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Unusual Suspects

A Don’t Miss Dark Procedural Series đŸ”Ș

Hello mystery fans! I recently finished Mindhunter season 2 so I thought I’d round up some great reads for fans of the show. But don’t worry, this is spoiler free, and if you haven’t seen the show yet there’s other reasons to enjoy these books. Plus, I’ve also got some recent releases for you.

Set During The Atlanta Child Murders (TW child abuse/ child murders)

Leaving Atlanta cover imageLeaving Atlanta by Tayari Jones: The second season of Mindhunter explores the real Atlanta Child Murders where a serial killer was kidnapping and murdering Black children in Atlanta, which is also the backdrop of this novel set in Atlanta during 1979. Jones brilliantly follows three middle school children as they deal with their own life problems–parents’ divorce, navigating social situations at school, crushes–while also bringing to life what it’s like to live in a place and time where everyone is beginning to be on high alert when they’re already dealing with other problems. Jones, like Jane Harper and Attica Locke, vividly makes the setting as important as a character. She shows us this period in time through the eyes of children who are trying to figure out their own stuff and the behavior of the adults around them. This is especially a must-read for fans of novels that walk the line between literary and crime, and are always seeking excellent writing. And if you’re an audiobook listener it has three excellent narrators for the children, and each has their own section, told in first, second, and third person.

Dark, Fictional Serial Killer + Procedural (TW kidnapping/ domestic violence/ child rape, death, murder/ alcoholism/ graphic violence)

The Vanishing Season cover imageEllery Hathaway Series by Joanna Schaffhausen: This series has two books out so far with a third releasing in 2020: The Vanishing Season; No Mercy; All the Best Lies. Like Mindhunter you get dark cases, serial killers, law enforcement partnership, an FBI profiler, and a side plot revolving around adoption. I inhaled the first two books in the series as the characters and their dynamics are great while the books also have you on the edge of your seat as the main character, Ellery Hathaway, is usually in danger. It’s not just that her job as a police officer is dangerous but also that she was a survivor of a child serial killer. She ends up partnering with the FBI profiler who saved her so many years before–and has since written a book about her… This is a don’t-miss series for fans of fictional serial killers, dark procedurals, and women who don’t quit. (I went light on plot details so as not to spoil anything between the books.)

True Crime (TW rape)

The Grim Sleeper cover imageThe Grim Sleeper: The Lost Women of South Central by Christine Pelisek: We circle back again to a real serial killer that hunted victims (for two decades) that police and society usually don’t care about, like the focus of season 2 of Mindhunter. Christine Pelisek was the reporter who broke the story and named the Los Angeles serial killer–who murdered Black women and left their bodies in alleys–“The Grim Sleeper” because of a break in time between attacks. Here Pelisek takes you into the case, trial, and more importantly gives voice to the victims and their families.

Recent Releases

Three-Fifths cover imageThree-Fifths by John Vercher (Very excited about indie press Polis’ new crime imprint Agora Books and their first release! You can read more about it here.)

The Vanished Bride (Brontë Sisters Mystery #1) by Bella Ellis (I absolutely adored this historical mystery that reimagines the Brontë sisters as detectors looking for a missing woman.) (TW domestic violence/ addiction/ alludes to past statutory rape)

 

The Nanny cover imageThe Nanny by Gilly Macmillan (TBR: Return home, past-mystery thriller!)

The Chestnut Man by SĂžren Sveistrup (Dark serial killer thriller I’m looking forward to reading, by the creator of the Danish show The Killing which was later adapted into the AMC show.)

Mycroft and Sherlock: The Empty Birdcage (Mycroft Holmes and Sherlock #3) by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Anna Waterhouse (The basketball star continues his brother duo mystery series for Sherlock Holmes fans!)

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 CanavĂ©s.

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

Team Of Librarians Solving What’s-The-Title Mysteries: Today In Books

Team Of Librarians Solving What’s The Title?

I feel like all you need to know to want to read this article is: “But 20 librarians from the New York Public Library were seated in the room—and they were there to crack mysteries. Their tools were a whiteboard, a marker, a series of screens, and a metal bell of the sort you’d find on a hotel-lobby desk. Whenever it dinged, it meant a case had been closed.” Librarians are awesome and you can read about this team solving “what’s the title” book mysteries here.

New Book Details The Harvey Weinstein Investigation

The New York Times reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey’s book, She Said, details how they started with a few interviews that ended up turning into a full investigation into Harvey Weinstein’s predatory behavior. CNN talks about some of the revelations in the book, including the main sources for the original article.

Chicago Rapper Launches Awesome Book Club

Twenty-seven-year-old Chicago rapper Noname (Fatimah Nyeema Warner) has launched a book club to “highlight progressive work from writers of color and writers within the LGBTQ community.” The first two books chosen in August were Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire and We Are Never Meeting in Real Life by Samantha Irby. Read more about the book club and Noname’s bookish life here.

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Today In Books

Harry Potter Lego Castle Built By David Beckham: Today In Books

Harry Potter Lego Castle Built By David Beckham

According to Victoria (Posh Spice) Beckham’s social media posts, David Beckham recently sat down to build the Harry Potter Lego castle for his daughter Harper, who is “obsessed with Harry Potter.” But like most Lego builders know, sometimes you need a good chunk of time to build such things. Check out how long it’s taken and Victoria’s funny posts here.

Romance For RAICES

Romance authors and community members are holding a silent auction to help raise money for RAICES (Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services) and The Young Center. You can check out the items to bid on here–including Ripped Bodice gift cards, foodie crawls, signed books–and/or you can directly donate. So far they’ve raised $11,535.00!

A Look At Trade Shows Accommodations And Lack Of For People With Disabilities

Publishers Weekly took a dive into how accessible events, from ALA conferences to BookExpo, are for people with disabilities since it appears that, even with the Americans with Disabilities Act in place since the 90s, only recently did bookish trade shows and events start implementing accessibility. “Disability is too often excluded in discussions of diversity. But disability crosses racial, gender, sexuality, class, and national boundaries. People need to speak up, and the publishing industry needs to listen,” says the owner of Neverending Bookshop, Annie Carl.

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Today In Books

The Word Leprechaun Not Native Irish: Today In Books

The Word Leprechaun Not Native Irish

According to scholars it seems that the word “leprechaun” is not a native Irish word. Scholars found that even though “leipreachĂĄn” has been an Irish word for a long time, “Luperci” is the word it came from and that goes back to Roman festivals. Please further nerd out with me with all the info here.

A Discovery of Witches Season 2 Is Coming!

Deborah Harkness’ trilogy about witches and vampires and demons living among us was adapted and aired on Sky One in 2018 before coming to the States in 2019. Anyone who watched the first season has been desperately waiting/hoping for a second season. And now we have news: It’s currently filming and will air on Sky One in early 2020. Everything we know so far is here.

Method Man Wants To Join Marvel Universe

Method Man, rapper turned actor, is using Instagram to plead for a role in the Marvel Universe. Not just any role, he wants to play Lucas Bishop who was last seen on screen in X-Men: Days of Future Past.

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Today In Books

Spend The Night In A Library In Wales: Today In Books

Spend The Night In A Library In Wales

Gladstone’s Library, located in a small village in north Wales, offers overnight stays! Which it has done since 1906. Learn all about it, and check out this writer’s amazing experience, here.

The Handmaid’s Tale Sequel Also Getting Adaptation

This seemed so obvious to happen that it felt like news we already knew: Margaret Atwood’s The Testaments, publishing next week and set 15 years after The Handmaid’s Tale, will be adapted by MGM TV and Hulu. Get all the details, including Atwood’s statement, here.

Libraries Are Beautiful Things

Des Moines Public Library partnered with the Des Moines Parks and Recreation Department to host monarch tagging events on the 12th, 16th, and 17th of this month. “Families will get a chance to learn more about ‘the king of butterflies,’ the environmental cues they use to know when it’s time to travel, and what mysteries still surround their annual treks.”

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Unusual Suspects

Win the Best Mystery/Thrillers of the Year So Far!

Hello mystery fans! It’s that time of week where I send you off into the weekend with some interesting things I think you may like to read/know about. Also, some Kindle deals, true crime (some nonviolent), and some September premiering TV shows that mystery/crime fans may want to watch.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Lost Man cover imageWin the Best Mystery/Thrillers of the Year So Far!

Quiz: Your Perfect Thriller Series

7 Thrillers Coming Out In Autumn 2019 In The UK

Top 5 crime-fiction books to look forward to in September

All of Ruth Ware’s Books in Order

Attica Locke, Novelist and TV Writer, Has Some Suggestions for Hollywood

True Crime

Just Mercy cover imageJUST MERCY Official Trailer! (Adapted from Bryan Stevenson’ memoir)

The Hustle Behind Hustlers How do you make a film about scamming rich white men in an industry run by rich white men? First step: Get J.Lo to sign on.

A Mindhunter Fan Put the Charles Manson Scene Side-By-Side With an Actual 1981 Interview

bad blood by john carreyrou cover imageIt’s time to talk about James Mattis’s involvement with the Theranos scandal

Kerri Rawson On Stepping Out Of The Shadow Of Her Serial Killer Father

A Plagiarism Scandal Shakes Up the True-Crime Podcast World

Victim in Brock Turner Stanford sexual assault case goes public with her name and memoir

Kindle Deals

The Impossible Girl by Lydia KangIf you’re looking for a historical mystery: The Impossible Girl by Lydia Kang is $0.99! (Review)

If you’re looking for a Jamaican and Scottish crime solving team: Murder in Montego Bay (A Preddy and Harris Investigation Book 1) by Paula Lennon is $4.96!

 

September TV You May Want To Check Out

Stumptown vol 1 cover imageStumptown is an adaptation of a graphic novel and stars Cobie Smulders, a Marine vet P.I. It premieres September 25 on ABC. Check out the fantastic trailer here.

Prodigal Son, while not an adaptation, sounds like it’d be great for procedural and fictional serial killer fans to check out. It follows a criminal psychologist with a serial killer father! It’ll premiere on Fox on September 23rd and you can check out Michael Sheen as a serial killer in the trailer here.

And Evil is for fans of mysteries and horror–and fans of Robert and Michelle King who brought us The Good Wife and The Good Fight. It follows a psychologist, contractor, and a Catholic priest in training as “they investigate the church’s backlog of unexplained mysteries.” !! You can check out the trailer here and it’ll premiere on CBS September 26th.

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 CanavĂ©s.

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

CRAZY RICH ASIANS Co-Writer Quits: Today In Books

Crazy Rich Asians Co-Writer Quits

Coming at you with nothing-has-changed news: It looks like pay disparity caused the Crazy Rich Asians adaptation co-writer, Adele Lim, to walk away from the sequel. “She declined to provide specific figures, but sources say that Warner Bros.’ starting offers were $800,000 to $1 million for Chiarelli and $110,000-plus for Lim.” More details here.

We’re Getting A Shuri Novel!

The brilliant, hilarious, and overall awesome Blank Panther character Shuri is getting her very own novel! The middle-grade book, Shuri: A Black Panther Novel, will be written by Nic Stone and release in 2020. Click here for more on this book and those to follow in the Scholastic and Marvel original stories series.

Fun With AI

First, A.V. Club played with Adam King’s Talk To Transformer–an OpenAI created to continue stories–by feeding it erotic fiction. Now, Bustle decided to try feeding it first lines from six famous works of literature to see how it would continue the story. So I freaked out at AI saying, “If my mother was dead, I was her ghost,” and scratched my head at, “Then, cut the tomatoes into a circle shape, and then a square shape, in the shape of a ‘E’, and then a ‘A’. You should get a total of 7 tomatoes.”

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Today In Books

Excerpt from THE TESTAMENTS by Margaret Atwood: Today In Books

Excerpt from The Testaments by Margaret Atwood

Thirty-four years after the release of The Handmaid’s Tale, the sequel–already short-listed for the Booker Prize for Fiction–will publish on September 10th. Can’t wait even one more week? Here’s an excerpt! Or you can pre-buy The Testament–which Amazon shipped out early causing a lot of upset.

Hell Of A Story, Hell Of A Cast

The trailer for the film adaptation of Bryan Stevenson’s memoir looks amazing! Starring Michael B. Jordan, Jamie Foxx and Captain Marvel–er, Brie Larson, the film tells the true story of a young lawyer’s fight for justice. Have all the popcorn ready for its December release and watch the trailer here!

Bye Bye Bye

In great news: As of September 1st the Detroit Public Library system is eliminating overdue fines! While not applicable to damaged or lost items it will also erase past overdue fines. “Fine free is a growing trend in American libraries, resulting in increased visits and circulation. With no fines, the Detroit Public Library will be more accessible and welcoming than ever before.”

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Unusual Suspects

Hawai’i Mystery đŸ”Ș

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a mystery set in Hawai’i that I loved, a Swedish novel about a P.I. that I found really interesting, and a bunch of women at a retreat where things are gonna go real wrong!

Hawai’i Mystery (TW addiction/ sick parent/ past stalking incident mentioned)

Iced in Paradise cover imageIced in Paradise (A Leilani Santiago Hawai’i Mystery) by Naomi Hirahara: This was so good and I really hope there is a lot more to come. Leilani Santiago moves back to Hawai’i, after living in San Francisco for years, to help out her family. She’s working in their shave ice shack and mostly trying to figure out where she wants to be and what exactly she wants to be doing. The “what” gets answered for her when her dad, who she has a difficult relationship with, is accused of murdering the man found dead in their business. Of course she starts trying to figure out what happened, and not because she automatically thinks her dad is innocent, she isn’t so sure. This was such a a great mystery read that is filled with family, culture, food–and if you didn’t already want to go to Hawai’i you certainly will now. I think this one works really well for fans of cozy mysteries but also for those who shy away from cozy mysteries thinking they’re too slow.

Interesting P.I. In Sweden (TW past self harm/ past attempted suicide on page with detail/ pedophile/ human trafficking)

The Truth Behind The Lie cover imageThe Truth Behind the Lie (Kouplan #1) by Sara Lövestam: This was so different from most P.I. novels I’ve read and I really enjoyed that. It also reminded me of the Israeli Avraham Avraham series that I love in its care and kindness from the main character. Kouplan is an Iranian refugee living in Sweden and learning to be a P.I. by taking on cases from people who can’t, for whatever reason, call the police. He takes on the case of a woman, Pernilla, whose six-year-old daughter is missing. This very much takes you through all his steps as he gets to know Pernilla, questions people, and sets himself tasks to find the girl. It’s also a meditation on life, self, and mental illness and it felt like a quiet mystery in a lovely way. I’ve been thinking about this one sporadically since I finished and really look forward to more of this series, and crime publishing more novels like this.

What Could Go Wrong At A Retreat? Everything! (TW hair pulling disorder/ past pedophile on page/ brief mention past suicide, with detail)

The Retreat cover imageThe Retreat by Sherri Smith: This was a ride! It starts out feeling like a novel about four struggling women, all trying to find their footing, and then the suspense begins and by the end it might just feel like a horror novel. Which is to say I really enjoyed it! I also really liked the premise, which starts with a once famous child actor, now a grown woman, who almost had her comeback until she tweeted a homophobic “joke” and got cancelled. Now she’s at a weekend retreat with her soon to be sister-in-law who she needs to build a relationship with for the sake of her relationship with her brother and her two college friends. The book rotates chapters between the four women as they deal with their pasts, the secrets they’re currently still holding, their relationships with each other, and what exactly they want–and is a valid option–from life. Did I mention one wakes up covered in blood and holding a knife? And then one member from the retreat is missing? That’s just the beginning–about halfway through–of all that is to come!

And if you want a chance to win 10 of the best mystery and thrillers of this year we’ve got a giveaway! Enter here.

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 CanavĂ©s.

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

HARRY POTTER Book Ban Like It’s 1999: Today In Books

HARRY POTTER Book Ban Like It’s 1999

Today in “I had to check the date on this article several times”: Rev. Dan Reehil has had the Harry Potter book series removed from St. Edward Catholic School’s library because “These books present magic as both good and evil, which is not true, but in fact a clever deception.” The decision was not made lightly, though, as he consulted exorcists, several of whom recommended the books’ removal.

Library “Check Out” A Dog Event

If you’re recovering from the three-day weekend and/or are on hurricane watch and need something to awwwwwww about: on September 14th, the Vancouver Public Library, the Vancouver Park Board, and St. John Ambulance will be hosting an event where you can “check out” a dog and read poetry to it. “At Canine Library, all the dogs will be assigned a book of poetry that relates in some way to animals or parks.”

2019 Booker Prize for Fiction Shortlist Announced!

6 books are now in the running for the 2019 Booker Prize of ÂŁ50,000 as the fiction shortlist was announced. Two authors may not surprise you, in name at least, but can you guess the other four?