![]() ![]() And Edgar Award winner Art Taylor has a new collection of short fiction, The Adventure of the Castle Thief and Other Expeditions and Indiscretions, being readied for publication in the middle of next month. Also keep your eyes peeled for The Cliff’s Edge, the last Bess Crawford historical mystery Charles Todd was able to write with his mother, Caroline, before her death a near-future climate-catastrophe gripper by Peter May titled A Winter Grave a psychological thriller called Birnam Wood, by Eleanor Catton, who captured the 2013 Booker Prize for The Luminaries Simon Mason’s The Broken Afternoon, his second outing for dissimilar Oxford detectives Ryan and Ray Wilkins (following last year’s A Killing in November) William Kotzwinkle’s Bloody Martini, his follow-up to 2021’s Felonious Monk a surprising yarn, Natalie Marlow’s Needless Alley, set in 1930s Birmingham, England, and starring a gumshoe specializing (much to his disgust) in divorce work, who falls hard for the wife of a client-“a leading fascist with a dangerous obsession” Simon Scarrow’s Dead of Night, which finds Criminal Inspector Horst Schenke ( Blackout) untangling the puzzle of a seemingly innocuous doctor slain in wartime Berlin Expectant, New Zealand author Vanda Symon’s story about a pregnant and deskbound police detective searching for links between the brutal slaying of another woman with child and a succession of past crimes involving mothers and their offspring Andrew Taylor’s The Shadows of London, presenting his sixth case for part-time Restoration-era British snoops James Marwood and Cat Hakesby and Red Queen, by Spaniard Juan Gómez-Jurado, which imagines a disgraced police officer in Bilbao trying to convince a brilliant but traumatized amateur sleuth to help him solve “a macabre, ritualistic murder.” In addition, Jeri Westerson’s Courting Dragons introduces a king’s jester in Tudor England who’s no fool when it comes to crime solving. ![]() And Jacqueline Winspear has a World War II-backdropped standalone thriller, The White Lady, set to reach bookshops near the end of March. The English translation of Swedish writer Niklas Natt och Dag’s The City Between the Bridges: 1794, a sequel to his grim but extraordinary The Wolf and the Watchman, is coming in late February. They include new novels by Janice Hallett, Walter Mosley, Louise Candlish, Arnaldur Indridason, Cara Black, Kwei Quartey, Laura Joh Rowland, the late Peter Robinson, and even Sarah “Fergie” Ferguson, the scandalized Duchess of York (who could forget her infamous topless-and-toe-sucking incident?).Īustralian author Jane Harper is due out soon with Exiles, her third mystery featuring federal investigator Aaron Falk. Over the last month, I have put together a list of more than 425 books-scheduled for publication between now and April Fool’s Day, on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean-that I believe will be of particular interest to fans of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction. It’s a good thing that there are so many fresh releases waiting to entertain us. ![]() (Summer heat is no less useful in that regard.) ![]() Winter is only one of many excuses we use to ditch other responsibilities and seek delight in the written word. Not without reason has Seattle found a place among the most well-read cities in America. Coffee shops are seeing a boom in business, and the bulbs in living room lamps are under strain as residents snuggle up in armchairs for hours, paging through their latest book acquisitions. This general dearth of gelidity, however, hasn’t stopped local bibliophiles from locating comfortable retreats where they might wait out the darkness of the season. That’s better than the weather in, say, Missoula, Montana (37 degrees today), or Minneapolis (even chiller at 25!). Yes, we did have to deal with snow and icy conditions around Christmas, but since then the temperatures have been confined to the mid-40s and low 50s, with periods of rain (of course, this being the Pacific Northwest). Detective Parkĭoo-Man and Detective Cho.Here in Seattle, we haven’t been experiencing much of the cold that has socked-and socked in-other parts of the country this winter. In 1986, in the province of Gyunggi, in South Korea, a second young and beautiful woman is found dead, raped and tied and gagged with her underwear. SOURCE : Memories.of.Murder.x264-BestHD (Size: 10.93 GB) thanks Torrent name: Memories of Murder (2003) 1080p BluRay 5.1Ch x265 HEVC SUJAIDRįormat/Info : High Efficiency Video CodingĬhannel positions : Front: L C R, Side: L R, LFE ![]()
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