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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On October 4, 2022, legendary author Peter Robinson, creator of the long-running Inspector Banks series, passed away after a brief illness. Beginning with Gallows View in 1987, Robinson delivered a novel in the series, or short story collection, almost every year until his death. He also managed to find the time to write three stand-alones. All told, he completed 34 books, 31 of them either Inspector Banks novels or related short story collections. His new, posthumously published Banks novel, Standing in the Shadows is now available. And while all of Robinson’s Banks stories can be read out of order, this book also completes the “Zelda” trilogy, and represents some of Ro…
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It’s summer in New England. The sun is just peeking over the mountains, but cars and trucks are already rolling into the parking lot of the local flea market. The vendors rush to unpack and setup. The first customers hurry down rows of tables and tents, hoping to spot a rare collectable or antique at a low price before other buyers arrive. Many of these customers are antique dealers, others are collectors, some are local homeowners or tourists. Before the morning is done, any or all of them may purchase something they’ll later regret. My name is Trish Esden. I’m the author of the Scandal Mountain Antiques Mystery series and a full-time antique dealer, a profession I’ve…
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I’m writing my seventh thriller, and six of them have been set in Seattle. What is it about Seattle, and the Seattle area, that makes it such a compelling place, such an attractive place to write thrillers? Why do I always come back to Seattle when I could write about New York City or Los Angeles or Chicago or Paris, other places where I have lived? For me, Seattle is a hidden jewel, an original, never-ending cache of unexpected surprises. I love writing about Seattle’s eccentricities, its quirks, its unique culture, its vibrant street life, the kids who are trying to create a place for themselves, the high school children in the young Shakespeare workshop producing his …
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“The height of the Bush era was a weird, giddy time.” -Stephen Thomas Erlewine on Milli Vanilli’s Girl You Know It’s True (1989) Cop Rock (ABC, 1990) was a real television show that existed. It was a police procedural with musical numbers. The plot of the show chugged progressively from episode to episode like any police procedural. The songs in the show occurred with clockwork regularity, as in any musical. The characters—police officers, suspects, lawyers, bureaucrats—resembled characters in fraternally related shows like Law & Order, except that they sometimes burst into song. I promise this is true. I first learned of Cop Rock from a video posted almost as …
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The CrimeReads editors make their selections for the best new fiction coming out this May. * Megan Abbott, Beware the Woman (Putnam) Megan Abbott goes Rosemary’s Baby! A pregnant woman and her doting husband head to a family retreat in the woods, ready to relax with the knowledge that her father-in-law is a doctor. But a sudden health scare, and the family’s strict supervision of her activities, make the cottage start to feel more like a prison, and Abbott’s narrator starts to get a bad feeling about her mother-in-law’s early demise. Abbott has already proven that teenage girlhood is Noir AF, so I’m psyched to read her do the same thing for pregnancy. –MO Molly O…
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When people ask me how I came up with the idea for An American in Scotland, I’ve never wanted to share the real answer. But the truth is: I wanted to run away from home. At the time, I had no plans to write a mystery set in Scotland. I just wanted to out of my house and to be anywhere else in the world. Normally, when I create worlds for my books, it just comes to me out of the ether—or I channel it from higher power. I’ve never questioned the process it just happens. Out of the blue a character starts talking and the stories play out like a movie in my head. The town and the people come alive for me, and I just write down what happens. That’s my process. There was a …
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SEPTEMBER 27, 1988 ISOLATION CELL, MAXIMUM SECURITY U.S. PENITENTIARY, LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS Don’t wear a tie, unless it’s a clip-on,” Associate Warden Lee Connor warned me. “Silverstein might grab it through the bars to choke you.” Connor unlocked the solid steel door that led from the prison’s administration building into the bowels of the ancient penitentiary. I was being taken to interview Thomas Edward Silverstein. It would be the first and only time a journalist would be allowed to speak to him face-to-face during his lifetime. He was being held in a dungeonlike basement cell isolated from the rest of the prison population as punishment for murdering a correctiona…
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Ahead of the launch of Out of the Ashes, my first book for adults, the question I keep getting asked, more than any other, is: What difficulties did you encounter writing this novel, as a YA writer? Before my adult debut, I published seven mystery novels for teenagers. It seems natural that readers would be curious about the difference between writing for adults and writing for teenagers. But in certain cases, the phrasing of that particular question has an undeniable subtext. What some people really seem to be asking, is, was it hard, writing your first real book? The bias against young adult literature has been discussed at length in the book community and within pub…
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Readers become writers the moment they glance away from the page, distracted by their own inner voice announcing, Hey, I can do that. In my case, it took a few nanoseconds more to sense that my first protagonist, would be, like me, a suburban Long Island mom. She’d have left behind a stimulating job (in my case, as a magazine editor and freelance political speechwriter) for the stay-at-home life. She’d be bright. Curious. Sardonic? Sure, why not? She adored her kids yet sometimes she yearned for discourse more elevated than pre-school repartee. Without a doubt, she was someone with whom I could identify. The year was 1978 and Judith Singer became the protagonist of Compr…
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Every town or county has its version. In all the corners of North America, for a short time each year, in mall parking lots or yellowing fields on municipal outer limits, an otherwise unremarkable space is transformed. The endless strings of incandescent lights with their sequenced colors. The tinny royalty free music and the roar of the rollercoaster. The smell of hot friar oil and the exhaust of diesel generators. Most of us have, in some corner of our mind, memories of our local carnival or fair. In my hometown of St. Albert, Alberta, straddling the 53rd parallel north on the cusp of the Canadian prairies, we had the Rainmaker Rodeo. For one (true to the name and ofte…
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When people speak of women’s power, they tend to think of three things. Political influence. Financial clout. And of course, sexual power. Three things that have one thing in common: these things generally serve a capitalist patriarchy, in which – with a few exceptions – a woman’s value is closely tied to her desirability. In fiction, women characters tend to follow a similar trend. Young women still dominate in almost every genre; and although we expect more independence and drive from our fictional heroines than we once did, most protagonists are young, while older women occupy secondary, often domestic roles. Older women are mothers, grandmothers, their power passed o…
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In the morning, I write dark, twisting murder mysteries, and during the day, I work at a church. I have no theological background. I’m in charge of facilities. I’m the one who calls the handyman when something goes wrong. Sometimes I try to fix the problem on my own, watching YouTube videos about how to change out a faucet. I muck around with a wrench, fail, call a plumber. Sometimes I write in the chapel before punching in. One day, the pastor asked if I wouldn’t mind joining her. A member was recently diagnosed with breast cancer, and the pastor wanted me to sit in on their conversation. I get this question at least twice a year. Not from the pastor, but from friends.…
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Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Molly Odintz, Scott Montgomery, Hopeton Hay (eds.), Austin Noir (Akashic) “A perfect testament to Austin’s ability to look backward while moving forward.” Kirkus Reviews Susan Isaacs, Bad, Bad Seymour Brown (Atlantic Monthly Press) “I can think of no other novelist—popular or highbrow—who consistently celebrates female gutsiness, brains and sexuality. She’s Jane Austen with a schmear.” –NPR’s Fresh Air Sara Herchenroether, The Night Flowers (Tin House) “Nuanced characters and artful prose complement the intricately crafted mystery, but what distinguishes Herchenroether’s t…
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Unlike some other months, there’s no one standout crime show coming in April, but we do have some interesting limited series heading our way, including a satirical look at the Watergate scandal starring Woody Harrelson and Justin Therous, and a much-anticipated adaptation of a Very Big New York City novel. Consider your options below, or if it’s more your speed, you could just focus your time on the NBA playoffs and (re-) watching the final season of Better Call Saul, which just dropped on Netflix. Or maybe you haven’t finished The Night Agent + The Diplomat yet? There’s hope for us all. White House Plumbers (HBO / May 1st) The headline for this new miniseries about …
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The British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar – aka “The Rock” or simply “Gib” – is a most contested territory at the strategically crucial western entrance to the Mediterranean. Two and a half square miles of Spanish peninsula controlled by the UK and with a population of 32,000 Gibraltarians boosted by many Spanish day workers and the men and women of whichever Royal Navy ships happen to be in port. Plus there’s the famous Barbary Apes tourists love to photograph and (as this is Crimereads) have been known to escape uncaptured with the odd wallet, camera or ice cream. Madrid sees the British presence as a provocation; London shows no sign of leaving and The Rock remains a…
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A few years ago, I remember returning home one day to discover our dog had eaten a giant chocolate off a tabletop. We stuffed her in the car and rushed her to the vet in time to save her life. Later, we’d wonder how our dog could have even reached that high table, but what lingers most in my mind is the sheer, stomach-plunging panic of the moment. Thrillers often benefit from an occasional jolt of horror, and when I aimed to scare readers with my newest novel The Last Word, I started with my own real experiences. The death of a pet is an everyday anxiety – certainly not as dramatic as the murders and mayhem that thrillers offer – but it’s intense all the same, relatable …
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Last night in New York City, the Mystery Writers of America announced the winners of the 78th annual Edgar Awards. Congratulations to all the winners and nominees. ___________________________________ BEST NOVEL ___________________________________ WINNER Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka (HarperCollins – William Morrow) *** NOMINEES Devil House by John Darnielle (Farrar, Straus and Giroux – MCD) Like a Sister by Kellye Garrett (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books) Gangland by Chuck Hogan (Hachette Book Group – Grand Central Publishing) The Devil Takes You Home by Gabino Iglesias (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown & Co./Mulhol…
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Maybe it’s too easy to say that on one hand there’s fact and on the other there’s fiction. Fact being categorical. Full stop. And fiction being the pure impulse, the total freedom of its writer. The freedom to create a character from the ground up. To make worlds and timelines and maps and motives. The freedom to crack a plot wide open, rearrange the pieces and put it back together in a more fitting order. Fiction: where everything is completely invented. Created. Imagined. But it’s probably fair to say that there’s always some fact in fiction. That threads of the author’s life have managed to become woven throughout, maybe even unconsciously. Snippets of real conversati…
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They somehow managed to get their hands on the key to a door leading to the prison yard. Just before dawn on a November day in 1880, four men leaned a plank against the outer wall, used it to climb to the top, shimmied down knotted blankets to the ground on the other side, and scampered off. They were so quick and so quiet, a guard on duty only a few yards away saw and heard nothing. One of the escapees from the Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City was a convicted killer. A thief and a forger also went over the wall that morning. But the most notorious of the four inmates was a con man who posed as a monk or priest and had been pulling swindles in the United St…
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In Chicago, on May 21st, 1924 Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb murdered 11 year-old Bobby Franks, in what was termed at the time a thrill-killing. Leopold and Loeb were both academic geniuses, sons of millionaires, and lovers. Renowned attorney and foe of capitol punishment, Clarence Darrow was able to get them “life plus 99 years” instead of the death penalty. Loeb was murdered in prison in 1936 and Leopold took charge of his own publicity and was released from prison in 1958. He lived out his years quietly in Puerto Rico until his death in 1971. Little has been written about his post-prison life. Erik Rebain , an archivist who works for the Chicago Tribune and Chicago Hi…
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I am a storyteller. My voice and perspective are unique to who I am and my experiences. There is no one else on this planet who has looked through these eyes, or soul, and filtered the world the same way as I have. This goes for everyone, including the characters in the stories we tell. So often in our lives we only see one dimension of a person or a story. Social media is built on this. However, behind whatever we think we know lies the truth. This was my approach to the story of La Llorona and telling the story of Alejandra. I have been both women, trapped by the stories I was told since childhood how to be, how to look, what should be important to me, and my place in …
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Lindsay Hunter is the author of two story collections and three novels, including Eat Only When You’re Hungry. Her new novel, Hot Springs Drive, is forthcoming from Roxane Gay Books an imprint of Grove Atlantic on November 7th. In Hot Springs Drive, a close friendship between two women ends in the murder of one and the unraveling of the other, as she tries to balance between grief, justice, and guilt. Lindsay Hunter was kind enough to answer a few questions about the new book to accompany the cover reveal. Tell us about your latest. Hot Springs Drive is a novel that’s loosely based on a real murder that occurred. The crime itself is violent and bloody with–in my opini…
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ABANDONED BOAT IN CHESAPEAKE CONNECTED TO UNSOLVED MISSING-PERSON CASE BRANDYWINE, VA.—The Virginia Coast Guard is searching throughout the Chesapeake Bay for a local fisherman after his boat was discovered abandoned on the southern shore of Gwynn’s Island. Henry McCabe, 35, is the owner of the 1974 Chesapeake deadrise. The boat was discovered run aground by a passerby, who noted signs of recent occupancy, including food and children’s clothes. Attempts to locate McCabe have been unsuccessful. Spokesperson Sally Campbell said, “No distress calls were made to our current knowledge, and no hazardous weather was present. So far there are no signs of foul play.” The disc…
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The Edgar Awards are tonight! Before the ceremony, why not take a look at part 2 of our massive roundtable discussion on the state of the genre, featuring nearly 40 nominees for the Edgars. Thanks so much to all who contributed! In this second installment of the discussion, authors discuss craft, classic crime novels, writing advice, and (in a surprise twist) the question with by far the most answers: to plot or to pants? So raise a glass, toast your favorite authors, and enjoy this lively discussion. __________________________________ Which books do you re-read? Why? __________________________________ Seraphina Nova Glass (nominated for Best Paperback Original – On a …
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In the first episode of My Favorite Murder, podcast hosts Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark talk about the way they bonded over true crime at a party. At the time, true crime still felt like a niche interest, but the genre quickly bloomed into a mainstream obsession. Like most people in 2015, I listened to Serial and watched Netflix’s Making a Murderer, but as true crime grew in popularity, a question of ethics began to play on my mind. I’d always been a morbid person, but as I watched Etsy explode with cutesy slogan t-shirts and serial killer colouring books, it all began to feel a little distasteful – a little vulgar. I still wanted to read the books that interested…
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