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Unusual Suspects

Investigators & A Wealthy Family Are Trapped On An Island Together đŸ”Ș

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a PI series with a lead I really like, a serial killer thriller focused on the victims, and a murder mystery on an island where everyone is trapped thanks to a storm!

What You Don't See cover imageWhat You Don’t See (Cass Raines #3) by Tracy Clark: This is one of the handful of ongoing series that I keep up with because I love the character: Cass Raines, a former police officer turned P.I. in Chicago. Unlike many of the PI leads that are loners or bad at personal relationships, Raines has a nice support system, is in a new romantic relationship, and has a great relationship with her ex police partner. That’s how this mystery, her new case, starts: Ben Mickerson is working for Vonda Allen, the woman on top of a media empire, as a bodyguard because she’s receiving threats. Mickerson convinces Raines to join him as a bodyguard and help figure out what is happening and immediately the job Raines didn’t want to take becomes the job she hates: there’s a shooting and Allen is so unpleasant that Raines probably wants to murder her rather than risk her life protecting her… Come for the great twisty mystery cases and stay for the found family. (TW suicide/ past animal cruelty, skippable and not graphic)

Please See Us by Caitlin Mullen: This is one of those mysteries that very much sinks you into the place, Atlantic City, and the residents’ current struggles. It’s told mainly by two characters but also by the victims and a coworker. There’s a teenage psychic, Clara, working for her aunt since her mother left who is seeing visions that may be related to the recent missing women cases. And then there’s Lily, heartbroken and newly arrived after running away from her art gallery life in NY. They meet one day in a spa Lily works in as Clara is trying to drum up business and steals from her. They have an instant connection as women who see the difficulty of being a woman in this world and the economic struggles Atlantic City has been suffering.

Both Lily and Clara have different backgrounds and thus struggle in different ways, but both are very aware of their place in the world and the struggle of moving from it. We also read as victims of the serial killer meet their end—written to give these woman voices, not to show gratuitous violence—and how close Clara and Lily’s lives are circling this danger… The audiobook has a multicast that kept my earbuds in and had me ignoring everything until I was done. (TW addiction/ past date rape alluded/ eating disorder discussed/ teen sex work/ attempted rape/ past suicidal thoughts, brief detail/ recalls past thoughts of wanting to harm child)

Death In The Family by Tessa Wegert: This is exactly as advertised—investigators and a wealthy family trapped on an island together with a missing man and tons of blood—but with the added story of the lead investigator’s past. The mystery: in an Upstate New York private island, a man is missing from his bed and he’s left behind his living girlfriend and a ton of blood. The wealthy family thinks he staged it, certainly, and is fine somewhere.  Former NYPD detective Shana Merchant and fellow investigator Tim Wellington disagree on whether the man is missing or dead, but they have plenty of time to look into it since everyone is stuck together on the island thanks to a storm. If you don’t read the book summary: Shana Merchant’s past trauma, which is why she left the NYPD and is currently engaged to her psychologist (gross!), is slowly revealed in more detail over the course of the investigation.

Everyone is a suspect here as you get the family with plenty of the usual motives for murder: infidelity, inheritance, secrets, people are aholes… This one reads like a standalone but it’s labeled as the start of a procedural series, so it looks like we’ll be getting more of cynical survivor Shana Merchant. And YMMV but I was having a hard time getting into the print copy and switched to audio and found myself finishing it in less than two days!  (TW panic attack/ PTSD/ talk of statutory)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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

SADIE Author Has An Upcoming Crime Book!

Hello mystery fans! I was able to find you a fair amount of interesting things to read and some awesome news announcements. I don’t have something new to watch this week–I am currently watching Sugar Rush and The Big Flower Fight–but I did get you a bunch of great Kindle deals that should keep you happily reading crime for a while.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Death By Dumpling cover image10 Scrumptious Culinary Cozy Mysteries

Psychological thriller author Jennifer Hillier talks crime books!

Mariah Fredericks & Jess Montgomery on research, character, and the craft of historical fiction.

Before there was Jessica Fletcher, there were the Snoop Sisters

New Thriller Challenges Readers To Take Another Look At ‘These Women’

Into Political Thrillers? Brad Meltzer Talks Secret Societies and Books You Don’t Want to Miss

The Lost sisters cover image22 Canadian thrillers and mysteries to read for National Crime Writing Month

I Grew Up Reading Mary-Kate and Ashley’s Detective Books and I’m Still Not Over Them

The Different Types of Book Formats Explained

Enter to win a 1-year subscription to Kindle Unlimited!

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

News And Adaptations

Three finalists named for Harper Lee legal fiction prize

Sadie author has an upcoming crime book, The Project, and all the muppet arms! Get a first look at Courtney Summers’ cult thriller The Project

French serial-killer expert admits serial lies, including murder of imaginary wife

Whodunnit? Did Agatha Christie ‘borrow’ the plot for acclaimed novel?

Heaven My Home cover imageAttica Locke’s Heaven, My Home has been shortlisted for the 2020 Political Fiction Book Orwell Prize!

Louise Penny’s Chief Inspector Armand Gamache series (almost) set to be a streaming series on Amazon Prime.

‘People loved that couple and loved the story we told’: Stana Katic fondly recalls her time on Castle despite being ‘hurt’ over her controversial exit

Kindle Deals

widows of malabar hill cover imageIf you want a great historical mystery–the sequel is a Harper Lee legal fiction prize finalist above–that is based on one of the first female lawyers in India: The Widows of Malabar Hill (A Perveen Mistry Novel Book 1) by Sujata Massey is $1.99! (Review)

If you want a character driven historical mystery centering different female spies based on the true story behind Doctor Zhivago: The Secrets We Kept by Lara Prescott is $4.99! (Review) (TW suicide mentioned/ attempted rape/ sexual harassment)

For a bananapants true crime about a murderous preacher and Harper Lee wanting to write a true crime book about it: Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee by Casey Cep is $4.99! (Review)

The Cheerleaders by Kara Thomas cover imageAnd for a great YA mystery with a lot of dead cheerleaders: The Cheerleaders by Kara Thomas is $1.99! (Review) (TW statutory rape/ suicide)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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Grief & Crime: Mysteries To Read After DEAD TO ME

Hello mystery fans! I really love the Netflix crime show Dead To Me, starring Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini, and, without giving any spoilers, the second season really feels like it dropped at a time when many viewers themselves are dealing with grief (related to “a collective loss of normalcy” caused by the pandemic).

There is something to be said for, at the very least, acknowledging grief, which is a strong theme in the dark comedy Dead To Me and why I took the major themes of the show (grief, found family, secrets) and found great crime books also exploring those things. For readers who are about to nope-nope-out because you’re only here for entertainment/escape to cope, don’t worry I have a fun book in here, and I promise the rest are not heavy books that will make you feel even more weighted than you may already feel. For spoiler reasons I won’t be focusing on the secrets in the books–but they are there…

tuesday mooneyTuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts by Kate Racculia: I’ll start with the fun book for those already hesitant about this theme. This is a great read for fans of puzzle books, pop-culture and literary references, and especially The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin.

Basically, a billionaire dies and sends a group of people on an Edgar Allan Poe treasure hunt through Boston. And one of the hunters is Tuesday Mooney, a loner whose childhood best friend disappeared, thought to have been murdered. Being that her mind has conjured up her friend as a “ghost” to cope and her teen neighbor (found family) is also grieving the death of her mother in a car accident there’s a lot of overlapping exploration with Dead to Me–plus dark humor. (TW depression/ parent death in recent past/ discussion about suicide/ past domestic and child abuse)

The Other Americans by Laila Lalami: This has quite a bit of overlap with Dead To Me in that both start with a hit-and-run and the fall out, including the grieving for a loved one. It explores the family’s grief, focused on the daughter and widow, and also the impact on the community as a witness to the crime is hesitant to come forward. You get multiple points of view, including those of a former cop and the detective working on the case, some found family, and difficult questions to ponder, making this a great followup read to the show. (TW addiction/ PTSD)

Alice's Island cover imageAlice’s Island by Daniel SĂĄnchez ArĂ©valo: Alice Dupont is a pregnant mother to a six-year-old when her husband dies in a car accident. The problem–outside of being widowed–is that the car accident happened nowhere near where her husband had told her he’d be. This turns Alice into a dog with a bone, needing to know why he was somewhere else and what else she may not have known about her husband… I especially recommend this on audio. (TW past suicide mentioned/ anxiety attacks)

 

The Things She's Seen cover imageThe Things She’s Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina, Ezekiel Kwaymullina: This is a beautiful and ultimately uplifting Australian book about family and friendship and the process of grief and moving forward. Beth Teller may be dead but her dad can still see her and speak to her, something that is not helping him move on from losing her. Beth decides the best way to help her father, a detective, is to help him with a current case of an unidentified body found in a fire at a children’s home where the caretakers are also missing. Enter Isobel Catching a witness they interview who poetically recounts her story. (TW there is nothing on page but alludes to child abuse.)

magic for liars cover imageMagic for Liars by Sarah Gailey: This is a PI novel sprinkled with magic since it’s set at a magic school, but it’s very much grounded in our world. It’s about two estranged sisters, with a ton of baggage, who grew up divided by the fact that one was magic and the other was not. One now teaches at a school for magic–where a fellow colleague has been murdered–and the other is the detective investigating. Awkward family reunion to say the least! This one explores many aspects of grief including how when unprocessed it can consume a person. (TW cancer)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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

British Spies Used Cupcake Recipe To Stop Terrorists

Hi mystery fans! I was able to roundup a good amount of interesting lists, articles, podcasts, and news I think you’d be interested in. Plus, I’ve got a completed series to watch and great Kindle deals.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

a gentleman's murder10 Mystery and Thriller Authors Like Agatha Christie

Rincey and Katie discuss the Edgar Award winners, Tana French’s new book and celebrate the 100th anniversary of the publication of The Mysterious Affair at Styles on the latest Read or Dead.

Poison is the Best Murder Weapon in Mysteries

Liberty and Vanessa discuss new releases, including A Deadly Inside Scoop by Abby Collette on the latest All The Books!

Land of Shadows cover image: sunrise LA city image blended into a dark street image with a silhouette of a person walkingRachel Howzell Hall and Alex Segura discuss diversity in crime fiction, what they admire most in crime novels, their participation as judges in the Eleanor Taylor Bland Crime Fiction Writers of Color Award, and more.

The cover for Fatal Fried Rice, Vivien Chien’s 7th Noodle Shop Mystery!

Val McDermid’s exclusive and gripping short story to inspire budding writers

The Origins of Scandinavian Noir

Drive Your Plow Over The Bones Of The Deadcover imageDrive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk is a Best Translated Books Award finalist!

The director of Suicide Squad is adapting yet another Harlan Coben novel for Netflix

How British Spies Used a Cupcake Recipe to Stop Terrorists

Why it’s so hard to read a book right now, explained by a neuroscientist

How much do you know about the true history of Scotland Yard?

Bluebird Bluebird by Attica Locke cover imageAttica Locke, Joe Ide, David Baldacci, Scott Turow, Harlan Coben, Walter Mosley at Live Talks LA

Exclusive: This upcoming novel gives the domestic thriller a killer sci-fi twist

French serial-killer expert admits serial lies, including murder of imaginary wife

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

Enter to win a 1-year subscription to Kindle Unlimited!

Watch Now

Amazon Prime: So this is slightly outside of what I usually recommend here, but the entire series (5 seasons) of Orphan Black is now on Amazon Prime. Yes, it’s sci-fi but it’s also a great show for fans of thrillers, crime shows, and the mystery of who/what is behind all of this and why?! Tatiana Maslany is also ridiculously talented in playing so many parts and Helena is one of my all time favorite characters. While it wasn’t an adaptation there have been books, graphic novels, and even a coloring book based on the show.

Kindle Deals

A Study in Scarlet Women cover imageMy favorite Sherlock is on sale: A Study In Scarlet Women (The Lady Sherlock Series Book 1) by Sherry Thomas is $2.99! (Review) (TW rape–I think it’s past recounted)

For bibliophiles and nonviolent true crime fans: The Man Who Loved Books Too Much: The True Story of a Thief, a Detective, and a World of Literary Obsession by Allison Hoover Bartlett is $4.99! (Review)

 

Girls Like Us cover imageIf you’re looking for a return home mystery starring an FBI agent: Girls Like Us by Cristina Alger is $2.99! (Review) (TW addiction/ PTSD/ statutory rape/ suicide mention with detail)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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Life Long Jewel Thief!

Hi mystery fans! This week I have for you one of my favorite memoirs (yes, you’re in the crime newsletter), a cold case murder mystery, and a past and present psychological suspense. Hopefully, I hit at least three different reading moods and tastes.

Diamond Doris cover imageDiamond Doris: The True Story of the World’s Most Notorious Jewel Thief by Doris Payne: I absolutely adore Doris Payne. ADORE. This is her story of growing up the daughter of a coal-miner who was abusive to her mother, and how, from a young age, she just decided she was going to be a jewel thief. And then made a literal lifelong career with her con of walking into jewelry stores all over the world and walking back out with at least one jewel. Some of the stories in here (her fight with a cow; what she did after not understanding what sex was as a child) are ridiculously hilarious. She’s smart, cunning, unapologetic, brave, and literally was arrested with her stolen jewel on her, and they couldn’t figure out how to charge her because they couldn’t find it!

I highly recommend the audiobook, narrated by Robin Miles, which really makes you feel as if you’re at lunch with Payne as she recounts her life for you. Also, someone needs to make this a film! (TW domestic abuse/ elder abuse)

This Is How I Lied by Heather Gudenkauf: This is the second Gudenkauf mystery I’ve read (Before She Was Found) and they both checked a bunch of boxes I enjoy: past mystery; small community; multiple point of view that incorporates both teenagers and adults. Maggie and Eve grew up best friends in a small Iowa town until Eve was found murdered in a cave at sixteen by her sister and Maggie. Now, 25 years later, Maggie is a heavily pregnant police officer who gets assigned Eve’s cold case murder. The case Maggie’s father had been in charge of at the time, and where he was unable to make any arrests–even though there was plenty of suspects, starting with Eve’s abusive boyfriend and her own sister who the entire town thinks is “psycho.” The chapters alternate between Eve back then, and Maggie and Eve’s sister now, as you start to think everyone is a suspect! (TW partner abuse/ statutory and sexual assault recounted/ suicidal thoughts/ animal deaths/ child abuse/ parent with dementia)

The Split by Sharon J. Bolton: I read and loved Bolton’s super creepy procedural The Craftsman, so when I saw her name on this book I instantly grabbed it. This is not at all like her serial killer procedural, which I don’t say as a complaint but, rather, so readers don’t pick this up as a “read alike” and end up disappointed with a book they would have enjoyed had they known it was different.

Okay, with that said here we have the kind of book where most readers will spend the experience trying to figure out what the hell is going on. It’s told in parts and follows Felicity, now living on a remote Antarctic island in hiding from her husband, and a year in the past when she was seeing a therapist right before fleeing into hiding. In the now, her ex has been released from prison and has shown up on the island to see her. In the past, her therapist is trying to help her while his police mother is concerned for him after the trouble he had with his last patient…

That is all I’m giving you. If you want out of your head for a while and into a story you won’t ever feel you have footing in, here’s your next read. And for extra in your head (literally) psychological thrills, go with the audiobook narrated by Katie Scarfe. (TW mentions child suicides, brief detail/ past child murders, not graphic/ stalking/ discussion of rape, past rape, including child/ child harm in past/ domestic abuse discussions/ past murder suicide/ past domestic abuse)

Recent Release

A Deadly Inside Scoop (An Ice Cream Parlor Mystery #1) by Abby Collette: A return home to run family business (ice cream shop!) cozy!

The Boy in the Red Dress by Kristin Lambert: Historical mystery set in the 1920s at a speakeasy in the French Quarter!

Flash Crash: A Trading Savant, a Global Manhunt, and the Most Mysterious Market Crash in History by Liam Vaughan: This sounds to be a nonviolent true crime so you know I’m in!

catherine houseCatherine House by Elisabeth Thomas: A gothic literary suspense set at a unique school deep in the woods…

The Last Trial (Kindle County Legal Thriller #11) by Scott Turow: A legal thriller with a case at the end of a criminal defense lawyer’s long career that will test everything.

The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware (Paperback): A gothic vibe set in a modern smart home where the nanny is now in jail and we start at the beginning to find out why… (TW child death/ sexual harassment)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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Page-Turning Mysteries That Aren’t Too Dark And Gloomy

Hello mystery fans! I was able to rustle up some book lists and news you’ll want, found a new adaptation that sounds good, and there is a handful of really good Kindle deals. Here ya go:

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

All 60 Original Sherlock Holmes Novels and Stories, Ranked

These Paranormal Cozy Mysteries Will Cast a Spell on You

On the latest All The Books! Liberty and Kelly talk Kimberly McCreight’s A Good Marriage and W.M. Akers’ Westside Saints: A Tiny Mystery.

A guide to Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries’ 10 creepiest episodes

widows of malabar hill cover image16 page-turning mysteries that aren’t too dark and gloomy

Sick of coronavirus news? The Boston Globe is running a serialized novella (with a strong Boston accent)

I am really loving this show so far. (spoilers) The ‘Defending Jacob’ Book Ending Is Totally Different Than The Series’

Jane Harper has a new book, The Survivors, releasing in Australia this year, and in the U.S. February 2021, and here’s the Australian cover and the U.S cover! (You better believe I’m going to buy this from a world shipping bookstore this year–if you’re more patient than me you can preorder the U.S. edition.)

(This sounds awesome!) Virtual Noir at the Bar Queens – A Double-Shot of Crime Fiction

6 Clever Mystery Novels Inspired By True Crimes

Nicole Kidman to Produce Amazon Adaptation of Kimberly McCreight’s ‘A Good Marriage

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

Enter to win a 1-year subscription to Kindle Unlimited!

Watch Now

Netflix: Based on Juanjo Braulio’s El silencio del pantano, The Silence of the Marsh is a Spanish slowburn psychological thriller that revolves around “a successful crime novelist [who] blurs the line between fiction & reality, uncovering the corrupt ties between politicians and the local mafia in Valencia, Spain.” Watch the trailer.

Kindle Deals

The Things She's Seen cover imageIf you want to read one of 2019’s best mysteries and read something a bit different than everything else: The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina, Ezekiel Kwaymullina is $1.99! (Review)

If you’re a fan of crime podcasts and thrillers: Conviction by Denise Mina is $4.99! (Review) (TW suicide, suicidal thoughts/ eating disorder/ rape/ addiction/ animal cruelty)

For fans of nonviolent, bananapants true crime: Billion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World
by Tom Wright, Bradley Hope is $3.99! (Review)

Searching for Sylvie Lee cover imageFor fans of family drama and mysteries who want to travel the world: Searching for Sylvie Lee by Jean Kwok is $2.99! (Review) (TW suicide/ mentions past domestic abuse/ statutory rape discussed)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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May Releases đŸ”Ș

Hello mystery fans! I’ve got a bunch of May releases you’ll want on your radar including translated crime, a legal thriller, cozy, and plenty of mysteries to solve. (📚= I’ve read and recommend; 📖= currently reading and enjoying.)

Shooting Down Heaven cover imageShooting Down Heaven by Jorge Franco, Andrea Rosenberg (Translator): 📖 For literary fans, this follows a group of kids in the ’90s during the height of Colombia’s drug cartels–and the death of Escobar– and their reunion now as adults when one of them returns home.

This Is How I Lied by Heather Gudenkauf: 📚 This is a procedural where the cop assigned to the cold case is now working on her childhood best friend’s unsolved murder. It’s told in past and present chapters, both timelines rushing to reveal what happened on that fateful night and who is responsible–everyone is a suspect!

A Deadly Inside Scoop (An Ice Cream Parlor Mystery #1) by Abby Collette: 📖 Really enjoying this cozy mystery that is a return to small-town to run the family business. The business being an ice cream shop (yum!) and the mystery being a dead person that won’t be good for business.

My Mother’s House by Francesca Momplaisir: A dark and unsettling read that uses a house with living feelings and thoughts to tell the tale of the Haitian immigrant family living inside and one man’s abusive behavior.

catherine houseCatherine House by Elisabeth Thomas: 📖 A school with experimental curriculum in the rural Pennsylvania woods is the setting for this gothic suspense that of course has a group of friends and secrets to be uncovered…

A Good Marriage by Kimberly McCreight: A friend back from law school calls Lizzie Kitsakis from Rikers needing her help. He’s the main suspect in his wife’s death…

 

Death in the East (Sam Wyndham #4) by Abir Mukherjee: I adore this historical mystery series about a Scottish detective working in 1922 Calcutta, India. This time around his British past comes to find him twenty years later… The only reason I haven’t already inhaled this book is I don’t have a galley–seriously, I love this series.

I Don’t Expect Anyone to Believe Me by Juan Pablo Villalobos, Daniel Hahn (Translator): Labeled as part campus novel and part gangster thriller, this Spanish prize-winning novel follows Juan Pablo Villalobos, a Mexican student on his way to Spain, who gets kidnapped and forced by gangsters to make a corrupt politician’s daughter fall in love with him–or his cousin will die…

The Boy in the Red Dress by Kristin Lambert: Historical fic set in 1920’s New Orleans with a murder mystery for fans of Miss Fisher’s Murder Mystery.

Sister Dear by Hannah Mary McKinnon: This sounds like a revenge thriller–when Eleanor’s dad dies she finds out he wasn’t her biological father and the man that is, instead chose another family. With a daughter that is Eleanor’s half-sister, and that half-sister is going to pay apparently.

What You Don't See cover imageWhat You Don’t See (Cass Raines, #3) by Tracy Clark: 📚 This is a great recent PI series set in Chicago, following a former cop with a great support system reluctantly taking on cases that are usually annoying to her–this time an abrasive media empire owner needs protection from a stalker…

Silence on Cold River by Casey Dunn: Ama Chaplin is a defense attorney in Georgia who left her life behind and previous name behind in Atlanta. Now a sociopath who was a teen she defended seventeen years ago is in front of her and has plans…And only one person, a grieving suicidal father, believes something happened to her and goes into the woods with a shotgun to find out.

The Silence by Susan Allott: 📖 Here’s an Australian mystery, part historical, about two neighboring families, a woman that disappeared in the ’60s, and the man now suspected of having something to do with the disappearance. You know I’m always in for any mystery that is going to have all the secrets coming out.

The Scotland Yard Puzzle Book: Test Your Inner Detective by Solving Some of the World’s Most Difficult Cases by Sinclair McKay: You read all the mystery books, but are you ready to be a detective? Find out by trying to solve these cases!

these womenThese Women by Ivy Pochoda: For fans of literary novels, fictional serial killers where the victims are the ones given voice, and gritty L.A novels.

The Last Trial (Kindle County Legal Thriller #11) by Scott Turow: A legal thriller where an 85-year-old defense lawyer takes on a final case of a friend charged with insider trading, fraud, and murder and this final case will put his career in jeopardy and challenge whether he ever knew his friend…

Hard Cash Valley (Bull Mountain #3) by Brian Panowich: This is a gritty southern noir series that has been optioned for television so you’ll want to get the books read before the adaptation.

Hunting November (Killing November #2) by Adriana Mather: The sequel to Killing November, about an elite boarding school training the elite’s kids to be the next generation of assassins and spies. This is one you need to start at the beginning with.

Westside Saints (Westside #2) by W.M. Akers: The sequel to Westside which is a genre blend of detective fic, historical fic, and fantasy set in a reimagined Jazz Age New York!

America’s First Female Serial Killer: Jane Toppan and the Making of a Monster by Mary Kay McBrayer: Fellow Rioter, and writer of our horror newsletter, McBrayer novelizes 19th-century serial poisoner Jane Toppan.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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Free YA Crime Audiobooks

Hello mystery fans! We made it to May of this century that is 2020 and another weekend–if weekends are still a thing for you. Anyhoo, I’ve got some distractions in the form of interesting things to read, watch, and I’ve loaded you up on great Kindle deals.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

In the Dog House by VM Burns cover imageA Brief Tour into the World of Cozy Mystery Authors

While they are self-quarantining, Rincey and Katie tackle some of the oldest mystery and true crime books on their TBR in the latest Read or Dead.

Five True Crime Books You Should Read This Month

Goodreads Employees Recommend Their Favorite Mysteries

Suspense, Mystery and Thriller Must-Read Books by Women Writers of Color to Read in 2020

Win a Copy of FIGHT CLUB 3 by Chuck Palahniuk!

News And Adaptations

Lambda Literary is asking for donations in order to continue operations.

Move over Veruca Salt, I NEED THIS NOW: exclusive preview of The Searcher by Tana French!

HBO Max sets launch date, unveils first look at new shows: Kaley Cuoco’s The Flight Attendant, and more.

cover of The 57 Bus by Dashka SlaterFree YA audiobooks through summer! (I love this program and look forward to it every year and there are fantastic crime books you should run to if you haven’t already: The 57 Bus; Monday’s Not Coming; Burn Baby Burn)

Matthew Rhys as Perry Mason is coming to HBO in a new series–focusing on the attorney’s early career, based on Erle Stanley Gardner detective fiction. For fans of Orphan Black, Tatiana Maslany will also star, and John Lithgow who has been in a million things. And here’s the trailer.

How Much of ‘Home Before Dark’ Is Based On The Real Hilde Lysiak?

Watch Now

On HBO Go: The Kitchen, adapted from the same titled graphic novel by Ollie Masters and Ming Doyle, stars Tiffany Haddish, Melissa McCarthy, and Elisabeth Moss as mobsters’ wives who take over when their husbands end up in prison. Watch the trailer.

Kindle Deals

Untamed Shore cover imageIf you’re looking for slow burn suspense with a bite: Untamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia is $4.99! (Review) (TW domestic abuse/past suicide mentioned, detail)

Indian Summer Meets Agatha Christie: I’ll Never Tell by Catherine McKenzie is $1.99! (Review) (TW suicide)

For a great British procedural that launches a great new series: The Birdwatcher by William Shaw is $2.99! (Review) (TW suicide, detail)

miracle creek cover imageIf you’re looking for a super good legal thriller + mystery + everyone’s got secrets: Miracle Creek by Angie Kim is $3.99 (Review) (TW child abuse/ suicide/ sexual assault)

And for a creepy-ish British serial killer read: The Whisper Man by Alex North is $2.99! (Review) (TW addiction/ child abuse, murder/ pedophile)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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Cat And Mouse Game Up Mount Everest đŸ”Ș

Hi mystery fans! I have a translated slowburn suspense from Korea, con women, and a graphic novel thriller where the cat and mouse game is literally up Mount Everest. Hopefully you’ll find some distraction in these books.

The Onlly Child cover imageThe Only Child by Mi-ae Seo, Jung Yewon (Translator): This is a slowburn suspense novel, with low grade creep factor, that doesn’t feel written for shock value but rather is an exploration of nature vs nurture. Seonkyeong is a recently married young criminal psychologist who finds her work and home life upended in different ways: an imprisoned serial killer suddenly decides he wants to talk, but only to Seonkyeong–this is why the book has comps to Silence Of The Lambs, which is the only similarity since tone and violence are all very different from each other. As she starts meeting with the serial killer, her home life suddenly changes when her husband’s young daughter, who she didn’t know of, has to come live with them. It seems that after the young girl’s mother died, and her grandparents took her in, her grandparents also died…

Readers follow as Seonkyeong tries to understand why the serial killer chose her, why her husband never mentioned a child, and questionable behavior from her stepdaughter. This is a great pick for fans of Kanae Minato and I really wish more crime novels would be translated. I love seeing the difference in society, investigation methods, laws, and even just the difference in what may be considered shocking or dark. (TW suicide mention/ child abuse/ animal cruelty)

Pretty Things by Janelle Brown: A layered crime novel that follows a con woman, Nina, and her mark, Vanessa, while exploring family, resentment, loyalty, and revenge. Nina grew up with a con woman mom who placed all her hope in her daughter never having to live that life and instead go to college and get a proper career. What Nina’s mom doesn’t know is Nina’s already a con woman. With a partner. So after her mom’s cancer returns and the treatment is too costly, Nina decides to pull a con that will solve their financial problems. Her mark? The sister of a high school boyfriend whose wealthy family ran her and her mom out of town years ago.

I’d say “let the games begin” but really this novel is more on the side of why people do what they do, giving us first row seats to the inner thoughts, behavior and life of Nina and Vanessa, alternating point of view between the two women now and their lives growing up. If you need something solid to sink into, this story will take you deep into the class war between these characters, while adding interesting things like what the life of a con woman and Instagram influencer are like. I recommend the multicast audiobook if you really want to be submerged into these women’s lives, dramas, and crimes. (TW parents with cancer, including death/ past child abuse/ mentions past molestation / past suicide, detail)

High Crimes cover imageHigh Crimes by Christopher Sebela, Ibrahim Moustafa (Illustrations): This graphic novel has a hell of a premise and certainly one I’d never read before: two people who find dead climbers on Everest, chop off their hands to identify the person, then offer the person’s family a chance to get their loved one’s body back–for a fee of course. This is a crime thriller so, naturally, something goes wrong. The wrong just happens to be that a body they identify is from a secret agency and that agency is coming for the body and the retrievers. The cat and mouse game takes place mostly up Everest while you get flashbacks of the dead agent, slowly revealing more about the agency, and Zan Jensen, one of the “grave robbers”, who happens to be a disgraced Olympic snowboarder with a lot of baggage and demons that she’s kind of working through but definitely full-on struggling with.

I love graphic novels and find that even when I’m struggling to read ebooks/print I can always read a graphic novel. Plus, you get human and environmental dangers if you’re looking to get out of your head and your living quarters for a while. (TW torture/ addiction, overdose/ suicide, including thoughts, details)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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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Sherlock Holmes’ Teen Sister Coming To Netflix!

Hello mystery fans! I found some interesting articles to click, there’s some news, a show I’ve been very excited for is finally here, and great Kindle deals!

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

10 Great Medieval (and Medieval-ish) Mystery Books

Here are 3 fictional detectives whose cases our book critic is devouring now | The Plot Thickens

Kellye Garrett is on the Crime Writers of Color podcast!

15 Best Mystery Novels for Any Mood

Dateline’s first narrative true crime podcast is a jawdropping story of greed — and a deeply fallible justice system.

Enter to Win a $250 Gift Card to Barnes and Noble!

News And Adaptations

The Case of the Missing Marquess cover imageMillie Bobby Brown will play Sherlock Holmes’ teen sister in Netflix adaptation with Henry Cavill playing Sherlock! (Based on Enola Holmes Mysteries series by Nancy Springer)

Bones complete series set on sale digitally at iTunes (Limited time)

Twin Peaks inspired a lasting legacy of smalltown weirdness in television

 

Your House Will Pay cover imageLos Angeles Times Book Prizes Winners Announced! and Steph Cha’s acceptance speech hours before her water broke!

Bosch will have a seventh season and it will be the series finale!

Watch Now

On Apple TV+: I really enjoyed the book Defending Jacob by William Landay (review) and was thrilled to hear it was being adapted and would star Chris Evans and Michelle Dockery (Love her in Good Behavior)! The book is a legal thriller about a father whose teenage son is suspected in another teen’s murder, and when I read it I thought it would be perfect for a series adaptation–it works so well for fans of legal thrillers, and procedurals, and family drama. And it’ll premiere today, April 24th! Here’s the trailer!

Kindle Deals

Yesterday cover imageIf you like mysteries with bite, and our current world with a slight twist: Yesterday by Felicia Yap is $2.99! (Review) (I don’t remember trigger warnings)

If you’re in the mood for a YA psychological: Little Monsters by Kara Thomas is $1.99! (Review) (TW suicide)

If you’re looking for a YA serial killer read, here is one I really enjoyed: Keep This to Yourself by Tom Ryan is $3.99! (Review)

kill the next oneIf you want the twistiest of thrillers: Kill the Next One by Federico Axat, David Frye (translator) is $2.99! (Review) (TW suicide–but don’t remember any others.) I never reread books, but I remember this being so twisty that I loved it, and it’s been so long I forgot the solve and have been debating coming back to it.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

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

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