How McKenna Jordan Became the Owner of A Mystery Bookstore Like No Other

McKenna Jordan is the owner of Murder By The Book in Houston, Texas, and a consultant for Minotaur Books at Macmillan Publishers. ___________________________________ Bookselling is this weird world where it’s kind of like rainbows and unicorns and magic, but it’s also a business. … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Lindy Ryan on Setting a Vampire Novel in a Small Texas Town

When I first started writing Bless Your Heart and the Evans women, it was a goodbye letter, not the start of a new series. I’d recently lost my grandmother to a brief but brutal sickness, and not long before that, my great-grandmother in one of those sudden-but-expected sorts of … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

5 YA Crime Fiction Reads With Magical Elements

Nothing keeps me flipping pages late into the night like a twisty who-done-it mystery or a fast-paced thriller, but my absolute favorite genre mash up is when those elements are mixed with a little bit of magic. There’s something about the addition of magical elements that adds a … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Netflix’s New Ripley Series has Many Talents

The thing about the new Ripley limited series, which premiered on Netflix this week, is that its leading actor, Andrew Scott, is incredibly good. He’s incredibly good in it, and he’s incredibly good in everything. I might even say that he’s the best actor working today. We don’t … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

The Best Psychological Thrillers of April 2024

April is the cruelest month, so perhaps that’s why all the thrillers coming out this month are so delightfully vicious. In the list below, you’ll find new works from top writers in the genre and some rising voices to round out the mix. You’ll also find the adage “hell is other pe … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

The Jake Gyllenhaal Noir Canon

Doug Liman’s “Road House” remake spends most of its runtime keeping things as sunny and breezy as its Florida Keys setting. Elwood Dalton (Jake Gyllenhaal, replacing the original’s Patrick Swayze) is chief bouncer for the eponymous establishment, the kind of happy warrior who’ll … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

12 Thrillers That Prove “Blood Is Thicker Than Water”

There is no stronger bond in this world than family, and a caring, loving parent will do just about anything to keep his or her loved ones safe. Dive into a lake to save a drowning child, or step in front of a train to rescue a toddler who’s fallen onto the tracks. Go up […] | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

The Allure of Jewelry Heists

As a society we are not just interested in jewelry heists: you might even say we are obsessed with them. Books, films, TV shows abound decade after decade from Robin Hood to Lupin. From the Moonstone to the Oceans franchise. We love jewelry robberies the point that we seem to eve … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Mysteries About Translators: A Reading List

Over the past few years, there’s been quite a few novels popping up featuring translators solving crimes. Some of the books are by authors who themselves have experience in translation, and reward readers with their turns of phrase and tricks of prose lifted from the cadences of … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Six of the Best Campus Crime Novels

What makes an academic institution the perfect setting for fictional crime? Perhaps it’s because there is so much at stake when a child or young adult is exposed to a crime. A campus, whether primary, secondary or tertiary, offers the potential for a juicy closed-room thriller – … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Teresa Dovalpage On Capturing Havana’s Past and Present Through Fiction

Last Seen in Havana, a suspenseful addition to Teresa Dovalpage’s Havana Mystery series, was released by Soho Press in February 2024. The novel, which takes place in Havana poignantly captures the perspectives and experiences of Sarah Lee Nelson, a young woman from San Diego who … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

7 Modern Cozies to Look Forward to Reading in 2024

Cozy mysteries are having a moment. The sub-genre is expanding and has resulted in a surge of popularity. Modern cozies maintain the core elements including a light-hearted tone, an amateur sleuth, and no graphic sex or violence. Yet they’ve become more inclusive and expanded the … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

We Need Black Horror Now More Than Ever

During the early years of the pandemic, I escaped into horror movies and books. There is something soothing about sitting at home alone in the dark, hiding from the outside world. There is a cool control to be found watching fictional evil on my computer screen, or falling asleep … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

The Good, the Bad, and the 80s: On Writing and Nostalgia

It was early 2021 and I couldn’t stop thinking about the eighties. For you maybe it was the seventies, or early 2000s, or whatever time it was that whisked you back to your youth, what we collectively call the good ole days, even if we can never all agree on when those days were. … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

The Backlist: Kellye Garrett on the Legacy of Valerie Wilson Wesley

When I first became aware of Kellye Garrett’s work, I couldn’t wait to run out and grab a copy of her breakthrough novel Like a Sister. Who wouldn’t want to read a novel with a beginning like this: “I found out my sister was back in New York from Instagram. I found out she’d died … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Cowriters SJ Rozan & John Shen Yen Nee On Reimagining Forgotten Histories

SJ Rozan is the bestselling author of twenty novels and over eighty short stories, and editor of three anthologies. Her multiple awards include the Edgar, Shamus, Anthony, Nero, Macavity; Japanese Maltese Falcon; and the Private Eye Writers of America Lifetime Achievement Award. … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

A Reading List of Marriage-Gone-Bad Thrillers

My first novel, For Worse, in bookstores April 2, 2024, is a domestic thriller about a vision impaired woman who’s trapped in a dangerous marriage with a husband who uses her blindness to sabotage her. Desperate for freedom, she finds an unexpected solution in a ladies chat room … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Don Winslow Reflects on Writing His Final Novel

For more than three decades, Don Winslow has written bestselling novels about everything from the War on Drugs (with his sweeping Border trilogy) to police corruption (“The Force”) to mafia hitmen (“The Winter of Frankie Machine”). Yet even as he produced these books at an astoun … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Five Great Murder Mysteries Set in College Towns

Write what you know—it’s a piece of advice you hear a lot. I’m not sure how useful it is. My first novel opened with a mysterious man buying a shovel so he could help a friend dig a grave in the woods. My latest begins with an eleven-year-old girl sneaking out her bedroom window … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

What The Saga of Australia’s Granny Killer Teaches Us About Gender, Age, and Victimhood

The Underhistory began with a box of old postcards. Written in the 1920s and 1930s, they were from an artist travelling Europe, notes back home to his wife and sons. They had a lovely tone to them. Even when he met royalty, his postcard said, ‘look after Mummy and we’ll get you a … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Of Fruit and Felonies: A Florida Story

Rows of orange people sit handcuffed in a beige room. One of them is my mother. I squint at the TV that the bailiff has rolled in on a cart. The people aren’t orange, their jumpsuits are. My shoulder presses against my sister’s on the hardwood bench we share, our legs shaking in … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

10 New Books Coming Out This Week

Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Don Winslow, City in Ruins (William Morrow) “With City in Ruins, Winslow wraps up a spectacular crime fiction trilogy: a sweeping story that morphs and expands over time.” –Washington Post Harry Dolan … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

The Importance of a Great Setting in Crime Fiction

Some years ago, I was working on a draft of my first real mystery thriller. In the opening pages, I included a bit of description meant to establish the location of the story (my hometown, Gainesville) and the time of year (late spring, the most miserable season in Central Florid … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Eight of the Most Unlikely Amateur Sleuths in Fiction

Ever since Miss Marple looked up from her knitting needles and solved her first murder, fiction has loved an unconventional amateur detective. From classic children’s adventures with sleuths like Nancy Drew or the Hardy boys, to Richard Osman’s crime solving seniors in The Thursd … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 months ago

Mini-Reviews from Three Months in Crime Moviegoing

In a maddening twist, nearly 1/4th of 2024 has already passed. I can barely remember to date things with the correct year, let alone comprehend that it’s basically April. But it is, and I have the ticket stubs to show for it. In the last three months, I’ve seen a lot of movies. H … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

The Best International Fiction of March 2024

Crime novels in translation were few and far between for the first two months of 2024, but March brings with it a deluge of mysteries and thrillers from across the globe. Below, you’ll find five highlights from the month in globetrotting literature, including a brutal French noir … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

The Strong, Complex Women of Historical Mystery and Romance

Two of my great literary loves are historical mystery and romance–especially when they star strong, complex, and messy female main characters. The kind that reviewers call unlikable, or spoiled, or complicated, and who sidestep completely the trap of “not like other girls.” My fa … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Books in Which Children Go Missing

My husband, our young son, and I fostered seventeen dogs during the pandemic. Our son cried every time a dog went to their forever home. A couple who adopted one of our fosters was so touched by his devotion that they offered to give him back the dog. When he said no, they sent h … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Hello, Miss Fenwick: Getting Reacquainted with a Crime Fiction Great

When Elzabeth Fenwick’s psychological crime thriller The Make-Believe Man was published in 1963, one of the novel’s many laudatory reviewers, a young North Carolina newspaper columnist named James Alexander Dunn, in the Chapel Hill News perceptively placed his finger on the signa … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Brendan Flaherty on Estrangement, Home, and the Rippling Effects of Trauma in ‘The Dredge’

Cale and Ambrose Casey haven’t spoken in thirty years. The brothers at the center of Brendan Flaherty’s The Dredge became estranged after traumatic events upended their adolescence. Over the next decades, each has crafted a life in which to protect himself and survive. In Hawaii, … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Real Life Crimes That Are Stranger Than Fiction

The truth is often stranger—wilder, more volatile, and somehow even more unbelievable—than fiction. Nowhere is this more evident than when it comes to true crime. As an author of mysteries for adults and young adults, I’m always scouring real-life, historical events for the seeds … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

4 Books In Which Children Are Accused – And Their Parents Wrestle with the Truth

I’ve long wanted to write a story where I take something that is considered a universal positive—the love of a parent for their child—and super-charge it and challenge it to the point where that love becomes dangerous. In my experience, we will do things to protect the ones we wo … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

The Best Reviewed Books of the Month: March 2024

A look at the month’s best new releases in crime fiction, mystery, and thrillers, via Bookmarks. * Ben H. Winters, Big Time (Mulholland Books) “A weird and wonderful cautionary tale … It features the month’s most engaging investigator, a schlumpy bureaucrat roused to action.” –Sa … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

When Horror Hits Home: An Appreciation of Domestic Horror

There once was a father who slaughtered a pig, and his children saw that. In the afternoon, when they began playing, one child said to the other, “You be the little pig, and I’ll be the butcher.” He then took a shiny knife and slit his little brother’s throat. Jacob and Wilhelm G … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

When Good People Do Bad Things: Exploring Everyday Evil in Crime Fiction

In my new novel SLEEPING GIANTS, the director of a children’s home uses a draconian new treatment method. Despite being without any scientific backing, this treatment has been heralded as the latest cure for troubled children. It’s cruel, invasive, and dangerous, and has already … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Y’all Means All: On the Growing Diversity of Southern Gothic and Rural Noir

When I was young, I spent Friday afternoons at my maternal grandmother’s house with the pages of supermarket tabloids spread out in front of me on the living room floor. You know the ones: The National Enquirer, The Weekly World News, The Weekly Globe, and others of that ilk. Som … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Robin Peguero on Satire and the Normalization of Political Violence

On the first day I joined the Select Committee Investigating the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, I was told to watch my back. An administrative aide and I were walking from Capitol Hill’s main campus to our own intentionally nondescript, off-the-beaten-path office buildin … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

How to turn Lunar New Year (and Other Holidays) Into a Setting for Your Next Crime

Years ago, I was describing the Lunar New Year celebrations to a friend of mine. I told her how huge my family is—my father has six siblings, my mother has eight, and every single sibling had multiple children, which means I have seventeen first cousins on my father’s side, twent … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

On The Unbearable Ordinariness Of The Conspiracy Theorist

When I started writing a novel about conspiracy theorists, I had a pretty good idea what to make of them. I was a cynic. I had followed the lawsuit brought against Alex Jones by the families of the Sandy Hook victims. I had read tweets doubting the authenticity of the bombing at … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Five Mysteries and Thrillers with a Reality TV Twist

I may be just a wee bit obsessed with reality TV competition series – or so I’ve been told. Survivor (the OG), The Amazing Race, Big Brother, Alone, and most recently, Squid Game – The Challenge – are all addictive, guilty pleasures to binge-watch with a bowl of popcorn and a gla … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

The Golden Age of the Paranoid Political Thriller

Impeachment. Charges of sedition. A president with a very low approval rating. Treasonous members of Congress. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff leading a movement to oust the president in a coup. All of those stressful plot points are from director John Frankenheimer’s 1 … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Cozy Renegades: Novels that Push the Boundaries

Like any genre, cozy mysteries have a set of story qualities that make them what they are. For cozies, five primary qualities define the genre: amateur sleuth, light-hearted tone, no bloody violence, no graphic sex, and no hard profanity. But where does one draw the line? Can a s … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

10 New Books Coming Out This Week

Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Abigail Dean, Day One (Viking) “A gripping examination of a community devastated by a school shooting and the “truthers” who deny it ever happened. Within that story is a girl who’s hiding what she kn … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

The Technothriller: Not Dead, But Hiding in Plain Sight

When people ask what kind of books I write—especially people who are obviously younger than me—I catch myself biting my tongue at the instinctive response. Tell someone that you’re a “technothriller author” and you’ll get a sideways glance. The same reaction I imagine you’d recei … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

“Warrior” is the Best TV Show You’re Not Watching

Why aren’t more of you watching Warrior?! It’s a question that keeps me up at night, along with “what is dark matter?” and “is a hot dog a sandwich?” Warrior is everything you could want in a TV show. From the stellar cast to the vivid setting to the breakneck action, it is a per … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Eric Rickstad: Why I Needed to Write a Novel About Male Violence and Guns

Lilith was an incredibly difficult novel to write. I lived with it in my head, and worked on it on and off, for nearly a decade. September 2, 2015, the first morning I dropped my daughter off at pre-K, was one of joy and pride, until I saw the sign by the entrance that read, […] | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

Encouraging Hard Conversations Through Humor

In the theatre, plays used to be divided into comedy and tragedy. Historically, however, comedies weren’t necessarily funny—instead, to quote Oscar Wilde, ‘The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what Fiction means’. This definition of comedy has faded into the pas … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago

The Best Psychological Thrillers of March 2024

Spring is here, and like the beautiful blossoms that lead to an explosion of pollen-induced sneezes, these novels examine the juxtaposition of attractive exteriors and invisible irritants (This metaphor especially works for the list below because one of the books is set in the DC … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 8 months ago