One other week, one other batch of books on your TBR pile. Pleased studying, of us.
Article continues after commercial
Lucy Andrews, A Very Vexing Murder
(William Morrow)
“This story celebrates what makes Austen’s work iconic: advanced, witty characters; relationship drama; and an exploration of human nature. Readers who loved Vanessa Kelly’s Emma Knightley mysteries or Claudia Grey’s “Mr. Darcy & Miss Tilney” collection will discover a lot to get pleasure from right here.”
–Library Journal
Tiffany Hanssen, My Name Was Gerry Sass
(Atlantic Crime)
“From its opening pages, public radio host Hanssen’s knockout debut, which orbits across the loss of life of a genteel hit man within the Eighties Midwest, hums with suppressed menace. Quick, humorous, and emotionally advanced, Hanssen’s thriller means that guilt and household trauma will catch as much as even the craftiest evaders. It’s an auspicious first outing.”
–Publishers Weekly
David Bergen, Days of Feasting and Rejoicing
(Blackstone)
“Taut, engrossing, and tense, Days of Feasting and Rejoicing is a fine-tuned, psychologically nuanced suspense story that gives a lot greater than most literary, crime thrillers, even these twice as lengthy. Expertly crafted and not possible to place down.”
–Iain Reid
Lacey Moone, Voted Most Likely to Murder
(Crooked Lane)
“Watching Belinda and Jolene discover energy of their flaws is simply as participating because the thriller . . . Followers of perceptive, humorous mysteries corresponding to Jo Firestone’s Homicide on Intercourse Island and The Ex-Girlfriend Homicide Membership, by Gloria Chao are certain to like Moone’s debut.”
–Booklist
Alison Gaylin, Robert B. Parker’s Booked
(Putnam)
“A tense story of doxxing and loss of life.”
–Kirkus Opinions
Alex Finlay, The Anniversary
(Minotaur)
“One way or the other, Finlay manages to enhance with every wonderful e book, and he has crafted one other terrific suspense novel that calls for to be learn in a single sitting. Jules and Quinn fly off the web page, and readers will probably be emotionally engrossed of their journey to see the place they’re of their lives every Could 1.”
–Library Journal
Louise Penny, Melissa Fung, The Last Mandarin
(Minotaur)
“[An] clever espionage thriller… Penny’s trademark humor mingles nicely with Fung’s political experience. The result’s an eerily believable nail-biter.”
–Publishers Weekly
James Comey, Red Verdict
(The Mysterious Press)
“[Comey] has confirmed himself to be a first-rate storyteller; definitely his experience on the earth of intelligence and intrigue offers the Carleton novels a powerful feeling of verisimilitude. But it surely’s his vividly drawn characters that actually promote the tales. . . . For readers who haven’t but checked out a Nora Carleton e book, the time is now.”
–Booklist
Emma Garman The Kindness of Strangers
(S&S/Summit Books)
“Agatha Christie followers, collect ’spherical….Should you like historical past together with your thriller, look no additional.”
–BookPage
Rhodi Hawk, This Town Won’t Tell
(Crooked Lane)
“Mesmerizing even at a break-neck tempo, This City Received’t Inform had me laughing, wincing, and compulsively turning the web page. With sharp writing and an interesting mess of a personality, Rhodi Hawk retains readers on a white knuckle funride of suspense.”
–Sarah Pinborough









