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,
2,801 topics in this forum
-
- 0 replies
- 641 views
“You’re crushing my balls!” Jared whispered hoarsely into my ear as he clung to my back, my right arm between his legs, my left hand gripping his right arm, his torso draped across my neck in the classic fireman’s carry. I sensed he was gritting his teeth while trying not to let anyone else overhear. Jared was a 200-pound Navy SEAL not wanting to advertise his discomfort at having his gonads flattened against the shoulder of a female, fifty pounds lighter, who was struggling to hang onto him. “Shut the fuck up! What do you think you’re doing to me?” I spat. I was hot, I was sweaty, and I wanted to get him off my back. But I was determined to make it down the field towa…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 323 views
Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Christine Mangan, Palace of the Drowned (Ecco) “Voluptuously atmospheric and surefooted at every turn, Palace of the Drowned more than delivers on the promise of Mangan’s debut, and firmly establishes her as a writer of consequence.” – Paula McLain Dolores Hitchens, The Cat Saw Murder (American Mystery Classics) “Hitchens’s use of foreshadowing elevates this above similar whodunits. That the observant Rachel is an appealing Jessica Fletcher antecedent makes the prospect of her further exploits in the American Mystery Classics series welcome.” Publishers Weekly Sujata Ma…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 313 views
I have worked in the film industry for nearly four decades in various capacities—from pyrotechnics to location scouting to screenwriting. Several years ago, one of my friends from Hollywood had purchased three adjoining apartments in one of the oldest parts of Paris that he wanted to renovate into a single living space. Because he lived abroad and traveled constantly, he asked me to oversee the construction. I knew absolutely nothing about building permits and construction but, for some reason, I agreed. One day, the workers tore down a wall and uncovered a small room containing just a table, a chair, some shelves, a whole lot of dust, and an old bottle filled with black …
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 335 views
What scares us? What really scares us? It’s not the form outside the window or the noise in the basement. It’s not the unexplained howling or the abandoned building that might or might not be populated by angry ghosts. Or it’s not just those things. What we find most terrifying is the wondering of what those things might be and the idea that whatever darkness lurks just out of sight, it’s so powerful, so sinister that we never stand a chance. The darkness—it’s coming for us. And when it gets hold, there will be no escape. That’s horror. And horror gets a bad rap—limping monsters, and shlocky movie effects, gore, and blood-curdling shrieks. But I have long been a fan of …
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 266 views
Who doesn’t love a good villain who has a single-minded prize in mind and will stop at nothing to get it? From Patricia Highsmith’s infamous con man Tom Ripley, to Gillian Flynn’s deliciously duplicitous Amy Dunne, these characters, oftentimes outright anti-heroes, can have readers, despite their better judgements, rooting for them in all their glorious conniving and underhanded ways. Here are five favorite psychological thrillers that revolve around crime characters who are driven by their naked ambition: Our Kind of Cruelty, by Araminta Hall Mike Hayes is in love with Verity Metcalf and is convinced they are destined to live out their days together in harmony. No m…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 289 views
Imagine that one day your sister asks you to spit into a vial, which you do because even though she’s crazy, she’s your sister. Following her instructions, you pack up the vial and send it to a DNA-testing site that promises to reveal everything you’ve ever wanted to know about your ancestry. Six weeks later, you discover that your crazy sister is only your crazy half sister. Not only that, you learn that about a dozen people you’ve never even heard of are all related to you. So, you call your buddy, a millionaire ex-cop who does “favors” for his friends and ask him to look into it without telling anyone because A) you’re sure it’ll mess-up your family and B) there mig…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
The hearing room was sweating. Though the weather was mild—partly cloudy with a high of seventy-four degrees—the temperature inside the Senate Caucus Room kept climbing steadily. An ornate space designed for three hundred occupants, on this day it was packed with eight hundred; even congressmen were sometimes escorted out by apologetic Capitol policemen who cited fire codes. Klieg lights and television cameras cramped the chamber even further, and the heat from the bulbs pushed the temperature higher. But any discomfort felt by those in attendance was secondary to the need to broadcast the hearings to the twenty million people watching on television. The hearings becam…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 307 views
It’s a long weekend here in the States and you might be tempted to go outside and enjoy some early summer freedom. By all means, follow that instinct, but you’ve got to come home some time, and odds are you’re going to want a thriller to get you through the weekend. We’ve got you covered. Here are the latest picks. If you’re interested in money laundering or Miami or money laundering in Miami… Startup Streaming on: Netflix Seasons: 3 Like many, I’m just discovering Startup now and delighted to learn that it has three seasons to binge. The show, which originally appeared on Crackle, has only just arrived on Netflix, and it features (at various points) Otmara Marrero,…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 715 views
Have you ever thought about why you love mysteries? Do you relish the escape factor? Enjoy the challenge of the puzzle? Do you just want to be entertained? Depending on the subgenre, crime fiction can be thrilling, intriguing, or fun—often all three. Mysteries are popular for many reasons. Yet I believe there’s one reason, a deeper reason, that underlies them all. I think we’re drawn to mysteries in fiction because life itself is a mystery. And we want to get to the bottom of it. “When I sat down to write The Alchemist, all I knew is that I wanted to write about my soul. I wanted to write about my quest to find my treasure. I wanted to follow the omens, because I knew ev…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 333 views
A wind gust strikes the window beside me, rattling the rain-streaked glass. Outside, a brief flash of lighting illuminates the slope of conifers that edge the hillside road. Abandoning my desk for a much-needed break, I lift my mug and swirl the shadowy liquid it contains, lingering over the last sip. Peering into the depths, it’s hard to not notice how the bitter leaves at the bottom resemble a crow with outstretched wings. Maybe it’s the fierce weather. Maybe it’s the grim nature of the scene I’ve just finished drafting, but one cup of tea isn’t going to be enough this afternoon. I’m referring to true tea, of course: the slightly bitter leaves of the Camellia sinensis …
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 335 views
A look at the month’s best reviewed crime novels, mysteries, and thrillers. Chris Power, A Lonely Man (FSG) “Chris Power’s elegant first novel is a slyly ensnaring literary thriller written in immaculate prose … an almost self-effacing commitment to unadorned clarity … Power’s restraint pays off, making for a subtly immersive read, his sentences rippling like clear water even as the story’s murkier undertow pulls you out to sea. He doesn’t skimp on themes either, raising interesting questions about whether stories draw their power from reality or imagination, who (if anyone) owns them, and what privileges narrative control confers on the teller. Contemporary socio…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 324 views
Chapter 4 tells of aperitifs, team play and whining, lotus leaves and utter fools, consistency and appreciation, Latin lovers and mommy’s boys. Poldi assembles a jigsaw puzzle and receives an answer she doesn’t like. Montana delivers an impassioned speech, Poldi’s nephew maps out a route to happiness, and Poldi herself needs a drink. After a disastrous evening she lays her cards on the table and Montana turns pale. “No!” “Yes.” “No!” “Yes, I tell you.” “Well, I’ll be buggered!” I said. Visibly gratified by my tipsy astonishment, Poldi grinned at me. My head was spinning. Lethal graffiti, Indian sitar players, laced ayurvedic smoothies, exorcisms, murder, my aunt in…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 341 views
The entire cast of Suddenly, last Summer was tense and overwrought even before cameras started rolling on the film’s final, pivotal, excruciating scene. The accounts of friction between the film’s four biggest power players—Elizabeth Taylor, Montgomery Clift, Katherine Hepburn, and director Joseph L. Mankewicz—were so rampant in Hollywood that, rather than deny them, they cooked up a scheme to make fun of the gossip and therefore make it seem ridiculous. They had the four main players of the production pose for a photo in which they mocked the rumors. In the foreground of the picture, Katharine Hepburn, with a fiendish grin, looks as if she is about to smack Elizabeth, w…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 336 views
When The Bishop’s Wife, the story of Mormon bishop’s wife Linda Wallheim investigating a woman’s disappearance in her own ward, came out, I went to a few Mormon women’s book clubs in Utah. One of those readers asked me, “Why couldn’t you have had the bad guy be a Mormon?” I was taken aback, then laughed a little, sure she wasn’t serious. But she was. “I wanted the bad guy to be a non-Mormon,” she said. And I asked, confused, “do you think Mormons are never the bad guys? Don’t you watch the news?” But she thought that I, as a Mormon, should feel an obligation to write positive depictions of Mormons, in part because that is what a lot of fiction published by local Mormon pr…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 299 views
CrimeReads editors select the month’s best new nonfiction crime books. * Daniel Levin, Proof of Life: Twenty Days on the Hunt for a Missing Person in the Middle East (Algonquin) Levin, a lawyer whose career has taken him into war zone mediation, chronicles the harrowing search for a missing person in the Middle East. The story begins with a dinner in Paris, during which he’s told of a young man who has disappeared in Syria. From there, Levin goes on a dark odyssey through an underworld of fixers, informants, people who want to help and those who want to take advantage, or worse. A portrait of a contemporary morass in the Middle East emerges, as Levin thoughtfully …
Last reply by Admin_99, -
The First Day of Spring tells the story of eight-year-old Chrissie. Chrissie’s life is a patchwork of handstands against walls, sweets stolen from the corner shop, and murder: she has just strangled a younger child. The community panics, its residents gossip, and Chrissie is alight with a fizzy, electric buzz. The crime grants her a feeling of strength and power that is hard to come by at home, where food is scarce and attention scarcer. We next meet Chrissie fifteen years later, as Julia. She has been given a new identity, but struggles to keep the tendrils of her past from coiling into her present—and is horrified when they start to threaten her own young daughter. I c…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 333 views
Summer is here! It’s the perfect time for travel, food, fun, and reading. Luckily, with cozy mysteries, we get all of the above, and we don’t have to leave home for it. The fifth installment of my Deputy Donut Mystery series, Beyond a Reasonable Donut, features a Friday the 13th celebration, the Baker’s Dozen Festival. Attendees can tempt good and bad luck, laugh at pranks and jokes, and receive thirteen goodies when they pay for a dozen. Emily Westhill from Deputy Donut, a café in downtown Fallingbrook, Wisconsin, and her assistant Nina are excited to fry and serve “corny” fritters at the festival. For those craving sweets, the fritters can be dipped in sugar. Naturally…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 726 views
Fill up your beach bag with Kristen and Layne’s summer reading recommendations, featuring shotgun-toting housewives, stabby backpackers, sexy ballerinas, and so much more. All books for sale at the official Unlikeable Female Characters Bookshop (or an indie bookstore near you!) A few summer reading recommendations based on your mood: Dinner & a show: Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala / The Turnout by Megan Abbott A getaway (with murder): We Were Never Here by Andrea Bartz / Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia Eating the rich: The Hunting Wives by May Cobb / The Photographer by Mary Dixie Carter Being gay & doing crimes: Tro…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
The tape recorders in room WT-1 were activated by an ingenious system of electronic signals that did not require the pushing of buttons. The Secret Service logged the president’s movements around the White House. Aides could determine his location from panels of twinkling bulbs hanging above their desks, similar to the device used in English country homes to summon servants. The First Family Locator system powered up individual tape recorders, depending on the room Nixon had just entered. The Uher machine hooked up to the telephone in the Lincoln Sitting Room—extension 586—had switched itself on automatically after Nixon returned to the residence from the Kennedy Center. …
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 307 views
There’s no such thing as a moral squirrel. They’re too focused on gathering nuts for winter to worry about stuff like that. Humans, on the other hand, are obsessed with morality. With right vs. wrong. Right: Are people kind and generous to one another? Wrong: Are people only out for themselves, no different from squirrels? Virtually all heroes in stories—I’m talking mainstream, commercial entertainment here—are angels. An iron moral compass guides them as they mete out justice against very obviously bad guys to restore the karmic balance of the universe. The righteous Harry Potter defeats agent of chaos Voldemort, Iron Man avenges crimes against the innocent, and so o…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 286 views
On October 21, 1888, a startling newspaper advertisement appeared in New York City. Block capitals declared that at the Academy of Music, that evening, the audience would witness the “DEATH OF SPIRITUALISM.” The performance would amount to “A THOROUGH AND COMPLETE EXPOSE,” an onstage battle of “SCIENCE vs. SPIRITUALISM.” What’s more, the legendary Fox sister Margaretta Fox Kane would be the star attraction. That night, hordes filled the famed theater where Victoria Woodhull had delivered an address to a boisterous crowd during her 1872 run for the presidency. In the words of the next day’s New York Herald, the place hummed with “the wildest excitement.” Among those prese…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 316 views
The CrimeReads editors pick the month’s best new books out in paperback. * Camilla Lackberg, The Golden Cage (Vintage) “A sexy, deliciously dark journey.” —Los Angeles Times Ruth Ware, One by One (Gallery/Scout Press) “Not only do Ware’s novels wink at Christie in a saucy way, but Ware herself is turning out to be as ingenious and indefatigable as the Queen of Crime.” —Maureen Corrigan, The Washington Post Sara Sligar, Take Me Apart (Picador) “My favorite debut crime novel of 2020 . . . just spot on about transforming life into art and who gets sacrificed—particularly women—as a result.” —Sarah Weinman, The Crime Lady Deepa Anappara, Djinn Patrol on the P…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 260 views
Growing up in a small Swiss town in the 70s and 80s, the availability of books in English was limited. My mum was British, my dad half Swiss, half British, and we only spoke English at home. Despite the fact I was schooled in German, I had a real appetite for stories in my mother tongue. Consequently, we’d stock up whenever we visited family in England, and I’d plunder Mum’s stack of novels every chance I got. Many of them were thrillers, and she’d allow me to read whatever grabbed my interest. As a side note, I recall her (jokingly) stapling together the pages of a novel that contained sexy bits when I was fourteen. No prizes for guessing which scenes I read first (sorry…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 324 views
Set in a quiet side street in the heart of Moscow’s Meshchanksy District, the Bekhterev Private Clinic occupied a five-story glass-and-concrete office building. Its namesake, Vladimir Bekhterev, born in 1857, was renowned chiefly as one of Russia’s most famous neurologists, a rival of Ivan Pavlov, and also for his probable murder on the orders of Josef Stalin. Asked to examine the dictator in 1927, Bekhterev had privately warned colleagues that Stalin was a paranoiac. He died suddenly and mysteriously the next day. After the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia’s new rulers reinstated him in the pantheon of national medical heroes. The Bekhterev Clinic had been sponsored by p…
Last reply by Admin_99, -
- 0 replies
- 328 views
New York writers are used to toiling in the shadows of the greats who came before us. But when I began writing The Bouncer and its sequels, creating a crime series set in the city, I found myself both inspired and intimidated by how many authors had plumbed those depths before me. Since the days of Whitman and Melville, the Bowery Boys and the Dead Rabbits, New York City has always inspired excellence in both writing and crime. And at least since Poe, one has fed the other, giving Gotham’s underworld a rich and varied literature all its own. Here, in vaguely historical order, is a list of some my favorite books about outlaw New York. Low Life, by Luc Sante For anyone…
Last reply by Admin_99,