Crime, Mysteries & Thrillers discussion
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Marshall
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Aug 31, 2015 04:28AM


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RIP Henning Mankell. I read them all for decades and watched the truly excellent tv series, all versions and all the films with true enjoyment. Thank you for hours of pure reading and watching pleasure and a world view without excuses. RIP


Thank you Loretta. I have read all the Jesse Stone and Sunny Randell novels. I was sad there weren't more Sunny books. It all started with Spenser and it is still my favorite RBP series. I hope you enjoy!




I just joined. First a reader, but also an author, I find the preset threads here intriguing because I'm more interested in broadening my reading for 2016 to new authors. In libris libertas (I stole that from some library in SoCal)....
r/Steve Moore

Goodreads always offers new adventures. I'm amazed at the variety here. I don't know why I wasted so many years with Facebook. This is the place to be!
r/Steve


Goodreads always offers new adventures. I'm amazed at the variety here. I don't know why I wasted so many years with Facebook. This is the place to be!
r/Steve"
Exactly...

You'll love it here.

I love mysteries/thrillers, especially ones by Scandinavian and British authors.
My second-favorite 2 characters are Harry Hole (Jo Nesbo) and John Rebus (Ian Rankin). Lisbeth Salander (Larsson) will always be first.
I vet all my book recommendations through Goodreads, and borrow them from my library.
Looking forward to finding new authors!


When I was reading a lot of mysteries to hone my writing skills for them, I discovered Ian Rankin. Blew my mind. He's become too expensive, so the PL or used book stores are my only choice.
r/Steve


Welcome to the group, Terri Lee! Was just looking over your read books and we seem to have common interests. Look forward to hearing more from you.

Hi Janet and welcome to the club. I'm another Rebus/Ian Rankin reader. I read most of them one right after the other (because I got a box of them from my cousin) and have been trying to space out the newer ones so that I can enjoy them. All the best!



There are so many good books and so many good authors, it's very hard to choose. I've never been able to read all the books I want to read, but Goodreads is probably the best website to learn about new authors.
Manasa,
Most crime, suspense, detective, and thriller stories have some romance depending on how broad your definition is--they're about human strengths and frailities, joys and sorrows, so the romantic elements, characteristic of all human beings, are often present in some way. Some are a teeter-totter between lust and murder (I stole one of my own titles) and some have plots actually driven by romance. It's a broad spectrum--and that's just one genre! We're excited about having you. Goodreads is indeed international!
r/Steve



Are you familiar with Carl Hiaasen's books? They're hilarious mysteries. As a mystery writer myself, I believe adding a bit of humor even when dealing with serious themes and heinous crimes adds another dimension to a mystery novel.
And welcome aboard.
r/Steve

Are you familiar with Carl Hiaasen's books? They're hilarious mysteries. As a mystery writer myself, I believe adding a bit of humor even when dealing with serious themes and heinous cr..."
Thanks for the welcome and the suggestion Steven. I haven't heard of Carl Hiaasen, but I just checked out the descriptions of a few of his books and it sounds like the kind of thing I'm looking for. I'll definitely have to try one.


Two votes for Carl now, so I'll definitely have to try out one of his novels. That's cool that you and your husband write the books together. My husband and I also work together on an online comic strip. I write them and he does the artwork. He's amazing with art, but definitely not a writer. Every once in awhile I don't get time to type the comic up, so he uses my handwritten notes and always manages to get a typo or spelling mistake in there somewhere. I avoid giving him handwritten notes at all costs. It's nice working together. It gives you a whole other world of things to argue about.

I reviewed a graphic novel (AKA long comic book?) for Bookpleasures once. It was a lot of fun--biting satire in both the art and story. I can't do that.
I generally lose the arguments with my wife. She's smarter than me. But knowing smart, strong women like her has helped me in developing interesting female characters for my novels. She's into bios, though, not fiction, but occasionally I throw Clancy's maxim at her: the problem with fiction is that it has to seem like it's true (that's probably a paraphrase, but it gives the idea).
r/Steve
PS. I thought the best Hiaasen novel was Skinny Dip--best in the sense of most humorous.

I reviewed a graphic novel (AKA long comic book?) for Bookpleasures once. It was a lot of fun--biting satire in both the art and story. I can't do that.
I generally lose the arguments with..."
It's a lot of fun writing comics and completely different from writing novels. There's a lot of information conveyed in the visuals, so it took me awhile to get the hang of that. I love both types of writing, but I have to say that writing comics is more fun. Ironically, I myself read more novels than comics though. The novel I'm working on now is my first one though, so I may change my mind as I write more.
I use my husband to check out my male points of view too. He's shut down a few of my jokes by saying, "men don't worry about stuff like that."

Steven wrote: "Shannon,
I reviewed a graphic novel (AKA long comic book?) for Bookpleasures once. It was a lot of fun--biting satire in both the art and story. I can't do that.
I generally lose the arguments with..."
Shannon wrote: "T'Gracie wrote: "I have laughed myself silly over Carl Hiaasen's books! My husband is a pretty funny guy and inserts humor into the books we co-write: The Nina Bannister mystery series. I like to r..."
HAHA Shannon about co-writing. My husband never kills them off fast enough, and he says he never knew I was so 'blood-thirsty!' You are correct, though, it does open up worlds for us to explore and talk about.


Welcome to the group, Tala. If you like James Patterson, some other books of his that I thought were great are:
- The NYPD Red series
- The Postcard Killers
- The Quickie
- Honeymoon
If you like mystery series like the Women's Murder Club, you might also like the Rizzoli and Isles series by Tess Gerritsen.

Patterson has become too formulaic for my tastes--I stopped reading the Women's Murder Club Series a while ago. Gerritsen became formulaic too, but I like the TV show. Jon Land's Caitlin Strong is featured in an interesting series. Maybe it's more fun to find individual gems than series, but a series allows you to see a character developed (usually). Also, don't forget the female villains. If anything saved Gone Girl, that was it. ;-)
(Self-promo alert.) Most of my books feature strong, smart female characters, in particular Detective Chen (she has an NYPD partner, though) and ex-USN Master-at-Arms and ex-con Mary Jo Melendez (the con-part was due to a frame).
r/Steve


Welcome to the group, Vanessa. If you're looking for courtroom thrillers Michael Connelly does a good series about a defense attorney called Mickey Haller also called the Lincoln Lawyer.

I'm Kelly. I love mysteries and crime so much I write them as well. (I'll head on over to the Author Corner in a bit to talk about my book).
I'm pretty eclectic in my reading tastes but always end up going back to a good mystery. I've been into the JD Robb "In Death ...." series the last few years.
My biggest challenge right now, apart from writing the next book, is trying to remember all the books I've read over the years and add them to my Goodreads shelf!




https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B01LXGVRVV…
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/resil...…
Hi, my name is Bob and I’m new to the group. Like many, I got hooked on mysteries in the 1950’s reading the Hardy Boys. I loved Frank and Joe and all the tough spots they got in and out of as teenagers.
The great thing is there are so many authors out there to spend quality time with, going back to Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and working up threw Ross Macdonald and John D. MacDonald, to Robert B. Parker, Lee Child, Steve Hamilton, and James W. Hall, to name a very few.
I’m also drawn to humorous crime writers like Carl Hiaasen, Dave Barry, and Janet Evanovich. My question is, do any of you recommend others with a similar style as these three?
The great thing is there are so many authors out there to spend quality time with, going back to Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and working up threw Ross Macdonald and John D. MacDonald, to Robert B. Parker, Lee Child, Steve Hamilton, and James W. Hall, to name a very few.
I’m also drawn to humorous crime writers like Carl Hiaasen, Dave Barry, and Janet Evanovich. My question is, do any of you recommend others with a similar style as these three?

Thanks for this. I'm a huge JD Robb fan.
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Books mentioned in this topic
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