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Today In Books

Mystery Writers of America Withdraw Linda Fairstein As A Grand Master: Today In Books

Sponsored by Today’s newsletter is sponsored by THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE DUKE, a delightful Regency holiday romance by Janna MacGregor.

The Good the Bad and the Duke_Cover


Mystery Writers of America Were Asked To Rethink Award Nominee

After announcing that Linda Fairstein, along with Martin Cruz Smith, would be receiving the 2019 Grand Master Award at this year’s Edgar Awards many people asked them to reconsider Fairstein. Linda Fairstein was the prosecutor in the Central Park Five case where five black teenagers were wrongly convicted. “The Five served six to 13 years in prison before their convictions were vacated following the confession of a serial rapist, confirmed by DNA evidence, in 2002. Fairstein has never apologized or changed her position on their guilt.” After consideration Mystery Writers of America withdrew Linda Fairstein’s Grand Master award. You can read their statement here.

Waterstones Book Of The Year Goes To

Normal People by Sally Rooney! The British book retailers award, created in 2012, usually goes to books that are bestsellers leading up to Christmas. Read more about Rooney’s novel and the runner ups.

Exciting Adaptation News

JoAnn Chaney’s thriller As Long As We Both Shall Live, publishing January 15th, already sold its film rights. As someone who read an ARC of the book, I promise this is exciting. It’s going to be a huge thriller in 2019, and it’s perfect for film adaptation.

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Today In Books

Margaret Atwood Wrote A Sequel To THE HANDMAID’S TALE: Today In Books

Sponsored by CADENZA by Stella Riley, an exquisite historical romance in The Times recommended Rockliffe series.

Cadenza cover image


Margaret Atwood Announced On Twitter The Handmaid’s Tale Sequel

Titled The Testaments the new work will publish in 2019 and “is set 15 years after Offred’s final scene and is narrated by three female characters.” Here’s hoping it’s still fiction when it publishes.

60 Years Later

Uncollected poems and an essay by Pulitzer prize-winning poet Anne Sexton have been rediscovered. Her early works, noted as being brighter than the work she’s known for, will be reprinted by the literary journal at the University of Idaho, Fugue.

Netflix + The Roald Dahl Story Company =

The streaming company will be creating family-oriented animated series based on Matilda, The BFG, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Twits, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator and George’s Marvellous Medicine. “Netflix says it will ‘remain faithful to the quintessential spirit and tone’ of Dahl’s work, while also building an ‘imaginative story universe’ that extends beyond the author’s books.”

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Unusual Suspects

I Can’t Resist A Baby Elephant!

Hello mystery fans! This week I have a baby elephant, dark true crime, and Australian crime for you.


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway! Enter here.


I Can’t Resist A Baby Elephant! (TW mentions suicide/ child & domestic abuse off page but mentioned with detail)

The Perplexing Theft of the JEwel in the Crown by Vaseem Khan cover imageThe Perplexing Theft of the Jewel in the Crown (Baby Ganesh Agency Investigation #2) by Vaseem Khan: This series walks a line between mystery and cozy mystery and should have a mass appeal because of that. It doesn’t shy away from real problems in the world and things that are dark, but it doesn’t sink into them which keeps the book feeling much lighter than many mysteries. It also moves at a much quicker pace than a lot of cozy mysteries. And while Inspector Chopra has a baby elephant as a “partner,” this really does stay in the plausible, if unlikely–but still realistic enough that I plan to retire with a baby elephant that will help me solve mysteries. In this book Inspector Chopra, still retired from the police due to a heart condition, is running a restaurant, solving mysteries, and caring for a baby elephant and a runaway child. At the heart of the book is the mystery of the stolen Koh-i-Noor diamond, but Chopra is also called upon for a friend who claims to be wrongfully imprisoned, a stolen bust, and plenty of chaos and drama involving the restaurant, caring for a baby elephant, and a runaway child. I love that baby Ganesha is given a full character, being that elephants really are very intelligent and emotional creatures. It’s a really enjoyable series to sink into and I always look forward to more Ganesha, and seeing how Inspector Chopra and his wife Poppy’s lives continue to evolve.

Excellent Dark True Crime (TW incest discussed/ rape/ torture/ suicide attempt/ self-harm)

People Who Eat Darkness cover imagePeople Who Eat Darkness: The True Story of a Young Woman Who Vanished from the Streets of Tokyo–and the Evil That Swallowed Her Up by Richard Lloyd Parry: This is one of those true crime books that has a dark and sad case at the heart of it, and I appreciate that Parry focused on the victims (even if I could have used a bit less of his opinion in a few spots). There is a banana-pants aspect to this, there’s a dive into Japanese clubs where men pay for women to flirt with them, there’s the look into the Japanese justice system, and misogyny. Lucie Blackman was a young British woman working as a hostess in Japan when she disappeared. Her family traveled to Japan, treating this the way British/US media would treat a white young woman missing, but discovered that in Japan things are done differently. At this point I swear Lucie’s father reminded me of Nick Dunne in Gone Girl, where we expect people to behave certain ways in certain situations but sometimes they don’t. The book reads parts of Lucie’s diary (I’m personally never comfortable with this unless their diary starts with “If I die you can publish this…”), takes medium-depth dives into some aspects of Japanese culture and history involving the racist treatment of Koreans in Japan, follows the case of what happened to Lucie, and the trial which goes a bit off the rails from what Japanese courts were accustomed to. There are a lot of interesting things in this book wrapped around a sad and avoidable murder of a young woman and a lot of things that would now get labeled #metoo. If you’re a true crime reader and had missed this one, definitely pick it up.

Australian Procedural (TW domestic violence/ rape/ suicide)

The Dark Lake cover imageThe Dark Lake (Gemma Woodstock #1) by Sarah Bailey: Detective Sergeant Gemma Woodstock is a person with secrets, including that she’s having an affair with her partner–what could go wrong? She’s also just had a miscarriage she hasn’t told anyone about, including her boyfriend who she’s raising a son with. Adding to her stress is her new case: a strangled woman found in a lake who Woodstock knew from high school. The case is filled with complications, starting with: as much as Rosalind Ryan seemed to be a popular drama teacher, much of her life raises more questions than answers, and no one seemed to really know her, or why someone would murder her. Told in then and now, and also first person and third person, you mainly get to know Woodstock as she deals with the case at hand, her current chaotic life, and her reliving high school and what she knew of Ryan. This one should satisfy procedural fans who like complicated main characters.

Recent Releases (Okay, so this is going to be minimal until the new year, not because I’m getting lazy but because publishing slows down in November and December and then has a book explosion in January.)

The Novel Art of Murder cover imageThe Novel Art of Murder (Mystery Bookshop #3) by V.M. Burns (If you’re looking for a cozy mystery with a bookstore setting.)

Kingdom of the Blind (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache #14) by Louise Penny (I’m curling up with this one this week since Penny always delivers a satisfying procedural.)

Hellbent (Orphan X #3) by Gregg Hurwitz (Mass Market Paperback) (I really enjoyed the first one in this series, which was super action packed fun thriller, and look forward to continuing.)

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 Canaves.

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

Book Concierge Is Back: Today In Books

Sponsored by Glimmer of Hope by The Founders of March For Our Lives

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NPR’s Book Concierge Of 2018

I know you can’t look anywhere without spotting a Best Of list–’tis the season after all–but I love how NPR’s Book Concierge is designed and how eclectic it is. You’re bound to see favorites while also discovering tons of new-to-you books.

Thriller Without Violence Award Goes To:

Australian novel, On the Java Ridge by Jock Serong. The Staunch prize, this is it’s first year, was created to award a thriller “in which no woman is beaten, stalked, sexually exploited, raped or murdered.” Read more about the prize, those who oppose, and about Serong’s novel here.

We Have Another Dictionary Chosen Word Of The Year

Dictionary.com has selected “misinformation” as the 2018 word of the year. “The rampant spread of misinformation is really providing new challenges for navigating life in 2018,” Dictionary linguist-in-residence Jane Solomon told The Associated Press. “Mainstream” and “representation” were among the runner-ups.

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Today In Books

Islamophobic Graphic Novel Pulled By Publisher: Today In Books

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


Publisher Pulls Publication Of Upcoming Graphic Novel

Abrams will no longer publish A Suicide Bomber Sits in the Library by Jack Gantos and Dave McKean after many publicly objected to the Islamophobic comic. The Asian Author Alliance wrote a public letter that was signed by more than 1,000 teachers, writers, and readers: “The simple fact is that today, the biggest terrorist threat in the US is white supremacy. In publishing A Suicide Bomber Sits in the Library, Abrams is willfully fear-mongering and spreading harmful stereotypes in a failed attempt to show the power of story.”

The Fourth Doctor Is Writing A Doctor Who Novelization

Tom Baker has co-written with author James Goss a novelization based on a Doctor Who film that had been planned but never made. You can read more about Scratchman over at EW.

For The Honor Of Grayskull

We are getting Little Golden Books in 2019 of She-Ra and He-Man! While we wait for the adorable I Am She-Ra and I Am He-Man I very much recommend the new She-Ra series on Netflix–it’s fantastic!

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Today In Books

Boise Librarian’s Kindness Project: Today In Books

This edition of Today In Books is sponsored by Wildcard by Marie Lu


In Delightful News

Paige Thomas, a Boise Public Librarian, has been hiding notes inside books waiting to be checked out. The notes are positive and kind–the type of thing to brighten your day when you find it in your book–as part of her #guerrillakindnessBPL project.

Trailer: Netflix’s Indian original series, Selection Day

Based on Booker Prize winner Aravind Adiga’s 2016 novel Selection Day, Netflix’s new coming-of-age tale will premier December 28. You can see the trailer here.

Protestors Trying To Stop Airport Being Renamed After Neruda

(TW rape) Chile’s busiest international airport may be renamed in honor of Chilean poet Pablo Neruda. But many feel this would be a mistake, and send a wrong message, since Neruda described a time he raped a maid in his memoir. “There is no clear reason to rename the airport, and it is happening at a time when women are only beginning to dare denounce their abusers,” said Karen Vergara Sánchez.

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Today In Books

The Oddest Book Title Of The Year: Today In Books

Today’s newsletter is sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway! Click here for more info.


The Oddest Book Title Of The Year

According to the Bookseller’s annual Diagram prize this year’s oddest book title goes to: The Joy of Waterboiling, a German-language guide to cooking meals in a kettle. It beat out other titles such as Are Gay Men More Accurate in Detecting Deceits?, Equine Dry Needling, Jesus on Gardening, and The Secret History of Dung.

A Round-Up Of Black Friday Sales For Readers

Here’s a list of great sales today from ereaders at Barnes & Noble and Amazon to sales at Indie stores, publishers, and small presses.

Wonder What Books College Freshman Are Reading?

The National Association of Scholars surveyed schools that used college common reading program throughout 481 colleges and universities. 67 percent of books assigned were published after 2011 meaning more recent work is being read than classics. Read on to hear about specific books being chose and why.

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Unusual Suspects

The Crime Fiction Elephant In The Room

Hi mystery fans!


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway!


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Death Prefers Blondes by Caleb Roehrig cover imageRead an excerpt of Caleb Roehrig’s upcoming Death Prefers Blondes

Agatha Christie: A Crash Course on the Queen of Crime

The Crime Fiction Elephant in the Room

I have always been fascinated with the concept of the “black widow.” In 2007, I wrote a poem titled “Black Widow Spider.” And then I continued to write about women obliterating men. So writing My Sister, the Serial Killer was relatively easy, since I had basically been rehashing a similar plot over and over for years.An interview with Oyinkan Braithwaite

‘Two Can Keep A Secret’ By Karen M. McManus Is A Must-Read YA Thriller If You Love ‘Riverdale’ & ‘Sharp Objects’

Jonathan Lethem’s Playlist for His Novel The Feral Detective

Adaptation News

Barbed Wire Heart by Tess SharpeTess Sharpe’s Barbed Wire Heart (gritty crime novel) will be adapted by the production companies run by Margot Robbie and Dan Lin.

The Bone Collector by Jeffrey Deaver will get a new adaptation, this time as an NBC TV series. You may remember the first adaptation, a film in the ’90s that starred Denzel Washington and Angelina Jolie.

Kindle Deals

Black Water Rising cover imageAttica Locke’s Black Water Rising is $1.99 if you’re looking for a character driven novel. It follows Jay Porter, a Texas lawyer, who finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time. She’s one of my all-time favorite crime writers.

Barbed Wire Heart by Tess Sharpe is $1.99! If the adaptation news above made you curious about this one that’s a hell of a deal. I for one need a good thriller right now and loved her previous mystery Far From You (review) so I bought this real quick.

Pretty Fierce by Kieren Scott is $3.82 if you’re looking for a fun thriller! (Review)

Upcoming Books I Excitedly Got Galleys Of This Week

Let Me Hear A Rhyme by Tiffany D. Jackson (Both her previous books were twisty and awesome so I’m looking forward to her upcoming novel.)

A Dangerous Collaboration by Deanna Raybourn (I adore this fun, feminist, historical mystery series!)

The Reckoning by Yrsa Sigurdardottir (Icelandic 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 Canaves.

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

Chinese Writer Imprisoned For Gay Erotic Novel: Today In Books

This edition of Today In Books is sponsored by Candlewick Press


Chinese Author Imprisoned

Identified by the state-run Global Times only by her surname Liu, writing under the pseudonym Tianyi, the Chinese author was sentenced to more than ten years in prison. Police in the Anhui city of Wuhu, where Liu was sentenced, said the novel described obscene sexual behaviour between males, and was “full of perverted sexual acts such as violation and abuse.”

Reading Fiction Makes You Nicer

An assistant professor of psychology at the University of Rochester, David Dodell-Feder, analyzed 14 previous studies related to whether reading fiction alters one’s brain. His conclusion: there’s a “small, statistically significant improvement in social-cognitive performance,” a finding they call “robust” when one reads fiction over nonfiction or not reading at all.

Netflix’s Christmas Gift

To subscribers this year is Avengers: Infinity War will begin streaming on December 25th. It definitely won’t be spreading any holiday cheer but if you want a blockbuster movie to gather around and watch from the comfort of your home Netflix has got you covered.

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Unusual Suspects

A Serial Killer, Quirky PI Family, And Debutantes Up To No Good!

Hello mystery fans! I’ve got a wicked read, a fun dark comedy, and debutantes up to no good for you this week!


Sponsored by Mariner Books

This “charming, confident follow-up to Creatures of Will and Temper” (Publishers Weekly, starred review) picks up in 1927 Long Island, where Ellie West fishes by day and sells moonshine by night to the citizens of her home town. But after Ellie’s father joins a mysterious church whose parishioners possess supernatural powers and a violent hatred for immigrants, Ellie finds she doesn’t know her beloved island, or her father, as well as she thought.


Hell Of A Debut! (TW child abuse/ domestic abuse/ rape)

My Sister the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite cover imageMy Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite: Delicious, wicked, and smart–I absolutely adored this novel. It was a quick read at 240 pages, but that just made it a tight, excellent read. On the surface this is a story set in Lagos, Nigeria about two sisters: Korede keeps covering up Ayoola’s murders, but when Ayoola sets eyes on the same man as Korede, will she still be as quick to defend Ayoola? This novel reads fun with it’s satirical edge but speaks truths and packs a punch with its exploration of women’s issues. One of my favorites this year and a must-read! I can’t wait to read what Braithwaite delivers next.

Delightful Dark Comedy (TW alcoholism/ suicide attempt mentioned/ molestation incident mentioned)

The Spellman Files cover imageThe Spellman Files (The Spellmans #1) by Lisa Lutz: I knew nothing about this novel when I started the audiobook and was delighted by this banana pants family of PIs. It’s a quirky, fun, dark comedy that follows the members of the Spellman family, focusing on Izzy, the middle child in her 20s. A lot of this book is the family drama of growing up, and being a part of a family of PIs, and gets into two cases–mostly in the 2nd half of the book. Rae, the ridiculous and hilarious youngest teen child, has gone missing. Izzy also needs to solve a missing-person case as a deal with her parents in order to quit the family business. If you’re a fan of the humor in Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum series, need something fun, or a bit different to read run to this one. I thought it was a standalone and was excited to discover there are six books in the series!

Hello, Revenge!

Little White Lies (Debutantes #1) by Jennifer Lynn Barnes: Debutantes up to no good I tell you! Eighteen-year-old Sawyer Taft lives in a small town with her mom, both doing their best to really raise each other. It felt a bit like the story behind Gilmore Girls–rich teen runs away to have baby and they raise each other and then grandma shows up wanting a relationship with her granddaughter. Except Sawyer doesn’t know who her father is, and hides from her mother that she’s signed a contract with her grandmother. The contracts means Sawyer needs to participate in debutante season and will have the money she needs for college. But really she’s figured this will be the perfect opportunity to find out who her father is… Enter debutantes who blackmail and kidnap each other, family drama, and family secrets. Fun and twisty with more to it than you might think. Sawyer leapt off the page from the beginning as a smart, determined, resourceful, and quick mouthed woman who knows when to hold her tongue–will definitely read the next in the series if it continues.

Recent Releases

Newcomer cover imageNewcomer by Keigo Higashino, Giles Murray (Translator) (For fans of character driven mysteries: Review)

A Map of the Dark (The Searchers #1) by Karen Ellis (Paperback) (For fans of procedural/thrillers: Review) (TW child abuse/ self-harm)

The Broken Girls by Simone St. James (Paperback) (For fans of past and present mysteries: Review) (TW rape/ suicide)

widows of malabar hill cover imageThe Widows of Malabar Hill (Perveen Mistry #1) by Sujata Massey (Paperback) (One of my favorite 2018 releases perfect for fans of historical mysteries: Review)

Insidious Intent by Val McDermid (Paperback) (TBR: Criminal psychologist and former detective team up to catch a serial killer going after single women at weddings, set in North England.)

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 Canaves.

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