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Completed Mystery Series!

Hi mystery fans! After finishing the great Truly Devious trilogy I thought I’d round up some mystery series that have completely wrapped up for those who don’t like never ending series or are completist who wait for the series to finish before starting. Plus, if you’re stuck inside because of crappy weather, marathoning a series is always a nice option.

Wife of the Gods cover imageDarko Dawson series by Kwei Quartey: For procedural fans who like to travel the world here is a great series set in Ghana that finished with its fifth book. I love reading procedurals set outside the US because I love seeing how laws, courts, police institutions differ, along with how crimes are different/similar. I also love seeing different cultures, all things this series has while following a great character: Detective Inspector Darko Dawson. You not only get to watch Dawson work on different cases, including ones that take him outside of Ghana to small towns, but you also get to know his family and personal relationships. You watch him grow from Inspector to Chief, and I personally really liked the way the series ended–which is all I’m saying because spoilers, obviously. (TW all I remember is rape, sorry.)

Truly Devious cover imageTruly Devious trilogy by Maureen Johnson: This is an awesome series with two brilliantly done cliffhangers (which I had to wait out but you do not!) and a series ending that wraps up the mysteries the way all the great mysteries do by laying it all out for you. You get a past and present mystery, an elite school, nods to the mystery genre, and a girl very knowledgeable in true crime who is determined to figure out what happened then and now. Stevie Bell is selected to attend Ellingham Academy, but, more than getting an education, what she’s determined to do is solve the school’s eighty+ year mystery: why was the founder of the school’s wife and daughter kidnapped and what happened? But Bell is going to have to overcome anxiety, getting to know her roommates, a present campus murder, and more… This is a series perfect for fans of the mystery genre! (TW anxiety attacks/ child death/ addiction/ suicide mentions/ past rape cases discussed)

Trouble Is a Friend of Mine cover imageTrouble trilogy by Stephanie Tromly: Here’s another trilogy that has a main past mystery running through the series and each book has its own current mystery. Zoe Webster is the new girl in town and school but dealing with that quickly becomes easier than dealing with Digby, the super annoying boy who’s decided she’s going to help him solve the mystery of his little sister who went missing years before. Along the way they’re also going to stumble on other mysteries in need of solving, build a friendship, and possibly more. If you like quick and witty dialogue, along with opposite personality pairings, this is a great series to curl up with.

A Spy in the House cover imageThe Agency series by Y.S. Lee: Here’s a four book series for fans of historical mysteries, the Victorian era, character driven novels, and spies. Mary Quinn is an orphan who is rescued and educated and, at age 17, learns that Miss Scrimshaw’s Academy for Girls has a mission with an all-female investigative unit, which Mary is about to become a part of. Her assignment is to pretend to be a lady’s companion to get information on cargo ship disappearances from the wealthy owner’s home. Follow Quinn through danger, romance, and cases including for Queen Victoria who is dealing with a thief in Buckingham Palace! This is an enjoyable series that gives girls and women power at a time when they didn’t have much.

A is For Alibi cover imageMy last two will be honorable mention series because they both have an *: Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone/alphabet series and Karen Kijewski’s Kat Colorado series. Sue Grafton’s series is great and a long marathon that begins with a 32-year-old PI in a Santa Barbara like city in 1980s California. (Review) It gets an * because sadly Grafton passed away so the series ends at Y is for Yesterday.

I discovered the Kat Colorado series while on vacation as a kid: the home we were staying in had a huge bookcase with a sign inviting us to read what we’d like so I inhaled books on the beach. Kat Colorado was the first difficult woman PI I fell in love with: she was mouthy, stubborn, ate terribly, had inappropriately timed humor, drank too much soda, and was not great at relationships. This one gets two *: It’s out of print so you have to go the way of library/used books; I technically still haven’t read the ninth, and final, book in the series because I was so angry at the eighth book ending. I’ve reread this series several times over the years and always have the same reaction–please note, I am a ridiculous human being. Either way this series will always hold a special place in my mystery loving heart.

Recent Releases

The Majesties coverThe Majesties by Tiffany Tsao (I am obsessed with this cover and it’s high on my TBR! The novel follows the sole survivor of a wealthy family after her sister poisoned them all.)

The Janes (Alice Vega #2) by Louisa Luna (The Two Girls Down sequel is here and once again you get a great detective pairing on a child sex trafficking case.) (TW Child murder/ sex trafficking/ torture/ fat shaming/ a dog gets shot)

The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia by Emma Copley Eisenberg (Currently my libro.fm listen: This is one of those true crime cases that the journalist blends memoir with investigating the history of the region, people, their own life, and the case–two girls murdered as they were hitchhiking on their way to a peace festival.)

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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Mysteries By The Pun 🔪

Hello mystery fans! Here are all the clickable things I found for you this week; 2 things to watch now, both from the same nonfiction book; your Kindle deals; and a little bit of my reading.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Bluebird Bluebird by Attica Locke cover imageAmanda and Jenn recommend dark and twisty murder mysteries on Get Booked.

Liberty talks about The Missing American by Kwei Quartey on All the Books!

Most Anticipated 2020 Books

How Nancy Drew Helped Me Reject Toxic Masculinity and Gender Roles

Mysteries by the Pun: 10 of the Best Cozy Mysteries

31 New Thriller and Mystery Books to Look Out For in 2020

TV and Movies 35 Small Details From “You” Season 2 That Deserve A Large Round Of Applause

What’s in a Page: Long Bright River author Liz Moore on the enduring legacy of her childhood diary

A Beginner’s Guide to African Crime Fiction

News And Adaptations

Borrowed Time cover image2020 Left Coast Crime “Lefty” Award Nominations Announced

Bahni Turpin will be the narrator for Kellye Garrett’s Hollywood Homicide audiobook!

Deanna Raybourn’s A Murderous Relation book tour dates!

Miss Fisher and the Crypt of Tears trailer

The CW renewed Nancy Drew

Craig Russell’s ‘Lennox’ Crime Thriller Books Being Adapted for TV

‘Mindhunter’ Future In Limbo As Netflix Series’ Cast Is Released & Season 3 Renewal Is Put On Indefinite Hold

Watch Now

Just Mercy cover imageHBO Doc ‘True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight For Equality’ Is Available To Watch For Free

And now in theaters is the film version Just Mercy, based on Stevenson’s memoir, which stars Michael B. Jordan, Jamie Foxx, Rob Morgan, Tim Blake Nelson, Rafe Spall, and Brie Larson. Watch the trailer.

 

Kindle Deals

Lives Laid Away cover imageIf you’re bummed that usually only the first book in a series gets put on sale, it’s your lucky day because the sequel in Stephen Mack Jones’s action packed PI series August Snow is $1.99: Lives Laid Away! (Review) (TW suicide/ human trafficking/ rape)

With the 3rd in the series releasing soon Sheena Kamal’s start to her Nora Watts PI series is $1.99: The Lost Ones! (Review) (TW I only remember rape, sorry)

Walter Mosley’s recent-ish PI novel Down The River Unto The Sea is $3.99! (Review) (TW rape)

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Mimi Lee Gets A Clue cover imageI just started reading Mimi Lee Gets a Clue by Jennifer J. Chow, and it’s like a chick-lit novel (HATE that term) married a cozy and tossed in a talking cat and I am so very much enjoying it. I miss those funny novels about women trying to get their life together with funny and ridiculous scenes thrown in, so add murder and animals to that and I’m super happy.

And on audio: I started listening to the true crime memoir The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia by Emma Copley Eisenberg, which seems to be an in depth look at the community, Eisenberg’s life and visit to the town, and the case–I’m still at the beginning. I’m halfway through The Janes, the sequel to Two Girls Down, a tense novel with an investigators pairing I really enjoy, which takes on a case of child sex trafficking this time.

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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No Idea Her Husband Was A Serial Killer!

Hi mystery fans! This week I have a great historical mystery for Agatha Christie fans, a page-turner thriller with an interesting premise, and a mystery novel for Tana French fans!

For Agatha Christie fans! (TW PTSD/ addiction/ suicides mentioned, with detail)

a gentleman's murderA Gentleman’s Murder by Christopher Huang: This is a great read for historical mystery and Agatha Christie fans as the mystery starts in an exclusive club: a murdered man is found in the vault of the club after a friendly bet. Lieutenant Eric Peterkin, currently editing mystery manuscripts, and a member of the club, immediately decides this qualifies him to solve the murder–especially when he finds the detective shady. I really enjoyed the characters–while this is a standalone I’d love more time with Eric and his sister–and especially the setting of the period just after World War I, and how it brings to light soldiers’ PTSD, and the lives of nurses without feeling gritty or dark. I also really enjoyed how Eric would plot out the different scenarios he was positing as the who and why for the murder mystery. A seriously great mystery to curl up with. And I look forward to picking up whatever he writes next.

Page-turner thriller! (TW partner abuse, including past sexual/ stalking)

Stillhouse Lake cover imageStillhouse Lake (Stillhouse Lake #1) by Rachel Caine: The premise of this is what got me to pick this up real quick as it follows a convicted serial killer’s wife as she tries to hide from him and the world. Gina Royal had no idea her husband was not only a serial killer but that the victims were murdered in her home where she was raising her two kids. But when her husband was caught and convicted, the world didn’t really believe that anyone could be that unaware of something happening in their house, so she was forced to go into hiding with her kids. And that’s how she lives, changing identities and moving regularly until they finally, hopefully, find a new place to settle for a bit longer–I mean the constant running is obviously doing a number on the kids’ emotional states. But, of course, this is a thriller, so she isn’t going to find peace. Instead, a body is found in the lake behind her house just like the victims of her husband… If you like dark-ish thrillers and want to get sucked into a page-turner my very fried end-of-year brain really enjoyed this escape.

For Tana French fans! (TW drug addiction/ rape, including statutory not on page)

long bright riverLong Bright River by Liz Moore: If you’re a fan of Tana French’s writing and character driven mysteries that explore a law enforcement character’s job, cases, and personal life, this one is for you. Also, if you’re a fan of how Jane Harper turns the harsh Australian terrain into a character, Moore does something similar, but with the opioid crisis. Set in Philadelphia, Mickey is a police officer with a new partner, a single mom with an unreliable babysitter, and a sister, Kacey, who over the years she’s arrested for drugs and sex work. The novel takes you into now and then, showing how the sisters grew up–raised by a grandmother who never got over their mother’s death–the separate life paths they took, and how they became estranged. While, in the now, Mickey tries to locate her sister while working on a string of murdered women cases. This is a relevant, slowburn mystery that focuses on the exploration of toxic family and addiction. This was my libro.fm audiobook pick and the narrator, Allyson Ryan, really brought Mickey to life with this dry, exhausted by life but still trying as hard as she can manner–that may sound like it’s not a compliment but it is, I promise.

Recent Releases

The Missing American cover imageThe Missing American by Kwei Quartey (If you’re looking for a new PI series mostly set outside of the U.S!) (Review) (TW attempted rape on page/ suicide on page/ ableism)

How Quickly She Disappears by Raymond Fleischmann (A slowburn, historical suspense with a past missing person and a creepy new arrival set in a remote Alaska town.) (TW child abuse/ pedophile/ suicidal thought)

The Peacock Detectives by Carly Nugent (Currently reading: A young girl in Australia is writing this story as her father is teaching her to love literature, and she’s telling us about her detective work, starting with finding a pair of missing peacocks–delightful!)

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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Most Anticipated Mysteries and Thrillers of 2020

Hi mystery fans! Publishing is wide awake with the start of the year so I have a bunch of things to click–including true crime–, kindle deals, and some of my reading this week. And a mea culpa: I told you Briarpatch had a January premiere date but that was for a “first look” airing trailer. The pilot episode will be February 6th–so good news you haven’t missed it!

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Untamed Shore cover imageRincey and Katie talk about the 2020 titles they’re most excited for on the latest Read or Dead.

Curl Up With These Cozy Cat Mystery Books

Mystery as a Gateway to Other Genres

A Look Ahead at Some New Crime and Mystery Series Launching in 2020

Valiant’s ‘Final Witness’ is publisher’s first crime noir and murder mystery

I’m a novelist – and this is why I choose middle-aged women as the heroes of my crime thrillers

Death In Her Hands cover imageThe 28 Most Anticipated Mysteries & Thrillers of 2020

‘Nobody in Tesco buys spy books by women’: how female authors took on the genre

‘No Time to Die’: Hans Zimmer Takes Over as Composer on Bond Movie (EXCLUSIVE)

True Crime

Your House Will Pay cover imageFour Authors Who Blurred the True Crime Line

How true crime shifted its lens from the bad guys to the bad justice system

Netflix Reveals Most Popular International Titles Of 2019: Madeleine McCann True-Crime Doc Tops UK, ‘Murder Mystery’ Leads In Australia

5 Biggest Moments of 2010s’ True-Crime Boom

Watch the Trailer for Netflix’s Latest True Crime Series, ‘The Goop Lab’ (This is obviously not true crime but this really made me laugh so just leaving it here.)

Kindle Deals

Fake ID by Lamar Giles cover imageIf you’re participating in Read Harder and/or looking for a mystery where the victim is not a woman, Lamar Giles Fake ID is $1.99! (Review)

If you’re looking for a return-to-small-town mystery, Lori Roy’s The Disappearing is $4.99. (Review) (TW physical child abuse/ stalking)

If you’re looking to start a procedural series with a unique-ish premise of a community of victims and criminals hiding out, here’s one of my favorites: City of the Lost by Kelley Armstrong is $2.99!  (TW domestic abuse/ rape/ pedophile/ suicide/ stalking)

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Winter Counts cover imageAcquired And Excited: One of my most anticipated books of 2020 is Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden which follows Virgil Wounded Horse, a local enforcer on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota! And Who Is Vera Kelly? has a sequel coming and give me all the spy ladies, so I snatched the galley for Vera Kelly is Not a Mystery by Rosalie Knecht real quick!

Currently listening to: I just started The Hand On the Wall by Maureen Johnson, which is the final in the Truly Devious trilogy set at an elite school with a past and present mystery, and it’s so good! I’m almost finished with the heartbreaking and beautiful memoir From Scratch by Tembi Locke (yes, Attica Locke‘s sister) about loss, family, and food.

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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DIE HARD At A Rest Stop!

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a new PI series, Die Hard at a rest stop (my title for the book), and a historical mystery with a character I adored.

New PI In Ghana! (TW attempted rape on page/ suicide on page/ ableism)

The Missing American cover imageThe Missing American by Kwei Quartey (Jan 14): This is Quarey’s start to a new series after completing his procedural series Darko Dawson.

This series starts with multiple points of view between the U.S. and Accra, Ghana. We have a white male widow in the U.S. who falls in love with a Ghanaian woman on the internet, and a police woman in Ghana, Emma Djan, who is assaulted by a superior (attempted rape) and is forced instead to work for a private detective firm.

When the widow goes missing in Ghana–after coming to meet his new love–Djan ends up on the case that will hit closer to home than she’d like, as the widow’s journalist friend and son also try to figure out what happened.

The book looks at both the scammers and victims of internet scamming, which I found super interesting–especially, since it also focuses on fetish priests (it is not a sexual thing). I really enjoyed following along with the characters’ lives in Ghana and Djan’s character, which will certainly have me picking up the next book in the series. Heads up there is a fair amount of ableism related to autism.

Die Hard At A Rest Stop/ Snowed-In Mystery Thriller! (TW racial slurs/ terminally ill parent not on page/ pedophile not on page)

no exit by taylor adams cover imageNo Exit by Taylor Adams: This made me think of Die Hard (which I love) if John McClane was a college woman tasked with saving everyone from a kidnapper while snowed in at a rest stop.

Darby Thorne is driving home to see her terminally ill mother when she gets snowed in at a rest stop with a handful of strangers during a blizzard. A less than ideal situation that quickly turns super intense when she spots a child in a cage in the back of a van at the rest stop. Surrounded by strangers, she has no idea who the van belongs to or how to get help without tipping them off that she knows…

This is the type of thriller I love: fast-paced, twisty, enough of a fun/implausible element to not give me nightmares or despair over the state of the world, and it kept me up way past my bedtime. I loved the child character, Thorne’s character (battling with processing the times in her life she hasn’t been the greatest human/daughter and trying to save a child and strangers at any cost to her well-being), how the plot kept evolving and taking new turns, and playing the game what-would-I-do-in-this-situation?! If you like thrillers, snowed-in mysteries, and Die Hard this was an awesome read.

For Historical And Cozy Mystery Fans (TW mentions domestic violence/ past suicide, detail/ talk of past peeping Tom)

Poppy Redfern and the Midnight Murders cover imagePoppy Redfern and the Midnight Murders (A Woman of WWII Mystery #1) by Tessa Arlen: This is one of those mysteries where I just fell in love with the main character early on and very much enjoyed watching her navigate her world while trying to solve a mystery.

Poppy Redfern is an Air Raid Warden in a remote English village in 1942–a few years into WWII–who has been raised by her grandparents and is rational, curious, kind, and compassionate–with a little dog as a sidekick. While her kindness and rationality has her neutral on the American Air Force members arriving in town, she is mostly alone in this mindset, especially when women begin to be murdered and all eyes turn to the Americans. Maybe not helping her stay clearheaded all the time is her crush on one of the Americans, but Redfern has the ability to shake most things off after some processing and continue with the task at hand, which in this case is who among them is a murderer?

This was an enjoyable and entertaining read with an ending (separate from the mystery) that left me wanting to follow Redfern in her future endeavors. This works well if you’re looking for a new series to pickup and also if you want just a standalone as the mystery is all wrapped up in the first book. (The audiobook is on Hoopla and has a good narrator.)

Recent Releases

Give the Devil His Due cover imageGive the Devil His Due (Rowland Sinclair #7) by Sulari Gentill: Australian historical mystery series that went real quick to the top of my TBR.

Long Bright River by Liz Moore (My current libro.fm audiobook which follows a cop trying to find her unofficially missing sister who has battled addiction since her teen years.)

The Lost Man by Jane Harper if you were waiting for the paperback edition of one of 2019’s best crime books it’s now out! (Review) (TW domestic abuse/ child abuse/ date rape/ suicide)

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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Barack Obama Reads True Crime

 

Hello mystery fans! I’m baaaaack and bringing you things to click (your holiday recovering brain surely already needs a break from the mountain of work you’ve returned to), things to watch, and Kindle deals.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Cutting Season by Attica Locke coverUnited States of a Mystery: Essential Louisiana Crime Fiction

What’s Your Next Thrill Ride Read, Based on Your Favorite Cocktail or Mocktail?

Rincey and Katie ended the year with mystery news, new releases, and holiday reads on Read Or Dead.

16 Mystery Book Recs Based on Films and TV Shows

13 Thrillers We Couldn’t Stop Thinking About In 2019

furious hours cover imageBarack Obama’s top 2019 reads has 2 true crime reads and a character driven thriller!

PubTalk Live with Kellye Garrett and Amanda Nelson

Kneading Into the Comfort of Cozy Cat Mysteries

Toni Morrison remembered by Walter Mosley

The Great British Murdering Show

News And Adaptations

Greenlit: BBC Murder Mystery ‘Shetland’ Is Shooting 2 New Series

Megan Abbott Wants You to Feel Everything

Watch Now

Briarpatch starring Rosario Dawson, based on the same titled novel by Ross Thomas, is a return-home mystery set in Texas now playing on USA Network. USA has put out a bunch of shows I’ve really enjoyed over the years so I’m definitely all in–even if I’m forever mad they didn’t renew Pearson–and you can check out the Briarpatch trailer here and watch it on it’s premiere day January 9th.

I am loving Megan Abbott’s adaptation of Dare Me, also on USA Network, and the second episode is up early on the app/site before it’s TV showing this Sunday. Think noir, murder, and suspense meets Friday Night Lights cheerleading team. (TW eating disorders)

Kindle Deals

They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall cover imageLooking for a modern take on Agatha Christie’s classic? Rachel Howzell Hall’s They All Fall Down is $2.99! (Review) (TW suicide/ eating disorder/ anxiety attacks)

Maybe you want to start the new year by starting a great cozy mystery series: Vivien Chien’s Death By Dumpling is $2.99! (Review)

Want to start an Irish procedural series? Dervla McTiernan’s The Ruin is $1.99! (Review) (TW: child abuse/ suicide/ rape)

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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International Crime Fiction 🔪

Hello mystery fans! This is my last newsletter of 2019, but I’ll be back here again in the new year with all the crime books, news, and some fun new things. For now I’ll leave you with a few more links to click, a new show, a returning show, an upcoming film I’m super excited for, and Kindle deals. Thanks for being awesome and sharing a love for crime books with me!

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

miracle creek cover imageRincey and Katie share their favorite mystery reads of 2019 on Read or Dead!

Best mystery books of 2019

We’re getting another Gethsemane Brown Mystery by Alexia Gordon!

The Best Books of 2019: International Crime Fiction

Jeff Lindsay, of ‘Dexter’ fame, has entertaining new thriller

Murder is messy in Hallie Ephron’s latest mystery

What You Don’t Know About Fear, Frauds, and Psychopaths: The Best True-Crime Audiobooks to Learn From

MWA Announces the 2020 Grand Master, Raven and Ellery Queen Award Recipients

Five Midnights by Ann Dávila Cardinal is getting a sequel!

Watch (Almost) Now (And Next Year)

Dare Me cover imageDare Me, based on Megan Abbott’s YA murder mystery, will premiere its first episode on USA Network December 29th. I will be making all the popcorn since I love Abbott’s crime writing and her exploration of girls and women: “There’s something dangerous about the boredom of teenage girls.” Watch the trailer.

The showrunner for the second season of Killing Eve, Emerald Fennell, has a woman revenge film coming out that looks AMAZING. Here’s the trailer for Promising Young Woman. It isn’t based on a book but it certainly looks perfect for crime reader fans. (TW date rape)

The second season of You, adapted from the same titled novel by Caroline Kepnes, will be streaming on Netflix on December 26th. I have no idea where the season will go from here and have not watched the trailer because I like to be surprised, but you can watch it here!

Kindle Deals

Perfect Days cover imagePerfect Days by Raphael Montes is $6.99 if you’re looking for what Annie Wilkes’ and Norman Bates’ offspring would be like. (Review) (TW don’t remember but dude kidnaps woman to convince her she’ll love him so let’s go with a bunch of them)

Hollywood Homicide (Detective by Day #1) by Kellye Garrett is $6.29 and one of my favorite cozy series starring a never-made-it actress who turns her sites to solving crime for the reward money of course. (Review)

Final Girls by Riley Sager is $1.99 if you’re in the mood for past and present mystery rolled in with horror movies. (Review) (TW rape)

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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Mystery As A Gateway To Other Genres

Hi mystery fans! In the spirit of the new year and reading harder/trying something new–the worst that happens is you don’t like it, which is a thing that happens even when you think a book sounds perfect for you–I’ve got a list of books to read to try other genres and categories.

The key to navigating your way into new genres is to take baby steps. It’s easy to say, for example, that you want to try a fantasy novel and then start with one with lots of world building and a fictional language which leads to confusion, that discourages you and then leaves you thinking that fantasy isn’t for you. But every genre/category has so many different types of works that it is just about finding what works for you. It’s like a person telling you they don’t read crime because it’s too dark, serial killer-y, and filled with graphic violence. Those books do exist but there are also a lot of works that contain none of those things. So here are recommendations for crime readers who want to take a baby step into another genre or category–and the list also works in reverse if you’re trying to get a reader who loves another genre to read crime.

Translation

Death Notice cover imageDeath Notice by Zhou Haohui, Zac Haluza (Translator): This reads very much like a procedural and action thriller film, making it a page-turner about a vigilante who is taunting the police, which they feel haven’t been properly punishing people. Many readers shy away from works in translation thinking they’ll be more difficult to read and hard to understand; this thriller will squash those thoughts. (Review) (TW suicide/ rape)

 

Short Stories (Also translation)

An Elderly Lady is Up To No Good by Helene Tursten cover imageAn Elderly Lady is Up to No Good by Helene Tursten, Marlaine Delargy (Translator): These are all short stories featuring the same main character–an elderly lady not afraid to, let’s say, eliminate anyone annoying her–so it reads similarly to a novel even though each story essentially has the beginning, middle, and end of a story. (Review) (TW domestic abuse)

 

 

Sci-Fi/ Fantasy

Undead Girl Gang by Lily Anderson cover imageUndead Girl Gang by Lily Anderson: (And YA) This is set very much in our world with the tiny little hiccup of zombies. Well three, when Mila Flores performs a spell to bring back her friend who she is certain did not take her own life and accidentally also brings back recently dead mean girls. (Review) (TW suicide)

Magic for Liars by Sarah Gailey: This is a PI solving a crime at a magic school, but it focuses on the mystery and crime solving–and family drama–more than magic spells or world building but has enough magic to give you a firm step into fantasy. (Review) (TW cancer)

Neverworld Wake by Marisha Pessl: While this novel is grounded in our world the solving of a past mystery is hinged on something that is not. I’m being vague on purpose, and the full review is in two parts if you want to avoid knowing the first twist. (TW suicide)

Literary

The Other Americans cover imageThe Other Americans by Laila Lalami: Literary fiction has a lot of snobbery surrounding it that often makes readers think it is inaccessible. I loved this novel because of how many types of readers it works for: murder mystery, crime, love stories, procedural fans, family drama, character driven, and multiple point of view. It follows the effects a crime has on a family and community, unfolding in surprising ways. (Review) (TW addiction/PTSD)

 

Romance (And historical fiction)

cover of an extraordinary union by alyssa coleAn Extraordinary Union by Alyssa Cole: Don’t you roll your eyes at me, romance is a fantastic genre. And the level of shexy/steamy/details etc varies so you can totally find the level that works for you. In this case Cole beautifully married a spy novel–during the Civil War–with a romance novel so you get all the intrigue plus two spies falling in love–a couple times with no pants.

 

 

Historical Fiction (and YA)

Burn Baby Burn cover imageBurn Baby Burn by Meg Medina: This is set in 1977 (we’re taking baby steps into historical fiction) when New York was burning and Son of Sam was killing. With that backdrop of chaos and fear, Nora is trying to navigate a volatile situation at home with her brother and deciding what she wants to do with her life. (Review) (TW I only remember domestic abuse)

 

 

Nonfiction

bad blood by john carreyrou cover imageBad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup by John Carreyrou: Many readers stay away from nonfiction thinking “boring” and “textbook” and let me just tell you this book is a banana pants page-turner! Even if you don’t care about tech, Silicon Valley, or medicine, everything about Elizabeth Holmes’s behavior, her company, and the work environment she created is so full on bonkers and unbelievable you won’t be able to stop reading. (Review) (TW suicide)

 

Middle Grade (Age categories for reading only work one way and that’s for kids to read at their reading level, they are not a stop on adults reading them. If that were the case we’d stop watching cartoons and anything rated below R/MA.)

The World's Greatest Detective cover imageThe World’s Greatest Detective by Caroline Carlson: This is a delightful read with a detective contest, a headbutting pairing, and an ending that had me hold my breath–in case you think children’s literature can’t be intense. Also, I really want this to become the start of a series! (Review)

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

Less Than 20% Finished Scorsese Epic

Hi mystery fans! I found you a bunch of things to read, rounded up some true crime articles (not all violent), and of course your Kindle deals (and 1 paperback). And now I’m off to inhale as many more books as I can that I haven’t gotten to yet this year because that’s how one ends the year, yes?

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

A Deadly Divide cover imageQuiz: What Should Be My Next Twisty Read?

Top 10 Nancy Drew Book Covers

Introducing the 2020 Reading Log!

Why ONE OF US IS LYING by Karen McManus is Problematic

Book Riot’s 2020 Read Harder Challenge

Read Harder: Read A Mystery Where The Victim(s) Is Not A Woman

A Reluctant Spy, Lady Sherlock, and More Must-Read Mystery and Thrillers

Spring 2020 Announcements: Mysteries & Thrillers

Dervla McTiernan Expands The Cormac Reilly Series With Both A Sequel And A Prequel

True Crime

The Suspect cover imageClint Eastwood’s ‘Richard Jewell’: Atlanta Newspaper Demands Disclaimer on Depiction of Female Reporter

‘The Irishman’: Less Than 20% Finished Scorsese Epic in Its First 24 Hours on Netflix

He’s a Liar, a Con Artist and a Snitch. His Testimony Could Soon Send a Man to His Death.

Netflix’s “Confession Killer” un-solves murders as a ruthless true crime story in reverse

This Week in True-Crime Podcasts: Red Ball, Night Time, and More

Kindle (and 1 Paperback) Deals

The Secret History of Las Vegas by Chris Abani cover imageOne of my favorite character driven crime novels (perfect for fans of dark literature) never goes on sale so it being reduced to $7.99 is a deal: The Secret History of Las Vegas by Chris Abani (Review) (Sorry, I don’t remember the TWs.)

For fans of crime novels: The Night Visitors by Carol Goodman is $1.99! (Review)

If you’re a paperback reader (or looking for a good book gift for nonfiction readers) The Truffle Underground: A Tale of Mystery, Mayhem, and Manipulation in the Shadowy Market of the World’s Most Expensive Fungus by Ryan Jacobs is $6.99! (Review)

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.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Watched That? Read This Mystery and Thriller Book

Hello mystery fans! This week I’m doing things a little different. I’ve found that most crime readers are also fans of crime films/TV series so with that in mind I thought I’d do a list of “if you liked that try this.” You can use it either way and find a book based on a film or show you liked or find a new show or film to watch based on a book you enjoyed. Or just add it all to your to-watch and to-read lists because why not?

Hustlers film poster Uptown Thief cover image

(Hustlers) Looking for more thieving women and sisterhood? In Uptown Thief by Aya de León a women’s health clinic in NY needs funding so the ladies of an escort service target scumbag rich CEO’s to steal from. Sounds like a win-win to me! (Review)

Casino Ocean's Eleven film poster Ghostman cover image

(Casino + Ocean’s 11) If you’re looking for a conman type novel where you get the detailed ins-and-outs of the criminal world and how each job is pulled off, along with all the drama involved with a life of crime, Ghostman by Roger Hobbs is a hell of a page-turner. (Review)

RuPaul Drag Race Ocean's 8 film posters Death Prefers Blondes cover image

(Ocean’s 8 + RuPaul’s Drag Race) A group of drag queens with a teen girl leader rob from the rich in the equally fun and heartfelt novel Death Prefers Blondes by Caleb Roehrig. Come for the crime, stay for the found family. (Review)

Silence of the Lambs The bad Seed posters The Only Child cover image

(The Silence of the Lambs + The Bad Seed) A venn diagram for fans of Kanae Minato, Silence of the Lambs, and The Bad Child would have Mi-ae Seo’s upcoming novel The Only Child in the center as a criminal psychologist is faced with questions of nature vs nurture in her job and private life…

Collateral Bodyguard posters A Dangerous Crossing and A Deadly Divide cover images

(Collateral 2018 series / Bodyguard 2018 series) Both these limited British series–with their detectives and exploration of current social issues– made me think of one of my favorite procedural series: Rachel Getty & Esa Khattak by Ausma Zehanat Khan, especially A Deadly Divide and A Dangerous Crossing. (Review) (Review)

Unbelievable poster Know My Name cover image

(Unbelievable 2019 miniseries) Another excellent voice in the fight against rape culture is Chantel Miller and her brave and beautiful memoir Know My Name. (Review–under nonfiction)

When They See Us poster My Midnight Years cover image

(When They See Us 2019 miniseries) I love true crime memoirs that explore social issues and in My Midnight Years, Ronald Kitchen tells his story of wrongly being imprisoned and placed on death row, shining a spotlight on our injustice system. (Review)

Ozark film poster Barbed Wired Heart cover image

(Ozark 2017 series) If you love Ruth on Ozark you’ll love Harley McKenna who is raised by her widowed father Duke McKenna–the violent top-dog criminal of North County–to survive anything, including his enemies coming to harm her. The fantastic opening line of Barbed Wire Heart by Tess Sharpe: “I’m eight years old the first time I watch my daddy kill a man.” You know you just heard that in Ruth’s voice! (Review)

Stumptown poster The Last Place You Look cover image

(Stumptown 2019 series) Looking for more modern noir starring a bisexual P.I. who doesn’t always get it right but you keep rooting for her? Meet Roxane Weary in Kristen Lepionka’s The Last Place You Look. Action scene endings included. (Review)

Serial Mom Devil Wears Prada film posters FashionVictim cover image

(Serial Mom + The Devil Wears Prada) #FashionVictim by Amina Akhtar made me think of John Waters’ suburban housewife suppression satire Serial Mom except swap suburban housewife for the fashion industry with a The Devil Wears Prada work environment. (Review)

The Rookie poster Land of Shadows and In the Woods cover images

(The Rookie  2018 series) If you enjoy The Rookie for its L.A. setting and diverse voices then Land of Shadows by Rachel Howzell Hall is the start to a great police procedural series you should definitely read. If you like the rotating point of view on the show you’ll want to read Tana French’s Dublin Murder Squad series, which rotates different members of the squad for each book. (Review) (Review)

Broadchurch poster Two Girls Down cover image

(Broadchurch 2013 series) Like Broadchurch, Two Girls Down by Louisa Luna explores a case centering children and their family but my comp is very much because both involve two unknown-to-each-other detectives who are paired together to solve a case. And I equally loved the pairings in both. (Review)

Derry Girls poster Say Nothing cover image

(Derry Girls 2018 series) While this is NOT a funny book following teen girls and has zero sitcom vibes, if you watched the show Derry Girls and wanted to learn more about the show’s time period of the Troubles, Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe is a great history/true crime book.

Mindhunter poster Leaving Atlanta cover image

(Mindhunter 2017 series) For another book that explores the time period of a show, this time in a novel, Leaving Atlanta by Tayari Jones is also set during the Atlanta child murders like season 2 of Mindhunter. Instead of being a procedural though it follows three children as they try to navigate their personal lives and family drama as the city becomes aware of someone preying on children. (Review)

Veronica Mars s1 cover Trouble Is A Friend Of Mine cover image

(Veronica Mars 2004 series) If you’re a fan of the first season of Veronica Mars and Logan being annoying let me introduce you to Digby in Stephanie Tromly’s Trouble Is a Friend of Mine. He drags the new girl Zoe Webster into all kinds of illegal-ish activity as he tries to solve a recent kidnapping in hopes of leading to answers to his sister who disappeared years before. (Review)

Elementary Fantastic Beasts posters Jackaby cover image

(Elementary 2012 series + Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them) If genderbent Sherlock and Watson solving crimes with fantastic beasts (the actual critters) mixed in is your thing than have I got a fantastic (heh) complete series for you to marathon: Jackaby by William Ritter. (Review)

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.