Crime Reads - Suspense, Thrillers, Crime, Gun!
CrimeReads is a culture website for people who believe suspense is the essence of storytelling, questions are as important as answers, and nothing beats the thrill of a good book. It's a single, trusted source where readers can find the best from the world of crime, mystery, and thrillers. No joke,
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—This story is a co-publication with The Delacorte Review. I’ve seen an alcoholic who fell down the stairs, wasn’t found for two weeks, and only then because the flies became so thick at the windows, that his mailman became alarmed. He lived alone because his wife had fled his abuse. When I left the scene, I passed her crying on the driveway, which surprised me. I’ve seen a homeless man who died where he lived—beneath a supermarket loading dock. I wriggled into the claustrophobic space to photograph his body lying atop a mattress beside his possessions: a lighter, extra socks, wallet, and book. I don’t remember the book’s title, but I wish I did. I’ve stood in mass gr…
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I write books set in the South, and it’s always interesting to hear readers ‘not from around here’ describe my leading ladies. To some, the women I pen are ruthless. To others, they are misguided. To a few, they are unimaginable. To most, they are strong, for better or worse. To me, they are simply writing what I know. My family from north Alabama speaks in a southern drawl so thick you’d think they’d just eaten a spoonful of sorghum syrup at any given moment. They are the women I know best: my grandmothers, my aunts, my sisters, my mother. Like the stereotypes of Southern women, they can serve you hot banana pudding right out of the oven and at the same time tell you o…
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“Please throw down the box.” Stage driver John Shine nervously fingered the reins of his six-horse team as he stared down the yawning barrels of the highway robber’s shotgun. The bandit had suddenly appeared in front of Shine as he was urging his horses up the long, gradual slope of Funk Hill in the foothills of California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains. For a moment, Shine hesitated as he reached for the green Wells Fargo strongbox under his seat. The bandit looked over his shoulder at the manzanita-choked hillside behind him and yelled, “If he dares to shoot, give him a solid volley, boys!” Shine glanced up quickly and saw half a dozen rifle barrels protruding from the …
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A good thriller yanks the reader in and holds them tight straight through to the end, but the subgenre of familial crimes is especially mesmerizing. We can’t look away. They were the perfect family. How did this happen? How could the family not know? Or even more compelling…What leads a person to betray their family? Those are the themes that bubble up in my debut thriller, Junkyard Dogs. Comped to Ozark and Shameless, on its surface Junkyard Dogs is the story of a high school basketball player thrust into a criminal scrapping ring when his dad suddenly disappears. But really Josh’s story is about family deceit and betrayal. When Josh digs too deep in search of his fathe…
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Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Donna Leon, So Shall You Reap (Atlantic Monthly Press) “As always, Brunetti’s sensitivity to the human factor in his work—apparent in his sense of responsibility to the victims and his empathy with nearly all those he encounters—is what draws the reader to care for this character in a way that is very different from how we respond to most fictional sleuths. Add to that the richness of Brunetti’s domestic life—loving but never sentimental, defined more by a raised eyebrow than a rhetorical flourish—and you begin to see why this series occupies a very special place in the crime-fiction wo…
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Of course it’s a big claim but there may not be a more beautiful, ethereal city on earth than Kyoto. Greater Kyoto contains one and a half million people but the city’s centre is the cultural heartland of Japan. It is a city (alternatively known as the Imperial City sometimes) of ancient culture, religion and architecture – those picturesque streets of wooden houses that make Kyoto so instagramable! The capital was moved from Kyoto to Tokyo after the Meiji Restoration in 1868 and so the city avoided the worst of the firebombing in World War Two that levelled the current capital. It is a city where you can still capture a Japan before it began to interact with the West and…
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Few things in life excite me more than doing research for a new novel. For me, it is the phase of the book-writing-process where new ideas manifest themselves, where rabbit holes are explored, and new discoveries are made. It is a phase full of wonder and limitless aspirations for what your book could be, but also a Herculean double edge sword when you realize that the research rabbit hole you’ve climbed down is none other than your brain’s careful attempt to camouflage what you are really doing: Procrastinating. That being said, let’s dive into my research process. Since my books can be categorized in the spy/geo-political thriller genre, I can safely say that I get mo…
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When I celebrated the publication of my first novel, one of my friends briefly steered me away from the hubbub and toasts and quietly asked: “Now what do you want?” I don’t remember what I said in the moment, but the question later haunted me as I struggled to find a satisfactory answer. It had taken me years to write the book. What did I really want from all that dreaming and effort? Sales? Of course, but I was under no misconception that my little mystery would be a bestseller or make me rich. A fellow author once told me, whatever the number of books you sell, it’ll never be enough. What else did I want? Good reviews? Sure, and I got them, but that wasn’t the point.…
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As far back as I can remember, I’ve made my home within mysteries. Not mystery, mind you – any real-life uncertainty is just a tripwire for my anxieties. But maybe that’s why the classic whodunnit has been such a reliable source of solace for me, a problem and its solution conveniently giftwrapped for my entertainment; a ship I can enjoy without wondering how it fit inside its bottle. Lately, I’ve cozied up in the clockwork castles of Christie’s biggest acolyte, Rian Johnson. If his Knives Out and Glass Onion are a joint thesis statement that the narrative wellsprings of Christie’s style of mysteries are not yet dry, then his new case-of-the-week mystery show, Poker Face…
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A little over ten years ago, Gillian Flynn already had two successful thrillers under her belt, Sharp Objects and Dark Places, but her third release would be a genre-defining moment. Gone Girl propelled domestic noir into the spotlight, bringing in new readers to the thriller genre in droves, and paving the way for the now-wildly popular subset of the thriller genre. Crime fiction, and even domestic suspense, didn’t start with Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl. Amy certainly isn’t literature’s first unreliable narrator. However, the release of Gone Girl catapulted domestic thrillers into what they are today, it brought the genre’s readership to numbers it had never experienced.…
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Opioids. Human trafficking. Domestic violence. Sexual violence. These are all topics I’ve plumbed the depths of in my work. And no, I don’t write incendiary exposes or insightful non-fiction. I write commercial thrillers, page-turning fiction designed to captivate readers and fuel sleepless nights. My foremost motivation is to entertain people. I live for the craft of storytelling. I love creating lush worlds and complex characters that lure you in and rob you of hours of your time. So why would I choose to lead my readers into such somber and macabre real-world issues like human trafficking? Because in addition to being a commercial artist, I’m also an invested citizen…
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For Henry: Although I’m not a teacher by profession—I’m a writer—I have for decades conducted writing workshops, including at Occidental College, USC, UCLA. Recently, when the wife of author Henry Turner, who had begun his professional writing journey years ago as an especially talented writer in my workshop, informed me that Henry’s car had gone out of control at a notorious curve on his way to Ojai, I was in shock. The driver, Henry Turner, was dead. To be invited into my workshop, applicants were required to submit a sample of work. I avoided noting gender and age; only talent was considered. Once in a while a submission of such refined quality appeared that the cho…
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I had been thinking a lot about serial killers. In fact, as I drove through the steep, rugged terrain of northwest Georgia, on my way to Cloudland Canyon State Park, I was listening to a true crime podcast. I think it was an episode about Lawrence Singleton, the “Mad Chopper.” For months now, I had been slowly wading into true crime documentaries and podcasts, wanting to understand our culture’s fascination with all things murder. While watching one of these documentaries, I had recognized footage of a school where a famous serial killer abducted his final victim. I realized with horror that I’d spent the early years of my childhood just a few blocks away, that I had of…
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Across the nearly two-and-a-half-hour sprawl of Inherent Vice, Coy Harlingen, surf rock saxophonist and heroin addict turned CIA asset, appears in two centerpiece scenes. In the first, soon after Doc has been hired by Coy’s wife, Hope, to investigate his whereabouts, Coy emerges on a fog-cloaked pier to ask that Doc keep an eye on Hope and their daughter, Amethyst, and provides a minor clue as to the significance of the words “Golden Fang.” In the second, Doc finds Coy at a house party, where the anxious and paranoid Coy bemoans his self-imposed alienation from his family and urges Doc to find Shasta before she is enmeshed in the same morass that he is. In both cases, Coy…
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Yes, strange as it may seem—and hard as it may be to believe today, with two cinematic blockbusters now under his sash and key roles in several other super-hit films as well—back in the 1960s and for decades afterward, Doctor Stephen Strange was one of Marvel’s less important, and least popular, marquee-level heroes. (In fact, Marvel editor Stan Lee later revealed the hero was nearly christened ‘Mr Strange’, but instead he got promoted to being an actual doctor, because Marvel already had a ‘Mr Fantastic.’) He started off his four-color life in a mere five-page throw-away story by scripter Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko in Strange Tales #110 (July 1963), basically just …
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As soon as you try to define a crime novel, things get complicated. Is it any novel in which a crime occurs? Is Middlemarch a crime novel? Crime and Punishment? Lolita? In the contemporary context, the problem is often solved by categorizing a novel of high quality in which a crime occurs as a “literary mystery” or “literary thriller”—terms that presuppose both a blending and a demarcation of genres that many writers are reluctant to admit exist in the first place. With definitions so hard to come by, what can we say about a novel that takes the form of a mystery but defies all the expectations of the genre? I’m not sure I can answer that question, but I do know that the…
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The Victorians were fanatical about the dead. During this era, the spiritualist movement—central to which was communication with the dead, especially through mediums—was in its heyday. Victorians were fascinated by anything supernatural, otherworldly, or occult, and a number of our present-day traditions around death and dying echo the practices of this bygone era. Public theatrical displays of mediumship and psychic power were a common occurrence in the Victorian era, particularly séances. These were an especially popular affair among the wealthy looking to entertain their friends with elaborate parlor-room displays. Though the Victorians did not abide by any standard …
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If I had to choose a favorite lineage within crime fiction, I’d pick one that includes Tony Hillerman, Barbara Neely, and Tiffany D. Jackson. Though their styles differ dramatically, these writers deliver satisfying stories whose marginalized protagonists question traditional responses to crime. Their books offer insight into survivors’ healing needs beyond exposing “the bad guy.” And they highlight the community’s role in responding to crime where institutions fall short. My debut novel, Play the Game, follows in their footsteps. Play the Game, a YA mystery, opens with the announcement that Phillip Singer, known to the public for killing a Black boy named Ed Hennessey, …
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In the opening chapter of Christopher Bollen’s immersive, intricately constructed new novel, aptly titled The Lost Americans, a “weapons tech” named Eric falls to his death from his hotel balcony in the pulsating city of Cairo. Did he jump or was he pushed? The scene shifts to his grieving sister, Cate, back in The Berkshires of Western Mass. Struggling to find meaning in her brother’s death, she bristles at Polestar’s explanation that Eric either committed suicide or had a drunken accident. “Cate would accept an accident. In the worst case, she even take murder.” As a villainous presence, Polestar makes for an ideal embodiment of evil, and Eric and Cate had clashed ov…
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Gus Vollmer was lost in thought. It was February 1921, and the chief was sitting at his desk at police headquarters, sun-wrinkled face creased into a frown of concentration. He jotted notes on a yellow pad in his looping handwriting. He’d spent the morning flicking through the latest issue of the Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, which had finally published a paper he’d submitted more than six months earlier, about his plans to build a policing school in Berkeley. But something else had caught his eye. Sandwiched between Vollmer’s article and one debating the benefits of hanging the mentally ill was a paper by a psychologist and lawyer…
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Witches—and witch trials—have long been a subject of fascination in literature. Not even Shakespeare was immune. In Macbeth, the Weird Sisters (originally called the Weyward Sisters) set the scene for the bard’s tragedy about fate, evil and malign female influence. Fast forward four hundred years, and witchy novels—across a range of genres—are bigger than ever. Perhaps we’re so spellbound by witches because we find them difficult to explain. The witch trials of the early modern period are one of the darkest chapters in human history: thousands of people, mainly women, were put to death in continental Europe, Britain and North America. This was a phenomenon that spanned c…
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Every crime story is, on some level, a story about justice served or justice denied. And when the author situates the crime or crimes that are perpetrated within the context of a system of oppression that negatively effects one or more groups of people based on their affiliations or identities—social justice—the world of the novel cracks open to let in some of the biggest, darkest, deepest questions about humanity itself. When I set out to write my debut novel, The Dig, the heart of the story came straight from the ancient Greek tragedy, Antigone. In Sophocles’ play, a young woman follows her moral and ethical conviction that the death of her brother who rebelled against…
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Jenna ditched the scooter and is fast-walking down Tenth Street when the phone rings. It comes up as only a number, no name. It’s not in the scooter guy’s contacts. She answers. “It’s me,” Simon says. “You’re sure?” He’s using a burner phone like they discussed when they made this contingency plan. Their marriage is nothing like the cliché in the movies where the spouse is blindsided by their loved one’s secret history. Before Jenna agreed to marry him, she told Simon everything. Well, nearly everything. Enough for him to be clear-eyed and understand the risks of living the rest of his life with her. Actually, there was some cliché to it—he proposed on the promenade out…
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In my upcoming young adult thriller, I Will Find You Again, Chase Ohara grieves the loss of her ex-girlfriend, Lia, and makes it her mission to find out what happened in the final weeks before her death. But as she begins to put the pieces together, she discovers secrets about her own relationship with Lia that shock her. Not everything was as it seemed, and not everyone is who they appear to be. But one thing is certain: if Chase can’t make sense of the past, she might not get a future. I love the idea of the thriller as a metaphor for the unknown within ourselves, and the outward mystery in Chase’s story ultimately leads to a confrontation of the dark truths lurking wi…
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North by Northwest isn’t about what happens to Cary Grant, it’s about what happens to his suit. The suit has the adventures, a gorgeous New York suit threading its way through America. The title sequence in which the stark lines of a Madison Avenue office building are ‘woven’ together could be the construction of Cary in his suit right there – he gets knitted into his suit before his adventure can begin. Indeed some of the popular ‘suitings’ of that time, ‘windowpane’ or ‘glen plaid’, reflected, even perfectly complemented office buildings. Cary’s suit reflects New York, identifies him as a thrusting exec, but also protects him, what else is a suit for? Reflects and Prote…
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