Suspense

  • Books In Which Rich People (Think They Can) Get Away With Murder

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    Having money offers many privileges. Beautiful clothes, houses, and spouses. Glossy lives, glossy hair, and the odd glossy-coated pony. Better healthcare and a better diet full of perfectly balanced macro and micronutrients. The rich may live longer, but they are not immortals. They are not untouchable. The Other Half, my debut novel, features a love-to-loathe…

  • Brave Women in Mysterious Circumstances: A Reading List

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    When I was 12 or 13, I read a book called The Other Side of Dark by Joan Lowery Nixon. There wasn’t a ton of YA in those days (this was before cell phones and streaming music, back when we had to look up information in encyclopedias and dinosaurs roamed the earth) so whenever a…

  • The Backlist: Alex Finlay and Polly Stewart Revisit ‘I Am Pilgrim,’ by Terry Hayes

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    Everyone who has ever tried to write crime fiction understands the importance of pacing. It’s not enough to have a plot that sounds exciting on the jacket copy—getting the plot to move in a way that keeps the reader breathlessly turning pages is another matter altogether. When I first read Alex Finlay’s work, I understood…

  • The Best Psychological Thrillers of November 2023

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    It’s about to be the start of the holiday season, and with everyone gearing up to spend as much (or as little) time with family as possible, it’s also the perfect time to pick up a psychological thriller and and wonder if Tolstoy would have enjoyed the era of domestic suspense when he wrote: “Happy…

  • Why New Zealand Noir?

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    Several years ago, I was sitting in a café with a group of fellow New Zealand writers, discussing books we’d recently read. With several of us, me included, working on thriller or suspense projects, we meandered onto the subject of thrillers and mysteries set in Iceland, as well as Norway and neighboring countries. And it…

  • Five Books With Righteous Female Rage

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    I didn’t intend to write a book about an angry woman. After all, furious, embittered characters—despite much progress—often remained the province of men. To write an angry woman was to risk her becoming Unlikeable, a nebulous state of being still somehow able to deliver the killing blow to reader enjoyment. This character, however, emerged with…

  • Healing Through Horror

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    Oh, the Horror! It doesn’t often come up but when it does, people are often surprised when I tell them I never set out to be a horror writer. Sure, I’m a die-hard, lifelong fan of the genre, and it was reading Stephen King’s The Shining at thirteen that opened my mind and imagination to…

  • Love and Cannibalism: Five Short Tales

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    Like many fans of dark fiction, I’ve had a long-standing fascination and love affair with twisted tales of cannibalism. The horror genre is the perfect playground for exploring visceral emotions, and hunger is one of the most primal and readily relatable. That ravenous, monstrous appetite that can possess characters both human and otherwise to do…

  • What To Read While You’re Waiting for the Next Season of Yellowjackets

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    How do you know someone just finished binging both seasons of Yellowjackets? A. They roam around in a daze grabbing random people and asking, “Who is pit girl? Who is pit girl?” I know I’m not the only one obsessed with the Showtime series about a New Jersey high school soccer team, the unspeakable things…

  • On Horror and Humanity’s Enduring Love Affair with Fear

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    Hold, friend. I only have fifteen hundred words to save your life. You and I are bound in a bargain spanning hundreds of years, across dozens of types of media and thousands of artists. There’s a monster hiding in these words, ripping through the sentences and syllables, trying to get to your soul. It wants…


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