crime

  • 10 New Books Coming Out This Week

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    Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * James Grippando, Goodbye Girl (Harper) โ€œThis is the eighteenth Swyteck novel since The Pardon (1994), and itโ€™s just as good as the rest. Grippando keeps coming up with complex and timely cases, and this one is first-rate.โ€ โ€“Booklist Amy Pease, Northwoods…

  • Crime and the City: Kinshasa and the DRC

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    Kinshasa โ€“ capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Formerly Lรฉopoldville under the bad days of Belgian colonialism, now one of the fastest growing megacities in the world with 16 million citizens and rising quickly โ€“ the most populous city in Africa, ahead of Lagos and Cairo. Diamonds, and rare earths all feature now…

  • Ian Hamilton On The Joys and Sorrows of Finishing a Series

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    When The Fury of Beijing is published at the start of the new year, it will be the 19th book in the Ava Lee seriesโ€”15 featuring Ava, and 4 featuring her mentor Uncle. They comprise about 7,000 pages, and 1,500,00 words. Not too shabby for what began with just her name and a couple of…

  • Rian Johnson and Olivia Rutigliano talk Poker Face, Knives Out, and Golden Age Mysteries

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    Reissued for the first time this century, John Dickson Carrโ€™s The Problem of the Wire Cage is an atmospheric and amusing Golden Age mystery with a memorable puzzle at its center. Dickson Carr is famous for his puzzling โ€œimpossible crimeโ€ plots in which corpses are discovered in scenarios that seem to lack any logical explanation….

  • The More the Deadlier: Multiple Points of View in Mysteries and Thrillers

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    When I first came up with the idea for Five Bad Deeds, I didnโ€™t imagine telling the story from so many different points of view. I had my main character, Ellen Walsh, all fleshed out, and Five Bad Deeds was supposed to be very much her story.ย  However, best laid plans often go awry.ย  See,…

  • How an Epic History of the Mafia Came out of a Chance Meeting with a Literary Legend

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    My last book about the mafia, Mob Rules: What the Mafia Can Teach the Legitimate Businessman, was an international bestseller translated into 20 languages. Because of the bookโ€™s global appeal, I was invited by the German media conglomerate Axel Springer to speak at their annual retreat for editors, being held at the Hotel Villa Athena…

  • Was โ€˜The Leopard Manโ€™ Hollywoodโ€™s First Slasher Film?

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    Cornell Woolrich published Black Alibi in 1942. His tenth book overall, it was the third in his series of โ€œBlackโ€ novels. The Bride Wore Black (1940), later adapted into a film by Francois Truffaut, led the sequence off, succeeded by The Black Curtain (1941), The Black Angel (1943), The Black Path of Fear (1944), and…

  • The Most Terrifying Abandoned Train Tunnels in the World

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    Iโ€™m often asked, โ€œWhere do you get your ideas?โ€ My answer always varies, as each book is different. But for my latest, Mister Lullaby, the idea was sparked by a luridly creepy picture of the Petite Ceinture, a once-thriving and now abandoned railway looping around the center of Paris, built more than 150 years ago….

  • Running Away with the Fairies

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    Here in Avalon was never supposed to be about fairies. Iโ€™d envisioned the novelโ€”a literary thriller about two sisters, one of whom, Cecilia, goes missing after getting involved with a mysterious interactive theatre troupeโ€”as a straightforwardly Gothic cult story: complete with plenty of murders to solve. And, two or so drafts in, it still wasnโ€™t…

  • Cozy Mystery Subgenres: Making the Perfect Blend

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    Cozy mystery is a subgenre of crime fiction. When readers ask what are cozy mysteries, I explain theyโ€™re mysteries without on-the-page violence, physical intimacy or naughty words. Thatโ€™s the quick-and-simple answer. Then I watch as their faces light up with understanding. I love that moment. Of course, people who read cozy mystery novelsโ€”also called coziesโ€”know…


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