Confession time: I used to hate mysteries with supernatural elements. Then I started reading Simone St. James. I’m a latecomer to St. James’ work, but in the relatively brief time I’ve been following her, she has transformed my reading habits. Beginning with St. James’ breakout novel The Broken Girls, and similarly reflected in her brand-new suspense novel The Sun Down Motel, St. James’ trademark blend of very earthly intrigue and otherworldly suspense has utterly won me over. In St. James’ hands, the psychological thriller gets a welcome makeover: her books are fresh, utterly addictive examples of the very best in mystery-meets-ghost story, and The Sun Down Motel is my favorite book of hers yet. Masterfully straddling two timelines, The Sun Down Motel drops readers into a small town in upstate New York—a place where time seems to have stood still, and the ghosts of the past might be a bit more literal than you’d imagine. Following a young woman who travels to Fell, New York in pursuit of the truth about her aunt’s mysterious disappearance in the same town, The Sun Down Motel will entrance with a rich sense of place, 80’s nostalgia, and an utterly gripping - and genuinely creepy - mystery. Here we have a compelling family drama, a modern ghost story, and a gripping mystery all wrapped up in one irresistible package. I loved The Sun Down Motel, and I’m betting you will, too.
Read MoreBook Review: DEATH IN THE FAMILY by Tessa Wegert
Show me a “locked room”-style mystery, and I’ll show you a book I simply have to read. Luckily for me (and, I suspect, for many of you!), Tessa Wegert has crafted an utterly irresistible modern-day mystery that is deeply indebted to the great “locked room” puzzles of the past. In DEATH IN THE FAMILY, a complex protagonist - a female police officer who has just moved out of the big city to escape a recent trauma - is called to a private island where a crime has occurred, and the favorite grandson of a wealthy matriarch has gone missing. Investigators descend on the island, and find themselves smack in the middle of a complex web of family secrets and hidden motivations. When a nor’easter descends, the investigators are trapped on the private island with their suspects--and a killer on the loose. DEATH IN THE FAMILY has all the best elements of Agatha Christie-inspired crime fiction: a clever puzzle, a cast of eccentric characters, and a moody atmosphere. But this is not just a Christie homage: it’s also a smart, decidedly modern crime novel that puts a woman’s inner fight with past trauma front and center. This immersive, engaging murder mystery will fill the Agatha Christie-sized hole in your heart, and in your TBR list.
Read MoreBook Review: THE OTHER PEOPLE by C.J. Tudor
I breathe a sigh of relief every time I start a new book by C.J. Tudor. That’s not because these books are light, relaxing reads—they’re not, not by any stretch of the imagination. It’s because C.J. Tudor, perhaps more so than any new author I’ve discovered in the past few years, writes with the kind of confidence and assurance that puts the reader totally at ease. Tudor’s stories are dark, intricate, mind-bending confections, the kinds of books that creep under your skin and demand you keep turning the pages well beyond your bedtime. They are, for me, pure escapism—stories worth setting aside your to-do list to devour. Tudor’s third outing, which just went on sale in the U.S. earlier this week, is no exception. THE OTHER PEOPLE begins with an apparently straightforward missing persons mystery: a father is on the hunt for his young daughter, a girl who went missing three years prior. He is the only one who believes she is still alive, and he won’t give up until he finds her. But there are more sinister forces at work here, namely, an anonymous and shadowy group that lives on the dark web—The Other People. Who are these “other people,” and what involvement do they have, if any, with our protagonist’s missing child? As readers follow the threads of this intricate mystery, they will quickly discover that the bigger picture of THE OTHER PEOPLE is even more fascinating than its individual parts. Laced with supernatural suspense and brimming with page-turning entertainment value and emotional heft, THE OTHER PEOPLE cements C.J. Tudor as the modern queen of creepy. Any reader who loves crime fiction that pushes the envelope simply must add C.J. Tudor to their to-read list.
Read MoreBook Review: THE TENANT by Katrine Engberg
Katrine Engberg’s star is on the rise. The author of the critically-acclaimed Korner & Werner series, Engberg has amassed dedicated readers in her native Denmark and around Europe—and this week, Engberg’s debut novel hit American bookstores. THE TENANT effectively blends elements of bookish suspense, human drama, and police procedure to deliver a story that, despite is Nordic setting, refuses to be confined to the “Nordic Noir” category—or to any single crime fiction category at all, for that matter. Engaging, offbeat characters and an intricate mystery drive THE TENANT: readers follow two Copenhagen police officers who are tasked with solving a bizarre murder, one which appears to be heavily inspired by the unpublished manuscript of the victim’s landlady. What secrets do the landlady and her manuscript hold? What motivation could she possibly have had for murdering her tenant? And if she didn’t do it, who did? In her debut crime novel, Engberg takes readers down a twisty path filled with plenty of red herrings, a moody Danish atmosphere, and a dash of humor, too. THE TENANT is a strong debut, a slow-burning story that will surely earn Engberg a loyal American fan-base.
Read MoreBook Review: DEATH DESERVED by Jørn Lier Horst and Thomas Enger
What do you get when you combine the writing talents of two popular Norwegian crime writers? The answer, as it turns out, is a delightfully devious serial killer thriller called DEATH DESERVED, the first joint offering from Jørn Lier Horst (author of the William Wisting series) and Thomas Enger (author of the Henning Juul series). In this new series launch, Horst and Enger team up to deliver a story that draws on both of their strengths, blending Horst’s knowledge of and eye for police procedure with Enger’s skill at crafting engaging, endearing characters. DEATH DESERVED is a race-against-the-clock thriller, a story following an unlikely pair of protagonists - a police officer and a celebrity blogger - who find themselves embroiled in the shocking disappearance of a star athlete in Oslo. As bizarre and dramatic clues begin to pop up across the city, it becomes apparent to those involved that they are dealing with a devious and increasingly emboldened killer, one who will stop at nothing to achieve his twisted goals—and make his work known to the public at the same time. Cleverly plotted and seriously entertaining, DEATH DESERVED is an excellent new serial killer thriller and strong series launch from two acclaimed Norwegian crime writers.
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