It’s a Mystery: “You couldn’t betray someone efficiently if you didn’t love them first”
/A multilayered, complex novel that explores how the sins of our fathers reflect upon us in an entirely new way.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
A multilayered, complex novel that explores how the sins of our fathers reflect upon us in an entirely new way.
Read MoreA thoroughly, exhaustively annotated edition of Raymond Chandler's 1939 novel The Big Sleep.
Read MoreThis is a world-class trip with a lovable psychopath.
Read MoreA meticulously plotted thriller from the ever reliable James Hankins.
Read MoreA successful professional, Mara is suddenly confronted by a new reality filled with unexpected mental, emotional, and physical challenges.
Read MoreGrieving parents are demanding answers, but everyone has secrets. Harry Kent and Detective Chief Inspector Frankie Noble have to find out which secrets were worth killing for.
Read MoreIconic Boston PI Spenser delves into the black market art scene and unsolved crimes.
Read MoreLove lost and found, cocktails on veranda, dinner dances, and a murder mystery adorn this satisfying summer read.
Read MoreA hard-hitting, gripping, thriller featuring a dynamic and compelling anti-hero.
Read MoreA colorful cast of characters deliver a wild spin on life in Florida, petty crime, Jewish identity, and Trump's America.
Read MoreKidd’s boundless, imaginative powers drive the plot forward in this amateur detective story with a gothic twist.
Read MoreNothing is predictable in this edgy, riveting, beautifully-wrought thriller.
Read MoreThe fourth in this series featuring the unlikely sleuthing duo of Clementine Talbot, the Countess of Montfort, and her chief housekeeper, Edith Jackson.
Read MoreDownie unfolds the investigation at her customary smooth, deliberate pace, filling her pages with well-realized characters
Read MoreMystery fiction based on the most famous murder in history.
Read MoreMaximum violence immediately. Except swap "joke" for "violence."
Read MoreA soft-spoken and convincingly wise novel set in the rural vastness of Montana, ambitiously patterned on Hamlet.
Read MoreAt the start of Strangers, Joanna Berrigan is home alone in her house near Munich when she is confronted by a man who is a complete stranger to her. He has let himself into the house with a key and insists he’s Erik Thieben, her fiancé, and that they live together. As he talks, attempting familiarity, nothing he says makes sense. The more he tries to comfort, the greater her terror. Furthermore, there is nothing in the house that suggests anyone else lives there. So why, the creepier he becomes, does she feel like she’s the one who’s crazy?
Read MoreIt's oddly comforting that the only lazy or derivative thing about James Lee Burke's 21st novel featuring tough-guy New Orleans sheriff's detective Dave Robicheaux is its title; there's no good reason why this latest book should be called simply Robicheaux – or alternately, no good reason why any of the previous 20 couldn't have been called that; it feels like the title you'd give the final book in your series, the one in which your hero finally heat-shots and throat-punches his way to Valhalla.
Read MoreThe incredible profusion in the last fifteen years of TV shows, movies, and books about lawyers has not, miraculously, glutted the market; readers’ fascination with the American legal system seems bottomless, which is certainly good news for anybody trying to break into that market.
Read MoreAn arts and literature review.
Steve Donoghue
Sam Sacks
Britta Böhler
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Eric Karl Anderson
Olive Fellows
Jack Hanson
Jennifer Helinek
Justin Hickey
Hannah Joyner
Zach Rabiroff
Jessica Tvordi