crime

  • Wildlife and Wonderlands in Mysteries

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    Iโ€™m a city girl, but I really enjoy reading stories set in state parks and forests and islands and other areas where there is less population, and the environment is as much of a character as the people. And the wildlife? Oh, yes, I want to meet them too. I write stories mostly set in…

  • The Importance of the Plot Twist

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    Who doesnโ€™t love a superbly executed plot twist? One that completely takes you by surprise and turns the story on its head. One that makes you gasp out loud because you truly did not see it coming. There have been times when I have been totally blindsided by a twist and every time that happens…

  • The Amish Fence

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    Youโ€™ve seen the Amish culture in books, movies and even in exaggerated โ€œreality shows.โ€ Without electricity, automobiles, TV, radio or other modern conveniences, the Amish drive horse drawn buggies, use kerosene and candle light, and generally live a rural farming lifestyle. Itโ€™s like stepping back in time with a community of people who choose a…

  • What Makes a Forest Such a Seductive Setting for Fiction?

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    The woods have been a popular setting in literature for centuries, from the Grimm Brothers to todayโ€™s bestsellers, but what makes a forest such a seductive setting for fiction? When I started putting together ideas for my second novel, What Waits in the Woods, I turned to this interesting and ubiquitous setting. But why? What…

  • How to Write Fiction about True Crime

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    If you are going to write a sensational, news-worthy crime story into your fiction, you have a few models for how to proceed. First, there is the Gone Girl model. Use a real-life crime as your inspirationโ€”in Flynnโ€™s case, the disappearance of Laci Petersonโ€”and take liberties. Change names, character backgrounds, and crucial plot elements. Twist…

  • 10 New Books Coming Out This Week

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    Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks. * Vanessa Chan, The Storm We Made (Marysue Ricci/S&S) โ€œAn intricate puzzle in which [Chan] deftly moves narrative pieces in time and among viewpoints.โ€ โ€“Booklist Kate Brody, Rabbit Hole (Soho) โ€œA gritty, realistically ambivalent look at how insiders and outsiders experience crime,…

  • The Rise of โ€œMom-Noirโ€

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    It was a few weeks in that I realized why I was finding motherhood such a shock to the system. As I leaned over the sink to tearfully rinse another streak of projectile vomit from my unwashed hair, I wondered why my expectations of the newborn phase had been so unrealistic. The answer, I realized…

  • How to Corral Your Nightmares for Use in Your Next Novel

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    Will robots dream of us in the same way that we dream about them? They say that AI can โ€œhallucinateโ€, right? Hadnโ€™t Philip K. Dick warned us about all this many years ago? Maybe we werenโ€™t paying enough attention then. Maybe we arenโ€™t paying enough attention now. What a strange world we are being thrust…

  • 10 Crime Movies Set at New Yearโ€™s Eve

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    You might remember our series โ€œ10 Crime Movies You Forgot Take Place During Christmas.โ€ We have six installments: one from 2018, one from 2019, one from 2020, one from 2021, one from 2022, and one from 2023. We also a list of the ten MOST obvious crime movies set at Christmas. But you know what…

  • The Best Traditional Mysteries of 2023

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    For me, there are few things more enjoyable than a good, old-fashioned whodunnit. Or a good, new-fashioned whodunnit. I say it a lot on this website, but, to me, the best thing that can happen in a book or a movie is someone crying out: โ€œsomeone in this house is a murderer!โ€ Or, if that…


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