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Unusual Suspects

Short And Long Crime Reads

Hello mystery fans! This week I thought I’d offer you a short read and a long read, depending on where your 2020 brain is at and what it needs.

Ghost Detective by Zachary Muswagon

This is a gem of a mystery, but heads up that it seems to only be available in audiobook in the U.S. However, that is the format I would highly recommend it in.

It starts with a bear and a crow having a discussion/argument that ends with the bear sending the crow to a man, Billy. We then meet Billy as he thinks he’s waking from a terrible night of falling off the wagon because it is the only thing that would explain his strange state and his inability to remember the previous night. But in fact the crow is his spirit guide because Billy has been murdered. I know!

Billy has to figure out why he’s stuck from moving on and who murdered him. Enter his cousin Dale who makes Billy figure out a way to talk to him through his Bluetooth, and his aunt Tina who sees and talks to spirits. We get taken into life on an unnamed reservation where many of the threats to Native Americans can be behind Billy’s death including an oil company and a gang. Will Billy–with help from the crow, his cousin, and aunt–be able to figure out who murdered him and more importantly find the forgiveness needed to pass on?

The Ghost Detective is a quick read packed with humor and heart that reminds readers of the voices missing in the crime genre. It also opens the door for it to become a series and yes, please. (TW alcoholism/ brief child abuse/ mentions song about rape, no detail/ fat shaming/ past child cancer deaths, not graphic)

The Searcher by Tana French

For those who are unaware of Tana French, she has a great police procedural series–each book can be read as a standalone novel–following detectives on the Dublin Murder Squad. She also has a standalone suspense murder mystery, The Witch Elm, and now The Searcher, a second standalone, which is a slow burn, possible missing persons mystery.

If you like procedurals, character driven stories, and want a faster pace, you want her Dublin Murder Squad books. If you want to sink deep into a life and have a murder mystery filled with suspense, you want The Witch Elm. If you want to be plunged into a life in a tiny town that is a slow burn possible missing person case, you want The Searcher. I love all her books and feel like a main theme is they should have a trigger warning for men. And by that I mean, if you think about the male leads, they are presented as “nice guys” but they’re kind of terrible.

Case in point: in The Searcher we meet Cal Hooper, a retired American detective, who is divorced and a father to an adult woman. He has a not-great relationship with his ex and his daughter, and he retired pretty young from the police force. He wants to have a better relationship with his wife and is certainly trying to have a good relationship with his daughter, so naturally he moves alone to a remote village in rural Ireland to work on those things while they are in the U.S. You see what I mean? And why did he retire early you wonder? Because he was coming to understand the Black Lives Matter movement and it was too difficult for him to wade through all of it to make any kind of decision, so retiring early seemed the best plan. You see!

Welcome to the life we’re plunged into. And by that I mean this was one of the few books this year that truly transported me out of the hellscape we are in and took me somewhere else. Cal may have moved away from all his problems but as he will soon discover, life is hard no matter where you go, and you’re going to have to make tough decisions, buddy! His comes in the form of a young teen named Trey who he keeps catching lurking around his property as he tries to fix the cottage. Trey is like a stray that will not leave and will not give up and forces Cal to do something about his inability to make hard decisions because Trey is convinced their brother did not pack up and leave, and Cal, being a detective and all, has to be able to help.

Problem is, small towns aren’t real big on outsiders to start with let alone ones that show up and start poking their nose into a mystery they claim isn’t a mystery… If you like slow unraveling mysteries, character studies, excellent writing, and want to live in rural Ireland while getting to know the locals (and all their gossip and secrets) this one is for you. I find myself once again longing for the next Tana French–always my feeling as I turn the last page of one of her crime books. (TW brief mention suicide, detail/ domestic violence discussed, not graphic or on page/ animal deaths, cruelty, hunting/ mentions fake rape rumor, no detail/ child abuse off page, results detailed)


Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. 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.

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

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Today In Books

Nominate Someone For A Lifetime Of Free Books: Today In Books

Nominate Someone For A Lifetime Of Free Books

Yes, you read that correctly. The London bookshop Heywood Hill is currently running a giveaway through November 8th where you nominate a person you’d like to see win Heywood Hill’s personalized monthly book subscription. The winner, anywhere in the world, will be sent one hardcover book selected just for them every single month for life. All you have to do is fill out your name, email, and the person’s name who you’re entering in the giveaway.

New Chinese Bookstore Has M.C. Escher Effect

Shanghai-based architecture firm X+Living designed the new Dujiangyan Zhongshuge in Chengdu and it’s like stepping into a bookstore that is inside of M.C. Escher’s art thanks to black flooring and mirrored ceilings. Seriously, check out the images.

White Supremacist Governor’s Name Removed From Library Branch

The Charlotte, North Carolina public library system took an audit last year of its 20 branches looking to identify racism and injustices in their displays. Among the 10 they identified was the actual name of The Morrison Regional Library, named after former North Carolina Gov. Cameron Morrison who was a leader of a vigilante group promoting white supremacy tactics to scare Black people to not vote. The library’s new name will be SouthPark Regional Library.

How to Improve Your Reading Comprehension as an Adult

We’ve gathered some tips on how to improve your reading comprehension as an adult, based on recent research around the subject.

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Today In Books

Oprah’s Book Pick Is 7 Books This Time: Today In Books

Oprah’s Book Pick Is Seven Books This Time

To meet the current unprecedented times, Oprah Winfrey has done things a bit different than her usual book club recommendation, going with seven selections she calls “The Books That See Me Through.” The books she found to “comfort, inspire, and enlighten” include James Baldwin’s essay collection The Fire Next Time, Joy Harjo’s edited anthology When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry, Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Between The World And Me, Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon, and Mary Oliver’s poetry collection Devotions. Rather than Apple TV interviews, she’ll talk about the books on Instagram, and as of now there is no timeline for future book club picks.

The Dry Film Adaptation Trailer

Jane Harper’s The Dry film adaptation now has a trailer! Starring Eric Bana as Federal Agent Aaron Falk, who returns to his small town to investigate a murder-suicide of a childhood friend, the film is set to premiere in Australia on January 1st. We’ll have to wait, but don’t worry: there is an International release plan, the dates just haven’t been revealed yet.

New CW Batwoman Will Make Comic Debut

When Ruby Rose, the lead actress playing Batwoman, left the CW series, DC and CW decided that, rather than replacing her as Kate Kane, they would create a new Batwoman to cast. And now we’ll be seeing Javicia Leslie as Ryan Wilder, a character who will make her comic debut tomorrow in Batgirl #50.

10 Recent Books by Asian American Poets

Don’t miss reading these powerful and poignant books by Asian American poets engaging their diverse backgrounds in diverse ways.

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Today In Books

Nominate Someone For A Lifetime Of Free Books: Today In Books

Nominate Someone For A Lifetime Of Free Books

Yes, you read that correctly. The London bookshop Heywood Hill is currently running a giveaway through November 8th where you nominate a person you’d like to see win Heywood Hill’s personalized monthly book subscription. The winner, anywhere in the world, will be sent one hardcover book selected just for them every single month for life. All you have to do is fill out your name, email, and the person’s name who you’re entering in the giveaway.

New Chinese Bookstore Has M.C. Escher Effect

Shanghai-based architecture firm X+Living designed the new Dujiangyan Zhongshuge in Chengdu and it’s like stepping into a bookstore that is inside of M.C. Escher’s art thanks to black flooring and mirrored ceilings. Seriously, check out the images.

White Supremacist Governor’s Name Removed From Library Branch

The Charlotte, North Carolina public library system took an audit last year of its 20 branches looking to identify racism and injustices in their displays. Among the 10 they identified was the actual name of The Morrison Regional Library, named after former North Carolina Gov. Cameron Morrison who was a leader of a vigilante group promoting white supremacy tactics to scare Black people to not vote. The library’s new name will be SouthPark Regional Library.

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Today In Books

Parents Threaten Lawsuit Over THE POET X: Today In Books

Parents Threaten Lawsuit Over The Poet X

Lake Norman Charter School in North Carolina has had The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo on the freshman reading list for two years. Now a group of parents, who already have the option to select a different book for their children, want to ban the book completely. The coming of age story about a Latina teen finding her voice is being accused of being “intimidating, hostile, and offensive” by parents, one of which has threatened to sue the school if they do not remove the book.

Read Jane Austen’s Novel In Her Own Handwriting

A version of Jane Austen’s Lady Susan, an epistolary novella, is now available to purchase with the text in her handwriting. It’s a reproduction of the only known surviving fictional draft in her handwriting, which is located at the Morgan Library & Museum.

The Worst Best Man Sells Film Rights

While there will be a wait, here’s great news for fans of romcoms: The Worst Best Man by Mia Sosa has sold its film rights to Project X Entertainment. Imagine being a successful wedding planner and the groom running away on your wedding day! It gets worse: you then have to work with the best man who you blame for the whole thing.

Short Story Collections: 8 Books That Are One of a Kind

Sample an author’s work with some exceptional short story collections, including Alone Together: Love, Grief, and Comfort in the Time of COVID-19 Edited by Jennifer Haupt.

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Unusual Suspects

The 31 Best Thriller Books Of All Time

Hello mystery fans! It is me with your mystery links, news, Kindle deals, what to watch, and a little bit of my current reading.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Tiffany D. Jackson and the “Stress” of It All

How I Learned to Stop Being Sexist and Love Miss Marple

Trick or Treat for Democracy: Thriller Writers Unite to Help DEMS Win Big! (Text banking with 10 award winning crime writers.)

Know My Name cover image

Know Our Names: Chanel Miller Shatters Stigma for Asian American Survivors

12 Mystery Novels Featuring Black, Indigenous, and POC Protagonists

Murder, She Wrote: An inside look at Agatha Christie’s pop culture reign, 100 years after her first book

The 31 Best Thriller Books Of All Time (Good Luck Getting a Peaceful Night’s Sleep Again!)

Land of Shadows cover image: sunrise LA city image blended into a dark street image with a silhouette of a person walking

Rachel Howzell Hall’s LA detective series, Detective Elouise Norton, sold the rights to Lionsgate Television!!!!!!!!!

In Virtual Event, Bouchercon 2020 Picks Year’s Best

The Flight Attendant’ Trailer: Kaley Cuoco Returns to TV in HBO Max Murder Mystery

PW Talks to Walter Mosley

Watch Now

Netflix: Rebecca, based on Daphne du Maurier’s same titled Gothic novel, stars Lily James, Armie Hammer, and Kristin Scott Thomas. If you need some suspense in your life–and really, what better time is there than October to watch something Gothic–here’s the trailer.

Kindle Deals

The Lady Killer cover image

The Lady Killer by Masako Togawa, Simon Grove

For fans of Japanese crime novels, and a little bit of bananapants reads, here’s one for $1.99! (Review) (TW suicide/ child death/ attempted rape/ eating disorder)

City of the Lost cover image

City of the Lost (Casey Duncan Novels Book 1) by Kelley Armstrong

If you like procedurals but want it to have a unique slant, and love remote settings, this one is for you! And the start to this great thriller series is $4.99. (TW suicide/ pedophile/ stalking/ rape/ domestic abuse)

A Bit Of My Recent Reading

I recently finished reading Tess Sharpe’s The Girls I’ve Been (January 26th), and it is fantastic and I can’t stop thinking about it. I’ve been a fan of Sharpe’s crime novels for a bit, and my enthusiasm and expectations for this were high; she delivered in spades. If you’re a fan of Sadie and No Exit, I’d go ahead and make sure your library is going to get this one or preorder it–Future You will very much thank Past You. The quick gist is that a bank robbery goes terribly wrong with three 17-year-olds inside–two best friends and two dating–and they decide they have to do something to get out of the hostage situation. What almost no one knows is that one of them was raised by a conwoman and all of that knowledge is about to get put to the test. I love SO much about this thriller, including that Sharpe stepped right over every single trope and went in a different direction. It’s absolutely already one of my favorite books of 2021. (TW child, domestic, and partner abuse/ attempted child sexual assault)

And my current audiobook listens (attempts at a break from everything): The Falling in Love Montage by Ciara Smyth which is a fantastic YA romance with the best character voice from the first page. It has depth, dealing with a terminally ill mother and a father moving on, while also being hilarious and light as two teens decide to do cliché romcom dates over a summer. And my current Libro.fm listen is You Had Me At Hola by Alexis Daria which I’ve been milking for a while because I don’t want it to end. I get so few Latinas (and hilarious primas) in romcoms, and it’s funny, thoughtful, and sweet.

And yes, I know you’re here for crime, so back to crime. Here are two 2021 releases I just got my grabby hands early copies for, which I literally could not be more excited for: Dial A For Aunties by Jesse Q Sutanto and the sequel to The Missing American, Sleep Well, My Lady by Kwei Quartey. Pretty sure these will be my weekend reading.


Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. 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.

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

BECOMING Memoir Editor Starts Own Independent Publishing Firm: Today In Books

Becoming Editor Starts Own Independent Publishing Firm

Molly Stern edited Michelle Obama’s memoir, Becoming, when she was at Crown and also worked with Sarah Jessica Parker to launch her imprint. Now Stern has founded her own independent publishing firm, Zando, with the first list of releases scheduled for fall 2021.

Obama & Bill Gates Rec’d Book Retold As Graphic Novel

If you’re a follower of book recommendations by readers like Barack Obama and Bill Gates, you’ve probably heard of Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind Book by Yuval Noah Harari. Now the book, based on Harari’s lectures at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, will get a graphic novel treatment: Sapiens: A Graphic History: The Birth of Humankind (Vol. 1).

Gideon the Ninth Author Signs 5 Book Deal

For fans of Tamsyn Muir’s trilogy of books–which begins with Gideon the Ninth and will complete next year–there’s much to celebrate as Muir has signed a five-book deal with Tordotcom Publishing. The six-figure deal includes three novellas and two novels.

The Top 10 Batman Villains

Batman’s villains are almost as vast and well known as the caped crusader himself. Let’s look at some of the best Batman villains he’s faced.

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Today In Books

5-Year-Old Writes Book To Help Kids Get Through Pandemic: Today In Books

5-Year-Old Writes Book To Help Kids Get Through Pandemic

With the help of his father, five-year-old Wade Williams wrote the book he wanted to help kids through the pandemic. Wanting to encourage safe practices during the pandemic and give hope, Wade Through the Pandemic details Wade’s experiences–from his grandmother getting COVID-19 to his baby sister being born.

Latinx Kidlit Book Festival

Mark your calendars and call your favorite sofa seat because Las Musas, collective of women and non-binary Latinx authors writing children and YA, are hosting their first Latinx Kidlit Book Festival December 4-5th which will livestream on Facebook and YouTube. Already scheduled is a Draw Off, kids asking Elizabeth Acevedo questions, a roundtable discussion with LGBTQ+ Latinx Writers, horror, Gabby Rivera on her superhero, and so much more. Seriously it’s a jam-packed schedule of amazing Latinx talent with fantastic events and panels.

HBO Max’s The Flight Attendant Adaptation Trailer

Chris Bohjalian’s thriller The Flight Attendant was adapted into a series for HBO Max starring Kaley Cuoco. And the Nov. 26th premiering series–about a flight attendant who wakes up next to her one-night stand murdered and needs to figure out who did that–has a trailer.

9 Diverse Memoirs You Should Add to Your Reading List

Looking to read more diverse memoirs? Here’s a list of memoirs, written by authors from all over the world, and all walks of life.

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Unusual Suspects

Historical & Remote Mystery For Escape Reading

Hi mystery fans! This week I have for you a historical fiction with two mysteries and a snowed in mystery (avalanche!) where someone(s) is a murderer. Both should, in different ways, offer you escapes from everything right now.

Death in the East (Sam Wyndham #4) by Abir Mukherjee

This is a great historical series that follows a former Scotland Yard detective, Sam Wyndham, now leading a police force in British ruled Calcutta. And in this story we get to see him as a young constable in 1905 London in between the current 1922 chapters where Wyndham has traveled to an ashram where he plans to finally battle his opium addiction.

The past chapters in East London take you through his life, his relationship with a woman he fell in love with and was forced to break up with, and her murder that he finds himself needing to solve. The current chapters take you into an ashram led by an Englishman who converted to Hinduism and who is a monk offering a detox plan: one that we get to watch Wyndham go through. But this is a mystery series that does a great job of balancing character–and development–with solving crimes, so both past and present chapters have murder mysteries that will eventually collide…

A lot of series keep the lead character the same throughout, and that offers comfort in a way of always knowing what you’re getting, but I also love watching characters grow and change, which is something we get to see with Wyndham. This is a great historical mystery series that offers much of what fans of the genre look for while also being unique and fresh. Really recommend picking up A Rising Man if you’ve yet to start this series.

And for fans of Sergeant Surendranath Banerjee, you’ll have to wait most of the book for him but it’ll be worth the wait, plus I appreciate the author not forcing something that would have been unlikely. (TW domestic abuse, mostly alluded, not graphic or on page but throughout/ anti-Semitism/ mentions being suicidal in past, no detail)

One by One by Ruth Ware

I’ve read all of Ruth Ware’s mystery books because I always enjoy them, and I like that she changes the type of mystery from book to book. My first and favorite read has remained The Woman In Cabin 10 and now One by One has slid into second place–I am clearly a sucker for a remote mystery.

This one is for fans of Agatha Christie who want the And Then There Were None story set today. Basically you have a chalet where a tech company’s stakeholders have gathered for skiing and fighting over the company’s next step. As the title suggests, one by one they will start to die. There will also be an avalanche trapping the two chalet caretakers in with the guests who survived the avalanche…

If you listen to audiobooks I’d 100% go with that format as the narrator, Imogen Church, had me sold and invested in the characters’ inner thoughts, drama, and fear. This is the kind of book that, for me, offers an escape from the current world by sucking me in with a high stakes, page turning, what-is-happening plot, while also not being believable enough to make me fearful in real life. Ware also struck a good balance for me, which I find crucial in books where people are going to die, that you have a healthy dose of like and dislike to care enough to turn the page, but not be traumatized by the offings. (TW mentions past child abuse, not graphic/ discussion of possible suicide/ past attempted sexual assault briefly recounted, not graphic)


Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. 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, 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

Teaser Trailer For THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD: Today In Books

Teaser Trailer For The Underground Railroad

In exciting trailer news: we now have a teaser for the adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Underground Railroad, being adapted by Barry Jenkins into an Amazon limited series. Grab a few popcorn kernels and watch the first look teaser.

Masked Romance Covers On Apparel For Our Times

Yes, it is weird to be excited for an awesome line of merchandise that has printed romance covers with the leads wearing masks, but find your joy where you can during this pandemic. In this case, The Ripped Bodice, the only exclusively romance bookstore on the West Coast, has a great line of tees, hoodies, and masks perfect for romance lovers: The Ripped Bodice Mask Up! Swag, #2.

Jimmy Patterson Books Imprint Drops All Non Collab Authors But Patterson

The Jimmy Patterson Books imprint at Little, Brown began in 2016 publishing books by Patterson and collaborators, and also authors not collaborating with Patterson. The imprint however has decided to change focus and no longer publish books that aren’t by Patterson or in collaboration with him. Authors not fitting in that category are moving to the Little, Brown Books for Young Readers imprint.

Comics A-Z: History from First Ladies to Justice

This Comics A-Z deep dive is going back into time. We’re talking history, comics style. Let’s look at these comics, from First Ladies to Justice.