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Crime & Mystery Novels

Highlights

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  4. Four Fiendish Tales of Murder

    In these novels, detectives — some real, others self-appointed — investigate deaths in a small town, on board a train, in a haunted French chateau.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  13. Following the Bloodlines

    In new crime novels from Victoria Kielland, James Wolff, Katie Siegel and Michael McGarrity, the past is hard to shake.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
  14. Murder, They Wrote

    Our columnist looks at a clutch of summer crime novels, including “I Didn’t Do It,” set at a mystery writers’ conference.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  18. A Nun With Very Bad Habits

    In the novel “Scorched Grace,” a tattooed, chain-smoking, swearing-prone nun turns out to be a crack detective.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
  19. A Mother Vanishes

    In Jane Harper’s new book, “Exiles,” set in a small Australian town, a 39-year-old woman disappears from a wine festival — but her infant daughter is found in her stroller, unharmed.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  22. Were These Murders Inspired by Fiction?

    In Stephen Spotswood’s new novel, “Secrets Typed in Blood” — set in 1940s New York City — a pulp magazine writer claims that a killer is copying crimes from her stories.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  24. Murder in the Mosque

    In “Blackwater Falls,” Ausma Zehanat Khan introduces a Muslim police detective bent on bringing justice to marginalized communities.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  29. Alone in the Minnesota Woods, Tracked by Killers

    William Kent Krueger’s “Fox Creek,” the 19th book starring the detective Cork O’Connor, will delight fans — and it’s a good entry point for those new to the series, too.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  32. How Could This Be Murder?

    In Tom Mead’s “Death and the Conjuror,” a man is found dead in his study, his throat cut. There is no weapon in the room, and the doors are locked — from the inside.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  45. Murder Most English

    In “Something to Hide,” Elizabeth George delivers another intelligent, intricate mystery starring Detective Inspector Thomas Lynley of New Scotland Yard.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  57. Killing Time

    If your idea of a great summer read involves murder, bloodshed, revenge and trickery, you’re in luck.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
  58. Murder in a French Mountain Village

    Our crime columnist raves about Samira Sedira’s “People Like Them,” as well as Willa C. Richards’s debut, “The Comfort of Monsters.”

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  60. Dark Side of the Soul

    Sarah Weinman on four new mysteries, including Heather Levy’s “spellbinding” debut, “Walking Through Needles.”

    By Sarah Weinman

     
  61. Bang, Bang, You’re Dead

    Murders abound in new novels from James Ellroy, Joe R. Lansdale, Laura McHugh and Leonardo Padura.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  64. When a Cold Case Turns Deadly

    In her latest Crime column, Sarah Weinman reviews Amy Suiter Clarke’s debut novel, “Girl, 11,” about a true-crime podcast host in a killer’s cross hairs.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  67. Queen Elizabeth II, Amateur Detective

    This week’s crime fiction column includes SJ Bennett’s new novel, “The Windsor Knot,” in which the monarch investigates a murder at Windsor Castle.

    By Sarah Weinman

     
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  79. Bodies of Evidence

    In her new Crime column, Marilyn Stasio ranges from an Alpine chalet to the sunny streets of Los Angeles to the venerable British city of Bath.

    By Marilyn Stasio

     
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  84. Murder, Murder, Everywhere

    In Marilyn Stasio’s new column, the bodies pile up so fast it’s hard to keep count.

    By Marilyn Stasio

     
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  86. Beautiful Places to Die

    In these new crime novels, the settings — mountain hamlets, Antarctic ice fields, French sheep farms — may look bucolic. They are not.

    By Marilyn Stasio

     
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