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Unusual Suspects

Why Do Kids Love Thrillers?

Hello mystery fans! This week I made the super brilliant decision to start watching The Patient (Hulu) before falling asleep because who doesn’t need more serial killer nightmares? Anyhoo, my joy this week has been coming from Justina Ireland sharing her promo videos for Rust in the Root which have taken a wonderful ’80s turn. And now for all the mystery: new releases, backlist page-turners, news, and I have something new to watch!

Bookish Goods

large black blanket with a white screenprinting of a skeleton reading and text "go away I'm reading"

Go Away I’m Reading by EverythingAfterCo

Fitting all year round but especially now that ’tis the season! ($80)

New Releases

cover image for All That's Left Unsaid

All That’s Left Unsaid by Tracey Lien

For fans of emotional literary mysteries, Celeste Ng, and Steph Cha (me!). This is a family drama and murder mystery as guilt propels our MC to search for answers. Ky is a Vietnamese Australian reporter whose 17-year-old brother was murdered after she’d told their parents he should be allowed to go out and celebrate graduation with his friends. But how could he have died in a busy restaurant without a single witness to come forward and say what happened?

cover image for I'm the Girl

I’m the Girl by Courtney Summers

Here’s a gritty YA for fans of being fully absorbed in a ripped-from-the-headlines ominous story that focuses on the emotional toll over the “thrills.” Georgia Avis’ life is in no way going the way she’d like. Her brother is her guardian after their mother passed, she’s just lost money she stole from him, and found a dead body before being hit by a car. And yet her obsession remains clear: she wants to be an Aspera girl, a job at the members-only resort her mother used to work at. As she begins to look into who murdered the teen girl she found, she finally gets a different job at the resort. She’s so close to what she wants.

(TW rape and murder of young teen case, not graphic/ past parent cancer death, not graphic/ teen sexual assault by adult on page/ brief suicide mention, detail/ predators)

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

Riot Recommendations

Let’s do some backlist page-turning thrillers for some good reading escape.

cover image of Never Saw Me Coming by Vera Kurian

Never Saw Me Coming by Vera Kurian

For fans of revenge fantasy, unreliable narrators, and a who-is-murdering-us mystery! We follow three college students who are secretly enrolled in a program for psychopaths at the school: Chloe, Charles, and Andre. Chloe has zero interest in school nor the program but is there to murder the guy who assaulted her. Charles is working hard in the program so that he can maintain healthy relationships and do well in school. Andre is pretending to be a psychopath for the full scholarship. They’re all minding their own business when someone murders a fellow student in the program. Naturally the fingers point to someone in the program but who and why? I will absolutely read whatever Vera Kurian writers next.

(TW nonconsensual drugging/ past tween rape/ adult child abuse/ briefly recounts teacher student statutory relationship, not graphic/ webcam hacking and non-consensual distribution of sexual images/ past suicide briefly mentioned, detail)

The Banker's Wife by Cristina Alger cover image

The Banker’s Wife by Cristina Alger

For fans of relentless journalists! This was one of those audiobooks that I pressed play on with no expectations but just to check out the opening and ended up inhaling it. We follow two women’s lives. Annabel is a former socialite now living in Switzerland as an expat. Her husband was on a plane that crashed in the Alps and she’s starting to think that maybe her husband’s job with Swiss United wasn’t what she thought. Marina Tourneau is a journalist marrying into a political family who expect her to quit her job–as if!

(TW: rape/ suicide)

Watch Now

Little Women on Netflix: STAY WITH ME! Okay, so this South Korean series adaptation of Little Women adds more to the story including murder and embezzlement putting it in the crime/mystery genre. Exciting, and apparently the only way to get me to watch anything Little Women (sorry, not sorry). It stars Kim Go-eun, Nam Ji-hyun, Park Ji-hu. Watch the trailer!

News and Roundups

cover image for Reprieve

James Han Mattson, Reprieve, sold his next novel The Grand Impostors which has a paranormal investigator!

Ellie Marney’s None Shall Sleep is getting a sequel, Some Shall Break, and Marney just revealed the cover!

Why Do Kids Love Thrillers?

‘Confess, Fletch’ Delivers a Fun, Airy Mystery That Effortlessly Entertains

Censorship News (Get involved in your local library and school boards/meetings, vote against book banners trying to hold these positions, actively fight book bans.)

How Librarians Can Counter Lies from Book Banners

John Green’s First Novel May Be Banned At His Old School

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

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

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

Winners of the 2022 Anthony Awards

Hi mystery fans! I currently have a kdrama hangover from Healer, so thankfully I started an exceptional audiobook: How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water by Angie Cruz. And now for your new releases, paperback releases, news and roundups!

Bookish Goods

books cut and painted to look like 3D pumpkins

Book Pumpkins for Fall and Halloween

Fall decorations but make them bookish. ($46)

New Releases

cover image for We Lie Here

We Lie Here by Rachel Howzell Hall

For fans of family secrets, MCs returning home, and MCs that are writers! Yara Gibson comes home to Palmdale, California to host the party for her parent’s wedding anniversary. Things take a strange turn when Yara’s mom’s estranged friend suddenly starts texting Yara that there is something important she has to tell her. Except before she does, she’s found dead! Now there’s a key to a cabin with an unsolved mystery from the ’80s…

cover image The Rising Tide

The Rising Tide (Vera Stanhope #10) by Ann Cleeves

For fans of procedurals, North England, and the show Vera! Detective Inspector Vera Stanhope is tasked with investigating a group of friends. Decades ago one of them died and the remaining friends have gotten together since on Holy Island, where they met 50 years ago. And now one of the friends is dead and even though it is presumed a suicide at first, Vera quickly goes into murder investigation mode. Secrets and suspects there are plenty… If you’d like to start at the beginning, pick up The Crow Trap.

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

Riot Recommendations

Let’s do some recent paperback releases for those who prefer the format and have to wait a year-ish (in many cases) for the paperback to release after the hardcover.

My Sweet Girl cover image

My Sweet Girl by Amanda Jayatissa

For fans of past and present stories, unreliable narrators, and psychological thrillers! Past chapters: we watch Paloma growing up in a Sri Lankan orphanage up until she was adopted by Americans. Present chapters: Paloma finds her roommate, who was blackmailing her, dead but when the police show up, the body is gone. Talk about a mind fck…

(TW child abuse/ past child suicide attempt briefly mentioned, detail/ ableism/ colorism/ pedophile/ PTSD/ blackout drinking)

cover image for Friends Like These

Friends Like These by Kimberly McCreight

For fans of friend groups, secrets, and multiple POV. A decade after a fatal accident, six friends have gotten together in the Catskills to try and help one of them struggling with addiction. Instead one person goes missing and one is found dead… Who needs enemies with friends like these, I’m assuming.

News and Roundups

cover image for The Perfect Crime

20 New Mystery And Thriller Novels Coming Out This Fall

(Congrats!) Winners of the 2022 Anthony Awards Are Revealed

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery trailer

Is See How They Run based on an Agatha Christie book?

51 Books for the Four Hottest New Mystery & Thriller Trends

10 Awesome Whodunnit TV Shows And How To Watch Them

Censorship News (Get involved in your local library and school boards/meetings, vote against book banners trying to hold these positions, actively fight book bans.)

How to Run for School Board: Book Censorship News

Celebrating Banned Books Week 2022

And if you wanted to help out a classroom with a focus on banned books here is a Donors Choose project: Banned Books Reading Corner

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

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

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

23 True-Crime TV Shows That Prove Fact Is Stranger Than Fiction

Hi mystery fans! Getting me through this week is the chaotic messy press of Don’t Worry Darling and Chris Pine amazingly keeping it together, disposable camera and all. And loving Gemma Chan’s red carpet dress. Now for the books! Here are some new releases, backlist, news and roundups!

Bookish Goods

tshirt with graphic design of ghost holding book and pumpkin with "boooooks" text graphic as background

Books Halloween Ghost Shirt by Lisasavagem

My body is ready. $14 (on sale as of me writing this for $10)

New Releases

cover image for South Central Noir

South Central Noir (Akashic Noir Series) edited by Gary Phillips

Akashic’s noir series are great for readers looking to be immersed in a place and looking to discover new crime authors. The latest collection is edited by Gary Phillips with fourteen stories set in South Central Los Angeles. Some of my favorite authors included in the anthology are Steph Cha, Tananarive Due, and Naomi Hirahara–and I look forward to discovering more new-to-me writers!

cover image for Back to the Garden

Back to the Garden by Laurie R. King

For fans of Laurie R. King (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes / Kate Martinelli series) she’s back with a new standalone! An estate in California is being renovated when a skull is found–dundundun. But it’s far from an easy case for Inspector Raquel Laing being that 50 years ago the estate was a counterculture commune filled with people. And looking at the past brings up that at least three people disappeared from the commune…

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

Riot Recommendations

Now for some backlist crime books blended with a coming-of-age feeling.

cover image for East of Hounslow

East of Hounslow (Jay Qasim #1) by Khurrum Rahman

This is a fun thriller series starring the most reluctant spy ever. Javid Qasim is a British Muslim who lives with his mom, sells pot, and thinks his new car is the world. Then MI5, in need of someone like Qasim to infiltrate a terrorist group, comes to mess-up his life. Literally, they basically give him little choice but to become a spy and accept this mission, even though Qasim is really not interested in politics. Who he is and what he believes are all about to be challenged as he’s forced to grow up pretty quickly. Highly recommend the audiobook narrated by Waleed Akhtar.

(TW mass shootings, terrorist attacks/ child deaths/ past attempted suicides mentioned)

Dare Me cover image

Dare Me by Megan Abbott

I love that Megan Abbott writes these quietly intense stories that are always focused on some kind of sport/work obsession. In this case we have high school cheerleading. The school hierarchy has been set and Addy Hanlon and Beth Cassidy, best friends and cheerleaders, are at the top. Until a new cheerleading coach shows up, there’s a death, and an investigation… You can watch the adaptation on Netflix.

(I do not remember TWs, sorry.)

News and Roundups

The best recent crime and thriller writing – review roundup

Deanna Raybourn in conversation with Liberty Hardy

Courtney Summers in conversation with Nina LaCour

23 True-Crime TV Shows That Prove Fact Is Stranger Than Fiction

Ellen Hart to be honored at upcoming world mystery book convention in Minneapolis

How One Modernist Building in Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest Changed Cinema Forever

Fans Of Gone Girl Will Love The Ex-Wife

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

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

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

BBC Adapting Holly Jackson’s ‘Good Girl’s Guide to Murder’ As A Series

Hi mystery fans! My good news for this week is I just finished two books I was highly anticipating that I really enjoyed: Undercover Latina by Aya de León (great audiobook narrator!) and Exiles by Jane Harper. And Liberty Hardy started a patreon newsletter about books which will certainly murder everyone’s TBR. Now let’s chat new releases, fictional true crime podcasts, news and roundups!

Bookish Goods

a book sleeve made of halloween printed fabric with a stack of 6 other fabric choices

Halloween Book Sleeve by Bellandthreads

Keep your book snuggly with Halloween vibes (6 fabric choices). $17

New Releases

the darkness of others book cover

The Darkness of Others by Cate Holahan

Here’s a pandemic lockdown mystery for readers who did not just yell “too soon!” and are looking for a psychological thriller. Imani and Philip Banks’s family live in Brooklyn Heights and have a great life when the pandemic lockdown begins and Philip’s restaurant closes. Their temporary solution is to rent out the extra room in their townhouse. It seems like a win for all, especially the new tenant Tonya Sayre. Tonya is a struggling actress, mother of a teen, and afraid of her child’s father. But as soon as Tonya is late on payment, the Banks start thinking she must be a con artist and soon Imani is even convinced she killed a neighborhood family…

cover image of Killers of a Certain Age by Deanna Raybourn; illustration of a hand holding a big knife, with a bracelet on the wrist

Killers of a Certain Age by Deanna Raybourn

If you want a fun crime book, run to this one. Deanna Raybourn is an automatic read for me since I adore her Veronica Speedwell series and I love seeing her create something totally different while also keeping her fantastic humor. This is the story about a group of women assassins that were trained in the ’70s. You get their past stories along with their current story: now in their 60s, they are taking a cruise together only to discover there is a hit out to kill them — rude! Naturally a group of smart and trained assassins are going to fight back! This is smart, fun, and funny and a great book to curl up with if you love cheering for a group of women to kick ass.

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

Riot Recommendations

And now for fans of fictional true crime podcasts in books!

book cover for the weight of blood

The Weight of Blood by Tiffany D. Jackson

This is a horror book with mass appeal for fans of mysteries — especially since the format has a true crime podcast in the present trying to figure out how and why mostly an entire town was murdered the night of its first integrated prom. And no, this is not a historical fiction — segregated proms existed in the 21st century by having them hosted privately off campus by parents and students. So the reader gets the podcast, articles, and interviews of those who survived in the present while also taking us back to 2014 where we meet Maddy Washington attending high school in a small town in Georgia. Forced to do so by her white father, she’s been passing for white all her life until recently after an incident that goes viral placing an even bigger target on her back… I loved this book, which is a perfect fall read if you’re a mood reader, and as a retelling of Carrie, I found it better than the original source. I said what I said 🙂

Bonus: The audiobook has a multicast narration by JD Jackson, Sarah Mollo-Christensen, Joy Nash, Christopher Salazar, Karen Malina White.

(TW child abuse/ brief mention past parent cancer death/ bullying/ racism/ police brutality/ brief suicide, detail)

Girl, 11 cover image

Girl, 11 by Amy Suiter Clarke

For fans of thrillers, fictional serial killers, and author Michelle McNamara. Elle Castillo went from being a social worker to a very popular true crime podcast host. For her current season, she chooses a case that has haunted her: a serial killer who murders using a numeral pattern that starts with the first victim being 21 and moves younger in age with every killing. She goes to meet up with a listener who has a tip only to find him dead… This was an under-the-radar book from last year that I think would be a huge hit for many readers, especially if you’re up for a page-turner that will keep you up late at night.

(TW infertility briefly recounted/ child murders/ child abuse/ sex offender investigated, crime not on page/ panic attacks/ past murder faked as suicide recounted, detail)

News and Roundups

cover image for Blackmail and Bibingka

Lovely art print available for those who preorder Blackmail and Bibingka by Mia P. Manansala.

BBC adapting Holly Jackson’s ‘Good Girl’s Guide to Murder’ as a series

Liberty and Kelly chat new releases including Daisy Darker by Alice Feeney on All The Books!

Christian Bale is a Gothic Detective in First Look at Netflix’s The Pale Blue Eye

Zoinks! The 10 Best ‘Scooby-Doo’ Films, From ‘Monsters Unleashed’ to ‘Zombie Island’

Censorship News (Get involved in your local library and school boards/meetings, vote against book banners trying to hold these positions, actively fight book bans.)

How To Create A Good Banned Books Display

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

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

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

Mila Kunis Leads Netflix’s Mystery Adaptation of “Luckiest Girl Alive”

Hello mystery fans! Apple TV+ is not giving me episodes of Bad Sisters fast enough! I need more dark humor women shows, especially now that we probably won’t be getting them from HBO Max anymore. Now on to the books: new releases, backlist noir, and a bunch of news!

Bookish Goods

holographic magnetic book mark that says "read all night book club"

Holographic Read All Night Book Club Magnetic Bookmark by mysecretcopy

When you stay up all night because you need to know how the mystery is solved! $5

New Releases

cover image for Two Parts Sugar, One Part Murder

Two Parts Sugar, One Part Murder (Baker Street Mystery #1) by Valerie Burns

If you’re looking to start a new cozy mystery series, here you go! Madison Montgomery comes into a three-part inheritance from her great aunt: a house, a bakery, and a giant English Mastiff. She’ll just have to move to New Bison, Michigan, which she’s down for considering she just had a public disaster she’d like to forget. What she doesn’t realize is she’ll not only need to get to know this small town, a new business, and taking care of a dog, but also solve a murder when the Mayor is murdered and the knife has Madison’s fingerprints on it…

cover image for The Fishermen and the Dragon

The Fishermen and the Dragon: Fear, Greed, and a Fight for Justice on the Gulf Coast by Kirk W. Johnson

The author of The Feather Thief is back with another work of narrative nonfiction! What culminates in the largest settlement in U.S. history from a citizen environmental suit started in Seadrift, Texas in the late 1970s. Vietnamese refugees arrival in the small fishing town angered the white fisherman which escalated into a self-defense shooting that put an even bigger target on the Vietnamese community, including from the KKK which promised violence if they didn’t all leave. And if that wasn’t enough, it’s all intersected with water pollution from companies and the ties of environmental justice and racial justice.

Johnson’s The Feather Thief was my first narrative nonfic that I was like “this can’t possibly be as interesting as it sells itself to be” and let me tell you it was super interesting. That book put me on the path of true crime books that were fascinating and led me to Patrick Radden Keefe‘s nonfiction so The Fisherman And The Dragon‘s audiobook (narrated by David Lee Huynh) is high on my TBR list. Especially since I love reading and watching docuseries about events in history that were never given the attention they deserved.

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

Riot Recommendations

Here are two backlist titles that deal with espionage: one fiction, CIA, contemporary and the other WWII narrative nonfiction.

Red Widow cover image

Red Widow (Red Widow #1) by Alma Katsu

This is a character-driven mystery that follows not one but two CIA agents. CIA agent Lyndsey Duncan was on suspension because having an affair with an MI5 agent is a no-no. But with CIA informants dropping dead, she’s brought back in which is when she meets and gets to know CIA agent Theresa Warner, who people call “Red Widow” because her husband was murdered and she’s determined to find the killer. Clearly there is a mole in the department, but will they figure it out in time?

(TW suicide not on page, brief detail/ side character with cancer/ briefly mentions war crimes)

A Woman Of No Importance over image

A Woman of No Importance: The Untold Story of the American Spy Who Helped Win World War II by Sonia Purnell

This is a true story that reads like a spy thriller. American Virginia Hall was initially sidelined from participating in the war because she was a woman and had a prosthetic leg but she ended up becoming one of the spies that helped win the war–starting with her being dropped into Nazi-occupied France. This is a great biography about a woman whose story should be told and a great read for fans of secret agencies, untold stories, and fantastic audiobooks.

(TW past attempted suicide, detail/ mentions types of tortures used, details, including rape/ alcoholism)

News and Roundups

cover image for Shutter

Crime, Character, the Supernatural – a Navajo Takes Back Her Story

‘Inventing Anna’ Ignites Defamation Suit Against Netflix

Val McDermid reveals ‘Queen of Crime’ legal threat from Agatha Christie estate

Onyx Collective’s New Legal Drama ‘Reasonable Doubt’ Is Bringing the Heat

Mila Kunis Leads Netflix’s Mystery Adaptation of “Luckiest Girl Alive”

The podcast You’re Wrong About did a 3 part series about Go Ask Alice with Carmen Maria Machado (love her books) and the third part with the author of Unmask Alice, Rick Emerson.

Censorship News (Get involved in your local library and school boards/meetings, vote against book banners trying to hold these positions, actively fight book bans.)

Gender Queer cover

Few Parents Actually Opt Students Out of Florida School Library Books

Missouri Schools are Pulling Books From Libraries After New Law Criminalizing “Sexually Explicit” Material

Gender Queer Obscenity Case Dismissed in Virginia

Nora Roberts Donates 50k To Library Defunded for LGBTQ Books

The List of 300+ Books Pulled and Ranked on Queer Content in Collierville, Tennessee

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

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

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Natalie Portman’s ‘Lady in the Lake’ Hits Pause After Extortion Threat

Hello mystery fans! Welcome (almost) to September and hopefully less can’t-breathe-in-this-heat weather. This week I’ve been enjoying the new podcast Vibe Check and cannot wait for Weird: The Al Yankovic Story after watching the trailer which is parody of parody. Now on to the new releases in crime, backlist that may be new to you, and news.

Bookish Goods

sticker of a Black woman witch with a purple witch hat and holding a purple book open

Black Witch Sticker by thetrinigee

‘Tis the season! $10

New Releases

cover image for Are You Sara?

Are You Sara? by S.C. Lalli

These types of setups always get my full attention: Sarah Ellis passes out in a bar bathroom so Saraswati “Sara” Bhaduri, who works in the bar, helps her into a rideshare only to discover later that they got into the wrong cars and were taken to the other’s home. Which would be an annoying drunk inconvenience but this is a crime book, so Sarah Ellis ends up murdered where Sara Bhaduri lives and that’s gotta put Bhaduri on edge…

cover image for Daisy Darker

Daisy Darker by Alice Feeney

I love remote mysteries! And this one is a whole family meeting up for Nana’s 80th birthday, stuck on an island, and one by one they start to die– mwahahaha. For me remote mysteries need a good balance of being invested enough in the characters to want to read and not enough that you “care” that they’re gonna probably all die, and Feeney pulled that off. We get to watch the family and all their drama and secrets as someone is murdering them–can you figure out who and why before there possibly isn’t anyone left? I found this fun, and also love that I think half of readers are going to enjoy the ending and the other half are going to be mad (not for problematic reasons). Stephanie Racine does a great narration if you need an audiobook to get sucked into.

(TW brief fatphobia/ past child abuse/ drugging without consent/ vet mentions stories of animals in cruel conditions/ statutory kiss, gropping/ mentions past suicide/ mentions past accidental child death/ suicide)

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

Riot Recommendations

Here are two police procedural series set outside of the U.S. One is still an ongoing series and the other is completed.

Wife of the Gods cover image

Wife of the Gods (Darko Dawson #1) by Kwei Quartey

This series is set in Ghana and is completed with 5 books, if you’re looking for a marathon. In the start of the series Detective Inspector Darko Dawson is sent away from his family in Accra to work on a case in small town Ketanu. Not only is Dawson up against a tough case—AIDS activist and medical student Gladys Mensah was murdered—but the local police are super not thrilled to have his help even if he does speak their language. Dawson also has personal ties to the town: his mother was last seen alive there…

(don’t remember TWs, sorry)

cover image for The Keeper of Lost Causes

The Keeper of Lost Causes (Afdeling Q #1) by Jussi Adler-Olsen, Lisa Hartford (Translator)

Set in Copenhagen and for fans of unsolved cases, and dual POV. Carl Mørck isn’t winning popularity contests with his personality so when his boss is given the idea to create a unit to banish Carl to work on cold cases he pretends to be giving Carl a promotion. Carl, who was recently ambushed with his colleagues on a case, isn’t falling for it but is happy to be left alone. But there’s a case he tries to solve about a missing politician who disappeared without a trace years ago so he gets an assistant to his department, an issued car, and begins to put the pieces together– all while dealing with his estranged wife, teen stepson, the surviving colleague of the ambush, and his own PTSD from the event.

(TW mentions suicide attempts, detail/ suicidal ideation/ islamophobia/ ableism/ brief mention past death during child birth/ panic attack/ fatphobia)

News and Roundups

Five great cozy mystery novels

Natalie Portman’s ‘Lady in the Lake’ hits pause after extortion threat

‘Confess, Fletch’ Trailer: Jon Hamm and John Slattery Set a ‘Mad Men’ Reunion in Maddening Mystery

If you’re looking for “an examination of all things Louise Penny and Inspector Gamache” there’s a new newsletter by fans: Notes from Three Pines

Deanna Raybourn was asked on Twitter if it were possible that Killers of a Certain Age would start a series and Raybourn responded “I can only say that people are talking. 🔪

Censorship News (Get involved in your local library and school boards/meetings, vote against book banners trying to hold these positions, actively fight book bans.)

States That Have Enacted Book Ban Laws

Libraries Under Attack (Again): The Backlash Against Drag Queen Story Hour in the UK

Texas School Board Bans the Word “Transgender” from District

Duval County Public Schools Bought Dozens of New Books. They’re Sitting Indefinitely in Storage.

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

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

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

‘Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’ Gets Netflix Release Date and Star-Studded First Look Photos

Hi mystery fans! I have been watching and loving Bad Sisters (Apple TV+)–I’m a big fan of dark humor, sibling shows, and Sharon Horgan. Now let’s jump into this week’s new releases, some odd couple mysteries, and news.

Bookish Goods

hot pink journal with white silhouete of woman with magnifying glass and text saying "get a clue"

Nancy Drew journal by TheCottageDesignCo

Because collecting journals is a sport like buying books. $15

New Releases

cover image for You're Invited

You’re Invited by Amanda Jayatissa

Amaya no longer lives in her home country, Sri Lanka, but she sure is going back when she learns that her ex best friend is marrying her ex boyfriend. Her mission, which she chooses to accept: stop the wedding. The problem? The bride to be goes missing and Amaya is a suspect…

(TW brief self-harm, cutting scene/ recounts partner abuse/ mentions past statutory)

cover image for Girl, Forgotten

Girl, Forgotten (Andrea Oliver #2) by Karin Slaughter

Sequel to Pieces of Her! We’ve got an unsolved murder mystery from the ’80s: Emily Vaughn ends up dead on prom night because of a secret. Now US Marshal Andrea Oliver is sent to protect a judge receiving death threats, but really she’s thinking about solving Vaughn’s murder…

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

Riot Recommendations

Odd couples! A thing I love in general is when two people who are opposites in some way (or every way) are paired together. It just opens the door for so many things. So here are two series starters, in totally different genres, that pair opposites together.

A Rising Man cover image

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

Odd couple: Sam Wyndham, a former Scotland Yard detective now working in British-ruled Calcutta, and Sergeant Banerjee, one of the only Indians in the CID.

Mystery: A British official has been murdered and Wyndham will not only have to navigate Calcutta politics and deal with terrorist suspects, but he’s also trying to hide his Opium addiction. This is one of my favorite historical mystery series.

(TWs only remember addiction, sorry)

Two Girls Down cover image

Two Girls Down (Alice Vega #1) by Louisa Luna

Odd couple: Alice Vega, who breaks all kinds of norms, is an out of town Bounty Hunter and Cap, a dad and ex-cop PI getting out from the fallout of losing his job and a divorce. One feels stable and calm and one does not.

Mystery: Two sisters disappear from a parking lot and their mom hires Vega to find them. Vega teams up with Cap for help since local police aren’t welcoming.

(Trigger Warnings: child cruelty/ pedophile/ suicidal thoughts)

News and Roundups

How We Fall Apart cover image

Katie Zhao on her portrayal of mental health and the Asian American experience in ‘How We Fall Apart’

Deanna Raybourn announces book tour for Killers Of a Certain Age.

‘A Friend of the Family’ Victim Speaks Out as Peacock Show Trailer Drops

Book Launch: Valerie Burns in conversation with Vanessa Riley

‘Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’ Gets Netflix Release Date and Star-Studded First Look Photos

Steven Pasquale Joins Neve Campbell in ABC Drama Series ‘Avalon’

Untangling the contradictions of crime novelist Patricia Highsmith

Censorship News

Here are the Most Challenged Comics and Most Banned Comics Since 2000

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

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

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

Neve Campbell to Headline David E. Kelley, Michael Connelly ABC Series ‘Avalon’

Hello mystery fans! Both of this week’s mystery newsletters are written in the past-past (so I can have a few days off, wheeeeeeeee) — which I only mention in case another apocalyptic thing happens between my submitting and these hitting your inbox making the tone of either newsletter totally off. Fun times! And now here are your new releases, backlist, news and roundups.

Bookish Goods

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Urkel Book Tee by GoldenBookMuse

The degree to which I laughed at this perfect T-shirt. $25

New Releases

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Murder in Westminster (Lady Worthington Mysteries #1) by Vanessa Riley

A new historical (Regency-era) mystery series! Lady Abigail Worthing and Stapleton Henderson are fighting neighbors until Abigail finds Juliet, Stapleton’s wife, dead on her property. Which is a problem on its own but Abigail has enough against her to know this will lead to finger pointing at her. And while she has an alibi, it’s one she cannot give since it would cause her too much trouble. So when Stapleton offers her another alibi, it makes sense that the two with the most to lose may find a way to work together to figure out what happened.

cover image for Long Gone

Long Gone (Detective Annalisa Vega #2) by Joanna Schaffhausen

If you’re looking for a page-turning procedural series, this one is for you. It’s the second book in the series and it starts at the end of the first book dealing with the aftermath (so if you like to not have a book spoiled pick up Gone For Good). If you don’t however care about that, you can start here and not be lost — you’re given all the info you need. Annalisa Vega is a detective, daughter of a retired cop, and not in many people’s good graces. Her ex-husband is also currently her partner — they don’t hate each other, and I love this dynamic. A new case is assigned to them which is just baffling: a cop was murdered in his sleep with his own gun while his wife was there but she was unharmed and can’t identify the person because they were in scuba gear. It sounds too far fetched to be real and Vega has her work cut out for her. If you like messy personal lives of detectives you root for and fast paced mysteries, here you go. Bonus: I enjoyed the audiobook narrator, Kelsey Navarro.

(TW domestic violence/ mentions past suicide, no detail/ parent with Parkinson’s/ sexual harassment and stalking stories)

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

Riot Recommendations

Here are two crime novels starring a vigilante, if revenge is your trope of choice.

Death Notice cover image

Death Notice by Zhou Haohui, Zac Haluza (Translator)

For fans of procedurals, cat and mouse games, vigilantes, and translated books! Eumenides has taken it upon himself to punish those he believes escaped proper punishment, and releases a “death note” with his intended targets which the police try to stop. But Eumenides is always one step ahead…Bonus: actor Joel De La Fuente narrates the audiobook. And you can pick up the sequel Fate.

(zero memory of TWs, sorry)

cover image for They Never Learn

They Never Learn by Layne Fargo

For fans of revenge fantasies, campus novels, and dual POV! Scarlett Clark is an English professor at Gorman University with the teeny secret that every year she selects the most despicable man on campus and straight up murders him. But maybe one too many murders have happened and she needs to avoid a detective on the case. We also follow a freshman at the same university, Carly Schiller, who has come to college to escape her oppressive dad and hopefully come into her own.

(TW rape/ past parent abuse mentioned/ murders covered up to look like suicide discussed)

News and Roundups

book cover for The Obsession

Jesse Q. Sutanto hints at adaptation news!

Neve Campbell to Headline David E. Kelley, Michael Connelly ABC Series ‘Avalon’

First images of ‘Enola Holmes 2’ unveiled

The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup

Apple TV+’s ‘Bad Sisters’ review: Sharon Horgan’s dark comedy ditches whodunnit for how

Censorship News

The Bible Is Now Gone, Along with Dozens of Other Books, in Keller ISD

Defending the Right to Read

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

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

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

Meet this Season’s Dark and Twisty Hits

Hi mystery fans! After two mystery books that did the old mental illness boogeyman I needed a palate cleanser, so I grabbed the audio for Alexis Hall’s Husband Material, which I’d been saving as a treat, and it’s the best decision I made this week (I can listen to Joe Jameson say Lucian on a loop forever and ever if anyone makes that happen). And this weekend I plan on finishing two winter titles: Keigo Higashino’s Death In Tokyo and Maureen Johnson’s Nine Liars (Truly Devious #5). I hope you’re also reading great things and if not hopefully I’ve got you covered below with new releases, FBI nonfic, and news and roundups.

Bookish Goods

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Book socks by 2troubleboys

Put your feet up while reading and let everyone know how you feel. $13+

New Releases

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The Lies We Tell by Katie Zhao

For fans of past mystery and coming of age stories! Anna Xu is a university freshman so school and everything related should be taking up all her time, except seven years ago her childhood babysitter went missing as a sophomore at the same university. So naturally she’s going to solve the case! Which is difficult enough but she has way more stress on her plate considering her parents’ bakery now has competition and the son of the competing bakery is also in school with her. How will he fit in with everything already going on in her life?!

cover image for When We Were Bright And Beautiful

When We Were Bright and Beautiful by Jillian Medoff

(TW sexual assault) This is one of those books with a setup that immediately hooked me: Twenty-three year old Cassie Quinn gets a phone call that her younger brother Billy has been arrested for raping his girlfriend. Quinn immediately knows it’s a lie. Not because she doesn’t believe that our rape culture exists (she does), but because she’s certain Billy is the exception. She hates his girlfriend and believes they’ve had a volatile relationship so she returns home to be there for Billy, her parents, her other brother, and help with the trial. From there we get to know this wealthy family, the lawyers taking on the case, and even the accuser–all through Cassie’s eyes. This is both an exploration of our rape culture and a family drama, with a good dose of legal mystery. I inhaled the audiobook which has a great narrator, Marin Ireland.

(TW date rape case, past attempted assault/ recounts alcoholic parents/ grooming, statutory)

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

Riot Recommendations

FBI nonfiction: one on the violent side and one on the not violent side.

cover image for Three Minutes to Doomsday

Three Minutes to Doomsday: An Agent, a Traitor, and the Worst Espionage Breach in U.S. History by Joe Navarro

Joe Navarro was an FBI agent who retells his obsession with proving that a former American soldier, Rod Ramsay, was a spy after noticing his body language in an interview. But because of agency politics and Ramsay’s intelligence, it took years for Navarro to slowly gain Ramsay’s trust and get enough evidence to prove his initial hunch. This is the real life trope of an obsessed investigator who won’t let go of a case to the detriment of their personal life and health with a glimpse into the FBI in the ’80s and counterintelligence.

A Killer by Design book cover

A Killer by Design: Murderers, Mindhunters, and My Quest to Decipher the Criminal Mind by Ann Wolbert Burgess, Steven Constantine

This is for readers of sociology, serial killers, social profiling and those interested in the creation of of the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit. There’s been a bunch of these books over the years but they’re always by a white man so even though I knew these cases, I grabbed the audiobook–Gabra Zackman does a great narration. It was really interesting to hear how Ann Wolbert Burgess went from being a nurse focused on sexually assaulted women to working for the FBI and helping to build the model for how the FBI profiles and studies serial killers.

(All the TWs as it’s just all the most violent cases.)

News and Roundups

cover image for Complicit

Liberty and Tirzah discuss new releases including Complicit by Winnie M Li on All The Books!

Miss S: How the HBO Max Show Puts a Chinese Spin on Murder Mysteries

Everything we know about HBO’s true-crime series ‘My Dentist’s Murder Trial’

5 mystery books of 2022 that will keep you hooked

How to Help Libraries Affected by the Kentucky and Missouri Floodings

cover image for Killers of a Certain Age

Livestreaming on Crowdcast: September 13th at 7pm Deanna Raybourn in conversation with Liberty Hardy

Will The CW Nexstar deal affect Walker, Nancy Drew, and more?

Meet this Season’s Dark and Twisty Hits

Censorship News

Florida School District Puts Warnings on 100 Books, including EVERYWHERE BABIES

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

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

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

‘Devil in the White City’ Ordered to Series at Hulu, Keanu Reeves to Star

Hello mystery fans! I’ve got your new releases, a couple backlist missing persons mysteries, and news to get you through the midweek blahs.

Bookish Goods

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Good day to read tshirt by nfiniti

No lie detected. $19

New Releases

cover image for Complicit

Complicit by Winnie M Li

This is a ripped-from-the-headlines type story that doesn’t aim for thriller entertainment but rather the real life ways being a part of an industry steeped in rape culture sneaks up on you. Sarah Lai went from up-and-coming producer to teaching film at a small college. It’s not the life she had wanted for herself but she’s left Hollywood and it is what it is — until a journalist asks to speak to her. He’s interviewing everyone who’s worked with a particular film producer over allegations of sexual assault. Lai is hesitant to speak but meets with him telling pieces of her story, revealing to the reader what it was like to be an assistant and then producer in an industry that celebrates the “boy’s club”. If you like going deep into a business (how films get made from start to finish), this is a well done look at rape culture that keeps the majority of things off page, focusing instead on the way we’re intentionally taught to not notice the red flags around us. The audiobook is narrated by Katie Leung and really made me feel like I was listening to Lai tell me the story of her time in film production.

(TW conversations about teen with eating disorder/ attempted sexual assault on page/ rumors, accusations, assumptions of sexual assault)

cover image Run Time

Run Time by Catherine Ryan Howard

Here’s a fun thriller tipping its hat at horror tropes without being a horror novel. It’s also for fans of a story inside a story. Adele Rafferty ran away from her home in Ireland to L.A. hoping to put a bad filming experience behind her. But a call to replace an actress in a movie set to start filming right now makes her think this could be her final chance to be a star. So back home she goes to a film set in the middle of the woods to film a horror film. But from the start, things don’t feel right and she doesn’t know who to trust and she’s out in the middle of nowhere…

(TW sexual harassment, groping / attempted murder suicide)

Riot Recommendations

If you’re a fan of the missing person plot in mystery novels, I have two selections for you.

When You Look Like Us cover image

When You Look Like Us by Pamela N. Harris

High school junior Jay Murphy is working hard at a job at Taco Bell and writing papers for wealthy students so he can surprise his grandmother with her retirement. But things get more complicated when his sister Nic calls him one night while out with her boyfriend (the drug dealer they’re supposed to stay away from) and Jay ignores her. That’s the last he hears of her and soon she’s missing. With the cops not interested in searching for her, Jay feels he must find his sister. Highly recommend the audiobook narrated by Preston Butler III. I’m excited to see Harris has a new novel coming in 2023: This Town is on Fire.

(TW past parent cancer death mentioned, not detailed/ briefly mentions past sexual assault, no details)

cover image for I Hope You're Listening

I Hope You’re Listening by Tom Ryan

At the age of seven Dee and her best friend Sibby went to play in the woods and only Dee returned. Sibby has remained missing until the present day where Dee is 17 and anonymously hosts a true crime podcast about missing persons. She doesn’t want to be a sleuth herself, so instead she presents cases and their information for armchair detectives to help out in. Then a girl goes missing from the same street her and Sibby grew up on and the past comes flooding back… This is a great mystery for fans of past and present mysteries, true crime podcasts, loving families, and thriller endings.

News and Roundups

cover image for Miss Aldridge Regrets

“Miss Aldridge Regrets” and other mystery books to pick up in August

‘Devil in the White City’ Ordered to Series at Hulu, Keanu Reeves to Star

The Life and Disappearance of Agatha Christie

Enid Blyton: The British author loved in India

How Kaley Cuoco’s Own Trauma Played Out in ‘The Flight Attendant’ Season 2: ‘I Had an Intervention on Myself’

Censorship News

How To Find and Develop a Local Anti-Censorship Group

“I will do what I can for damage control”: Abortion Information Misinformation within Oklahoma City’s METRO Library

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

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

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