The Mystery, Crime, and Thriller Group discussion
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Somebody tell me when that starts. I'm halfway through and there a couple of cleanly positioned corpses and a messy suicide (but we always thought he was high-strung). Mostly its a tour of Oxford coffeeshops and atrip down memory lane for the metrosexual protagonist.
If I was reading a hardcover of


Somebody tell me when that st..."
"It puts the lotion on its skin."
Creepy! You just can't compete with this guy, especially when he tucks himself & dances! What a villain!
I love what you had to say about this book; you have summed it up rather eloquently!

Johnette wrote: "I've just finished Blindsighted by Karin Slaughter immediately followed by Still Life by Louis Penny. At this moment, I'm feeling that Slaughter was too gory and Penny is too cozy. Still not sure..."






I've always been a fan of the Parker books but have to admit the earlier books are probably the best from a plot standpoint. That said, in this book, I particularly liked the interaction between Spenser and Sixkill, Parker always managed to do very good dialog and characterization.

The Fifth Witness Envy Second Grave on the Left


Then I'm going to start reading the next Michael Connelly book on my list, which is [bookcover:Echo Pa..."
I hope you enjoy Echo Park. It was an excellent read.

I also got a Kobo Vox ereader for Christmas and have borrowed Two Dollar Bill by Stuart Woods from my public library.

For those unfamiliar with the Long Knives, this was the purge of German Officers after the July 1944 coup attempt against Hitler.


Hi Marjorie, If you want to stay in the WW II rut I can highly recommend the Billy Boyle series. Billy Boyle by James Benn. Very interesting stories based on some of the lesser known (or now forgotten) events of WW II.


Thanks Allison. I'm putting The Fifth Witness on my TBR list :)




Dry Ice was a very good book. I have read most of White's books but am unsure of the one set in Utah.

I looked it up - Higher Authority. It was his third book.
I don't always remember to look up when driving.

If Books Could Kill"
Thank you, Jeff!



It's sitting on my shelf, too! Well ... actually, I think my mom took it when she visited, so I'll read it when I get it back :)







My favorite Gerritsen books are VANISH (an Edgar nominee), THE APPRENTICE, and ICE COLD. She's a terrific writer, you really can't go wrong. The only book I didn't love was THE SINNER, but it was still worth reading. I have THE SILENT GIRL in my towering TBR pile. Though a series, they can stand alone in most ways. THE SURGEON is the first, but I didn't read it until I'd read a couple of the later books first.

Oh, another good murder mystery (but edging more in the thriller category) author is JT Ellison. She has a series with 5 or 6 books, her debut was ALL THE PRETTY GIRLS which was good (I gave it a blurb because I liked it) and her second book 14 was even better. She won the Thriller Award for best paperback original last year. Disclaimer: she's a good friend of mine, but I wouldn't recommend the books if they weren't terrific. They are a little gritty, but not as violent as Karin Slaughter, for example. (I also like Slaughter a lot, but my mom doesn't because of the violence--my mom loves Ellison's books.)
Harlow wrote: "Sorry, I don't know how to add hyperlinks."
Hi Harlow, check out the "Techno Corner" folder. Instructions for all sorts of neat things:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/7...
Hi Harlow, check out the "Techno Corner" folder. Instructions for all sorts of neat things:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/7...

I *love* Arkady Renko. Stalin's Ghost is a good one. Have you read Child 44?



Just a side note, also - I LOVE Slaughter's books. She's definitely one of my favorites!

Did not know there was a new Arkady Renko book! I loved Child 44, thought it was excellent. Wo, Stalin's Ghost is going on my wish list right now! Thank you for the good news!

Ok, I'm out of touch. Just looked up Stalin's Ghost and see that it was published in '08. Well, I have some catching up to do. So many books, so little time!

The Killing Of Emma Gross is based upon a true story, set in a period when ‘the Ripper’ (or ‘Vampire Of Dusseldorf’) was terrorising families in Germany in the late 1920s.
The murder we’re concerned with is of one Emma Gross, a prostitute found killed in the room of a seedy hotel where customers pay by the hour. It’s one that comes as part of a rather unfortunate package.
Seaman takes the idea of this unsolved case and weaves a wonderful story for the reader to delight in.
The book opens with Detective Michael Ritter with the body of Emma Gross and we get a fly on the wall view of what happens.
From that point on we’re inside the head of one Detective Thomas Klein. In fact, we’re not just inside his head but inside his whole body as it reacts to each situation and new emotion in different ways. It’s quite a skill Seaman has with internal settings, giving us not only Klein’s insides, but small rooms and oppressive atmospheres that lend to the whole piece a claustrophobic feel which entirely makes sense for the period and situation.
Unfortunately for Klein, he has something of a history with his senior colleague Ritter and this leads to trouble when their paths cross over the case.
Klein has been tipped off about the ‘the Ripper’ Peter Kurten and sets off to arrest him in a church.
Instead of making Klein the hero, Ritter turns the world upside down and Klein is given a roasting in an interrogation room.
The bringing in of a Berlin hotshot soon sees Klein back on the case and he’s soon sent off to work on a maverick operation that leaves him vulnerable from every angle.
Klein is a superb character. An old storm trooper who’s allowed himself to go to seed, he moves through the underbelly of the city with all senses bar smell switched on.
We get a glimpse of what it might have been like in a post-war world where the communists have been crushed, there’s an economic depression and Freud has a spreading influence that percolates through German Expressionism. I got flashes of the movie ‘M’ every so often (Fritz Lang’s very early talkie from the period and dealing with a serial child-killer) – that’s a film I admire greatly so if the effect was intentional, I take my hat off.
Seaman throws in some German language every once in a while, usually in terms of humour (the word ‘arsch’ is slipped in wonderfully from time-to-time).
I’d say he also did a lot of research, but it’s leaked to us subtly rather than rammed.
It’s a must for the fan of the police procedural and is even more of an essential read for those fans looking for something with a strong and unique flavour.
Full Marx.

Let me know when you finish Killshot. I think that's Leonard at his best though I didn't like a significant portion of the book... well, we can talk when you finish! :)

I like Elmore Leonard but if I had to pick the ones I like least, they all seem to be set in Detroit. I like when his stories are set in Florida much more but I think Carl Hiasseen and Leonard had a turf war for the state and Carl won.


My favorite Gerritsen books are VANISH (an Edgar nominee), THE APPRENTICE, and ICE C..."
Allison, I didn't care for



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I enjoyed the Tinker Tailor Series both as a book and as the BBC feature. They followed up with Smiley's People. I recently re-watched them on Netflix and they were still true to the story but the quality of the picture and sound was a lot worse than I remembered.