The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction New books by Karin Fossum, Harlan Coben, Charles Todd and Sharon Bolton. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction New books by Thomas Mullen, Lotte and Soren Hammer, Julia Keller, and E.S. Thomson. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction New novels by Louise Penny, Alex Marwood, Ken Bruen and Anne Perry. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction In Michael Koryta’s latest nightmare, a self-anointed messiah is preparing to shut down the electrical grid supplying energy to half the country. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction Lisa McInerney’s “The Glorious Heresies” and more. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction Bill Loehfelm’s “Let the Devil Out,” Joseph Finder’s “Guilty Minds” and more. By MARILYN STASIO
A Roundup of New Crime Fiction Ace Atkins’s “The Innocents,” Peter Lovesey’s “Another One Goes Tonight” and more. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction Walter Mosley’s mellow private eye, Easy Rawlins, is back in “Charcoal Joe.” By MARILYN STASIO
David Swinson’s ‘The Second Girl,’ and More In “The Second Girl,” a private investigator with a drug habit agrees to look for a missing teenager. By MARILYN STASIO
Clare Mackintosh’s ‘I Let You Go,’ and More Clare Mackintosh’s first novel is a cunning psychological thriller that opens at Christmastime with a hit-and-run accident. By MARILYN STASIO
Dan Fesperman’s ‘The Letter Writer,’ and More Real-life gangsters appear in Dan Fesperman’s dynamic novel set in New York during World War II. By MARILYN STASIO
‘The Butcher Bird’ by S. D. Sykes, and More In S. D. Sykes’s sequel to “Plague Land,” England is ruled by mob violence in the wake of a devastating pandemic. By MARILYN STASIO
Philip Kerr’s ‘The Other Side of Silence,’ and More Philip Kerr’s new novel involves bridge, blackmail and spies. By MARILYN STASIO
Linwood Barclay’s ‘Far From True,’ and More In “Far From True,” a drive-in movie theater’s four-story screen collapses, crushing two cars in the front row. By MARILYN STASIO
Jo Nesbo’s ‘Midnight Sun,’ and More Jo Nesbo’s latest is about a Norwegian hit man who flees Oslo to escape the wrath of his boss, a mobster known as the Fisherman. By MARILYN STASIO
Richard Montanari’s ‘Shutter Man,’ and More “Shutter Man” is a blood-drenched thriller about a group of boys from the same blighted neighborhood who grow up to become criminals and killers — and cops. By MARILYN STASIO
Joe R. Lansdale’s ‘Honky Tonk Samurai,’ and More Lansdale’s latest includes excessive violence, raunchy language, adolescent clowning, and characters named Weasel and Booger. By MARILYN STASIO
Ian Rankin’s ‘Even Dogs in the Wild,’ and More Rankin’s latest novel illustrates the tensions between Scotland’s two major cities. By MARILYN STASIO
Thomas Perry’s ‘Forty Thieves,’ and More A married couple, former detectives, are targeted by a husband-and-wife team of assassins in Perry’s new thriller. By MARILYN STASIO
Murder at a Remove In Val McDermid’s “Splinter the Silence,” cyberbullying persuades a strong, self-assured woman to take her own life. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction New books by Karin Fossum, Harlan Coben, Charles Todd and Sharon Bolton. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction New books by Thomas Mullen, Lotte and Soren Hammer, Julia Keller, and E.S. Thomson. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction New novels by Louise Penny, Alex Marwood, Ken Bruen and Anne Perry. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction In Michael Koryta’s latest nightmare, a self-anointed messiah is preparing to shut down the electrical grid supplying energy to half the country. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction Lisa McInerney’s “The Glorious Heresies” and more. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction Bill Loehfelm’s “Let the Devil Out,” Joseph Finder’s “Guilty Minds” and more. By MARILYN STASIO
A Roundup of New Crime Fiction Ace Atkins’s “The Innocents,” Peter Lovesey’s “Another One Goes Tonight” and more. By MARILYN STASIO
The Latest and Best in Crime Fiction Walter Mosley’s mellow private eye, Easy Rawlins, is back in “Charcoal Joe.” By MARILYN STASIO
David Swinson’s ‘The Second Girl,’ and More In “The Second Girl,” a private investigator with a drug habit agrees to look for a missing teenager. By MARILYN STASIO
Clare Mackintosh’s ‘I Let You Go,’ and More Clare Mackintosh’s first novel is a cunning psychological thriller that opens at Christmastime with a hit-and-run accident. By MARILYN STASIO
Dan Fesperman’s ‘The Letter Writer,’ and More Real-life gangsters appear in Dan Fesperman’s dynamic novel set in New York during World War II. By MARILYN STASIO
‘The Butcher Bird’ by S. D. Sykes, and More In S. D. Sykes’s sequel to “Plague Land,” England is ruled by mob violence in the wake of a devastating pandemic. By MARILYN STASIO
Philip Kerr’s ‘The Other Side of Silence,’ and More Philip Kerr’s new novel involves bridge, blackmail and spies. By MARILYN STASIO
Linwood Barclay’s ‘Far From True,’ and More In “Far From True,” a drive-in movie theater’s four-story screen collapses, crushing two cars in the front row. By MARILYN STASIO
Jo Nesbo’s ‘Midnight Sun,’ and More Jo Nesbo’s latest is about a Norwegian hit man who flees Oslo to escape the wrath of his boss, a mobster known as the Fisherman. By MARILYN STASIO
Richard Montanari’s ‘Shutter Man,’ and More “Shutter Man” is a blood-drenched thriller about a group of boys from the same blighted neighborhood who grow up to become criminals and killers — and cops. By MARILYN STASIO
Joe R. Lansdale’s ‘Honky Tonk Samurai,’ and More Lansdale’s latest includes excessive violence, raunchy language, adolescent clowning, and characters named Weasel and Booger. By MARILYN STASIO
Ian Rankin’s ‘Even Dogs in the Wild,’ and More Rankin’s latest novel illustrates the tensions between Scotland’s two major cities. By MARILYN STASIO
Thomas Perry’s ‘Forty Thieves,’ and More A married couple, former detectives, are targeted by a husband-and-wife team of assassins in Perry’s new thriller. By MARILYN STASIO
Murder at a Remove In Val McDermid’s “Splinter the Silence,” cyberbullying persuades a strong, self-assured woman to take her own life. By MARILYN STASIO