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Unusual Suspects

Murder, Blackmail, & Unsolved Mystery

Hello mystery fans! What do I have for you this week? A slow-burn suspense, a NY procedural, and a modern Nancy Drew. Something for everyone!

Untamed Shore cover imageUntamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: This is a great slow-burn suspense novel that, depending on your relationship with Jaws, may have an eerie setting. And by that I mean it’s set in 1979 Baja California, and there are a lot of dead sharks, guts included.

Eighteen-year-old Viridiana wants out of the town because her mom expects her to work in her shop and marry a man Viridiana has broken up with and has zero interest in getting back with. She also grew up aware that she’s the reason her mom got anchored to her father and stuck with a life she didn’t want, something Viridiana refuses to let happen to her. And so when wealthy tourists show up with a writer looking for an assistant Viridiana takes the job, including moving into a room in their rented home. You know this tale, and you know someone is going to die in an accident, or maybe not an accident… As the cracks widen and the secrets begin to spill who will protect themselves and who will come out on top?

If you like character driven suspense, and are looking for an interesting setting you’ve probably never read before, definitely pick this one up! (TW domestic abuse/ past suicide mentioned, detail)

Don't Look Down cover imageDon’t Look Down (Shadows of New York #2) by Hilary Davidson: This is the sequel procedural to One Small Sacrifice (Review) which I enjoyed so much last year I grabbed this one ASAP. It’s a great new series for fans of procedurals, detective partners, multiple point of view, and books that focus on the case at hand.

We open with Jo Greaver, a victim of blackmail, going to drop off the money at an apartment, but nothing goes as planned–does it ever?–and she ends up shot and shooting her blackmailer. She doesn’t stick around to find out what happens next, and goes back to work, and her life, as if a bullet in the arm won’t stop her. When NYPD detectives, Sheryn Sterling and Rafael Mendoza, show up on the scene, the evidence and witness accounts don’t make sense. And it also doesn’t add up with what we saw happen with Jo, which leads the detectives and readers to have to piece together not only who the blackmailer is, but what they’re blackmailing Jo with, and what really happened in that apartment?!

If you like page-turning, twisty procedurals that give you character depth but stay focused on the case and mystery at hand you’ll love escaping into this series. (TW sex trafficking/ past domestic abuse mentioned/ past drug overdose/ suicide, detail)

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder cover imageA Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder #1) by Holly Jackson: Pip, a high school girl, decides to do a research paper on finding out what really happened to Andie Bell five years ago. The problem is that Andie Bell has already been declared dead, even if her body was never found, and her boyfriend, even though he died by suicide, has already been proven guilty of murdering her in the court of public opinion. Pip thinks there are too many what-ifs, questions, lack of evidence, and that there was racist reporting that never actually closed this case for her. So she’s asking questions–barred from speaking to the Bell family and told the project will immediately be cancelled if she doesn’t do this delicately–and trying to figure out what really happened to Andie Bell. Pip is naive in a lot of ways, not having been one to attend parties, date, rebel in any way and she’s going to find herself wading into school secrets, family secrets, friend secrets, and the age-old question: do you ever really know anyone?

This is a great, twisty read for fans of YA and I’m definitely picking up the sequel–this reads like a standalone so don’t worry if you don’t like series. And bonus: the audiobook has an awesome multicast which bravo to the publishers for doing. (TW past suicide, with detail/ mentions self harming/ cyber exploitation/ talk of statutory, date rapes discussed/ dog dies)

Recent Releases

Egg Drop Dead cover imageEgg Drop Dead (A Noodle Shop Mystery #5) by Vivien Chien (A really good cozy series following a young woman working at her family’s restaurant in an Asian mall who constantly finds herself solving crime.)

Watching from the Dark (DCI Jonah Sheens #2) by Gytha Lodge (If you’re looking for another good recent procedural series here’s the sequel to She Lies In Wait.)

Firewatching (Detective Sergeant Adam Tyler #1) by Russ Thomas (A procedural following the only detective in the South Yorkshire Cold Case Unit!)

Trouble Is What I Do cover imageTrouble Is What I Do (Leonid McGill #06) by Walter Mosley (The PI who is always walking the line of staying clean and falling into the dark underbelly of NY is back! The audiobook has a fantastic narrator: Dion Graham, whose voice you know from The Wire, The First 48, Dear Martin and Black Leopard, Red Wolf.)

Pretty as a Picture by Elizabeth Little (A remote island with a film editor working on a project gets drawn into the sets rumors and accidents and the film’s previous editor’s disappearance. Oh, and the real-life murder mystery the movie is based on!)

On the Lamb (Kebab Kitchen Mystery #4) by Tina Kashian (A cozy mystery series set in a Mediterranean restaurant on the Jersey Shore!)

Follow Me by Kathleen Barber (The author of Are You Sleeping is back with a stalker book.)

Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe cover imageSay Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe (Fantastic true crime history now in paperback.)

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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Unusual Suspects

5 New Thrillers and Mysteries To Help Escape Reality

Hello mystery fans! I have a ton of clickable things, some Kindle deals, and I went old school with this week’s “watch now.”

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Onlly Child cover imageRincey and Katie talk mystery news, recent releases, what they’re reading, and a couple mystery books with a romantic element in the latest Read or Dead.

Liberty and Tirzah talk about The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James, The Holdout by Graham Moore, and Death in the Family by Tessa Wegert on the latest All The Books.

‘The most boring part’: why the killer didn’t matter to Georges Simenon

Silent City cover imageTwo authors—working from opposite ends of Florida—bring epic noir series to a close, and live to tell the tale.

The Summer Scares Reading List is Here, The Other Mrs. Leads Holds, My Dark Vanessa Tops the Indie Next List | Book Pulse

6 books Erik Larson keeps returning to

Five new thrillers and mysteries to help escape reality — or see it in another light

My Dark Vanessa cover imageThis is not an Onion article: Weinstein Juror Almost Kicked Off Trial for Reading My Dark Vanessa

Christopher Bollen’s A Beautiful Crime Is a Cold-Blooded Yet Seductive Novel

Discover the Swatch X 007 Tribute Collection and gear up for some 007-action with six exclusive models.

Congrats to the L.A. Times Book Prize finalists!

News And Adaptations

the ghost bride cover imageA distant, equally talented yet more playful cousin of Agatha Christie surely haunted the creation of six-part Taiwanese-Malaysian thriller The Ghost Bride, now streaming on Netflix.

Why Cozy Mysteries Are The Hottest TV Genre Of 2020

The 1920s book series by Leslie Charteris was adapted into the film 1997 The Saint starring Val Kilmer and will now get another adaptation by Rocketman director Dexter Fletcher.

Remember when I said Graham Moore’s The Holdout was “A legal thriller for fans of procedural shows and films“? I wasn’t the only one who thought so, Hulu is turning it into a series!

Watch Now

Going old-school this week with the 1986 adaptation The Great Mouse Detective, which is on Disney+ and based on Eve Titus’ the Basil of Baker Street series which reimagines Sherlock and Watson as mice. Adorable, funny, and entertaining. I love mice!

Kindle Deals

invisible by stephen l carterFor my nonfiction fans: Invisible: The Forgotten Story of the Black Woman Lawyer Who Took Down America’s Most Powerful Mobster by Stephen L. Carter is $3.99!!!

If you’re looking to start a series with a forensic archeologist: The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths is $4.99!

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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Unusual Suspects

Eerie Mystery, Legal Thriller, and 2020 Favorite Read

Hi mystery fans! This week I have for you a favorite crime read of this year (already!), an eerie past and present mystery, and a legal thriller for fans of procedural shows.

Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line cover imageDjinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara: This will definitely be one of my favorite reads of the year. It was hard to read this and not think about all the discussions happening surrounding American Dirt and its issues, including it being trauma porn because Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line is the complete opposite of trauma porn. Yes, it follows children navigating through slums in India to find a missing friend as children are going missing and the police are not putting in much effort, but underserved communities are still communities filled with different types of people with lives and desires and this novel shows that.

Jai is a nine-year-old boy who has watched so much procedural shows that he believes himself able to find out what happened to his missing classmate and enlists schoolmates Faiz and Pari to help. They’re determined to find out if a bad djinn is responsible for the disappearance, or a bad person, and they set out through the city to get their answers.

The novel shines a light on the 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. Anappara brings to life beautiful characters who keep things upbeat while exploring the darkness of the world in a story that starts with a coming-of-age mystery that travels along into noir territory. If you’re an audiobook listener I can not recommend it enough in that format. The narrators, Indira Varma, Himesh Patel, and Antonio Aakeel, are fantastic! (TW child, domestic abuse/ child deaths)

The Sun Down Motel cover imageThe Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James: A ghostly mystery!

Thirty-five years after her aunt Viv disappeared from her shift at a motel Carly decides to take the same job at the same motel and figure out what happened to her aunt, along with who her aunt was, being that she grew up really not hearing much. The thing about this motel is that it’s definitely creepy and haunted. Doors open and slam on their own, customers are either walking red flags or shrouded in mystery, someone keeps smoking but there is no one there…

Told in past and present chapters we follow as Carly in the present tries to piece together what her aunt was doing and what happened to her, and we watch Viv in the past doing her own detective work as the two storylines begin barreling towards each other.

A great past and present mystery with an eerie setting and some spooks. (TW mentions past rape, not graphic)

The Holdout cover imageThe Holdout by Graham Moore: A legal thriller for fans of procedural shows and films.

This had the implausibility feeling to it that I really enjoy because it let me sit back and just be entertained. The premise is that a group of jurors from a case that got national attention reunite for a true-crime docuseries because one juror is convinced they got it wrong the first time. Maya Seale, who after the case went to law school, was the juror who convinced everyone that the Black teacher was innocent in the disappearance of his white student. There has never been a body, the teacher has since disappeared, and the girl’s father is still certain a guilty man walked away when one of the past jurors is murdered and Maya becomes the prime suspect.

Basically everyone’s secrets are gonna come out! (TW mentions past PTSD/ past statutory, not graphic/ talk of pedophile and sex offenders/ attempted rape, partially on page/ past child, domestic abuse/ suicide)

Recent Releases

The Aosawa Murders cover imageThe Aosawa Murders by Riku Onda, Alison Watts (Translator) (Really looking forward to this one about a mass cyanide poisoning and a little girl that survives and is suspected…)

Second Sister by Chan Ho-Kei, Jeremy Tiang (Translator) (Currently reading: Young woman hires a Sherlock hacker type detective to find out who was responsible for her sister’s death by suicide.) (TW public groping/ suicide, detail/ date rape)

 

The Other Mrs cover imageThe Other Mrs. by Mary Kubica (An author who I always pick up is back with a psychological thriller about a murdered neighbor in a small-town in Maine.)

Foul Is Fair (Foul Is Fair #1) by Hannah Capin (A revenge fantasy where a teen girl and her friends go after the boys that raped her.)

Death in the Family (Shana Merchant #1) by Tessa Wegert (Trapped on an island murder-mystery!)

A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell Mystery #4) by Deanna Raybourn (Paperback release of one of my favorite series.)

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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Unusual Suspects

Marathoning A 50 Book Crime Series 🔪

Hello mystery fans! If you’re looking for some things to read to escape the world, Kindle deals, and something to watch I’ve got you.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Untamed Shore cover imageOn this week’s All The Books Liberty and Kelly chatted new releases including The Falcon Thief and Untamed Shore.

Today in trivia I hope I get to use one day: Agatha Christie’s The Pale Horse is credited with saving lives and being cited in a murder trial.

Forever shouting “translate more books!”: How locked-room mystery king Seishi Yokomizo broke into English at last 

Crime Writers of Color listed a bunch of authors for African American History Month.

The Onlly Child cover imageYou can read an excerpt from The Only Child by Mi-ae Seo at CrimeReads.

What’s In a Page: Saint X author Alexis Schaitkin on the hardest part of writing a book

What this reader learned from marathoning a 50 book crime series.

Enter to Win a $50 Barnes and Noble Gift Card!

News And Adaptations

An exclusive first look at And Now She’s Gone by Rachel Howzell Hall

Jason Batemen won’t be directing Jason Reynold’s Clue remake anymore and that wail you heard was me.

Meg Gardiner’s The Dark Corners of the Night (the third in the FBI series) will be adapted into a one-hour drama by Amazon Studios.

If you’re looking for a new Spy thriller comic series here’s the trailer for Bang!

Not an adaptation but heavily influenced by Christie so putting it here: Rian Johnson Says ‘All Bets Are Off’ When It Comes To Casting The Knives Out Sequel 

Watch Now

The Handmaiden is a South Korean crime drama based on Sarah Waters’ Fingersmith‎ and is currently streaming on Amazon Prime. You can watch the trailer here. ‎

Kindle Deals

Burn Baby Burn cover imageThis was so good and while it’s a coming-of-age story it’s set during the summer of Sam in New York and the tension between that and the volatile situation at home I think makes this a great read for fans of crime novels: Burn Baby Burn by Meg Medina is $1.99 –seriously, two dollars get this! ( I don’t remember trigger warnings but here’s my review.)

A very good legal thriller that is LITERALLY FREE, GET IT AND READ IT: Every Reasonable Doubt (Vernetta Henderson #1) by Pamela Samuels Young

From my cozy mystery TBR list: Dead As a Door Knocker by Diane Kelly is $2.99

From my thriller TBR list: The Third Victim by Phillip Margolin is $1.99

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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Vigilante For Hire 🔪

Hi mystery fans! This week I’m doing a slightly mean thing and shouting about a book I really liked that comes out later this year–it’s prebuy worthy and, this way, you can tell your library now that you want it and be first on that list! Also, I revisited a classic and have a great procedural sequel for you. We are never without a great book to read!

Winter Counts cover imageWinter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden (August 25th, Ecco): I especially loved two things about this novel: the characters and the setting.You realize how starved we are for certain stories and voices when publishing finally tosses you one. It’s like finally getting a drink in the desert, and as soon as you’re done you’re like give me so much more. That’s how I felt with this mystery, which I could not put down.

Virgil Wounded Horse lives in South Dakota on the Rosebud Indian Reservation and makes a living off of a legal loophole of sorts. The local police are only allowed to handle certain cases and everything else must be passed on to the FBI. The problem in this is that the FBI does not take all the cases, which leaves many criminals, from predators to robbers, unpunished. That’s where Virgil comes in: people pay him to basically beat the snot out of criminals who fall through the cracks. He’s also raising his nephew since his sister passed away and is the only family left. Because he’s responsible for not just himself anymore, he toys with taking a high paying job to investigate who is bringing in drugs to the reservation. He’s reluctant for a slew of reasons including it’s his ex-girlfriend’s father hiring him. But when the case hits close to home he’s left without much option. That’s how he finds himself paired up with his ex-girlfriend, and the FBI, to find out what is happening.

I absolutely loved Virgil, the vigilante for hire, as he’s cleaned up his life but still struggles to find his place. He’s introspective, curious, and also listens. A great contrast in his partnership with his ex who has lived a privileged life and is also in different ways struggling to find her place. I also loved the balance of seeing many different characters’ lives, and voices, on and off the reservation. A great mystery with excellent characters–everything you want in a crime novel!  (TW addiction/ mentions suicides, one with detail/ past rapes including children mentioned, not graphic/ child death/ pedophile, crimes off page/ fat shaming)

Strangers On A Train cover imageStrangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith: I am not a rereader but I read this as a teenager and, well, that was certainly not yesterday. Paired with discussions of Highsmith recently, because the anniversary of her death was on the 4th, her diaries releasing and revealing her as a terrible person, and seeing the Folio society edition, I decided to reread the novel.

This is one of those works that has a famous adaptation and has inspired countless works, making many feel like they already know it so no need to read it. I was curious how this would affect my ability to get sucked into the suspense, and let me tell you this is so well written that, even with all I know, I spent the day with my headphones on listening to it. The tension is so well done. The unraveling. The exploration of obsession. All connected to a chance encounter between two strangers who express hate for people they know. Only one takes seriously the idea: I’ll kill yours if you kill mine… If you’ve never read the classic, or it’s been so long you’ve forgotten it, I’d say it’s worth an afternoon to curl up with.

The Burn cover imageThe Burn (Betty Rhyzyk #2) by Kathleen Kent: This is a really good procedural series that follows Betty Rhyzyk, a former NY cop who talks to her dead uncle in her head for advice, and who has just relocated to a new job in Dallas, Texas. She’s tough and stubborn on the outside–ready to take on the world–but she’s cracked on the inside and trying hard not to completely unravel. Some of her issues are from events that recently happened (first book, so I’ll be vague), and some she brought along with her from New York. While she tries to hide her PTSD from those around her, especially her girlfriend Jackie, she’s also trying to figure out who is murdering drug dealers. But ordered mandatory therapy and desk duty, she’s going to have to get creative to solve the crime, and be suspicious of everyone, including her partner…

An awesome procedural that’ll keep you on your toes and keep you rooting for the detective. (TW mentions past suicide with detail/ PTSD/ mentions of past child abuse/ alcoholism)

Recent Releases

Untamed Shore cover imageUntamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Currently reading: A suspense novel set in the ’70s following a local woman in Baja California who becomes a live-in assistant to wealthy tourists, and you just know someone is gonna die and someone is gonna lie…)

Dead to Her by Sarah Pinborough (TBR: I have read all of Sarah Pinborough’s twisty mystery/thrillers and I will continue to do so!)

The Only Child by by Mi-ae Seo, Jung Yewon (Translator) (Nurture vs nature when a dark criminal mind meets a kind, optimistic, criminal psychologist.) (TW child abuse/ animal cruelty/ past suicide)

The Falcon Thief: A True Tale of Adventure, Treachery, and the Hunt for the Perfect Bird by Joshua Hammer (Currently reading: For fans of The Feather Thief!)

American Sherlock cover imageAmerican Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI by Kate Winkler Dawson (TBR: A look at the the birth of criminal investigation in the twentieth century!)

All the Best Lies (Ellery Hathaway #3) by Joanna Schaffhausen (Currently reading: This is a dark series about a serial-killer-survivor-turned-cop who pairs up with the FBI agent that once saved her. It’s great for fans of dark procedurals!)

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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Unusual Suspects

6 Mystery Novels Set in Scotland

Hello mystery fans! Who’s ready to click all the links, get some Amazon deals, and hear about a new documentary? Well, ready or not, here we go:

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Know My Name cover imageRincey’s Booktube review of Know My Name by Chanel Miller (TW rape)

Rincey and Katie are here to satisfy your SFF mystery cravings and to talk about the Edgar Award nominees in the latest Read or Dead.

The (Legal) Thrill Is On: 14 Authors Like John Grisham

6 Mystery Novels Set in Scotland

Die Hard at a Rest Stop and More Must-Read Mystery and Thrillers

American Spy cover image2020 BARRY AWARD NOMINATIONS

“One day somebody will explain to me why it is that, at a time when science has never been wiser, or the truth more stark, or human knowledge more available, populists and liars are in such pressing demand.” John le Carré on Brexit: ‘It’s breaking my heart’

Cuban Writer Honored for ‘Queen of Bones’ Murder Mystery (The bit about how heavy her accent is was not needed.)

“It would be better if we were having conversations about it rather than talking at each other, and as always, books are some of the best means to spark those kinds of conversations.” Throwing Rocks: An Interview with John Vercher

News And Adaptations

I inhaled her mystery novels in high school: Legendary Mystery Writer Mary Higgins Clark Has Died at 92

Well this upcoming “gothic lesbian murder book” sounds super good.

The Highway, the first book in C.J. Box’s Cassie Dewell series, is being adapted into a CBS show by David E. Kelley.

Chris Pratt will star in and executive producer an adaptation of the political thriller The Terminal List by Jack Carr.

Rosario Dawson Teases ”Smart, Weird, Wild” New Murder Mystery Series Briarpatch

Agatha Christie’s The Pale Horse Amazon adaptation has a trailer!

Watch Now

McMillions On HBO Go: A six-part docuseries about the ex-cop that defrauded the McDonald’s Monopoly game of $24 million. “Big crime, when nonviolent, can have an element that’s sort of funny — audacious, inventive, and doomed to blow up in the faces of the perpetrators. But big criminals often suck in small criminals, and in those stories, you often find desperation and naivete.” From Linda Holmes NPR review. Watch the trailer.

Reminder: Briarpatch starring Rosario Dawson as an investigator premiered yesterday, February 6th on USA Network, and if not up already will probably soon be on the website/app.

Kindle Deals

The Impossible Girl by Lydia KangA great historical mystery following resurrectionists in 1850 is ridiculously priced at $0.99: The Impossible Girl by Lydia Kang (Review)

The third book in my favorite Sherlock series is $1.99 if you’re not already caught up: The Hollow Of Fear by Sherry Thomas. (Review)

From my TBR pile the British serial killer detective thriller The Cutting Room (Carver and Lake #2) by Ashley Dyer  is $1.99!

Bellweather Rhapsody cover imageAnd for a quirky, horrorish murder mystery, Bellweather Rhapsody by Kate Racculia is $1.99! (Don’t remember if it has triggers.)

Start a delicious cozy mystery series: Hummus and Homicide by Tina Kashian is $1.99!

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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🔪 February’s Mystery and Thrillers!

Hi mystery fans! I thought I’d start the month off with a nice big list of great crime books releasing this month. So grab your TBR list, get ready to buy, or let your library know what you’d like them to get for you. (📚= I’ve read and recommend; 📖= currently reading and enjoying.)

The Aosawa Murders cover imageThe Aosawa Murders by Riku Onda and Alison Watts (Translator): A young girl is the only survivor of a mass poisoning but did she have any involvement…”contemporary Japan, with its rituals, pervasive envy and ever so polite hypocrisy.”

Second Sister by Chan Ho-Kei, Jeremy Tiang (Translator): 📖 I really like his PI life story told in reverse novel, The Borrowed, so super excited to be reading this one with essentially a hacking Sherlock hired to help a young woman find who harassed her sister into death by suicide. (TW public groping/ suicide, detail/ date rape)

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder cover imageA Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder #1) by Holly Jackson: 📚 A teenager, Pip, does a school project essentially on the town’s missing girl case–who has since been declared dead without a body, and whose boyfriend was suspected and died by suicide. This was a satisfying mystery that posits the main possible outcomes of what may have happened as you follow Pip on the case. Great multicast audiobook. (TW sharing nudes without consent/ past suicide, detail/ mentions self harm/ talk of statutory/ date rapes, not on page/ animal cruelty)

Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line cover imageDjinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara: Here’s another missing person mystery, this time the classmates are on the search and it’s set in India. “Drawing on real incidents and a spate of disappearances in metropolitan India, Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line is extraordinarily moving, flawlessly imagined, and a triumph of suspense.”

On the Lamb (Kebab Kitchen Mystery #4) by Tina Kashian: A cozy mystery set in Jersey, which follows Lucy Berberian who returned home and is working in the family’s Mediterranean restaurant, Kebab Kitchen. Drooling already!

The Falcon Thief cover imageThe Falcon Thief: A True Tale of Adventure, Treachery, and the Hunt for the Perfect Bird by Joshua Hammer: 📖 I am so here for these nonviolent true crime stories that read like part history, part adventure, and part “heist.” Definitely for fans of The Feather Thief. Also, as usual humans are terrible.

Saint X by Alexis Schaitkin: 📖 Teen girl murdered on tropical vacation with suspects arrested but never charged, and how that tragedy affects the family.

Untamed Shore cover imageUntamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: 📖 Slow-burn suspense set in Baja, California during the ’70s following a local woman who has been hired by a rich renting couple as a live-in assistance and you just know someone is gonna die… Ps: I have read everything Moreno-Garcia has written and will continue to do so. (TW domestic abuse, past suicide mention, with detail)

The Burn (Betty Rhyzyk #2) by Kathleen Kent: 📚 Another great procedural series I look forward to! This one follows a Brooklyn detective transplanted to Dallas, Texas dragging her past with her.(TW PTSD/ addiction/ past domestic abuse/ suicide/ animal cruelty) (Review for first in series, The Dime)

The Onlly Child cover imageThe Only Child by Mi-ae Seo, Jung Yewon (Translator): 📚 Great slow-burn psychological following a criminal psychologist called to meet a jailed serial killer who also learns her husband has a daughter she knew nothing about and begins to question nature vs nurture at work and at home… (TW child abuse/ animal cruelty/ past suicide)

All the Best Lies (Ellery Hathaway #3) by Joanna Schaffhausen: 📖 Love this dark procedural series about a young girl saved by an FBI agent, who wrote a book about her, and when she grew up and became a detective she keeps partnering with him on other cases. Start at the beginning with his series (Review for first in series, The Vanishing Season).

Egg Drop Dead cover imageEgg Drop Dead (A Noodle Shop Mystery #5) by Vivien Chien: A return-home-to-work-in-the-family-business-turn-amateur-sleuth series with a slow-burn romantic relationship that will leave you craving Chinese food.

Trouble Is What I Do (Leonid McGill #6) by Walter Mosley: P.I. Leonid McGill is back for fans of PI novels who need a quick read to curl up with.

Death in the Family (Shana Merchant #1) by Tessa Wegert: A wealthy family on an isolated island with blood found leaves investigators to question if someone is dead. Of course there’s dark secrets and they get snowed in.

The Other Mrs cover imageThe Other Mrs. by Mary Kubica: Twisty psychological thriller set in a small-town in Maine with a dead neighbor…

The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James: 📖 Gothic mystery where a young woman takes a night clerk job decades after from the place her aunt disappeared–spooky! (Mentions past rapes, no details)

Don’t Look Down (Shadows of New York #2) by Hilary Davidson: This is a procedural following NYPD partner detectives I’m really looking forward to after the great first book, One Small Sacrifice (Review), in the series.

Alone in the Wild cover imageAlone in the Wild (Rockton #5) by Kelley Armstrong: Love this detective series set in a remote, secret location with criminals and people seeking protection from criminals where the residents don’t know who is which.

Nairobi Noir by Peter Kimani: The first East African installment in the Akashic Noir Series!

Foul Is Fair (Foul Is Fair #1) by Hannah Capin: For fans of revenge crime novels: Teen girl and friends take revenge on the boys that raped her.

18 Tiny Deaths: The Untold Story of Frances Glessner Lee and the Invention of Modern Forensics by Bruce Goldfarb: If you’ve yet to hear about this woman she was fascinating and you should learn about her!

Firewatching cover imageFirewatching by Russ Thomas: A police procedural for fans of psychological thrillers, which follows a cold case specialist detective!

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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Nancy Drew’s 90th Birthday Shouldn’t Be About The Hardy Boys

Hello mystery fans! It’s Friday and I got things for you to read, things for you to watch, and things for you to buy. Also, if you’re a fan of literary novels, Book Riot has new podcast with a perfect title: Novel Gazing (cracks me up every time).

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

A (Mostly) Definitive Ranking of Sherlock Holmes Adaptations

6 Ideas For Nancy Drew’s 90th Birthday (That Aren’t Killing Her)

New Nancy Drew comic celebrates beloved sleuth’s 90th birthday by killing her

A Decline in Prophets cover imageFour Aussie crime writers take on the USA

15 Female Detective Novels To Read While You Mourn Nancy Drew

QUIZ: How Well Do You Know Nancy Drew?

What Happens To Your Brain When You Read True Crime

Read an exclusive excerpt of Saint X, the buzzy new novel about a missing teenager

News And Adaptations

The Man In My Basement cover imageWalter Mosley’s ‘The Man In My Basement’ Film Adaptation Enlists Rising Director Nadia Latif; Protagonist Pictures Onboard

New film about Cuban spies raises ire among exiles: ‘A tale to glorify criminals’

New Study: Crime Shows Are A ‘PR Machine’ For Law Enforcement

Super excited for Tiffany D. Jackson’s next novel!

Matt Damon To Re-Team With ‘Ford V Ferrari’ Helmer James Mangold On Don Winslow Novel ‘The Force’

Watch Now

A Death in Vienna cover imageNow Playing: Vienna Blood on Sundays at 10 p.m. EST on PBS/website. Sigmund Freud’s student teams up with an Austrian detective to solve mysterious and deadly cases in early 1900s Vienna–based on the Liebermann Papers series by Frank Tallis. Watch the trailer.

 

 

Kindle Deals

If She Wakes cover imageLooking for a thriller? If She Wakes by Michael Koryta is $4.99! (Review)

Looking for a historical mystery series? A Front Page Affair (Kitty Weeks Mystery #1) by Radha Vatsal is $3.82!

Want to start a long procedural series? The first Chief Inspector Gamache Mystery by Louise Penny, Still Life, is $2.99!

If you were interested in reading Thomas Harris’ new novel (The Silence of the Lambs author) Cari Mora is $4.99!

Chase Darkness cover imageWant to read true crime? Billy Jensen’s Chase Darkness with Me: How One True-Crime Writer Started Solving Murders is $1.99!

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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Unusual Suspects

Better Than Bond!

Hi mystery fans! This week I have for you a wealthy family drama that starts with a mass murder and explores the “why,” an excellent detective pairing, and a kick ass better-than-Bond graphic novel.

The Majesties coverThe Majesties by Tiffany Tsao: This book is for fans of Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived In the Castle and the bits in Crazy Rich Asians that focus on the family drama and history of the wealth (not the romcom parts). It also works for fans of crime, contemporary fiction, family dramas and the “why” part of mysteries. Because we know the who and what: Estella poisoned the entire Sulinados family (hundreds!), including herself, and everyone is dead except for her sister Gwendolyn, who is barely alive. Gwendolyn, nicknamed Doll, lays in the hospital reflecting on her family’s wealth, businesses, relationships (with a heavy focus on her and her sister’s), and secrets of course, to pinpoint how and why Estella would have done this.

While I was looking forward to Doll’s answers, what kept me fully engaged in this book were the family stories, characters, drama, secrets, and relationships. This was one of the books I was most anticipating this year (that cover!) and it didn’t disappoint! (TW murder suicide/ domestic abuse)

The Janes cover imageThe Janes (Alice Vega #2) by Louisa Luna: This is a series that I love because of the partnership.

In the first book Alex Vega traveled from San Diego to Pennsylvania to help find two missing girls and ended up meeting and partnering with a former cop, Max Caplan, nickname Cap. Now Vega is back in San Diego, working with Cap, assisting the SDPD on two Jane Doe cases. Cap is the quiet, calm, listening type while Vega is the “tough woman.” But not the character that just gets labeled that so the reader is supposed to think she is. Vega will assault a man and the man will end up being shoved into the trunk of her car. She’ll rip her own stitches out to get out of a situation. She’s not so great at listening, or playing nice; she’s abrasive, and won’t stop until she helps the girls she’s promised to help.

Watching Cap and Vega learn from each other while trying to stop a sex trafficking ring is a delightful break in this gritty, action packed novel. (TW sex trafficking, girls/ child murder/ torture/ fat shaming/ dog shot)

Velvet Vol 1 cover imageVelvet, Vol. 1 by Ed Brubaker, Steve Epting, Elizabeth Breitweiser, Chris Eliopoulos: Another reason to love my library system is that I’m finally catching up with graphic novels that have been on my TBR list for years. And this was so good!

A James Bond level spy is killed and it turns out the spy agency director’s secretary, Velvet Templeton, is really the greatest spy. It’s awesome! It has the whole spy running for their life, being framed, having to save their name and life etc vibe. Templeton is a great character that takes you into the now (running for her life) and also how she was trained along with past missions. And I can’t tell you how many times I’ve DNF’d comics (and books) where the women were just so poorly written/drawn that I couldn’t, so it was such a delightful treat to read about an older woman truly kicking ass.

And if your library has Hoopla the three volumes of the series are there. (TW mentions pedophile/ PTSD/ alcoholism/ partner abuse)

Recent Releases

A Beatiful Crime cover imageA Beautiful Crime by Christopher Bollen (From the author of Orient, a couple decides to sell counterfeit antiques as a way to escape their NY life, and of course it’s a crime novel so nothing will go well.)

Hi Five (IQ #4) by Joe Ide (The fourth in the Long Beach PI installment that is a modern day Sherlock.)

Holding Smoke (Judah Cannon #3) by Steph Post (The final book in this Florida crime family trilogy.)

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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Unusual Suspects

How to Find Free Mystery Books Online

Hello mystery fans! I’ve got your clickity links for all the happenings on mysteries and crime and your Kindle deals!

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

My Sister the Serial Killer cover imageThe Final Folk of Thrillers and Horror

10 Captivating Books Like THE DA VINCI CODE

How to Find Free Mystery Books Online

What All Those Dead Girls Say About Us

Rincey and Katie are back with another Read or Dead and someone had a lot of feelings about Tana French’s adaptation.

(Speaking of) Starz In Talks For Second Season Of Irish Crime Drama ‘Dublin Murders’ – TCA

Top 10 books about trouble in Los Angeles

Pardners in Crime: The 10 Best Western Mysteries and Thrillers

Adaptations And News

Defending Jacob cover image‘Defending Jacob’ Producers Say Reading The Book Won’t Spoil The Thrill – TCA

Jack Reacher series author Lee Child ‘quits and lets brother step in’

Daniel Craig faces off with supervillain Rami Malek in No Time to Die, his explosive final James Bond film

Amy Ryan Shames Cops, Looks for Her Missing Daughter in Lost Girls Trailer

Harlan Coben writes books you can’t put down – his TV shows are no different

The 2020 Edgar Nominees  Announced

Kristen Lepionka is has an upcoming standalone mystery that I can’t wait to read!

Kindle Deals

The Good Son by You-jeong jeong cover imageHere’s a great slowburn psychological suspense that starts with someone covered in blood and no memory: The Good Son by You-Jeong Jeong, Chi-Young Kim (Translator) is $4.99! (Review) (TW: stalking/ suicide)

If you like Australian crime and campus set novels: All These Perfect Strangers by Aoife Clifford is $5.99! (Review) (TW rape/ past suicide mentioned/ past child and domestic abuse mentions)

If you’re a fan of thrillers, past and present, and camp settings: The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager is $1.99!

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.