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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Everyone loves an odd couple. “The Odd Couple” proves this—the premise is right there in the title—and for mystery lovers, there’s the brilliant Sherlock Holmes and slow-to-the-solution Dr. John Watson. (Although the movies starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce went way too far in making Watson a dunderhead.) But while Rathbone and Bruce was arguably the most notable on-screen pairing in mystery films, starring in 14 (!) movies between 1939 and 1946, they had competition as “most unlikely thriller partners” from Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet. Lorre and Greenstreet were, of course, memorably teamed in “The Maltese Falcon” in 1941 and “Casablanca” in 1943. They wer…
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A look at the month’s best reviewed crime novels, mysteries, and thrillers. Jeff VanderMeer, Hummingbird Salamander (MCD) “[VanderMeer] uses spy fiction to show how spy fiction can’t help us when the sky falls in. Or heats up … Like your favorite Hollywood blockbuster, Hummingbird Salamander features ecoterrorists, evil corporations, a race to defuse doomsday weapons, gunfire, fisticuffs, action sequences and hair-raising escapes … like Ling Ma and Holroyde, VanderMeer introduces all this genre fun mostly to subvert it … part of what the novel is doing is showing how humans are connected to the rest of nature even when we’d rather not think about it. The planet on w…
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Nearly a decade ago, Sisters in Crime created the Eleanor Taylor Bland Award, a $2,000 grant that “is intended to help an emerging BIPOC writer with a novel-in-progress or early-career work of crime fiction. It also supports developmental opportunities, including workshops, online courses and research.” Submissions for the award remain open for submissions until May 15. Previously, we’ve interviewed the winners of the award, but this year, we did something different, asking the judges to reflect on Bland herself, and how crime writers and readers can continue to show her work the respect and love it deserves. Thanks so much to David Heska Wanbli Weiden, Mia P. Manansala, …
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“In fact,” my sister murmured without looking my way, “it made me think of someone. I had an…encounter, years ago, didn’t I ever tell you? Something happened to me.” An encounter! The word sounded bizarre, what with all the shadows. I stopped singing at once. I remembered Mama’s frequent command: “Go see what your sister’s up to.” Actually, in some respects, Claire Marie reminds me of the ducks you sometimes see, ducks that look as though they’re gliding on the water without making any movement at all themselves, but under the surface, their feet are paddling like mad. There’s something trompe-l’oeil about those ducks. “A very curious story, it’s true,” my sister wen…
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Today the Mystery Writers of America announced the winners of the 2021 Edgar Awards, one of the mystery world’s premier honors. This year marks the 75th annual presentation of the awards. For more on the nominees and special award winners, check out our roundtable discussion: The State of the Crime Novel in 2021, Part One and Part Two. Congratulations to all this year’s authors. ___________________________________ BEST NOVEL ___________________________________ Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara (Penguin Random House – Random House) Before She Was Helen by Caroline B. Cooney (Poisoned Pen Press) Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman (Penguin Random Hou…
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__________________________________ From Monsters by Barry Windsor-Smith. Used with the permission of the publisher, Fantagraphics Books. Copyright © 2020 by Barry Windsor-Smith. View the full article
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After a very, very long year, the Edgar Awards are once again upon us. 2021 marks the 75th year that Mystery Writers of America will celebrate the best crime and mystery writing, and while 2020 was an abysmal year by any other metric, it was a stellar year for great new books. In what’s become a tradition here at CrimeReads, our editors partnered with MWA to organize a giant roundtable discussion between the Edgar nominees, and we received responses from over 30 authors, each with their own fascinating take on our beloved genre. The Edgar Awards Ceremony begins at 1 PM EST on Thursday, the 29th, via Zoom. You can read the second part of this discussion, focused on the cha…
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All of my forty-eight published novels have been historicals, which naturally require a lot of research. I have one rule when I do research: I read and read until I come across something that makes me say, “Wow, I didn’t know that!” Then I build the book around that amazing fact, because I figure if I didn’t know it, neither did the vast majority of my fans. If it made me say “Wow!”, it will make you say “Wow!” too. One of these Wow moments resulted in my entire Counterfeit Lady Series. It all started about ten years ago, with a conversation I had with my then-editor, the great Ginjer Buchanan. Ginjer had been my editor for about ten of my Gaslight Mysteries at that po…
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I love my brother—and—my brother killed our mother. This pair, this impossible simultaneous truth, is what I learned to hold. There are many more of these pairs, pairs not specific to my family’s story. The vast majority of people with serious mental illnesses are not violent—and—some people with untreated psychotic disorders can be. Stigma around serious mental illness is based in exaggerated fears of violence—and—stigma around serious mental illness multiplies if we don’t discuss the rare cases of violence in the clearest terms possible. To be as clear as possible, I want to dissect what I mean when I look at this question: Is there a link between untreated serious…
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Show don’t tell. Avoid flashbacks like the plague. Don’t info-dump backstory. Get rid of your prologues. There is no shortage of advice and rules out there for the burgeoning writer. However, as long as each of the above reveals something about your main character in a vivid and interesting way, I would argue those rules can be seen as—in the immortal words of Captain Barbossa—“more what you’d call ‘guidelines.’” As a reader, one of my favorite ways authors break these rules is by playing with form and incorporating epistolary or other non-prose elements in their fiction. I adore prose, but nothing makes me more interested in a book than seeing snippets of diary entrie…
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Alaska. A single bone—or even a bone shard—wouldn’t just slow work down. It would stop everything. Dead. The snort and belch of the backhoe rattling along the mountain made Merculief feel less isolated than he actually was. There were thirty-seven men working at this mine, including the guy driving the backhoe and the laborer leaning on a shovel next to Merculief. That was way too many witnesses for anything sketchy to happen—other than having to endure a few elbows and junior high-level taunts in the chow trailer. They wouldn’t have hired him if they didn’t want him around. Would they? Merculief turned up the volume on his phone, letting “No One Knows” by Queens of …
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Santi is lost. He stands in the middle of a busy shopping street, a stone in a river of staring people. He knows what a year of rough sleeping has done to him: the haunted eyes, the tremor, the nervous tension that makes people keep their distance. But he knows that’s not why they’re looking. Being the center of the world is exhausting. He wishes, sometimes, that they would just stop. Look at someone else, he wants to say, but the problem is that everyone else is perfectly transparent: even if they all lined up in front of him, it would be as useless as trying to hide in clear water. He’s not sleeping rough these days. He has a place in the hostel now. That’s where he w…
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In September 1846, the famous poet Elizabeth Barrett had her beloved dog, a spaniel named Flush, stolen while walking down a street in London. The city was full of professional dognapping rings who targeted wealthy pet-owners and ransomed their animals back to them—and because of a legal loophole, were not doing anything illegal by doing so. When Flush had been stolen for the third time, just before the cloistered and sickly Elizabeth plan to run away to marry the poet Robert Browning, she decided to break her domestic imprisonment and fight back. Read the complete story at Truly*Adventurous. * Elizabeth Barrett only looked away from the busy London street for a …
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Americans love the freedom of the open road, or so the public-relations campaigns would have you believe. Endless advertisements feature the latest automobiles roaring along a sun-dappled highway, often to a popular rock song of yesteryear. Countless movies, books, and television shows celebrate the automobile-centric milestones that supposedly define American life—the gift of the first hand-me-down junker, the wise choice of that minivan that can fit your growing family, and, finally, the acquisition of the ultra-expensive car (“You’ve made it. You deserve that Mustang.”). There’s a grittier side to all of that, of course. In American noir and crime fiction, the car is …
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So, you crack your knuckles and sit down at the keyboard to write a thriller. You’re eager to create a gripping story in which the protagonist tries to stop something dreadful from happening. You want to cause delicious anxiety and apprehension that keeps readers on the edge of their seats, turning the pages in dread and exhilaration. How do you create work that lives up to the name and thrills? ___________________________________ Nine Things a Thriller Needs ___________________________________ 1. Minimal Weight Thrillers must read lean and mean. Fluff and padding dull their impact. Cut needless words, scenes, and characters. (By way of example: I originally titled…
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The Los Angeles Police Department has long defined its mission in its motto: “To protect and to serve.” Now LAPD, like departments across the county, faces a new level of scrutiny about how it fulfills that responsibility, particularly to Black citizens and other citizens of color. The fall-out from the death of George Floyd at the hands—or, rather, the foot—of a Minneapolis police officer and the response of police departments, including LAPD, to the demonstrations triggered by his death has raised awareness of police abuses even among Americans ordinarily unaffected by them. There is, however, another long-standing form of police misconduct that has not generated the s…
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As the Cayuses struggled for their very survival, Henry Spalding despaired of his new life among American settlers in the Willamette Valley. Despite having spent the first three decades of his life in the uniformly white small towns of upstate New York, he wrote that he “never felt at home among the whites.” Short of money and with four young children to provide for, he jumped from job to job in the 1850s, working as a teacher, farmer, school commissioner, postmaster, roving minister, justice of the peace, Indian agent for the federal government, and pontificator in local and East Coast newspapers. All the while, he ached to return to Nez Perce country, where he wanted to…
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Part the First: The Ambitious Young Author Despite having produced more than one hundred and thirty mystery novels between 1886 and 1932, the year of his death, English born, New Zealand raised author Ferguson Wright Hume (1859-1932) today is remembered—to the extent that he is remembered—for one work, his debut murder tale, The Mystery of a Hansom Cab (1886). Accounts typically assert that upon the novel’s publication some 500,000 copies of Hansom Cab were placed into the eager hands of murder fanciers (some sources suggest up to a million copies may have been sold), making the novel a landmark financial success within the mystery genre. Few people indeed ever achieve s…
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