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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Just seeing the words “Wes Anderson movie” will probably make you picture a very specific, highly-stylized aesthetic comprised of, among other things, symmetrical mise-en-scene, bright colors, old-fashioned intertitles, exaggerated acting patterns, quirky children who are more emotionally intelligent than their equally quirky adult counterparts, and probably Owen Wilson. Anderson’s famous cinematic style (created in concert with cinematographer Robert Yeoman, among other artists) has been the subject of art shows, parodies, and even an Instagram account-turned-book called Accidentally Wes Anderson, which assembles photographs of real-life locations that look like they cou…
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As my dad tells it, he was a third-year graduate student in Lubbock, Texas (my birthplace) interviewing a candidate for a faculty position. The candidate: a woman from Pennsylvania. The setting: not Pennsylvania—with Lubbock’s two-dimensional landscape, a blue sky stretched out until it is cellophane thin, and a deep deep dark come a moonless night. Not long into the interview, the woman paused before asking my dad: How are you not afraid to live out here? You can see everything. She’s right—you can see everything in west Texas, just like you can see everything if you stand in the middle of some stark open plain across much of the West. And while I can’t know the source …
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How much of an expert do you have to be to write a Sherlock Holmes novel? It’s a question that has occupied my mind for the last year or so. When I was asked to suggest plots for Holmes novels that would be faithful to the canon, my initial response was one of horror at being woefully unqualified. But my mind began to turn over, mysteries bloomed out of seeds of ideas, rough synopses became more intricate with every pass. All writers experience imposter syndrome, but in my case it’s usually been relegated to after completion of a novel, at the point when I’m required to coerce others into reading it. On this occasion, once my synopsis had been approved I found myself par…
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12 August 1961 – Rügen Island, East Germany Joachim pulls his foot back from the water. It’s cold, even in August. His friends are splashing in the sea, teasing him, calling him to come in, but he hates cold water and they know he won’t. He thinks back to last night. Workers beer. Sweat. Bodies tightly packed in against each other. Fumbling and kissing in the corner. He’s never had a holiday like this, not once in his twenty-two years and he doesn’t want it to end. Bright green forest covers the chalk cliffs behind him, white-tailed eagles wheel overhead and the sea is so clear he can see tiny fish flitting through the water. Just one week left, then it’s back to East…
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I’m called a writer, or often more specifically, a mystery writer. But the truth is that I think of myself primarily as a storyteller. And as a storyteller, I believe I have a sacred duty, a sacred promise to fulfill. Homer states it beautifully in his epic Odyssey: “Sing in me muse, and through me tell the story.” I believe the best stories come from a place deeper than our conscience thought, and as storytellers, we’re simply the vessels for the telling, channels for the greater truths. When I was a child, I was blessed with parents who read to me. I never went down for a nap or to bed at night without hearing a story from a book. I grew up thinking of the world in ter…
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Back in 2011, I was perusing the shelves of my local library when I came across a book called Little Faces by Sophie Hannah. She was an unknown author to me at the time, but I’ve always been a fan of mysteries, and the synopsis sounded right up my alley. The story is about a woman who returns home from a night out to find that her two-week old infant has been swapped with another baby. The mind-bending, psychological aspects of the book blew me away. I flew through the story, having never read anything like it, and I was immediately hooked. After turning the last page, I raced out and bought the next three books in this series—The Truth Teller’s Lie, The Wrong Mother, an…
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Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * William Kent Krueger, Lightning Strike (Atria Books) “This sensitive, moving prequel introduces and draws readers into the series. Krueger has written another perceptive coming-of-age novel, the poignant story of a father and son trying to understand each other.” –Library Journal (starred review) Peter Heller, The Guide (Knopf) “Heller is an expert at building suspense, and he’s a first-rate nature writer, lending authenticity to the wealth of wilderness details he provides… The Guide is a glorious getaway in every sense, a wild wilderness trip as well as a suspenseful journey to…
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Colombo—a city of five and a half million people and the largest city by far on the island of Sri Lanka. The city is also a port and a harbour, an ancient sea trade crossing in South Asia, an integral part of what is now known as the old Maritime Silk Road, and, after 1815 (following the island being under both Portuguese and later Dutch control) to independence, a part of the British Empire and the administrative capital of Ceylon. The country’s recent history has been marked by insurrections and civil war since independence as well as the devastating tsunami of 2004. Perhaps as many as a hundred thousand people died in a quarter century of civil war that ended in 2009. …
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Pick up a copy of any book in my Cajun Country Mystery series and you’ll see a basset hound on the cover—sometimes crafty, sometimes woebegone, but always there. In the series, the Crozat family pet is a male hound named Gopher. In real life, she was our beloved Lucy, who we adopted through the Basset Hound Rescue of Southern California. Lucy crossed the rainbow bridge in 2010 but will live forever on bookshelves, thanks to the talents of my wonderful series’ cover artist, Stephen Gardner. I’m not the only mystery writer whose four-legged friend has served as a cover girl or boy. Here, seven cozy authors share the artistic inspiration they derived from their beloved fu…
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In 1990, after almost two decades spent collecting rejection slips, I finally published a novel, Murphy’s Fault. The book had been turned down by over twenty publishers before legendary mystery editor Ruth Cavin picked it up for St. Martin’s Press. After such an inauspicious, tortured beginning, imagine my surprise when the book was named to the 1990 New York Times Notable Book List, the only first mystery on the list that year. This got me a second contract and a little bit of local notoriety. A short time after the book was published, Tennessee writer Deborah Adams asked me to blurb her debut cozy, All The Great Pretenders. As I’d never been asked to provide a blurb b…
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Buying the first issue of Heavy Metal magazine in the winter of 1977 was a life changing event for thirteen year old me. An anthology graphic arts magazine that launched in April, 1977, Heavy Metal was published by the same folks who brought us National Lampoon. An American version of the French comic Metal Hurlant, the magazine mostly reprinted European artists who were new to most Americans, but soon became internationalist graphic art heroes: Angus McKie, Philippe Druillet, Enki Bilal and Mobius. In the beginning, there were only a few Americans being published in Heavy Metal including Vaughn Bode and Richard Corben. Both began their careers in underground comics and…
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I’d argue that seeing your friends succeed is probably sweeter than your own success—it’s less fleeting, and purer in a way. Writers tend to speed past the good times and focus on the bad. Maybe that’s what makes us who we are? But when it’s something good happening to someone else, to someone we care about, it lasts longer. This is a circuitous way of saying I was so happy to see the success my friend Pornsak Pichetshote’s had with his creator-owned comic book series, THE GOOD ASIAN, in tandem with artist Alexandre Tefenkgi. A love letter to the PI genre told through the eyes of flawed, conflicted detective Edison Hark, who is hunting a killer on the streets of 1936 Chi…
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Stories about settling old scores thrive in the thriller genre, and in literature generally. As humans, we are hard-wired to feel revenge—it’s a primal emotion arising from a place of pain and suffering. There’s an element of proportionality involved, a sense of wanting to restore balance by meting out an equal level of suffering to the person responsible for causing this pain. Fantasising about how we will ‘get our own back’ on someone who has wronged us activates the brain’s reward center and offers a degree of relief from the intensity of our emotions. This ‘relief’ is, of course, illusory. By focussing on revenge, all we’re really doing is keeping the emotional wound …
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For me, summer is a perfect time for a deep dive into mystery, especially cozies. As a traditional mystery writer, I love the puzzle at the heart of a cozy—the twistier, the better. But a good cozy is much more than just that puzzle. What makes the cozy mystery genre such a delight is that it’s about the things we enjoy—good food, beautiful (or at least interesting) locations, beautiful things, good books, great friends, family. Yeah, okay, there’s that dead body in there that messes up the character’s enjoyment of all these wonderful things, but we’ll work on that. Then there’s the pets. Since pets are a major part of family life — even when that family is one person l…
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Whether it’s the language, the tradecraft or the folk legends of American Mafia life, The Godfather reads like a voyage through the underworld with Mario Puzo acting as our Virgil. The Godfather also functions as a classic of another genre: the immigrant story. Vito is the new arrival who works around the clock to establish himself in his new land, getting his hands dirty, while his more privileged and better-educated son longs to succeed like a native. Michael Corleone’s dreams are of assimilation. He marries a willowy WASP beauty, her family rooted in the New England of the Mayflower. He wears the uniform of the US Army. He is adamant that ‘his children would grow i…
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The heist is one of my all-time favorite plot devices, familiar and yet constantly open to reinvention. There are so many scenes we expect to see: a master thief taking on a last job, often reluctantly; the assembly of a team of criminals, each with one specific but impressive skill; the planning of the job complete with a visualization of everything going right, even though we know it won’t; the last-minute betrayal that upends everything and tests the moral character of some member of the crew. The pleasure of a good heist comes not from inventing new scenes but from employing these expected ones well: heist fans want to see an interesting crew with impressive abilitie…
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August’s roster of international crime and mystery includes everything from straight-up thrillers to magical parables and more. Whether you’re in the mood for slow-simmering suspense as the summer drags on, or high-octane action to make it pass more quickly, beat the heat with these releases from around the work. Kotaro Isaka, Bullet Train Translated by Sam Malissa (Overlook) This book is so much fun!!! Bullet Train reads a bit like if Elmore Leonard was hired to adapt Murder on the Orient Express and it was directed by Bong Joon Ho. Several groups of criminals converge on on train headed from Tokyo to Morioka—an odd couple protecting a gangster’s son and a suitcase…
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I’ve spent a lot of time researching art theft and forgery. One in particular—the notorious 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre Museum. Here’s how it went: a recently fired employee hid in a closet overnight, emerged at dawn on a day the museum was closed to the public, took the painting off the wall, stashed it under his jacket and walked out. No Tom Cruise-like dangling from a high-wire, no digitally scanned replications to take the painting’s place. Its disappearance was in fact not noticed for two full days! We are talking about the Mona Lisa, possibly the most famous painting in the world, its reputation enhanced by the theft and the ensuing media frenzy. I …
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They landed about forty-five minutes later at a remote section of Hunter Army Airfield. No sooner had Coldmoon angrily yanked his backpack out of the rear of the helicopter’s cabin than he heard the sound of a second chopper, approaching quickly. A minute later, it appeared in the sky. It was a Bell 429, government issue by the look of its tail markings, and it in fact appeared identical to the one their superior, ADC Pickett, had arrived at their private island in earlier in the day. Coldmoon scoffed. Why should he be surprised? At almost the same time, as if choreographed, an Escalade with windows tinted almost as black as its body pulled up nearby, stopped, an…
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I’m going to warn you right now. If you’re Stephen Miller or someone who agrees with that kind of hardline, nativist bullshit, you’re going to hate this piece and all the movies on my list, as they’re all empathetic to the immigrants they portray. Like the best war movies tend to be anti-war movies, the best immigration movies are usually critical of the treatment of those people that are desperate to better their situation. Always remember that when powerful people are trying to convince you that powerless people are the threat, they’re lying to you. There’s going to be someone out there saying to themselves, “Aren’t all movies about unauthorized immigrants crime fil…
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In a genre that has historically been dominated by heterosexual white men, spy fiction is finally becoming home to a range of new intersectional feminist voices. I was in my 20s when I began working on my latest book, A Spy in the Struggle, and at the time, there were no politically charged spy novels by women, let alone women of color. Prior to my book coming out in 2020, Jamie Canavés of BookRiot said the following about it: “Add this to the list of fantastic mold-breaking spy novels like American Spy and the Vera Kelly series.” A Spy in the Struggle is about a young Black woman attorney working for the FBI who develops divided loyalty when she is unexpectedly sent to…
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Picture us, reader, taking a walk in the park. We have masks in our pockets and variants on the brain. If we had been on this walk two years ago and I said, “I worry that the world is going to face a sustained health crisis the likes of which had never been seen before.” Reader, you would have muttered politely that I had a vivid imagination. I would have known you were trying to get me to stop talking about herd immunity and the worst-case scenario and how the hell is [your favorite unfortunate part of the world] going to make it? I would have sighed and answered, “I know, I should lighten up. It’s August. Nothing happens in August. And the books are always good becau…
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My children are growing up. It shouldn’t be a surprise—it’s what they’re meant to do, after all—but still, sometimes, it is. My youngest can now reach the glasses on the high shelf, and my eldest can wear his father’s trainers (and frequently does, to much irritation). My children do their growing both overtly and covertly: sometimes, I see an incremental difference from one day to the next, and yet at other times, they suddenly lurch into a much larger version of themselves, leaving me blinking bemusedly at the change. How can I have missed it? I wonder, whilst marveling at this new form that I must now come to terms with. What else might I miss if I’m not more careful?…
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Monday. Nineteen hours in the dark. The dead man lived up the hill. We could have walked, if the world wasn’t ending and we didn’t have to bring him back. But it was and we did, so Harkless and I suited up and went out to the parking lot. As we exited the building a stunning fist of heat descended on us. The nearest wildfire was thirty miles away. Gritty sky and roaring air gave the illusion it was right over the ridge, climbing fast. The apocalypse smells like a campfire and glimmers gold. Through fierce raking wind we hurried to the body van, got in, and slammed the doors. Above his respirator mask Harkless kept blinking. “God.” He pulled the mask down over his ch…
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Sascha Rothchild has worked on some of our favorite shows in the (now virtual) office, including GLOW and The Bold Type, so it’s no surprise that when I was given an advanced reading copy of her debut thriller, Blood Sugar, I devoured it (despite the book’s rather effective message of self-care and restraint). Sascha Rothchild was kind enough to answer a few questions about the book and its absurdly charming killer. Scroll down to see an exclusive cover reveal. Blood Sugar will be published in April of 2022. MOLLY ODINTZ: So, one of my coworkers is a type 1 diabetic, and I was recommending this to her as “diabetes noir”—can you talk about the use of diabetes in the stor…
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