write the adaptation and Sandra Marquez will direct. So exciting!

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Mila Kunis Adapting Thriller

Hello mystery fans! We survived the shortest month of the year that managed to feel as long as a year so let’s celebrate with all the linkable crime things and a weekend in the mystery bookfort. (That was a very long sentence for a very long month.)


Sponsored by Soho Crime.

Hunting Game cover imageAuthor Helene Tursten (Detective Inspector Huss series) returns with a new mystery series introducing her unforgettable heroine: hunter, fighter, and dogged police detective Embla Nyström. When two members of Embla’s party turn up dead during an annual moose hunt in rural Sweden, Embla must delve into the dark pasts of her fellow hunters in search of a killer. “Haunted, driven, immensely human . . . Embla is a winning new Scandinavian noir lead.” —BBC Culture


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Spin cover imageYA Thrillers That Put Teenagers to the Test

11 Books About Stalkers and Obsessives for Fans of “You”

L.A. Times Book Prize finalists

Men and Women – Thrillers and Mysteries

 

News And Adaptations

Heaven My Home cover imageHeaven, My Home, the next book in Attica Locke’s Highway 59 series, has a cover! My excitement for this book and the adaptation for the series has no bounds!

Mila Kunis Snaps Up TV Rights to Journalist Andrea Bartz’s New Thriller, The Lost Night

9 Thrillers & Mysteries Becoming Movies Or TV Shows In The Near Future

All the Literary References in Netflix’s YOU

True Crime

bad blood by john carreyrou cover image“She Never Looks Back”: Inside Elizabeth Holmes’s Chilling Final Months at Theranos

Criminal groups are offering $360,000 salaries to accomplices who can help them scam CEOs about their porn-watching habits

The sensational society killings that rocked L.A. — still a mystery 90 years later

San Francisco ‘Doodler’ Killer Subject Of Crime Series From UK Outfit Ugly Duckling Films

Hockey dad’s discarded napkin at rink ties him to 1993 killing in Twin Cities 25 years later

Kindle Deals

Gold of Our Fathers by Kwei Quartey coverIf you’re looking for a great detective series set in Ghana, Gold of Our Fathers (Darko Dawson #4) by Kwei Quartey is $1.99!

If you’ve ever wondered what a book written by Annie Wilkes and Norman Bates’ child would be and want to read a truly disturbing thriller, Perfect Days by Raphael Montes is $6.99! (Review) (I don’t remember all the trigger warnings but recall rape and kidnapping.)

If you want to start a mystery series that follows the teen descendants of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson, A Study in Charlotte by Brittany Cavallaro is $1.99!

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Orient cover imageI’m currently drowning in audiobooks–just like I like it–and am listening to: Orient by Christopher Bollen (A small town mixed with locals and new rich New Yorkers is rocked by a murder.);  Blanche Among the Talented Tenth by Barbara Neely (Cozy mystery); The Third Victim by Phillip Margolin (Serial killer thriller); City of Devils by Paul French (True crime set in 1930s/’40s Shanghai.).

My current print reads: Smoke and Ashes by Abir Mukherjee (I love this historical mystery series!); A Friend is a Gift You Give Yourself by William Boyle (I really like his crime writing.).

Just South of Home cover imageAnd my yay-look-at-the-galley-I-got: The Reign of the Kingfisher by T.J. Martinson (It’s a mystery book with superheroes!); Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee by Casey Cep (Nonfiction that sounds super interesting.); Just South of Home by Karen Strong (I’m in love with this cover!)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.