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Unusual Suspects

Why Gillian Flynn Launched her Book Imprint with a Debut Noir About a Rebel Nun

Hello mystery fans! As I edit this newsletter, I have one ear tuned to the street waiting for a delivery with my Nintendo Switch because, yes, this is going to be the cure for my stress. That means hopefully by the time you’re reading this, I’m finger-cramping my way through Zelda and a ton of old school games. So if you needed a reminder to go find yourself something that brings you joy, here it is: go find it.

And if you’re looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

Bookish Goods

a pencil pouch with the graphic of a library cart and text that says "this is how I roll"

This is How I Roll pouch by DeliciousAccessories

Looking for a pencil case? Makeup case? A pouch to toss little items into? ($16)

New Releases

cover image for Tremors in the Blood

Tremors in the Blood: Murder, Obsession, and the Birth of the Lie Detector by Amit Katwala

For fans of true crime, history, and criminal justice/forensics. This is a really interesting dive into the history of the lie detector/polygraph — from its creation in the 1920s to its implementation through history to now – including how not all its creators ended up believing in it. The book alternates between the inventors and the creation, to dives into criminal cases through history where the lie detector was used – including to determine whether someone should be executed or not. It’s eye-opening and a big reminder that the lie detector doesn’t meet scientific standards, even if it’s once again back in popular use. You get legal cases, courtroom scenes, learn interesting things like where the term “3rd degree” comes from, and the history of police corruption and crime at the turn of the century.

I inhaled the audiobook, narrated by Paul Bellantoni.

(TW domestic violence/ brief mentions of past child sexual assault, no detail/ suicide, detail, including murder suicide)

cover image for All That Is Mine I Carry With Me

All That Is Mine I Carry with Me by William Landay

For fans of fictional true crime, fictional authors writing a book in a book, unsolved cases, and alternating point of view by sections. The book starts with an author who is writing a book on a case from the ’70s: a lawyer with three kids was the suspect in his wife’s disappearance. But this is not a random case: the author grew up best friends with one of the children, one who is completely against him writing this book. The accused father now has dementia and can’t defend himself. What happens to a family when a mother just never comes home? When the father is accused? And the now grown kids don’t agree on digging into the case?

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

Riot Recommendations

And let’s do some March paperback releases!

Book cover of Queen of the Tiles by Hanna Alkaf

Queen of the Tiles by Hanna Alkaf

For fans of word games, history/definition of words, and mental health not being portrayed as a boogeyman. Najwa Bakri is back doing what she loves: playing at a Scrabble tournament. She’s there to take the title of Queen of the Tiles which her friend Trina held, until her death. She also needs to find out who is posting on Trina’s Instagram account claiming her death was suspicious…

(TW depression, anxiety/ drugging without consent / grief)

cover of The Book of Cold Cases by Simone St. James, featuring a car with its driverside door open in the rainy dark, with a big mansion in the background

The Book of Cold Cases by Simone St. James

For fans of fictional true crime writers, past murder cases, and things that get a bit spooky. Shea Collins is a receptionist with no social life who pours over true crime cases at night, since she survived an attempted kidnapping as a kid. Her current obsession is a double murder from the ’70s that Beth Greer stood trial for and was acquitted of. Shea, unable to let it go, decides to try and interview Beth to get the real story. But doing so only invites her obsession to grow and strange things to begin to happen.

(TW mentions past attempted child kidnapping, brief mention of sexual assault, not graphic/ alcoholism/ brief mention of past partner abuse/ mostly alludes to child abuse incident, not graphic/ speculates sexual assault, mentions past rape, not graphic)

News and Roundups

Noting “Changed Complexion of Staff,” Elmwood Park Public Library Board Takes Over: A Case Study in Library De-Professionalization

there goes the neighborhood book cover

Liberty and Danika chat new releases including The Golden Spoon by Jessa Maxwell

Q & A with Jade Adia

Down the Crime-Fiction Rabbit Hole with Iris Yamashita, Author of City Under One Roof

Why Gillian Flynn launched her book imprint with a debut noir about a rebel nun

‘Shetland’ Writer David Kane To Adapt Denise Mina’s ‘Morrow’ Into Multi-Season TV Series

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

12 Heart-Pumping New Thrillers To Read In 2023

Hello mystery fans! I once again have a few links to censorship news (out of a never-ending amount) so I wanted to urge you all, if you’re not already, to join in the fight against all the book-banning and censorship going on. The movement is growing and awful at its current state but is not the end goal. I hear a lot of comments about states like Florida and how they deserve it or it’s their problem — which are not great to begin with, especially since it’s reliant on the false narrative that a state is a monolith — but for those who only care when something is in their backyard: Florida is the canary in the coal mine, it is the template meant to be applied to all states. While Book Riot has tool kits for fighting book bans, tips on How to Talk About Book Bans With Friends, Library Patrons, and a book (How to Fight Book Bans and Censorship), there are also great organizations fighting the fight that can always use your help, including the Florida Freedom to Read Project.

And Book Riot has a new newsletter! Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

Bookish Goods

washi tape in beige with graphic design images of animals reading books

Reading Critters Washi Tape by thecleverclove

I mean this had me at the title — which I squealed at. ($5)

New Releases

cover image for What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez

What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez by Claire Jimenez

For fans of contemporary novels with great voice and an underlying mystery that is solved at the end. This is one of my favorite books of the year, I really loved the voice(s) and its mix of genres. The central running mystery is about Ruthy Ramirez who disappeared after track practice in junior high. She’s never been heard from since. Over a decade later, one of her sisters swears that she spots Ruthy on a reality show. But how? We follow the remaining women of the Ramirez family living in Staten Island who in different ways have been worn down by life. We watch them struggle in their personal lives, work, with each other, the dreams they had and have, and the questions of what happened to Ruthy — how can someone just disappear? The novel alternates between the three women — Dolores, Jessica, and Nina — in their current lives, while they also recount their childhood and past stories. And then, at the end of the book, their need to know if that is Ruthy on TV leads them to drive to the set of the show in hopes of getting answers…

I highly recommend this book for the pleasure of getting to know these women. And if you listen to audiobooks, it’s a fantastic choice as it’s narrated by the author, Claire Jimenez, who really brings to life the Ramirez women and the rhythm of their voices.

(TW mentions of past child abuse/ talk of diet culture/ recounts of past child sexual assault, not graphic/ mentions past domestic abuse)

cover image for A Sinister Revenge

A Sinister Revenge (Veronica Speedwell #8) by Deanna Raybourn

I adore this entire series with all my heart. This is a must-read series for fans of fun historical mysteries with great opposites-attract pairings. Raybourn also has a gift for humor and consistently delivers one great entry into the series after another.

Veronica, a lepidopterist, and her partner Stoker, a natural historian, find themselves forced back together by Stoker’s brother Tiberius, who may be in great danger. Tiberius was a part of a friend group called the Seven Sinners, which recently had two members die. A bit odd. But what really seals the something-isn’t-right-here feel is that Tiberius’ is sent a message to get his own affairs in order. So Veronica and Stoker team up to throw a party and invite all the remaining Seven Sinners in order to smoke out the possible murderer. What could go wrong?!

Among a great series that I always love–for it’s characters, humor, and adventures–this may be my favorite! And the audiobook has a great narrator, Angèle Masters, which really brings all the characters to life.

If you want to start at the beginning pick up A Curious Beginning.

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

Riot Recommendations

Thought I’d show a bit of the spectrum of Japanese crime books by picking one dark crime novel and one slow-burn look at how people are affected by a crime — with a twist!

In the Miso Soup cover image

In the Miso Soup by Ryū Murakami, Ralph McCarthy (Translator)

This is a dark crime novel that dives into Japanese subculture, makes comparisons between U.S. and Japanese societies, and like most Japanese crime novels doesn’t have the use of guns. It also works for fans of horror and psychological thrillers as the further you read, the deeper you get into a character’s mind.

Kenji is hired as a tour guide by an American who wants to experience Tokyo’s sex industry. At first Kenji doesn’t care, mostly ignores, that he feels like something is off with Frank — but the deeper into the night they get, the more anxious Kenji becomes.

(TW rape/ past suicide attempt/ graphic violence/ statutory relationship)

cover image for Six Four

Six Four by Hideo Yokoyama, Jonathan Lloyd-Davies (Translation)

This gives you a really detailed procedural for the majority of the book and then at the end it cranks up to a thriller. Mikami is a former investigator, now working in press relations, who is inundated with all the politics happening in the department. In his personal life his daughter is missing which has led to his wife no longer leaving the house. At work he’s looking into a fourteen-year-old unsolved kidnapping/murder case and the possible department screw-up, along with a current case where the police are withholding the name of a driver and the media is upset and pushing back. I was fully absorbed in this one and loved seeing the difference/similarities in a procedural from a country other than the US and was really satisfied by the “twist” ending.

(I didn’t keep TW notes when I read this one, sorry.)

News and Roundups

Giving Up Is Not an Option: Book Censorship News

Volusia County Schools (FL) Want to Invest in Moms For Liberty’s BookLooks

Here are the Comics Moms for Liberty and Other Book Banners Call Inappropriate, and Why

12 Heart-Pumping New Thrillers To Read In 2023

Alma Katsu – 10 Questions for Crime Writers of Color

‘The Confessions Of Frannie Langton’ Exclusive

Luther: The Fallen Sun Review: The Award-Winning Series Rises Again

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

Top 10 criminal duos in fiction

Hello mystery fans! If you get excited about Girl Scout cookies and you’re looking for a box(es), here’s a roundup of trans kids that are scouts selling cookies you can buy from.

And Book Riot has a new newsletter! Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

Bookish Goods

tea towel that says "Reading forever! Dishes whenever!"

Bookish tea towel by BookishEndeavors

Yes to this motto. ($8)

New Releases

Time's Undoing Book Cover

Time’s Undoing by Cheryl A. Head

For fans of journalist leads, family mysteries, and past and present story lines! In present day, Meghan McKenzie works at the Detroit Free Press as a reporter and pitches her own family mystery as an article to write: Her great-grandfather’s murder. All she’s ever known was that he died a woodworker at the age of 28. In 1929 we meet carpenter Robert Lee Harrington, his young daughter, and pregnant wife as they start a new life in Birmingham, Alabama.

Meghan travels to Birmingham to find the answers she’s looking for to write her article, and while some people are happy to help, others are not. Both Robert and Meghan’s stories slowly unfold, increasing in danger.

I love that the audiobook had a narrator for each time period: Jade Wheeler and Ronald Peet.

cover image for The Secrets of Hartwood Hall

The Secrets of Hartwood Hall by Katie Lumsden

For fans of historical mysteries and gothic mysteries. Margaret Lennox, running from her past, decides that an isolated house in the west of England would be a great place to take a job as governess to a widow’s only child. What could possibly go wrong? Certainly taking up a forbidden relationship with the gardener won’t make things worse? Maybe the abandoned east wing is a red flag, along with gossip from the village that does not trust the widow…

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

Riot Recommendations

And just like that it is March. Apparently no matter how old I get, I will always associate the month of March with the color green — thanks, primary education. So I went with some green covers.

cover image for Dead in the Garden

Dead in the Garden (Grasmere Cottage Mystery #1) by Dahlia Donovan

If you’re looking for a super cozy (cinnamon roll) mystery with romance novella, here it is. Couple Valor and Bishan live in an English village and find a dead body in their garden. As the cozy trope goes, one of them must be accused (Bish) and the other (Valor) must solve what really happened in order to free Bish! It ends on a cliffhanger (!) so have the sequel queued up.

cover image of The Banks

The Banks by Roxane Gay, Ming Doyle (illustrations)

For fans of standalone graphic novels, revenge, family drama, and heists. Watch how a family — a grandmother (Clara), daughter (Cora), and granddaughter (Celia) — got into the heist business long ago and how in present day they’ll try and pull off one last set-for-life pay day with a twist of revenge!

(TW: one panel of possible sexual assault, quickly stopped)

News and Roundups

cover image for Red London

Two Thriller Writers and Former Spies On Writing and Living Espionage

Rebecca Makkai’s smart, prep school murder novel is self-aware about the ‘ick’ factor

Top 10 criminal duos in fiction

Florida lawmakers to consider expansion of so-called ‘don’t say gay’ law

Reading Pathways: Getting Cozy With Valerie Burns

Tennessee governor to ban drag shows — despite photo of him dressed in drag

Liberty and Kelly discuss new releases including Liliana’s Invincible Summer: A Sister’s Search for Justice by Cristina Rivera Garza on All The Books!

Help Support the Book Drive for Green Hill School Prison Library

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

The Best Unconventional Detective TV Shows and Movies, Ranked

Hi mystery fans! I finally got to watch Julia Roberts and George Clooney’s recent romcom (fun!) and I started Poker Face which really scratches the itch for mystery fans who like to see the crime upfront and then watch the sleuth have to piece together evidence to hopefully nail the culprit!

Bookish Goods

New Releases

cover image for Liliana's Invincible Summer

Liliana’s Invincible Summer: A Sister’s Search for Justice by Cristina Rivera Garza

It’s always strange to say this about true crime memoirs but this is a gorgeously written book that will live with me forever which I loved. It’s for fans of true crime looking for the focus to be on the victim(s) and our society, without excessive graphic violence descriptions. Cristina Rivera Garza uses her sister’s murder in 1990 to spotlight femicide in Mexico. Twenty-nine years after Liliana Rivera Garza — a 20-year-old architecture student — was murdered, Cristina decides to get the files and follow the investigation, while also adding entries from her sister’s diary to show how a teenage relationship led to her strangulation in her home years later. The book also brings to light many femicide cases in Mexico and protests, shining a light on women trying to fight back against gender-targeted crime and how society has played a role in its existence and protection. If you read true crime memoirs, I highly recommend picking this one up to get to know Liliana and Cristina. Liliana’s diary entries are also a perfect snapshot of a teen girl’s life.

Victoria Villarreal does a fantastic job narrating the audiobook, which I listened to in one day.

(TW mentions rape cases the way the news does/ talks of femicide cases/ mentions case believed to be suicide that was later determined murder/ mentions partner sexual assault, not graphic/ partner abuse/ mentions brief threat of suicide)

cover of Scorched Grace by Margot Douaihy; illustration of a stained glass window image of a nun smoking a cigarette, done in reds and purples

Scorched Grace by Margot Douaihy

This is the first book put out by Gillian Flynn‘s imprint! And if you’ve ever wanted a lesbian nun covered in tattoos who goes full amateur sleuth, here you go! Sister Holiday is not a nun with habits you’d expect from a nun: smoking, cursing, and throwing herself into an investigation. And she won’t have anyone messing with the home she’s finally found, so when an arsonists hits Saint Sebastian’s School, killing a janitor, even the New Orleans heat won’t stop her from finding who’s responsible in order to save the school from being shut down. Being an amateur sleuth mystery, and her not fitting in the perfect nun box, you know she’s going to become a suspect herself…

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

Riot Recommendations

I have two more recent paperback releases for two different reading moods!

Under Lock & Skeleton Key cover image

Under Lock & Skeleton Key (Secret Staircase Mystery #1) by Gigi Pandian

A great start to a new series for fans of locked-room mysteries, amateur sleuths, past family mystery, and watching all the clues come together! Tempest Raj left her Las Vegas gig as a magician and is now living in her father’s house with her grandparents. She’s working for her dad’s company — which builds secrete and elaborate things in homes — while she figures out what she wants to do with her life. And so of course she finds a body, one that looks exactly like her and that she knows, at a job site. She’ll have to solve the murder, and whether it was targeted at her!

Soneela Nankani narrates both audiobooks in the series delightfully — The Raven Thief releases soon!

(TW brief mention of past suicide assumption, detail/ past domestic violence mentions/ stalker)

cover image for Tripping Arcadia

Tripping Arcadia by Kit Mayquist

For fans of Gothic mystery, elite families, and secrets! Lena’s father lost his job after an injury. Now Lena has dropped out of medical school and is willing to take any job to help her parents out financially. It’s how she ends up working for an elite Boston family, no matter how many red flags there are… What could go wrong?

News and Roundups

More Politicians Need To Address Book Bans

Liberty and Tirzah chat new releases including I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai, Scorched Grace: A Sister Holiday Mystery by Margot Douaihy, and The Writing Retreat by Julia Bartz on All The Books!

Mystery Writers of America Announces Barbara Neely Grant Recipients

Alison Brie, Jake Lacy Join Liane Moriarty Series ‘Apples Never Fall’ at Peacock

The Best Unconventional Detective TV Shows and Movies, Ranked

Jesse Q. Sutanto returns with cozy murder mystery

‘The Night Manager’ Renewed for Season 2 With Tom Hiddleston Returning

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Julia Donaldson Ends James Patterson’s Reign as UK Libraries’ Most Borrowed Author

Hello mystery fans! If I’d been told one of my all time favorite romance films would be an animated one, I would have had doubts and yet it’s now true: Entergalactic (Netflix).

Bookish Goods

sweatshirt with a rainbow and book that says "portable magic"

Booklover Sweatshirt by BoldBirdApparel

Be cozy, love books. ($42)

New Releases

Someone Else's Life cover image

Someone Else’s Life by Lyn Liao Butler

For fans of domestic thrillers, stories where the past is maybe coming to get you, and slow burn suspense! Annie Lin has had a difficult life recently, including losing her business. Now she, her husband, and her recently traumatized child move from New York to Kauai in the hopes of helping their son, bringing peace of mind to Annie, and fixing her marriage. But during a storm, a stranger seeks shelter at their home. Could this be a new friend that Annie desperately needs or has danger just arrived?

cover of Murder at Haven's Rock by Kelley Armstrong; photo of woman in shadow standing on a cliff's edge against the setting sun

Murder at Haven’s Rock (Haven’s Rock #1) by Kelley Armstrong

For fans of action, murder mystery, remote locations, and page-turners! This is a spinoff from Armstrong’s Rockton/Casey Duncan series, which takes the two main characters from that series and begins a whole new adventure for them — similar to the last. You can 100% start here.

Casey Duncan is a detective married to Eric Dalton, a sheriff. They’re taking what they know of a secret town that houses people who need refuge (sometimes from bad people, sometimes they are the bad people) and creating their very own hidden town in the Yukon wilderness. But things are definitely not starting out on a good note when two of the workers building the town ignore the rules and go into the forest. Soon the two missing crew members are a dead body and a missing person and Casey and Eric have to deal with a prickly architect, a crew with plenty of gossip, a woman with a wolf, and the dangers in the forest to figure out what happened — all while they try and settle into their new town, bring in Casey’s sister, and find out some residents can’t wait any longer to join…

Definitely pick this up if you need to be sucked into another world, want a missing person/murder mystery, and the pace of a thriller.

The audiobook is narrated by Thérèse Plummer, who I really enjoyed as she brings all the tension and action into her voice. She also narrated Armstrong’s previous series.

(TW briefly mentions past suicide, not detailed/ Parkinson’s discussions past and present)

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

Riot Recommendations

I have an excellent library system because it is well funded — as should ALL library systems be — and I regularly use Hoopla and Overdrive so I thought I’d share the last two books added to each wishlist.

cover image for Peg and Rose Solve a Murder

Peg and Rose Solve a Murder (A Senior Sleuths Mystery) by Laurien Berenson

For fans of older MCs, amateur sleuths, and odd couple pairings. Rose Donovan is a former nun who has a hard time getting along with her sister-in-law Peg Turnbull. But when someone from their local bridge club is murdered, they’ll have to put their bickering aside — maybe — and team up to solve this murder.

cover image for The Last Templar

The Last Templar by Raymond Khoury

For fans of adventure, mystery, history, and Dan Brown. The Metropolitan Museum of Art is holding a gala for the opening of their new exhibit, Treasures of the Vatican. This is where archaeologist Tess Chaykin is witness to four masked horsemen dressed as Templar Knights violently storming in and stealing a device. Now Tess and FBI agent Sean Reilly must figure out the who, what, why by learning the hidden history of the crusading Knights.

News and Roundups

5 new mysteries and thrillers to help get you through winter

time's undoing book cover

As Book Bans and Legislative Attacks Escalate, the New Press Pushes Back

Oklahoma One Step Closer to Implementing State-Wide Book Rating System

Julia Donaldson ends James Patterson’s reign as UK libraries’ most borrowed author

Rachel Howzell Hall, George Saunders, James Hannaham among L.A. Times Book Prize finalists

One of Netflix’s best crime dramas is not being renewed, according to creator

This Propulsive Mystery Stars a Chain-Smoking Tattooed Lesbian Nun

BBC announces new Agatha Christie murder mystery adaptation

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

10 Mystery Book Series That Keep Amateur Detectives Guessing

Hello mystery fans! I am counting down the days until Ted Lasso season three arrives (March 17th) and am very much enjoying the second season of Bake Squad on Netflix — if you’re looking for a fun comfort show that’s also delicious!

Bookish Goods

clear bookmark with 3 white ghosts in center all giving the finger

Rude Ghost Bookmarks by SpideybatCreations

I might be writing this at the end of the day and I may have laughed way too hard at these adorably rude ghosts. ($8.50)

New Releases

cover image for Every Man A King

Every Man a King (King Oliver #2) by Walter Mosley

I love Walter Mosley and am glad he has a new crime series — his backlist is extensive and in all genres! This series is for fans of PIs, and old school detectives looking for a modern story.

Joe King Oliver lives in a world where people owe each other favors and no one is all good or all bad. He used to work for the NYPD until he was framed and ended up in Rikers. Now he’s a PI with his daughter helping out in the office, even if he’s trying very hard to dissuade her from this line of business. He ends up with two jobs, both really uncomfortable: a family friend needs him to look into a white nationalist arrested for murder who is being hidden in the prison system; and his ex-wife needs help for her wealthy husband. As usual King is going to find himself down very dangerous rabbit holes…

You can jump in here, but if you’re a completionist pick up Down the River Unto the Sea.

The audiobook is narrated by Dion Graham who is always an automatic listen for me.

(TW brief suicide mention, detail)

i have some questions for you book cover

I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai

This is one of my favorite reads of the year. It has so much of my catnip: university setting, return to past school, a past murder mystery being reexamined, and a true crime podcast host. It also dives into the way rape culture has always existed but the difference in language and understanding through generations, the spectrum of predators, and the way victims are exploited in the true crime genre.

Bodie Kane is a well known podcaster with two young children and a marriage-on-paper-only when she’s asked to return to Granby School, the boarding school in New England she once attended, to teach a film class. She accepts, even though she never really enjoyed her time there and her roommate was murdered. Now one of her students decides to take on the assignment Kane gives with a focus on her roommate’s murder. The case was solved, the athletic trainer found guilty, but the student is convinced it was all wrong. Now Kane has a front row seat to the students digging into the case, a flood of her own memories, and a world where it feels like everyone has an online opinion for true crime cases.

The audiobook is a great production, mostly narrated by Julia Whelan with a bit narrated by JD Jackson. More audiobook productions should follow this lead.

(TW brief mention past drug overdose, brief mention past addiction and death unknown if suicide, detail/ brief mention past domestic abuse/ mentions sexual assault case/ eating disorder/ rumors of statutory student teacher/ past memory possible suicide attempt/ recounts past groping/ mentions suicide cases, method mentioned/ mentions of terminal cancer diagnosis and death)

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

With the news that “The HarperCollins Union, which represents 250 employees, just announced that they’ve voted to ratify the contract negotiated with publishing giant HarperCollins and will return to work on February 21,” I thought I’d share two of their titles that released at the end of 2022.

Someone Had to Do It by Amber and Danielle Brown cover

Someone Had To Do It by Amber Brown, Danielle Brown

For fans of thrillers, family drama, and fashion! The story revolves around two young women tied in different ways to the fashion industry, specifically the New York fashion house Simon Van Doren. Brandi Maxwell is the intern realizing the job is anything but glamours but still enamored by the world of fashion. Taylor Van Doren is about to lose her inheritance from the fashion house her father runs if she fails another drug test. At a party Brandi overhears something she shouldn’t as Taylor is now ready for revenge…

cover of Nine Liars (Truly Devious) by Maureen Johnson; illustration of a shatter picture frame lying on a bed of fall leaves

Nine Liars (Truly Devious #5) by Maureen Johnson

If you are a fan of the mystery genre and nods to the tropes, you should 100% be reading this series. Also great for fans of found family, friend groups. The first three books, starting with Truly Devious, are a trilogy and need to be read together in order. Book 4 and 5 however can be read as standalones, and without having read the trilogy.

Stevie Bell is a senior at Ellingham Academy but her boyfriend is now studying in London so obviously she jumps at the chance to convince the principal to let her and her friends do a study abroad course in London. But there isn’t much time for studying when Stevie learns of an unsolved murder mystery: In the ’90s, nine Cambridge friends were staying at a friend’s home playing drunk hide-n-seek in the middle of the night when two were murdered with an ax. After meeting one of the survivors, Stevie can’t get the case out of her head, and being Stevie she’s going to prove that it wasn’t a robbery gone wrong. If she’s correct, that means one of the surviving seven friends was the ax murderer…

I bloody loved this book — it’s super satisfying for mystery lovers.

(TW anxiety attack)

News and Roundups

book cover for the woman in the library

45 Books About Libraries and Librarians to Check Out Now

Authors Sign Open Letter to New York Times Calling Out Anti-Trans Coverage

How to Talk About Book Bans With Friends, Library Patrons, and More

The Guardian: The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup

Must-Listen: Bookish Podcast Episodes From Non-Bookish Podcasts

10 Mystery Book Series That Keep Amateur Detectives Guessing

Liked The Night Manager? Here are 7 crime thriller shows & movies that are as intense and suspenseful

‘A Singular Crime’: Warner Bros’ Argentinian Crime Thriller Sells To Key Markets — EFM

What happened at the end of Luther? Season 5 recap

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

30 of the Best YA Mystery Books of All Time

Hi mystery fans! Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur is now streaming on Disney+ and I am so excited. Now let’s talk books.

Bookish Goods

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Rainbow Bookshelf Sliding enamel pin by BookaholicStore

For those who dream of owning a library with a sliding ladder. ($12)

New Releases

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My Flawless Life by Yvonne Woon

For fans of elite private schools and “fixers”! Hana Yang Lerner goes to an elite school in Washington, D.C. where she’s basically the school fixer — students hire her for whatever mess they need resolved, or disappeared. Her only problem is that her father, a senator, is in a car accident that almost kills a woman and has him arrested. It leads to Hana losing her friends, standing, and reputation and her fixer skills are no match for the situation. It’s why she takes a job from an anonymous person with the job of following her ex-best friend. What could wrong?!

cover image for Death of a Dancing Queen

Death of a Dancing Queen by Kimberly G. Giarratano

For fans of PIs, family drama, and decades old unsolved murder cases. Billie Levine lives in New Jersey with her mom, brother, and now grandfather who is a retired cop/PI, that moved to Florida but has returned since Billie’s mom has been diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s. Her mom’s condition is why Billie has decided to take over her grandfather’s private PI firm — it’ll hopefully pay some bills and have flexible hours so her mom isn’t left alone at home. But what she thinks is a simple case — a boyfriend looking for his girlfriend — ends up getting very complicated quickly. The missing girl had a true crime podcast, and she was focused on an unsolved murdered woman case that Billie’s grandfather has files on, and connects to the Jewish mob Billie knows. And Billie is having to reckon with her own past — an ex connected to the Jewish mob — and her emotional state is thinking that she will inherit her mom’s diagnosis.

(TW addiction/ mom with early onset Alzheimer’s / mentions assumption of partner abuse/ alludes to past attempted sexual assault, no details/ alcoholism/ transphobia, transgender reveal used as a “twist”/ antisemitism)

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

In a little behind-the-curtain moment for this newsletter I keep an Excel-style file by years (since I started) broken down monthly with the releases. And since I accidentally hit the 2020 tab I figured why not look at which books came out this week in that year.

cover image for Untamed Shore paperback

Untamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

If you’re looking to get away from the winter cold, want a slow-burn suspense, and like recent historical (1979). Set in Baja California on a beach littered with dead sharks, we meet 18-year-old Viridiana. She wants to get the hell out of this town and has no plans on marrying the guy she just broke up with, no matter how hard her mom tries to make it happen. So she’s all in to move into a rental home with a wealthy tourist couple to be the assistant to the husband. But one of them may not make it out alive…

(TW domestic abuse/past suicide mentioned, detail)

cover image for Foul is Fair

Foul Is Fair by Hannah Capin

For revenge fans and anyone who hears the “Lady Macbeth meets Heathers” war cry and thinks, “yes, please!” Elle is assaulted on her birthday at a boy’s prep school party. She tells her parents, friends, and transfers schools. She now goes to the school where every boy who assaulted her goes. And that’s how she begins her revenge, with the help of her coven — popular girlfriends — in order to enact her plan to kill the boys one by one…

(TW Capin gives detailed notes here.)

News and Roundups

The Violin Conspiracy cover image

How a real-life stolen violin inspired Brendan Slocumb’s bestselling mystery

Simon & Schuster is Up for Sale Again

Penn Badgley Goes Deeper on Swearing Off Racy ‘You’ Sex Scenes: ‘That Aspect of Hollywood Has Been Very Disturbing’

Revisiting the True Crime Case That Inspired Edgar Allan Poe

Three Trans Crime Writers Talk Thrills and Challenges of Writing in the Genre

Viral TikTok boosts father’s thriller book to bestseller

Libro.fm Offering Free Black History Audiobooks This Week

30 of the Best YA Mystery Books of All Time

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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 Spoutible, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, 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

Knives Out but with Muppets

Hello mystery fans! And happy half-off candy day! Since I will watch anything with ghosts, I of course had to start the new series Not Dead Yet (ABC / Hulu), but I currently remain obsessed with Ginny & Georgia (Netflix) — so help me if it doesn’t get renewed for a third season.

Bookish Goods

tshirt that says I rescue books trapped in the bookstore I'm not a hoarder I'm a hero

Book lovers T-shirt by IkersonLTD

Just found my new favorite T-shirt. ($25)

New Releases

cover image for Last Seen in Lapaz

Last Seen in Lapaz (Emma Djan Investigation #3) by Kwei Quartey

For armchair travelers and PI fans! Emma Djan works for a PI firm in Accra, Ghana. Her current case is a bit tricky since it comes from a friend of her boss: his daughter recently graduated from high school and disappeared from her home one night. The parents blame the boyfriend she suddenly was spending all her time with. But it’s not long into Emma’s investigation that she finds the boyfriend murdered, discovering he was a sex trafficker. Now she needs to find her missing woman and figure out who murdered her boyfriend…

If you want to start at the beginning, pick up The Missing American. And if you want a completed procedural series, pick up Quartey’s Wife of the Gods.

cover image for Black Wolf

Black Wolf by Kathleen Kent

For fans of CIA agents, historical fic (’90s!), and inserted chapters from the killers point of view. Melvina Donleavy is able to recognize anyone she’s ever seen because her brain will put together things people don’t notice like the shape of the back of their head. This is why the CIA thinks she’s an asset. And why they send her on her first mission to Soviet Belarus. She’s undercover and with a team, but even her own team doesn’t know why she’s really there. And complicating things is that women have been disappearing, and being murdered, in Minsk. Because some of the victims have been sex workers, no one seems concerned to look for the possible serial killer. But Melvina wants to know and starts to ask a few questions, leading to a woman who spoke to her to be murdered. Melvina is already in enough danger with her assignment, and now she’s added to that and potentially placed the entire team in even more danger…

I chose the audiobook format, which I enjoyed, narrated by Eva Kaminsky. I liked the balance between character focus and intensity and could see this being adapted into a limited series.

If you want a procedural trilogy pick up Kent’s The Dime.

(TW sexual assault/ mentions terminal cancer diagnosis/ mentions suicidal plan/ mentions past child abuse/ faked suicide, brief detail/ brief mention animal cruelty)

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

I’m a huge fan of adaptations. I think it gives the book the chance at a new, larger audience, and I love the idea of a story getting to be told in different formats. With that in mind, here are two books I think would be great adapted into TV series and film.

A Rising Man cover image

A Rising Man (Sam Wyndham, #1) by Abir Mukherjee

I love watching well-done historical period pieces like The Empress on Netflix. Taking a time period with political upheaval and throwing in characters with personal drama just makes good TV. Now throw in murders and I think we have gold, which is why Abir Mukherjee’s series would be perfect as a streaming series. It follows a former Scotland Yard detective, Captain Sam Wyndham, now working in British-ruled Calcutta in 1919. He’s partnered with one of the only Indians in the CID, Sergeant Banerjee. The characters, their personal lives, their relationships, the mysteries, and the time period offer so much story to be explored.

(TW addiction)

White Smoke cover image

White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson

Anything that has the premise of “is the house haunted or is it something else” filmed well will be a huge hit and I’d love to see Jackson’s White Smoke turned into one of those dark and moody feeling films. I also think the exploration of the teen daughter’s personal life and blended family, with the social thriller backdrop, could be amazing and has the potential for teen and adult audiences along with a real edge-of-your-seat feel.

(TW addiction/ past overdose mentions, not graphic/ obsessive thoughts/ past child murder mentioned, not graphic or detailed)

News and Roundups

Write Your Legislators About Banned Books Right Now With This Template

8 Action-Packed Novels About Art Heists

Discover the Biggest Mystery and Thriller Trends of 2023 with 84 New Books

‘Gone Girl’ author Gillian Flynn recommends 4 love stories

‘You’ Star Penn Badgley Requested ‘Zero’ Intimacy Scenes for Joe in Season 4: ‘I Don’t Want to Do That’

$55,000 in Antiquarian Books Were Stolen From Family Bookstore

Knives Out but with Muppets

(TW sexual assault) CRIME WRITER TURNED VICTIM AND SURVIVOR: When the system fails, you rewrite the rules

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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 Spoutible, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, 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

Amazon Bets Big on ‘Bosch’ with 2 New Spinoff Series

Hello mystery fans! 2023 feeling like a super weird year to anyone else? I’m trying to hold judgement since it is only February but it really needs to get its act together, please. Anyhoo, I stumbled across Extraordinary on Hulu, which was a very good laugh. And before we jump into all the mystery goodness, if you were looking for ways to help with the Turkey and Syria earthquake relief and recovery efforts, USA Today compiled a list of places to donate to.

Bookish Goods

a mug with rainbow in space that says "I've spent my whole adult life chasing the high of a scholastic book fair"

Retro Book Fair Mug by fuglybarbie

This is just true. ($14)

New Releases

cover image for No Home For Killers

No Home for Killers by E.A. Aymar

For fans of murder mysteries, past secrets, and family dramas. Markus Peña is an activist and musician with plenty of enemies when he’s murdered. His estranged sisters, Melinda and Emily, know Markus wasn’t a good person but they still need to find out who killed him and why. The problem is they’re not without their own problems and secrets, including one being a vigilante…

cover image for A Good Day to Pie

A Good Day to Pie (Pies Before Guys Mystery, #2) by Misha Popp

The series is called “pie before guys” and that makes this an automatic win for me. Also, I enjoyed the first book in the series: Magic, Lies, and Deadly Pies. You get a lady assassin, with a smidge of magic, on the cozy mystery line. This time around Daisy Ellery — who bakes special deadly pies for awful men — has entered a baking contest like GBBO. That means her secret murder life will meet her public baking life when the man she’s going to deliver a deadly pie to ends up dead before she feeds him — and he turns out to be one of the baking contest’s judges. Oh my!

I have the audiobook, narrated by Tanya Eby, high on my TBR for when I need a fun book.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

A thing I learned early on when I started writing about books was that rating/popularity aren’t necessarily proof of a book being good or not. A lot — A LOT — comes down to things like advertising and money put behind a book, among a ton of other factors that leave a lot of great books without an audience. So I wanted to give options for #14 on this year’s Read Harder Challenge: “Read a book with under 500 Goodreads ratings.”

cover image for Mighty Mighty

Mighty, Mighty by Wally Rudolph

Here’s a crime book set in Chicago that explores the power of hate, love, vengeance and family ties. You follow a cast of characters whose lives will collide: a priest running a shelter; a cop dealing with grief and retirement; a tattoo artist who does free work to cover up prison tattoos; two sisters trying to find their place in the world. It’s violent and dark but leaves you believing in redemption.

(I didn’t keep TW notes when I read this, sorry.)

My Midnight Years by Ronald Kitchen cover image

My Midnight Years: Surviving Jon Burge’s Police Torture Ring and Death Row by Ronald Kitchen, Thai Jones, Logan McBride

Bryan Stevenson’s Just Mercy was a popular book — with an adaptation! — and I always say fans of Just Mercy should read My Midnight Years and A Knock At Midnight. Bonus: Prentice Onayemi, who is a top tier narrator, narrates the audiobook.

(TW torture/ suicide)

Some Die Nameless by Wallace Stroby cover

Some Die Nameless by Wallace Stroby

Here’s a great thriller for fans of action films where a group of former friends find themselves in the present being killed off one by one! And toss in my other favorite trope: a journalist struggling at a downsizing newspaper accidentally discovering what’s going on and thus stepping into danger…

(TW: PTSD/ suicide)

Bury Me When I'm Dead by Cheryl A Head cover

Bury Me When I’m Dead by Cheryl A. Head

Fans of procedural shows with teams of investigators should 100% be reading this series! It’s about a PI agency with a team of four PIs — with very different personalities–and their office manager who loves to quote show tunes to annoy one of the PIs. And you get walked through entire cases, with clues and puzzles to solve.

The books now have audiobooks narrated by the actress Stephanie Weeks.

(TW parent early stage Alzheimer’s/ ableism/ forced vasectomy on teen)

News and Roundups

The Bandit Queens cover

Two novels take a closer look at class and gender in Indian society

Amazon Bets Big on ‘Bosch’ with 2 New Spinoff Series

Why Some Florida Schools Are Removing Books from Their Libraries

10 Clues You May Have Missed in The Pale Blue Eye

I am SO excited for this book! Cover reveal! Scream meets Clueless in this YA horror from Adam Sass in which two gay teen BFFs find their friendship tested when a serial killer starts targeting their school’s Queer Club.

Paul Rudd Spills On ‘Only Murders’ Role, Working With Selena Gomez

‘The Dry completely changed my life’: Jane Harper, Australia’s queen of crime

Cooking the Books: Against the Currant by Olivia Matthews

Facing pressure to ban books, suburban libraries ‘becoming a battlefield for the First Amendment’

Walter Mosley Thinks America Is Getting Dumber

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

19 New Mystery Books That’ll Have You on the Edge of Your Seat in February

Hello mystery fans! I’m really glad Spoutible is now live as a replacement for Twitter so if you find yourself there, feel free to say hi!

Bookish Goods

variety of postcards with illustrations of animals reading books

Bookish Animal Postcards by AuthorVanessaB

If you don’t send postcards, you can frame them or use them as bookmarks! ($2)

New Releases

cover image for Double The Lies

Double the Lies (An Annalee Spain Mystery #2) by Patricia Raybon

For fans of historical fiction! The series started with Annalee Spain working as a theologian at a Chicago Bible college returning home to help her estranged father. Now a year later, in 1924, Annalee finds herself in a relationship with a pastor and embroiled in another mystery. She’s the suspect in a murdered man’s case when the handkerchief she lent a crying woman is found on the woman’s dead husband’s body. Hope she finds the clues she needs to exonerate herself in Estes Park, Colorado now that her boyfriend has also gone missing…

If you want to start at the beginning, pick up All That Is Secret.

cover image for The Swifts

The Swifts: A Dictionary of Scoundrels by Beth Lincoln

For fans of family drama, zany characters, words, and middle grade novels. It’s also a great, fun read for fans of the mansion murder mystery mixed with The Mysterious Benedict Society (for the characters, not the SFF). In the Swift family, children get their name by family tradition and family dictionary: the day they are born, the family dictionary is used for their name with the belief that they will grow into the word’s definition. This is something that Shenanigan Swift is currently wrestling with: are they really destined to be the name they were given or is there room for them to be someone else? But this takes a slight backseat to the family reunion: Shenanigan is excited to learn about her family members. Except the family reunion soon becomes a murder mystery and Shenanigan, her sisters Phenomena and Felicity, and her cousin Erf will have to figure out what exactly is happening.

The audiobook narrator, Nikki Patel, is delightful!

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

If you wait for the paperback edition of books, here are two February releases to grab!

cover image for Like a Sister

Like a Sister by Kellye Garrett

Kellye Garrett remains one of my automatic-read authors, and wow the paperback got a gorgeous new cover!

For fans of family drama, amateur sleuths, and readers who like their mysteries neither dark nor cozy. Lena Scott is estranged from her half-sister, Desiree Pierce, when she learns Desiree has died. She immediately doesn’t believe the cause of death and finds herself instead needing to figure out what really happened to her former reality TV star sister.

(TW addiction/ speculation of suicide conversation)

cover of The Fields by Erin Young

The Fields by Erin Young

For fans of procedurals, family dramas, and small towns with the-past-is-coming-for-you vibes.

This has an intense opening of running for your life through a corn field. Cut to a dead woman being found and Sergeant Riley Fisher on the case. Except this case will soon be personal seeing as she knew the victim. But who wants the past to come out, and who wants it to stay buried?

News and Roundups

book cover for the woman in the library

Crime Writers of Color Podcast: Sulari Gentill, author of The Woman in the Library, is interviewed by Robert Justice.

Here’s How Moms For Liberty Is Lying About Books

The State of Diversity in the Publishing Industry

19 New Mystery Books That’ll Have You on the Edge of Your Seat in February

19 Oddball Mystery Series For Fans Of “Poker Face”

What Is Happening In Publishing?

Luther: The Fallen Sun: Release Date, Cast And Other Things We Know About The Idris Elba Netflix Movie

Jesse Q. Sutanto has multiple books releasing this year and here’s the cover reveal for I’m Not Done With You Yet

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2023 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.

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