Hot Mysteries and Thrillers of Summer

Summer reading time has arrived, and for the serious reader that means it’s time to enact a game plan. There are just too many good books, that’s the pleasant problem. If you want to get a lot of reading done, sequencing is critical.
Mystery and thriller fans, this one is for you. Below are the most anticipated mysteries and thrillers of the summer. Lots of delicious creepiness on tap: Jazz Age murder, circa 1924. A killer on the loose at 26,781 feet above sea level. Death by yoga, maybe. Also watch for new books from genre professionals, including Ruth Ware, Riley Sager, and Rachel Howzell Hall.
Scroll over the book covers to learn more about each title, and add the ones that pique your interest to your Want to Read shelf.
May
June
July & August
Which mysteries and thrillers will you be reading this summer? Share your bookish plans with us in the comments below!
Check out more recent articles:
Readers' Most Anticipated Books of Summer
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Earth, Water, Air, and Fire: 36 Books with Elements in Their Titles
Check out more recent articles:
Readers' Most Anticipated Books of Summer
Guaranteed, Reader-Approved Summer Page-Turners by Genre
Earth, Water, Air, and Fire: 36 Books with Elements in Their Titles
Comments Showing 1-28 of 28 (28 new)
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Marion
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May 17, 2022 07:24AM

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What a scorcher! Perfect for action-packed thriller lovers - so realistic, it reads like non-fiction! The dizzying pace keeps you turning the page!




The Woman in the Library
Botanist's Guide to Parties & Poisons
Last Call at the Nightingale
Things We Do in the Dark
and
Die Around Sundown


I agree with Janet as well. ☺

I finished ONE STEP TOO FAR a few days ago. Great book. I already had 12 of the books listed here on my Want To Read List here on Goodreads and have so many, many more not listed.

Jude Fischer wrote: "Do men not write novels anymore? I look at the list and would say it's 90% women authors. What's going on with publishing houses?
I agree with Janet as well. ☺"


I agree with Janet as well. ☺"
I have commented on this disparity before on another thread. I read and review about 2 crime/mystery/thriller books a week and women writers dominate the category with around 60-70%. If I exclude action type thrillers that percentage goes up but if I exclude psychological thrillers it goes down. Looking at threads like this one, or the selection of reviews for any given title, women also dominate. Sometime I seem to be the only man.




I wholeheartedly agree!