Skip to main content

Thriller

Migration ID
146

At what point does a slow fire turn into a conflagration?

Posted by Molly W on Nov 3, 2021
Cover of A Slow Fire Burning
A review of A Slow Fire Burning by
Paula
Hawkins

Paula Hawkin's latest mystery thriller takes the reader on a twisty tour down a London towpath full of murder and mayhem. A towpath in England is a path beside a canal or river, used by people or animals towing boats, also called a towing path. A considerable amount of action in this novel takes place on the towpath as characters travel to and from a neighborhood of houseboats. This provides a noteworthy setting. 

A new meaning for moonshot

Posted by Katie H on Oct 18, 2021
Cover of The Apollo Murders
A review of The Apollo Murders by
Chris
Hadfield

Kazimieras “Kaz” Zemeckis was bound for the stars.  At least, that was the plan before a bird strike on a routine fighter training flight left him with a glass eye and a job shepherding astronauts through the sort of space flights he was supposed to be on himself. By 1973, the Apollo missions are winding down as budget cuts take their toll, but the Apollo 18 trip promises to be like no other.

Eerie season is almost upon us

Posted by Jane J on Sep 27, 2021
Cover of The Stranger Diaries
A review of The Stranger Diaries by
Elly
Griffiths

October and the spooky season are just around the corner and I have the book for you. Elly Griffiths' (best known for her Ruth Galloway series of mysteries) Stranger Diaries is suspenseful and even spooky at times (there's even a ghost) and is a gothic book about a gothic story that is being written about for a book. Okay that sounds like nonsense, I know.

Not as they seem

Posted by Jane J on Sep 4, 2021
Cover of No One Will Miss Her
A review of No One Will Miss Her by
Kat
Rosenfield

Lizzie Oullette has been found dead and no one in her rural Maine town seems to care. It's only when it becomes clear that her husband Dwayne is the one who likely murdered her that people start to show an interest. Dwayne was an admired member of the community until he hooked up with town outcast Lizzie. So if he did kill her? Maybe it's for the best. At least that's what investigator Ian Bird is able to glean from the townsfolk. That and somehow Lizzie's death is connected to a Adrienne Richards, a glamorous blonde Instagram influencer who'd been renting a house from Lizzie.

Something in the shadows

Posted by Jane J on Aug 23, 2021
Cover of Dark Roads
A review of Dark Roads by
Chevy
Stevens

In her latest standalone thriller Stevens uses the true story of murders of indigenous women along Highway 16 (aka the Highway of Tears) in British Columbia as a jumping off point. At the heart of this novel are two young women whose lives entwine and overlap within a dark and violent set of events in the small town of Cold Creek, BC. Hailey McBride is seventeen years old and has just lost her only remaining parent, her dad.

Doing justice

Posted by Jane J on Jul 23, 2021
Cover of Razorblade Tears
A review of Razorblade Tears by
S. A.
Cosby

Sometimes when I read a book that is stellar I'm a little nervous about writing a review. I fear that I will not be able to capture the magic of the book and do it justice. Razorblade Tears is just such a book. And yet here I am and here's the deal: It's a book that is getting all the buzz, being named on all the "best of the year so far" lists, and will definitely be an award-winner (in fact it may already be nominated for something). So whatever I write here, know that this is a book you should read.

Sensory delight

Posted by Jane J on Jul 12, 2021
Cover of Palace of the Drowned
A review of Palace of the Drowned by
Christine
Mangan

Christine Mangan's first novel Tangerine had Patricia Highsmith vibes. Fair commentary. A description even more true I'd say in this, her sophomore effort in which author Frances "Frankie" Croy travels to Venice to lick her wounds and meets an engaging young woman who inserts herself into Frankie's life with dire results.

Zigzagging to the end

Posted by Jane J on Jun 8, 2021
Cover of The Other Black Girl
A review of The Other Black Girl by
Zakiya Dalila
Harris

The publisher's blurb for this book mentions the movie Get Out and that's a fair comparison. But I recently heard author Zakiya Dalila Harris talking about the influences on her writing and she mentioned Stephen King and I can see that too. Those aside, debut author Harris puts her own fresh, unique stamp on her novel and takes the story to places neither of those others could or did go. What starts out as a skewering of the whiteness of the publishing biz is turned sideways when a building, unknown menace begins to infuse the story.

Summer Reads for 2021: Buzzed-About Fiction

The books on this list are all about that easy reading vibe required in summer. Everyone is going to be talking about the books on this list, so better request them now!

24 articles from news sites, magazines, and blogs were used to find which fiction books are going to be talked about most this summer. Well over 200 books were mentioned. The best of the best are divided into 3 tiers, based on how many recommendations they garnered. 
 

John McClane meet Aubrey Sentro

Posted by Jane J on Mar 17, 2021
Cover of Water Memory
A review of Water Memory by
Daniel
Pyne

I know channel surfing is becoming a thing of the past as more and more of us are moving to streaming at will, but I'll date myself and admit I'm still a frequent surfer. And when I'm bouncing around the dial (for the kids reading: a dial is what we used to have to physically move on the tv to change channels) there are a few movies that will always make me stop and watch. One of those? Die Hard starring Bruce Willis as a New York cop loose in a skyscraper where terrorists have taken his wife and a bunch of her co-workers hostage.