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Unusual Suspects

Crime Fiction Goes Global and Diverse

Hi mystery fans! I’m here midweek once again in your inbox to hopefully give you some entertaining things to get you to the weekend. I’ve got new releases, backlist, news and roundups. And I watched The Gray Man and it was a fun, everything-goes-boom thriller just like I like.

If you want to work for Book Riot: we’re hiring an Editorial Operations Associate! We are committed to building an inclusive workforce and strongly encourage applications from women, individuals with disabilities, and people of color–apply by August 8th!

Bookish Goods

books cut into shapes of alphabet letters

Book Letters by TheVintageLime

Grab your initials or spell a word. $15.50

New Releases

cover image for The Binding Room

The Binding Room (Inspector Anjelica Henley #2) by Nadine Matheson

For fans of British procedurals! Detective Anjelica Henley is back, following the series starter The Jigsaw Man. Her current case involves a murdered preacher and a barely alive torture victim. Being that there are so many suspects this isn’t an easy case, and with more victims, it’s only a matter of time before Henley finds herself in danger…

I really enjoyed the start to the series, which I did in audio, and am looking forward to continuing.

cover image for The Last to Vanish

The Last to Vanish by Megan Miranda

For fans of secluded town, past missing person cases that remain unsolved, and an author with a substantial backlist to dive into. Set in a resort in the North Carolina mountains, Abigail Lovett will always be an outsider no matter how long she lives and works there. As much as she knows about the area, she also has much of the outsider curiosity of all the people who have just vanished from there over the years, one being a journalist whose brother has now shown up to get answers. Is the place Lovett has settled in filled with danger she’s ignoring, or does the terrain make it easier for random, unrelated vanishings to happen?…

(TW mentions past parent cancer death/ mentions past addiction, recounts intervention)

Looking for more new releases? Check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

I recently did true crime with historic cases and this time I’m doing true crime with history—there’s a slight difference, I swear. Both are also great in audio.

The Golden Thread cover image

The Golden Thread: The Cold War Mystery Surrounding the Death of Dag Hammarskjöld by Ravi Somaiya

Dag Hammarskjöld was a Swedish economist and the second Secretary-General of the United Nations whose death in a plane crash on Sept. 17, 1961 has remained unsolved. Along with the history of the Congo and the founding of the U.N. you get spies, governments planning assassinations, an unsolved mystery, conspiracy theories, and a reminder that history continues repeating itself if we don’t learn from it. “Nobody could call them off—only wind them up, set them off, and semi-legitimately deny any involvement in the destruction that followed.”

For audiobook fans, it’s is narrated by the author.

(TW attempted suicide recounted, detail/ mentions group rape not detailed or graphic)

Last Call cover image

Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York by Elon Green

This is a serial killer true crime book that focuses on the victims written by a journalist who does not insert himself or make this partially a memoir, as has become popular recently. Instead the book recounts the victim’s lives in all their reality, focusing on the queer community of the ’80s and ’90s in NY, how difficult if was for many to exist as gay men publicly, and the activists working to protect LGBTQ+ lives and rights. It’s a huge case of a killer who preyed on gay men for two decades but that most know nothing about because the media and genre have never focused on cases where marginalized communities are the targets. With all the anti-LGBTQ+ policies, laws, bills and book banning currently happening, it was impossible to read sections of this book without seeing the parallels in rising hate.

The audiobook is narrated by David Pittu.

(TW it was hard to keep track of these because much is mentioned as part of history and cases but the main ones are homophobia/ alcoholism/ hate crimes / racism)

News And Roundups

Crime Fiction Goes Global and Diverse, as These 20 Books by Women Writers Show

Netflix Greenlights Japanese Thriller Series ‘Burn the House Down’

In Netflix’s The Gray Man, Ryan Gosling gives the modern day action hero a much-needed overhaul

August 2nd, 3pm ET: Join Barnes & Noble as we welcome debut author, Ramona Emerson, for a live, virtual event to discuss SHUTTER, as part of our B&N Midday Mystery Virtual Event series.

Book Riot Will Match Your Donation to the National Network of Abortion Funds

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2022 releases. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

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