Hart Hanson On Screenwriting Vs. Novel Writing

My father grew up in a small lumber mill town in Idaho called Potlatch, where the panhandle meets the pan. In 1953, Potlatch High School won the state championship in Track & Field. How’s that for a school with a graduating class of seven? How’s that for a school whose Track and … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 1 hour ago

10 New Books Coming Out This Week

Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Michael Bennett, Return to Blood (Atlantic Monthly Press) “Bennett highlights Hana’s struggle to reconcile the pull of her Māori roots against her inner cop, a struggle that serves as a compelling bac … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 1 hour ago

Crime and the City: Adelaide and South Australia 

The first time I went to Adelaide the first thing everybody told me about the city was its specifically non-criminal antecedents. Adelaide, I was repeatedly told, is the major Australian city not originally established as a penal colony by the British. Today Adelaide is a jewel o … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 1 hour ago

Publishing My Godmother’s “Lost” Murder Mystery Manuscripts

“Aunt Betsy, what do we do with these boxes? They’re filled with paper,” my nephew shouted across the large playroom. In preparation for the estate sale, we were cleaning out my mother’s office, something that hadn’t been done in 32 years. We’d sorted through medical files, perso … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 1 hour ago

Several Observations Regarding The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare

It’s that time of year again. There’s a new Guy Ritchie film in theaters. Last year, I went to the movies and experienced the soul-warming balm of the nearly-incoherent heist movie Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre, and this year, I wanted to experience that again. So, I took mys … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 3 days ago

Love to Hate Her: Novels About Destructive Women

“I gave her my ugliness.” This is what I said to my editor when we first spoke about El, the protagonist of my debut novel Man’s Best Friend. El’s issues—her selfishness, her unavailability—were very much my issues in my early twenties. I was the friend who dodged phone calls, th … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 3 days ago

The Bloody, Intertwined History of Anarchism and Dynamite

July 5, 1915 Police headquarters, Centre Street, Manhattan The bombs came in all kinds of packages. Often they arrived in tin cans, emptied of the olive oil or soap or preserves the cans had originally been manufactured to contain, now wedged tight with sticks of dynamite. Someti … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 3 days ago

13 Weird, Fascinating Things I’ve Learned Researching Crime Novels

The incredibly successful suspense author Harlan Coben once told me—with a chuckle—that he thought conducting research for a book was just another form of procrastination. Guilty as charged on some occasions, but in most instances the research I’ve done for all nineteen of my mys … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 3 days ago

Humor in Mysteries and Thrillers Is No Joke

At Night Court one Christmas, John Larroquette gave me a sofa pillow embroidered with: “Dying is easy. Comedy is hard.” Larroquette, who makes the work of acting comedy and drama look effortless, gave it to me knowing it also crystalized the struggle of a writer. The real battle … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 3 days ago

A Heavy Town: On Chicago, Author Ronald L. Fair, and Hog Butcher

Chicago has produced more than a few successful African-American writers, in both the literary and sales sense, including Richard Wright, Gwendolyn Brooks, Lorraine Hansberry, Willard Motley and Sam Greenlee. Inspired greatly by Richard Wright, whose classic texts Native Son and … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 4 days ago

Time to Read Some Gothic Fiction!

El Nino-induced flooding of biblical proportions has inundated my home this year, which can mean only one possible thing: TIME TO READ SOME GOTHIC FICTION! It’s giving damp. It’s giving mold. It’s giving drip-drip-drip on the window pane. And the weather event causing me personal … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 4 days ago

Three Great Time Travel Books for People Who Don’t Like Science Fiction

I was never a fan of science fiction. I have a vivid imagination but with the exception of the original Star Trek, there’s something about stories set on different planets, or filled with aliens or with robot point-of-views that disconnects me from the story in a way in which I c … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 4 days ago

The Escapist Joys of The Lavender Hill Mob

The Lavender Hill Mob, which was made in 1951, is a film of endless charm and joy. It is a caper, which is (in my opinion) the best genre. And it was made by Ealing Studios, an English production company that was formally established in 1929, though on a site that had been home t … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 5 days ago

Monsters and Mortals: Famous Serial Killers on the Screen

Film and television have given us a number of unforgettable serial killers to haunt our nightmares. Sometimes, their origins and crimes are inspired by the stories of real criminals in our world. Other times, offenses and offenders are conjured up entirely from nightmare ether, t … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 5 days ago

6 of the Best Queer Mysteries

There’s nothing I love more than sitting down with a queer mystery or thriller—obviously, as a writer of the genres myself! The twists, the turns, the “oh my god!” moments, there’s nothing like it. Add the riches of queer history, the complexity of queer identity, and the double- … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 5 days ago

The Jessie Scouts: America’s Original Special Forces Unit

Jack Sterry sat astride the crossroads of history; at the right time and right place, he tried to shape the course of events by his actions. Sterry was part of an extraordinary group of men. Often referred to as Jessie Scouts, they were named after the wife of Major General John … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 5 days ago

The Last King of California: Excerpt and Cover Reveal!

If the world is flat like the Internet says, then this is the edge. The mountains on either side of the Cajon Pass are crumbled and cracked ruins slumping under a starless sky. It looks like where the earth runs out, the place before no place. Not that Luke really believes the ea … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 5 days ago

Randall Sullivan’s Strange, Wild, Personal History with the Devil

In the summer of 1995, I was living in a country at war. Where I kept my billet, in the westernmost province of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the worst atrocities had been committed two years before my arrival. Nevertheless, it was amid the blast craters and bullet holes of Mostar, a d … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 6 days ago

The Deadly World War II Mission Over the Roof of the World

At seventeen thousand feet and halfway from India to China, pilot Joseph Dechene had lost both his aircraft’s engines to ice. His lumbering cargo plane was now a glider. With white, ice-laden clouds pressed tight against the glass of its windows, the cockpit was like the inside o … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 6 days ago

A Gallery Owner’s Take On Writing About Art Theft in Latin America

Latin American crime rates are triple the world average and centuries of art can be found throughout the region, often unprotected or with minimal security. Crimes related to high value art and antiquities often involve cunning schemes and intriguing news reports. The abundance o … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 6 days ago

8 Ghost Stories That Will Haunt You

I love ghost stories. It’s not just the surface-level horror of the supernatural that appeals to me, but the deeper themes they can be used to explore. They are, at their heart, always about something returning: lost love, buried griefs and traumas, societal shames, injustices. A … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 6 days ago

A Reading List of Mother’s Worst Nightmares

Mothers, it’s all your fault. But you knew that, right? Whether you: –Let your little boy wander away in a crowded shopping area, never to be seen again –Let your toddler or tween daughter get taken from your own house –Encouraged your adult daughter to travel abroad and into the … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 days ago

10 New Books Coming Out This Week

A look at the week’s best new releases in crime fiction, nonfiction, mystery, and thrillers. * Emma Rosenblum, Very Bad Company (Flatiron) “[Rosenblum] is fantastic at showing the subtle corruption of wealth and how those who have it justify both the having and the wanting more. … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 days ago

The Surprising Joys of Working In a Half-Way House for Ex-Offenders

At 23, I decided I wanted to work with offenders. I’d always been fascinated by people who did bad things, maybe because I was a little bad myself. I’m the second youngest in a gigantic family, so there’s a touch of catholic guilt talking, but no, I was naughty as a child and you … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 days ago

5 Mysteries and Thrillers That Will Make You Laugh

If – like me – you love a comedy murder mystery or thriller, but have been judged by someone for it, I’m here to tell you that it’s ok because of science. That’s right, there is actually science behind your enjoyment of silly murders. One of the things that we humans find funny i … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 7 days ago

Half-Lives

“Sex Was Everywhere” Once upon a time there was no sex, but sex was everywhere: in Lisa’s sixth-grade locker with her breath mints and roll-on deodorant; in Dr. Perlman’s walk—slow and tight-calved; in Mr. Robinson’s guitar, playing Cat Steven’s “Wild World” each afternoon before … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 9 days ago

Elle Marr on Mining Personal Experiences for Writing Inspiration

Whether authors will admit it or not, some of us use personal experiences as inspiration for our writing. In the case of my latest psychological thriller The Alone Time, I drew inspiration from a plane crash that I survived when I was a child. The influence of my experience can b … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 9 days ago

Fifteen Minutes a Day, Celestine: The Crime Writing Career of Nedra Tyre

After the publication of Nedra Tyre’s first book, a collection of dramatic monologues based upon her career as a social services caseworker entitled Red Wine First, the native Georgian author joined a writing group in Atlanta, one of whose members, Atlanta Constitution columnist … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 10 days ago

Who Am I?

The notion of “Identity” can be regarded in multiple ways: Identity (noun): the condition or fact of being a specific person or thing; the ways that people’s self-concepts are based on their membership in social groups; the characteristics and qualities of a person, considered co … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 10 days ago

Don’t Make Graves: The Essential Harlem Detectives

The Harlem Detectives arrived like a thunderbolt. Like a meteor screaming across the sky. I had seen detectives before, but nothing compared to this. Or so I felt when I was introduced to Coffin Ed Johnson and Grave Digger Jones. They make their appearance at the start of chapter … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 10 days ago

Six Books Featuring Killer Women

I love feminism, and I love serial killer novel, but for many years I could never find enough novels featuring feminist female killers. (Aside from Sweetpea by CJ Skuse, the evergreen classic series of this genre.) So I decided to write one. My novel Bad Men is the story of heire … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 11 days ago

Are You A Good Enough Friend To Hide a Dead Body?

Some time back, I saw a meme on social media about being a “good-enough” friend to help someone hide a dead body. It got me thinking: who would I help? My oldest childhood friends sprung to mind. If they killed someone and couldn’t—who knows why?—call the cops, there’d have to be … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 11 days ago

The Best International Crime Fiction of May 2024

I should really have titled this column “The Best International Crime Fiction of May Plus One From April and One From Last Year”: mistakes were made in my reading preparations, and when you read two-thirds of a book that came out last year thinking it was out this month, you feel … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 11 days ago

Abir Mukherjee on Writing a Conspiracy Thriller “From a Position of Anger”

In the immortal words of Monty Python’s Flying Circus, “And now for something completely different…” For Abir Mukherjee – the author of the award-winning, immensely popular procedural series that takes place in post-World War One Calcutta featuring Captain Sam Wyndham, a former d … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 12 days ago

The Three German Extremist Friends Who Robbed Banks and Murdered Immigrants

One autumn afternoon in the German town of Zwickau, a woman splashed ten liters of gasoline around her apartment, then set it on fire. She had been dreading this day for years, hoping it wouldn’t come to this. But on November 4, 2011, it did, and she needed to act quickly to save … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 12 days ago

My Life and Times with Clive Cussler

Authors tend to be solitary creatures, so the idea of collaborating with one another is a rather odd event. That said, when Clive Cussler called me up some years back and asked if I’d like to work on his Oregon Files series of adventure novels, I said yes even before we discussed … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 12 days ago

Eight of the Greatest Campus Novels Ever Written

To step into a campus novel, like stepping onto a college campus, is to enter a miniature world. It’s a place with a particular geography, made of dorm rooms and classrooms, student centers and dining halls. Time is both fixed and in motion: for students, it’s always moving towar … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 12 days ago

Five Novels to Transport You to Wild Worlds This Summer

On Cumberland Island, Georgia, between the twisted oaks of the maritime forest and the broad, white dunes of the ocean-facing coast, I met a feral horse. He—a stallion straight from the cover of Black Beauty, if a little scragglier—had positioned himself on the narrow causeway th … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 13 days ago

Why Trains Make the Perfect Thriller and Mystery Setting

The 8:04 is coming down the tracks. Board at your own risk. This is the warning on the cover reveal for my new thriller The Man on the Train. Ever since the original damsel in distress was tied to the railroad tracks and early audiences purportedly fled in terror at the sight of … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 13 days ago

Los Angeles as Setting and Character

Los Angeles is the quintessential city of mystery, and I firmly believe that my decision to live here ultimately led me to write crime fiction. But that journey took decades. I wasn’t one of the starry-eyed optimists who thought of LA as the promised land. When I moved from New Y … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 13 days ago

The Damsel in the Mirror: Thrillers Where the Heroine Saves Herself 

Genre fiction is my jam, so I spend a lot of time thinking about what makes my favorite books tick. Growing up, I read a lot of macho thrillers: spies and submarines, combatants and operatives. These battles were mostly fought by well-trained experts. It’s fun to learn to pilot a … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 13 days ago

The Best Psychological Thrillers of May 2024

Each month, I attempt to perform the Herculean endeavor of rounding up all the best psychological thrillers coming out, and each month, I must admit to myself the true impossibility of the task in the face of so many good titles. May, however, has been particularly challenging, i … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 14 days ago

10 New Books Coming Out this Week

A look at the week’s best new releases in crime fiction, nonfiction, mystery, and thrillers. * Abir Mukherjee, Hunted (Mulholland) “A pretty much flawless thriller, Hunted works on every level imaginable. Terrific characters are subtly and mercilessly pushed along by a plot as pr … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 14 days ago

Morally Ambiguous Antiheroes in Mysteries and Thrillers

An honorable serial killer. A hacker turned vigilante. A gentleman thief. Mysteries and thrillers are full of morally ambiguous antiheroes who challenge us to confront truths about human nature and undermine strict definitions of good and evil. From Dostoevsky’s Raskolnikov to S. … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 14 days ago

Falling Hard for The Fall Guy

I don’t usually include personal anecdotes in film reviews, lest they detract from the critical discussion at hand, but I’d just like to open this review by saying that I brought my 87-year-old Croatian grandmother with me to my advance screening of The Fall Guy in IMAX, and afte … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 16 days ago

Alaska’s Long History of Serial Killers

From the time gold was discovered here in 1871, Alaska has been a magnet for a certain type of risk-taker. Daredevil fortune seekers came, seduced by the area’s seemingly infinite riches – miners, traders, trappers, and crab fishermen all answering Alaska’s siren song. Throughout … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 17 days ago

A Host of New YA Mysteries, Thrillers, and Horror Fiction

One of the most creative avenues for genre exploration today is found in young adult fiction. The following new and upcoming releases are distinguished by nimble use of tropes, deep love of references, intricate plotting, and a passion for justice. They are also, and I cannot emp … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 17 days ago

Monster Moms: Finding My Way Back to Horror

Not coincidentally, I quit my great love, horror movies, right around the time I became a mom. Perhaps it’s because new terrors haunted me: SIDS and school shootings, poison in Halloween candy, toxins in the water, plastic in our bloodstream, creepy lingerers in Golden Gate Park, … | Continue reading


@crimereads.com | 17 days ago