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Today In Books

Bookmobiles Are Coming To You New York: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by the audiobook edition of The Girl He Used to Know by Tracey Garvis Graves.

The Girl He Used to Know cover image


Bookmobiles Are Coming To You, New York

Starting in June, for the Bronx, and fall, for Staten Island and Manhattan, residents will get to browse 1,000 books (for all ages) check out, return, renew, and get a library card from one of NYPL’s bookmobiles. Vroom vroom, check them out here.

Unseen Kafka Works May Get Seen

A decade-long battle over several safe-deposit boxes has reached a verdict that has many speculating that we may finally get to see unfinished and unpublished work by Franz Kafka. “The judgment of the Swiss court completes the preparation of the National Library of Israel to accept the entire literary estate of Max Brod, which will be properly handled and will be made available to the wider public in Israel and the world.” (What if it’s just boxes filled with bugs?…)

Get Your Creepy On

The official trailer for the adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived In The Castle is here. The film, about the surviving family members after an arsenic poisoning, will be in theaters on May 17th–maybe skip the popcorn this time.

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Unusual Suspects

Courtroom Drama, Con Artists, And A Fun Murder Mystery!

Hello mystery fans! I have for you this week a fantastic courtroom drama/mystery, a fun murder mystery, and a nonfiction about con artists!


Sponsored by Libby, the one-tap reading app from your library and OverDrive

Meet Libby. The award-winning reading app that makes sure you always have something to read. It’s like having your entire library right in your pocket. Download the app today and get instant access to thousands of ebooks and audiobooks for free thanks to your public library and OverDrive.


Fantastic Mystery + Courtroom Drama (TW child abuse/ suicide/ sexual assault)

miracle creek cover imageMiracle Creek by Angie Kim: I couldn’t put this one down, even in the parts that hurt I couldn’t even flinch because I might miss something. This book works on so many levels, including as a courtroom drama, a mystery, an exploration of being an immigrant, marriage… The way Kim has layered everything between the current courtroom trial and the unraveling of everyone connected’s lives and lies is *chef’s kiss.* We start with a mother accused of setting a fire that caused an explosion, killing and injuring patients getting treatment inside a pressurized oxygen chamber. The oxygen chamber, the Miracle Submarine, was being run by the Yoo family in a small Virginia town. The mystery surrounds the woman on trial: did she set the fire on purpose to kill her son who was in the tank? Once you start meeting the Yoo family, the other patients, and watching the court testimony it starts to feel like everyone could have somehow been connected to the fire–including the mother on trial who has overwhelming evidence, including child abuse, against her as she tried to “cure” her son of autism. If you like courtroom dramas, small-town mysteries, and literary novels I wouldn’t miss this one–it’s definitely one of the best of 2019. And this is Kim’s debut novel so I can’t wait to see more from her.

Fun! (TW suicide)

Real Murders cover imageReal Murders (Aurora Teagarden #1) by Charlaine Harris: This has a fun premise: a group of people who meet to discuss true crime find themselves embroiled in a true crime. When the members of Real Murders Society show up to discuss a historical true crime they instead discover a murder–or at least Aurora “Roe” Teagarden finds the body. Being a group of true crime buffs, they can’t help but point fingers and think they can solve this (there is a journalist and cop amongst the group!), except soon there are more murders and it’s clear someone is framing people. Who would do this and why is what Roe, especially, wants to find out, being that she finds herself the target of poisoned food. She’s a librarian who has never had much luck dating but suddenly finds herself courted by two gentlemen: a writer and a police officer. But it’s hard to focus on dating when everyone is in danger and everyone is a suspect! This was one of those fun murder mysteries that stays fictional enough to be entertaining while also real enough to not be ridiculous. I’m curious to see how the characters and story will develop over the next nine books.

True Crime Memoir For Social Science Fans (TW suicide/ rape/ briefly mentions cases with pedophile)

Duped cover imageDuped: Double Lives, False Identities, and the Con Man I Almost Married by Abby Ellin: I love true crime memoirs–any memoir especially where the author just bares all–and have always loved social science so this hit a lot of yeses for me. Abby Ellin was basically duped by a conman and she tells her story here–interestingly enough, the two things I thought should have been the biggest red flags were actually the things he wasn’t lying about. She then also looks into why people lie, con, cheat, sociopaths, and those who fall victim. It’s a book that is very easy to judge and say, “Well, you should have known better,” or “I would never have fallen for that,” but that’s the whole point of the book–why do we blame the victims? And is it better to live life assuming everyone is out to get you or to have faith that they aren’t? I also found myself thinking about how victims are chosen and how someone who wants to be, and feels they need to be, loved can make easier marks, and how predators know this. I felt like this had a good balance between her story and accessible social science that the book works well for most readers–and I recommend going with the audiobook if you have the option.

Recent Releases

diary of a murderer cover imageDiary of a Murderer: And Other Stories by Young-Ha Kim, Krys Lee (Translator)

Alice’s Island by Daniel Sánchez Arévalo (Mystery/family drama)

Flowers over the Inferno (Teresa Battaglia #1) by Ilaria Tuti (Italian police procedural)

The Department of Sensitive Crimes (Detective Varg #1) by Alexander McCall Smith (Humorous procedural)

Before She Was Found by Heather Gudenkauf (YA mystery/thriller)

The Better Sister by Alafair Burke (Family secrets/ murder mystery)

Cult X cover imageCult X by Fuminori Nakamura, Kalau Almony (Translator) (Paperback) (For fans of cults.)

The Banker’s Wife by Cristina Alger (Paperback) (I really enjoyed this thriller starring a journalist–Full review.) (TW suicide/ rape)

Bearskin by James A. McLaughlin (Paperback) (For fans of crime novels in the wilderness.) (TW rape/ animal cruelty)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

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

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

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Today In Books

Unknown Daphne du Maurier Poems Discovered: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by HMH.


Unknown Daphne du Maurier Poems Discovered

Thanks to the auctioning of items by Daphne du Maurier’s husband’s secretary’s daughter, two previously unknown poems written by Maurier have been discovered. Tucked behind a framed photograph of the author are two poems written ten years before the publication of Rebecca.

600+ Books Looted After WWII Have Been Recovered

In 2017 Tania Grégoire sent 150 antique books to Sotheby’s for auction. The books were immediately flagged. Thanks to a few markings the books were linked to the University of Bonn in Germany which has an extensive catalogue of books that went missing. After learning that the books Grégoire had tried to auction were most likely looted, her father having been stationed during the war in Bonn, she led authorities to 450 more books. You can read more here, including the University’s press release.

Netflix Is Buying All The Book Rights

If it feels like every day we’re hearing about book rights being sold to Netflix it’s probably because they are. Not only have they been on a buying spree but 50 of the projects are being turned into series. PW takes you into the world of Netflix adaptations here.

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Today In Books

Snacks Or Snakes Confusion After Library Typo: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by New Harbinger Publications.

Mastering Adulthood cover image


Snacks Or Snakes Confusion After Library Typo

Let’s start the week with a good laugh! Pflugerville Public Library placed an ad in the paper about their anti-prom event which was gonna be fun thanks to a DJ and a photo booth and snakes–*record scratch!* They meant snacks, obviously, and assumed everyone would realize that but nope suddenly they had many calls about “snakes in the library?!” Thanks to a good sense of humor all around this got even funnier.

We’re Getting More SHRILL!

This is not a drill: Shrill, based on Lindy West’s memoir, has been renewed for season two on Hulu and this can not get here fast enough!

Saga Knows Its End Date

The saga that is Saga now has an official end in sight. Issue #54 of Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples’ graphic novel was its exact middle point and from there on we’re on course to the end. I love this comic and have to say this is great news because, as much as I want the things I love to exist forever in theory, I really hate that so many things run longer than they should.

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Today In Books

LOVE, SIMON Will Also Be A Series: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Dynamite.

The Boys omnibus vol 1 cover image


Love, Simon Will Also Be A Series

Becky Albertalli’s Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda got the film adaptation treatment in 2018 and it looks like we’ll be seeing even more of Simon thanks to Disney+. The upcoming streaming service acquired the novel’s rights during the whole 21st Century Fox takeover and they’re planning on creating a series.

A New Horror Imprint

Joining Tor, Forge, Tor Teen & Starscape, and Tor.com Publishing is the new horror imprint Nightfire. The new imprint will publish horror novels, novellas, short story collections and also has plans for podcasts, graphic novels, and more media. While we wait for the first release, slated for 2021, check out more info here.

Calling The Wedding Date and The Proposal Fans!

Jasmine Guillory is blessing us again with an upcoming romance set in the world of The Wedding Date series. This time we’ll follow single mom and social worker Vivian Forest on a Christmas trip to Sandringham–but why am I telling you this when you can instead read an exclusive first look here.

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Today In Books

Audible Is Producing Plays: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Henry Holt , publisher of TRUST EXERCISE by Susan Choi. Available now wherever books are sold.

Trust Exercise cover image


Audible Is Producing Plays

Enjoy the theater from the comforts of your home–or car, or wherever you listen to audiobooks, really. Audible has begun recording plays like An Act of God, starring Sean Hayes, for its million of subscribers. Read more about its Greenwich Village theater leasing, the 11 audible plays available, and its plans here. PS: if you’d listen to Alan Cumming’s read you an IKEA manual you’ll definitely want to click that link and get the deets on his one-man show.

More Digitizing!

Seriously, my favorite news lately is all the things libraries have digitized and made accessible. Looking to see never before seen footage? The Oakland Library has got you covered with newly digitized African American Museum & Library Oakland collection which has “footage documenting California activism and organized labor in the 1960s and 1970s.” Learn more here.

All The Disney+ Deets!

So if you’ve been dying to know when Disney+ (the upcoming streaming service) will be available and how much it’ll cost we finally have the answers: Nov. 12, 2019 and $6.99 per month or $69.99 a year. Netflix probably just shook a little.

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Unusual Suspects

A Brutal Twist Challenges Our Obsession🔪

Hello mystery fans!


Sponsored by Amazon Publishing

The Eighth Sister cover imageHe thought he’d left the spy game behind. Now he’s back in it, but the rules have changed. Ex-CIA agent Charles Jenkins accepts one last assignment in Moscow, but what he uncovers leaves him in the fight of his life—against his own country. Robert Dugoni, the New York Times bestselling author of the Tracy Crosswhite series, returns with a pulse-pounding new thriller of espionage, spy games, and treachery. Prime members read for free.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

American Spy cover imageThe Heroines Of ‘American Spy’ & ‘Who Is Vera Kelly?’ Are Challenging The World Of Male-Dominated Spies

Please Let Mycroft Holmes Be Fat

YA Mysteries You Won’t Want To Put Down

A Brutal ‘Killing Eve’ Twist Challenges Our Villanelle Obsession (Spoiler for s2e1)

Roxane Gay Returns to Comics in this Exclusive The Banks First Look

My Chick Bad: Unlikeable Heroines in Crime Fiction

News And Adaptations

Dare Me cover imageBlink and you might miss it, but there’s some sneaky peeks of my upcoming show DARE ME here…

TV’s Original Nancy Drew, Pamela Sue Martin, Cast In the CW Pilot Adaptation

‘Killing Eve’ Renewed For Season 3 By BBC America; New Showrunner Named

J.T. Ellison’s Lie To Me sold it’s televisions rights

‘Defending Jacob’: Cherry Jones, Pablo Schreiber, Betty Gabriel & Sakina Jaffrey Round Out Series Regular Cast Of Apple Series

JK Rowling backs crime writing scheme for BAME and working-class women

And this is not an adaptation or book related, but it sounds awesome and perfect for crime readers: Awkwafina & Ike Barinholtz To Produce & Star In ‘Crime After Crime’ Comedy At STX

Kindle Deals (Both from my TBR list!)

Miss Kopp Just Won't Quit by Amy Stewart cover imageMiss Kopp Just Won’t Quit (A Kopp Sisters Novel Book 4) by Amy Stewart is $2.99! (For historical mystery fans!)

The Marsh King’s Daughter by Karen Dionne is $1.99! (For thriller fans)

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

I acquired: Grab a Snake by the Tail: A Murder in Havana’s Chinatown by Leonardo Padura, Peter Bush (Translated) an upcoming release in the Mario Conde Cuban detective series (TW suicide). The next book in Abby L. Vandiver’s zanny cozy mystery series: Potions, Tells, & Deadly Spells. Ruth Ware’s upcoming psychological The Turn Of The Key.

I finished the audiobooks: A Beautiful Corpse (Harper McClain #2) by Christi Daugherty, Sophie Amoss (Narrator) which follows a journalist in Savannah (TW stalking); A Lady’s Guide to Etiquette and Murder by Dianne Freeman, Sarah Zimmerman (Narrator) a historical cozy mystery about a wealthy widow accused of her husband’s murder.

My current mystery break reads: Intercepted by Alexa Martin is a perfect romcom giving life to my black heart, which is a perfect balance to Samira Ahmed’s Internment, which is really good but also too real.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

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

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

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Today In Books

Digitizing The World’s Biggest Library: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by the audiobook edition of The Girl He Used to Know by Tracey Garvis Graves.

The Girl He Used to Know cover image


Digitizing The World’s Biggest Library

Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress, has big plans. BIG. Enriching the Library Experience is the five year plan to digitize the Library of Congress’ collection essentially making it accessible world wide: “In the past year, we’ve digitized more than 7.1 million items.” You’re gonna want to read this interview here.

Something Doesn’t Add Up

Remember how the Washington Department of Corrections banned used books being sent to prisoners from nonprofits citing that they’d had too many incidents with contraband items? Turns out when The Seattle Times requested to see the 17 incidents 12 didn’t add up to contraband items from used books–or any books. Get the details here.

Calling ’90s Kids!

There’s a documentary about Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark that delves into the popularity of the books but also how the books are amongst the most banned in modern times. You can watch the Scary Stories trailer here.

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Today In Books

Got Inked For The Library: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Amazon Publishing.

The Eighth Sister cover image


Got Inked For The Library

One of the events for National Library Week, to support the Lawrence Public Library, was Get Inked For The Library. Forty people signed up for a $100 tattoo from Standard Electric Tattooing where all proceeds were donated to the library.You can check out the 8 designs they chose from here and maybe get inspired for your own bookish ink.

Killer Women Mentoring Program

It’s 2019 and the crime genre has been so reluctant on being inclusive that programs like this have to be created: The author collective Killer Women began a mentoring program “for unpublished women from under-represented backgrounds who want to write crime or thriller novels.”

The Man Booker International Prize Shortlist!

The Man Booker International Prize–which aims to celebrate the top translated fiction from around the world–has announced its shortlist! Congrats to the six authors, translators, publishers, and books–yes, books have feelings.

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Unusual Suspects

Lots Of History In These Mysteries!

Hello mystery fans! I didn’t plan it but it happened and I’m happy it did: there’s a lot of history here. I’ve got for you my favorite Sherlock, an amazing real life WWII spy, and a recent historical mystery series that is so good!


Sponsored by the audiobook edition of Saving Meghan by D. J. Palmer

Saving Megha audiobook coverFifteen-year-old Meghan has been in and out of hospitals with a plague of unexplained illnesses. But when the ailments take a sharp turn, clashing medical opinions begin to raise questions about the puzzling nature of Meghan’s illness. Doctors suspect Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a rare behavioral disorder where the primary caretaker seeks medical help for made-up symptoms of a child. Is this what’s going on? Or is there something even more sinister at hand?


My Favorite Sherlock!

The Hollow of Fear by Sherry Thomas cover imageThe Hollow of Fear (Lady Sherlock, #3) by Sherry Thomas: If you’ve yet to read this amazing historical mystery series–one of my all-time favorites–here is a review for the 1st two books in the series. Read that instead of this review–not to be bossy but don’t spoil it for yourself. And now back to the third in the series: it’s SO good. This series keeps getting better for me and I started at already-in-love-with-it from the first book. Charlotte is still pretending to be Sherlock Holmes in order to solve cases and this time she takes her cover one step further (!!) when Lord Ingram is accused of having murdered Lady Ingram. If you enjoy this series for the witty banter, the inhaling of desserts, the mystery solving, the sexual tension, the twists, and Charlotte’s ability to see what others don’t–especially in relation to society’s treatment of women–you are going to be very pleased. And do I have good news for you: the next book in the series, The Art of Theft, comes out in October! I can’t wait that long! Also, someone needs to adapt this into a TV or film series NOW.

Fantastic Nonfiction! (TW suicide/ torture/ concentration camps)

Code Name: Lise cover imageCode Name: Lise: The True Story of the Woman Who Became WWII’s Most Highly Decorated Spy by Larry Loftis: I inhaled this fantastic audiobook! It’s nonfiction that is written like a novel about Odette Sansom, who basically ended up a spy in WWII because she decided to take the test to prove she wouldn’t pass when the SOE was trying to recruit her. Spoiler: she passed! She left her young children and went off to be a courier during the war and was immediately nicknamed the Angry Gazelle–she was delightfully stubborn. This takes you into her training, her mission, and her capture… If you like spy novels/biographies don’t miss this one. And if you’re an audiobook listener go with the audiobook!

Another Great Historical Mystery! (TW suicide)

Death of a New American cover imageDeath of a New American (Jane Prescott #2) by Mariah Fredericks: And here’s another historical mystery series that I love. This series is set in early 1900’s New York and has a great balance between focusing on historical moments and solving the mystery, while dissecting the social classes. In the second book the Titanic has just sunk and it’s all everyone can talk about–along with all the phobia and hate against Italian immigrants. Ladies’ maid Jane Prescott is traveling with the family she works for as plans for the youngest’s wedding are underway. And then the nanny at the family estate, where they’re staying, is murdered in what appears to be a kidnapping gone wrong. I really love Prescott’s character and her sometimes sardonic personality. She was raised in a place that took in sex workers and trained them for other jobs and so she’s always been treated as an outcast, has a lifelong friendship with an Italian girl who was an anarchist, and believes in asking many questions and searching for answers rather than believing the first thing someone says. This is an excellent series for fans of historical mysteries.

Recent Releases

They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall cover imageThey All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall (This great modern Agatha Christie retelling is now out! Review) (TW suicide/ eating disorder/ anxiety attacks)

The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold (Currently reading: Finally a focus on the women who were murdered.)

Murder by Milkshake: An Astonishing True Story of Adultery, Arsenic, and a Charismatic Killer by Eve Lazarus (True Crime)

Cat Chase the Moon (Joe Grey #21) by Shirley Rousseau Murphy (Feline private investigator)

Someone Knows by Lisa Scottoline (Domestic thriller)

Our House by Louise Candlish (Paperback) (Good psychological suspense) (TW suicide, suicidal thoughts)

Love and Death in the Sunshine State: The Story of a Murder by Cutter Wood (Paperback) (True Crime)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

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

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.