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Unusual Suspects

Community Focused Mysteries

Hello mystery fans! I recently finished an excellent crime audiobook that left me thinking about mysteries that are either set in communities where you get to know a lot of the residents and/or mysteries set in a community where the community itself feels like a character. So–as you’ve certainly already guessed–that’s what I’ve rounded up for you today:

deacon king kongDeacon King Kong by James McBride: Set in1969, readers are taken into the Brooklyn Cause Houses housing project, which is filled with interesting characters, many of which are known solely by their nicknames. Like Sportcoat, a church deacon who’d taught a youth baseball team, who is also known as the drunk. In front of everyone, he walks up to the known drug dealer, Deems Clemens, and shoots him.

This surprises everyone, including Sportcoat who isn’t really aware he was responsible for the shooting and ends up with a price on his head for it. We follow the members of the community–including Colombian ants (yes, the actual insects)–after the shooting and get the history of so many characters–Latinx, white, Black, Italian–bringing not only this time period and place to life, but why Sportcoat shot Clemens, along with another mystery buried somewhere in the community… I can’t recommend this one enough: the writing is exceptional, the characters are fantastic, even though the subjects seem like it would make this a heavy novel it is not at all, and the audiobook is narrated by Dominic Hoffman who you may (should!) know as Whitley’s boyfriend from A Different World.  (TW alcoholism/ slurs/ past child abuse/ suicide)

Four Rabbi Small Mysteries: Friday the Rabbi Slept Late, Saturday the Rabbi Went Hungry, Sunday the Rabbi Stayed Home, and Monday the Rabbi Took Off (The Rabbi Small Mysteries #1-4) by Harry Kemelman: This collects the first four novellas (a bit over 200 pages each) in the Rabbi Small cozy mystery series. Also set in the 1960s, but this time in the Barnard’s Crossing’s Jewish community in Massachusetts, a small-town not lacking in small-town drama, and follows Rabbi David Small. We start with Friday the Rabbi Slept Late where a nanny has been murdered and the Rabbi is trying to solve the case, while also being a suspect… This is a really good series for fans of cozy mysteries, especially if you’re looking for characters and a community we don’t get to see a lot of in mysteries. Plus, there’s 12 books in the series for a nice marathon.

cover image: title and author name with brick wall inside lettersIQ (IQ #1) by Joe Ide: Taking us to modern day, and to the side of gritty crime novels, is Ide’s series set in East Long Beach. The series starts by jumping between Isaiah Quintabe’s (a character influenced by Sherlock) childhood and his current life as a PI where he helps his community by taking on cases for whatever the person can afford (sometimes chickens!). This series currently has four novels following IQ, and his reluctant side kick of sorts, Dodson (rhymes with Watson!), and really brings to life East Long Beach’s various racial and ethnic groups to life without feeling stereotypical. This is a great series for fans of modern, gritty crime novels, Walter Mosley, and characters that aren’t just good or bad caricatures but human. (TW I would say over the course of the series it probably hits on all the major ones.)

Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line cover imageDjinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara: And for fans of standalone novels here’s one of my favorite reads of this year. It’s an adult novel, following child characters, that shines a light on underserved communities, treatment of women, and the voices ignored by those in power while keeping focus on the victims and those silenced, rather than the perpetrators. A trio of kids head out through a slum in India to find a missing classmate; Led by nine-year-old Jai, a boy who has watched so much procedural shows that he believes himself able to solve this mystery. But as more kids go missing it quickly becomes clear this is nothing like fictional PI shows and this is far from a Nancy Drew mystery. Anappara brings to life an underserved community filled with different types of people, showing their lives and desires rather than creating a trauma porn novel. If you’re an audiobook listener, I highly recommend that format as Indira Varma, Himesh Patel, and Antonio Aakeel are fantastic narrators. (TW child, domestic abuse/ child deaths)

And here are three upcoming titles (totally worth prebuy dollars/telling your library to purchase) that are very much community focused:

When No One Is Watching by Alyssa Cole: A super good suspense novel you won’t be able to put down that is set in a gentrified Brooklyn neighborhood… (TW mentions past domestic violence/ panic attacks/ past suicide mentioned, detail)

The Silence of the White City (Trilogía de la Ciudad Blanca #1) by Eva García Sáenz: This is the start to a great translated serial killer series that will take you on a tour of northern Spain’s Basque Country. (TW child murders, not graphic/ attempted suicide and suicide/ partner, child abuse/ nonviable pregnancy/ date rape/ past statutory not on page)

Winter Counts cover imageWinter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden: One of my favorite characters is Virgil Wounded Horse, a vigilante for hire living in Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, who is forced to team up with his ex-girlfriend and the FBI… (TW addiction/ mentions suicides, one with detail/ past rapes including children mentioned, not graphic/ child death/ pedophile, crimes off page/ fat shaming)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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.

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Today In Books

Antiracist Author To Head Antiracist Research At Boston University: Today In Books

Antiracist Author To Head Antiracist Research At Boston University

Certainly you’ve seen the anti-racist book lists everyone is posting amidst the ongoing demonstrations against police brutality and racial injustice. Making an appearance on all the lists I’ve seen is Ibram X. Kendi’s How to be an Antiracist. Now the scholar and author will be launching the Center for Antiracist Research at Boston University on July 1st. You can also look forward to his upcoming children’s book Antiracist Baby (that cover!), and don’t forget he has a back catalog: Stamped from the Beginning; The Black Campus Movement.

J.K. Rowling Uses Twitter To Make Transphobic Statements. Again.

You would hope J.K. Rowling would use her massive platform to help with any of the ongoing crises, but she instead decided to start by mocking a headline because it said “for people who menstruate.” This is not her first time publicly making transphobic statements. Many fans, celebrities, and organizations decried her hateful comments, explaining the harm she’s doing “preaching ‘an ideology which willfully distorts facts about gender identity and people who are trans.'” She has not apologized, but, rather, appears to want this harmful behavior to be the hill she dies on.

Comedy Women in Print Shortlist Announced

English comedian, writer, and actress Helen Lederer was fed up with the Wodehouse prize only having awarded four women the comic fiction award in twenty years. So she set up the Comedy Women in Print prize to help tackle the sexist notion that women aren’t funny. Irish writer Marian Keyes chaired this year’s judges and we now have a shortlist of seven novels vying for the award.

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Today In Books

Activist Opens Bookstore and Writing Center: Today In Books

Activist Opens Bookstore & Writing Center

Rachel Cargle–writer, academic, activist–has now added bookstore and writing center owner to her résumé. Elizabeth’s Bookshop & Writing Centre is currently an online store with a physical bookstore opening to come in Akron, Ohio, once safe following the pandemic. “A percentage of all the shop’s proceeds will benefit The Loveland Foundation, which Cargle founded in 2018 to provide therapy, mental health support, and healing resources for Black women and girls.”

Official Teaser For Lovecraft Country

The upcoming HBO series Lovecraft Country, based on the same titled novel by Matt Ruff, has a new official teaser! Created by Misha Green, with Jordan Peele as one of the executive producers, we can’t wait for August to watch this horror fantasy show.

Pandemic Fundraiser For Inclusive UK Publishers

A fundraiser to help Knights Of and Jacaranda, two independent and inclusive UK publishers, survive through the pandemic had a good week: They raised more than £100,000 last week, with 80% of the money raised going to them, and the remaining 20% to other UK indie presses.

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Today In Books

Comic Book Award Nominees Announced: Today In Books

Comic Book Award Nominees Announced

The nominees for the 2020 Eisner Awards–aiming to honor the best in the comic book industry–have been announced. While the committee to select the nominees didn’t get to spend four days together in a room pouring over the submissions (they emailed/Zoomed and read the submissions mailed and in digital format), they did still get their job done and you can now check out the full list of nominees from Best Short Story to Best Webcomic–and everything in between.

YA SFF

For fans of young adult SFF, or those looking to dip a toe in the genre, Tor has put together a nice list of new releases for June. From current day Puerto Rico to alternate 1828 Paris, there’s something for all kinds of SFF moods on this list.

Fundraising Campaigns For The Uncles Bookstores

There was some confusion recently after a New Jersey bookstore owner started a fundraiser to help the Uncles Bookstores in Minneapolis and people were concerned it may be a scam. The GoFundMe page was turned over to Don Blyly’s son to continue fundraising for the indie bookstores owned by his father, Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore and Uncle Edgar’s Mystery Bookstore, which were destroyed by fire during the protests against police brutality.

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Today In Books

Snoop Dogg Adapting Modern Sherlock: Today In Books

Snoop Dogg Adapting Modern Sherlock

Joe Ide’s IQ series–a modern day Sherlock set in East Long Beach complete with his own Watson, named Dodson–is getting the TV series adaptation treatment. And Snoop Dogg (Snoopadelic Films) is executive producing. “I don’t think I have ever seen a better match than Joe Ide and Snoop Dogg: this is going to be explosive TV at its very best.” If you’re looking for a gritty crime series to marathon catch up with the books: IQ; Righteous; Wrecked; Hi Five.

Amazon’s Current Best Seller List

While the Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality continue, there have been many calls for non-Black people to do better and to educate themselves, leading to the circulation of many anti-racist reading lists. And people are taking the step of buying books to learn about the systems that oppress Black people: “As of Wednesday, 15 of the top 20 bestselling books are about race, racism and white supremacy in the US.” Hopefully everyone is taking the next step and reading the books. (Remember if the physical book is sold out ebooks and audiobooks don’t sell out if those formats work for you.)

Kids Book Bingo Card

The Seattle Times has a beautiful, free, and fun Kids Summer Book Bingo card you can download. When you shout “bingo” (you have a horizontal, vertical, diagonal line–or the full card!) you can email them with your information for a chance to win a certificate to a local indie bookstore. Some Bingo squares include “Read it in a fort”; “About two things that seem very silly together”; “About a culture different from your own”.

Free Audiobook

The audiobook of STAMPED FROM THE BEGINNING by Ibram X. Kendi is currently available for free on Spotify.

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Unusual Suspects

Top 10 Scottish Crime Novels

Hello mystery fans! Today’s newsletter is going to be short and sweet because it’s an exhausting, heartbreaking, and extremely difficult time right now. Please take care of each other and yourself.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Thriller is Here to Stay: Exploring the Genre Post–GONE GIRL

How to Responsibly Recycle Your Ereaders

Top 10 Scottish crime novels

They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall cover imageA Round Table Discussion on Diversity in Crime Fiction

Nordic Noir Might Be TV’s Next Big Thing

Interview: Ann Dávila Cardinal clues us in on the mystery of Category Five

Rachel Howzell Hall announced a new crime book!

Enter to Win $250 to Spend at Barnes and Noble

Win a 1-year subscription to Audible!

Kindle Deals

Talk about a steal: you can prebuy Opium and Absinthe by Lydia Kang for $4.99 a month before it publishes!

For $0–ZERO–you can read a really good legal procedural: Every Reasonable Doubt (Vernetta Henderson #1) by Pamela Samuels Young (Review)

Here’s a super good YA nonfiction true crime for the ridiculous price of $2.99: The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater

Watch Now For Free

The film Just Mercy which stars Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Foxx, based on civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson’s memoir (Review), has been made available for free rental through June by Warner Bros. Pictures.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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.

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Book Radar

Watch JUST MERCY For Free and More Book Radar!

Hello book lovers! Today’s Book Radar is gonna drive on different rails–or off them–because I, Jamie Canavés (from the Unusual Suspects newsletter), will be temporarily driving this train of bookish news. It’s actually pretty quiet in the world of news that isn’t about *gestures wildly at everything * so I’m going to add in excellent Kindle deals if you’re hiding out in a bookfort, plus upcoming books I’m super excited about, what I’m reading, and I don’t have cats so you get the goat and a dinosaur.

Bookish News

Your next excellent read is definitely on this list: 2020 Lammy Winners.

“I read in Susan Orlean’s The Library Book that libraries fumigated books for public health reasons. Do they still do that?” Smithsonian Magazine’s answer.

If you’re a fan of online book clubs: Vox has chosen The Princess Bride and Jenna Bush Hager chose Megha Majumdar’s A Burning.

Richard Adams Estate Wins Back Rights To ‘Watership Down’ In English High Court Case

Warner Bros. Offers Free ‘Just Mercy’ Rentals, Encourages ‘Systemic Racism’ Education (And if you’ve yet to read the book by Bryan Stevenson I highly recommend doing that.)

Crime author Rachel Howzell Hall has sold her next mystery book and it sounds gooooood.

CrimeFest announced their Awards Nominations

 

Upcoming Books To Be Excited About–And Totally Worth The Prebuy Button/Telling Your Library To Purchase:

Alyssa Cole, who you may know from her excellent smooching books, has an upcoming thriller that is A+. And by that I mean I inhaled the book, and now have no one to talk to about it until it comes out later this year–I know boohoo for me. While I recommend knowing as little as possible about When No One Is Watching I will say it’s about a young woman in Brooklyn trying to keep her life and neighborhood together and it comes with all the suspense and way-too-real creepy vibes.

 

Winter Counts cover imageOne more mystery that has to be on your radar: Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden. We do not get many crime novels set on Native American reservations and we certainly do not get many Indigenous voices in the genre–or any area of publishing. So I was really excited to read this and not only do we get a great mystery–who is bringing drugs into the reservation?–but the characters are fantastic, starting with a vigilante for hire who gets roped into working with his ex-girlfriend and the FBI.

 

Sandhya Menon is my go-to for a feel good read that I can escape the world from. They’re not fluffy books necessarily, they deal with real problems and issues the characters struggle with, but there’s a HEA. And, more importantly for when I need her books, the characters are always trying to do good. In 10 Things I Hate About Pinky you get annoyed-by-each-other to lovers and a fainting possum. No, not like plays dead duh because that’s what possums do. It’s not very good at being a possum and it literally faints all the time, which never failed to make me laugh.

Here Are Some Kindle Deals

queen of the conqueredFor fans of fantasy, conquest, and revenge: Queen of the Conquered (Islands of Blood and Storm Book 1) by Kacen Callender is $1.99!

Love fantasy, novellas, and looking to start a series? The Empress of Salt and Fortune (The Singing Hills Cycle #1) by Nghi Vo is $3.99!

For fans of short stories and literature: Lauren Groff’s Florida is $4.99!

How about a fun and funny space opera with psychic cats?! Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes is $2.99!

And if you’ve yet to read Trevor Noah’s exceptional memoir Born a Crime it is currently $4.99 and you should run to it as it’s equally heartfelt and hilarious.

I’m currently reading:

A rare translated true crime: Magnetized: Conversations with a Serial Killer by Carlos Busqued, Samuel Rutter (Translator)

A nonfiction graphic novel: Amazons, Abolitionists, and Activists: A Graphic History of Women’s Fight for Their Rights by Mikki Kendall, A. D’Amico (Illustrator)

A romance novel: Beach Read by Emily Henry

 

And I leave you with the goat and a dinosaur:

a white dog sitting staring at an iguana

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Today In Books

How Bookstores Are Supporting The Protests: Today In Books

How Bookstores Are Supporting The Protests

Bookstores across the United States are supporting the Black Lives Matter protests over police brutality in various ways, from providing a safe haven space for protestors to donating sales to bail funds. Check out some helping bookstores and what they’re doing, along with many anti-racist reading lists.

Royal Shakespeare Company Drops Curtain For Rest Of 2020

Due to the pandemic, the U.K.’s ongoing lockdown, and social distancing advice from the government the Royal Shakespeare Company has officially cancelled or postponed all remaining 2020 performances. “The RSC said ticket buyers will be contacted by its box office staff in performance date order rotation to discuss refund and exchange options.”

Kid Lit Rally for Black Lives

Thursday June 4th at 7 p.m. EDT The Brown Bookshelf Facebook page will host a Kit Lit Rally for Black Lives, organized by Jacqueline Woodson, Kwame Alexander, and Jason Reynolds. The event will be separate forty-five minute conversations: one for young people (school-age children are welcome), and one for educators, librarians, and parents.

Free Adaptation Rental!

Warner Bros. film JUST MERCY, based on the nonfiction book by Bryan Stevenson, is available for free streaming in the month of June.

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Today In Books

Internet Archive Sued Over Free eBooks: Today In Books

Internet Archive Sued Over Free eBooks

The publishers Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, John Wiley & Sons, and Penguin Random House have joined together in a lawsuit against the Internet Archive. The suit claims copyright infringement as the Internet Archive has made scans of books available for free during the pandemic through the Open Library and National Emergency Library.

Book Inscribed by Mary, Queen of Scots

Mary, Queen of Scots’ prayer book, which she inscribed, is set to go to auction and sell for £350,000 ($432,000). The book also contains the monogram of Louise de Bourbon-Vendôme, Mary’s grand-aunt, who the book was originally made for. Take a look at some beautiful pages and Mary’s inscription.

The Bee

Grammy Award-winning jazz vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant reads Audre Lorde’s poem The Bees. (If for whatever reason you can’t watch/listen to a video right now, you can also read the poem.)

Your Next Great Read

The winners of the 32nd Lambda Literary Awards have been announced.

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Unusual Suspects

June Releases 🔪

Hello mystery fans! I’ve done my roundup of crime books releasing this month–we made it to June! There’s translated crime, mystery, thrillers, historical, some horror, and true crime. (📚= I’ve read and recommend; 📖= currently reading and enjoying.)

Seven Years of Darkness by You-Jeong Jeong: 📖 The author of The Good Son is back with a new psychological thriller! This time we have the death of a young girl in a South Korean village and three men with secrets to that night that end up in a cat and mouse game trying to reveal the murderer without giving up their own secrets…

The Guest List by Lucy Foley:  📖  This is one of those remote island Agatha Christie type books where someone will be murdered and everyone had a reason to want someone dead, and there are so many secrets–except, everyone was invited for a wedding. The point of view switches around between the wedding coordinator, the bride, her sister and so on as we race to see who is dead, how, why and by whom…

Magnetized: Conversations with a Serial Killer by Carlos Busqued, Samuel Rutter (Translator): We do not get a lot of translated true crime so this is top of my list. In the early ’80s in Buenos Aires four taxi drivers were murdered and nineteen-year-old Ricardo Melogno was sentenced to prison. Now Carlos Busqued has put together the documents and newspaper articles from the case along with his interviews with Melogno, who despite having already served his entire sentence is perpetually incarcerated.

Category FiveCategory Five cover image by Ann Dávila Cardinal: This is the sequel to Five Midnights (Review) which was a great mashup of a YA mystery novel and horror. Lupe, Javier, and Marisol are once again unraveling mysterious murders in Puerto Rico, this time after hurricane Maria…

I Killed Zoe Spanos by Kit Frick: This one comes with comps for Sadie and Serial since it’s a mystery mixed with a podcast. Anna Cicconi moves to a small village for a nanny job and finds that she bears an eerie resemblance to a local missing girl, Zoe. When Zoe is found murdered Anna is charged with the crime but a local teen with a podcast decides to look into this strange case…

Who Killed Berta Caceres?: Dams, Death Squads, and an Indigenous Defender’s Battle for the Planet by Nina Lakhani: Honduran indigenous leader Berta Cáceres was murdered after leading a successful campaign to stop construction on a river sacred to her Lenca people. Even though state security officials, employees of the dam company, and hired hitmen were found guilty of murder many questions remained over who paid and ordered for Cáceres’ murder.

The Amelia Six by Kristin L. Gray: A middle grade whodunit following 11-year-old Amelia Ashford who is spending the night with five girls she doesn’t know in Amelia Earhart’s childhood home. When Earhart’s goggles go missing and someone gets sick the girls band together to solve these mysteries…

Love and Other Criminal Behavior cover imageLove and Other Criminal Behavior by Nikki Dolson: 📖 I really liked Dolson’s noir novel All Things Violent (Review) so I obviously did all the gimme gimme hands for these bite sized short stories about, well, when love goes awry and/or leads to people taking extreme violent/criminal actions, from neighborhood friends to boxers. If you’re a fan of the grittier side of crime and are having trouble focusing on reading lately this is a great read.

Home Before Dark by Riley Sager: A new thriller with nods to the horror genre from Sager. This time we follow Maggie Holt as she returns to the Victorian estate her father once wrote a horror memoir about…

Vera Kelly Is Not A Mystery (Vera Kelly #2) by Rosalie Knecht: Vera Kelly is back! This time she has left the CIA and become a PI, reluctantly. This is a great historical mystery series that is unlike the others in many ways and I highly recommend it, especially for fans of character driven novels.

You Can’t Catch Me by Catherine McKenzie: 📖 McKenzie’s mysteries always have a combination of things that just suck me right in. This time I’ve got a woman who escaped a cult in her teens, the aftermath of public shaming, a con woman…

Dark August by Katie Tallo: Augusta (Gus) Monet returns to her hometown when her great grandmother leaves her her home in her will. There Gus discovers a trunk with old case files from her deceased and disgraced detective mother. Gus obviously starts digging…

Don’t Turn Around by Jessica Barry:  A suspense novel following two strangers on a midnight trip across Texas to New Mexico find themselves being hunted–but by who and which one of them are they after?…

Not a Gentleman's Work cover imageNot a Gentleman’s Work: A Gruesome Murder and the Long Road to Justice by Gerard Koeppel: A sailing ship with twelve people on board in 1896 arrived to their destination with only nine still alive, three having been brutally murdered…

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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.