Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Unstable States: Reading Psychological Suspense

SUSPENSE (1946). Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/144_1533468/1/144_1533468/cite. Accessed 4 Aug 2017.
A tale that is more interested in the “why” rather than the sheer mechanics of “how”—and that is more attuned to what makes a soul damaged potentially beyond repair—falls under the large umbrella of psychological suspense. Crime can be at the forefront, but the chase for the criminal is often hamstrung by mental intricacies of the case, its perpetrator, and, often most prominently, its would-be solver. A murder is usually the inciting event, the big rock that hits the water, but in psychological suspense, when it’s done right, the focus is on the ripples that rock makes. Psychological suspense is a genre within crime fiction that can, and does, encompass myriad subgenres, making it difficult to classify definitively. Still, one thing is for sure: if the mental states of the characters contribute to the story—the more unstable the better—and the plot revolves around this delicate balance, chances are you’re reading psychological suspense. And you’re reading with the lights on.
~Jordan Foster, "Top Ten Writers of Psychological Suspense"

Why do we love to read genres like psychological suspense? The intricacy of the plot? The complex, often wounded characters? The moral ambiguity that often ends up being punished? The fact that these tales have a domestic aspect, often set in familiar places and locales, while amping up the tension?  Psychology Today suggests it's because of their "power to stir up intense emotion. Our brains release neurotransmitters like dopamine, and oxytocin when we are intensely emotional (intensely happy as well as scared, or horrified) and these can serve to consolidate memories, and even strengthen bonds between us and others sharing the same experience." Maybe it's just the fascination with other people's psyches - Jessica Ferri asserts on the Early Bird Books site, "There's no escaping your own mind," but maybe you can, a little, by digging deep into the minds of others.

Fans of mysteries and thrillers will have likely heard of Daphne du Maurier, Gillian Flynn, Tana French, Sophie Hannah, Patricia Highsmith, and Ruth Rendell. But how about some of these less well known twisty tales?

Dare Me by Megan Abbott

The Forgotten Girls by Sara Blaedel

A Place of Execution by Val McDermid

Now You See Me by S. J. Bolton

The Clairvoyants by Karen Brown

The Visitors by Catherine Burns

The Silent Sister by Diane Chamberlain

Little Deaths by Emma Flint

The Ice Beneath Her by Camilla Grebe

Long Man by Amy Greene

Her by Harriet Lane

The Fall Guy by James Lasdun

I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh

Alex by Pierre Lemaître

The Perfect Girl by Gilly Macmillan

House. Tree. Person. by Catriona McPherson

The Iron Gates by Margaret Millar

Unravelling Oliver by Liz Nugent

The Walls by Hollie Overton

Drowned by Therese Bohman

The Perfect Neighbors by Sarah Pekkanen

Let Me Die In His Footsteps by Lori Roy

Unbecoming by Rebecca Scherm

The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson

In a Dark, Dark Wood by Ruth Ware

Heartsick by Chelsea Cain

Watching Edie by Camilla Way

The Black Angel by Cornell Woolrich [eBook]


Refinery29 says "Once you've reached the end and all the secrets have spilled out, it's not always fun to go back and read them again. You need new mysteries to unravel — new plotlines and characters to make the hair on your neck stand on end." Have you ever re-read a suspense thriller, or do you agree with their assessment? Regardless, you can find many more twisty titles in the library catalog - for more books, try a subject search in the catalog using the terms "Psychological fiction" or "Suspense fiction." But be prepared - there are thousands of titles to sort through!

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Featured Author: Margaret Maron

Mystery author Margaret Maron burst onto the scene with the first novel of her Sigrid Harald series in 1981; her Deborah Knott series (for which she is beloved by us) did not begin until 1992. In the intervening years, Maron has won Edgar, Agatha, Anthony & Macavity Awards; been the President of Sisters in Crime; received the Grand Master Award from Mystery Writers of America; and many other accolades.

As of this writing, Margaret Maron has called time on both of her long-running series. She has not ruled out writing stories -which is how her career began 40 years ago -  she is "ready to be done with contracts and deadlines" though she has "learned to never say never." (!) Ohio public radio station WYSO 91.3's Book Nook program has applauded Maron's choice: "Don't you love it when somebody has the good grace to go out at the top of their game?" We'll miss Sigrid and Deborah, but we certainly applaud Margaret Maron's future plans, which include wading into her TBR pile.

If you haven't yet read any of Maron's award-winning mysteries, we encourage you to check them out! She created Sigrid Harald, a homicide detective with the NYPD, based on her experiences living in New York with her husband during the early years of their marriage. Deborah Knott is a North Carolina district judge - the change of setting reflects the author's upbringing "where the Piedmont meets the Sandhills" of that state, though she emphatically declares the character is not based on her own family life. Maron says she chose these professions for her detectives because "Other, more inventive writers can make it seem perfectly logical that a schoolteacher or real estate agent or cookie-baking mom would keep stumbling over murders that they could solve with their civilian skills, but I needed a sturdier reed on which to lean."

Sigrid Harald series
9 titles, with 2 available in the library catalog currently, Fugitive Colors and Take Out (the last 2 books of the series) 

Deborah Knott series
20 titles, beginning with Bootlegger's Daughter and ending with 2015's Long Upon the Land

These two characters of have a ying-yang relationship in Maron's mind - she created Deborah to be the opposite of Sigrid in many ways. Interestingly, Sigrid and Deborah are distantly related, and you can view Deborah's family tree - she's the youngest of a family of twelve - on Maron's website. The two detectives meet in Three Day Town, the 17th book in the Deborah Knott series.

Ms. Maron has also written a few non-series titles - try Last Lessons of Summer, for which she won North Carolina's Sir Walter Raleigh Award.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Unusual Detectives

Revelations of a Lady Detective. Revelations of a Lady Detective. Image taken from Revelations of a Lady Detective. Originally published/produced in George Vickers: London, 1864. George Vickers: London, 1864. . Fine Art. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/163_2964167/1/163_2964167/cite. Accessed 4 Aug 2017.
It seems like from the beginning of detective fiction, authors tried to give their detectives a hook - making them unusual, and therefore memorable. Generally regarded as the first detective in fiction, Le Chevalier C. Auguste Dupin is a gentleman detective who solves cases to amuse himself. Sherlock Holmes plays the violin and boxes; he is a master of disguise and a habitual user of cocaine. Agatha Christie seems to use her fictional author character, Ariadne Oliver, to bemoan the folly of creating a detective that is too unusual - Oliver's detective, Sven Hjerson, is Finnish and a vegetarian, and Oliver is often at her wit's end plotting her novels with those traits, which she knows little about, in mind.

Authors still like to put their detectives in unusual milieus. For every gritty police procedural out there, you can find many titles and series (particularly cozies) featuring detectives and detecting teams from every walk of life - coffeehouses managers, tea shop owners, herbalists, crossword creators, knitters, and beyond.

Here's a handful of unusual detectives to pique your interest:

Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death by James Runcie
1950s vicar

Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by C. Alan Bradley
11-year-old sleuth and aspiring chemist

The Hearse You Came In On by Tim Cockey
Maryland morticians

Deception on All Accounts by Sara Sue Hoklotubbe
Cherokee banker

Celine by Peter Heller
elegant, aristocratic private eye

Dog On It by Spencer Quinn
Chet the dog, companion of an Arizona private investigator

Wine of Violence by Priscilla Royal
11th century prioress

Top o' the Mournin' by Maddy Hunter
tour guide

Summer of the Big Bachi by Naomi Hirahara
Japanese-American Hiroshima survivor and gardener in Los Angeles

Inherent Vice by Thomas Pynchon
private eye and Sixties music fan 

Gun With Occasional Music by Jonathan Lethem
hard-boiled detective in the near future - mystery has elements of sci fi

Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams
detective who investigates based on the fundamental interconnectedness of all things

The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon
Jewish refugee and detective in the Alaska panhandle

The Robots of Dawn by Isaac Asimov
science fiction detective

Whiskey on the Rocks by Nina Wright
real estate broker

My Heart May Be Broken, But My Hair Still Looks Great by Dixie Cash
The Domestic Equalizers, hairdressers

Wanna Get Lucky? by Deborah Coonts
customer relations representative in mega-casino

Eight of Swords by David Skibbins
tarot card reader and former activist

The Disciple of Las Vegas by Ian Hamilton
forensic accountant


Want more unusual detective choices? Check out the Job of Series Character list on the website Stop, You're Killing Me, "a resource for lovers of mystery, crime, thriller, spy, and suspense books...listing over 4,900 authors, with chronological lists of their books (over 57,000 titles), both series (5,800+) and non-series. Use the alphabetical author and character links or the special indexes." It's a favorite resource of ours! You can also search our Books & Literature guide, which provides you with links to booklists on various topics and our own literary research eResource NoveList (free with your valid library card!).

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Pacific Rim Noir

PACIFIC OCEAN/ASIA, 1595. - Map of the Pacific Ocean and South-East Asia from the 1595 edition of Abraham Ortelius' atlas "Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.". Fine Art. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/140_1645068/1/140_1645068/cite. Accessed 8 Jul 2017.
...there is no single landscape of crime around the edges of the Pacific. From darkness-shrouded mean streets through neon nightmares and on to bodies on beaches, crime novels set near the Pacific don't look as much like one another as, say, mysteries set in Chicago do. Still, if in Chicago, there's always an El train rumbling by in the background, on the Pacific Rim, there's always that behemoth of an ocean somewhere nearby doing its own kind of rumbling...you're like to hear in the sounds of the surf what Matthew Arnold called "the turbid ebb and flow/Of human misery."  
~Bill Ott, "A Hard-Boiled Gazetteer to the Pacific Rim"


A remote Australian bush town. Laos 1979. Political corruption in modern China. A Buddhist Thai policeman. The hills of Bali. The south Australia coast. Singapore's high society. North Korea's Ministry of People's Security. A Hong Kong mansion. A gritty police procedural set in Queensland. South Korea in 1974. The mean streets of Sydney. Manila's Quezon City. Violent robberies in Auckland City. A sidelined police inspector in Communist Shanghai. The wild mountains at the Lao-Vietnam border. These are just a few of the people and places you'll find in the noir set in the Pacific Rim, for those who like their reads dark and and gritty and with an Asian flair.




Blood Junction by Caroline Carver [large print]

The Broken Shore by Peter Temple 

Chain of Evidence by Garry Disher 

Crucifixion Creek by Barry Maitland 

Cambodia Noir by Nicholas Seeley 

Good Death by Christopher R. Cox 

I Shot the Buddha by Colin Cotterill 

The Ghost Shift by John Gapper 

Nine Dragons by Michael Connelly 

Shanghai Redemption by Qiu Xiaolong 

The Wolves by Alex Berenson 

Black Water by Louise Doughty 

A Corpse in the Koryo by James Church

Mr. Kill by Martin Limón 

Only the Dead by Ben Sanders [eBook]

Smaller and Smaller Circles by F.H. Batacan 

The Singapore School of Villainy by Shamini Flint 

Bangkok Haunts by John Burdett 

The Fear Artist by Tim Hallinan    
 
        

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

New & Novel: Mysteries

NANCY DREW COVER, 1930. - 'The Secret of the Old Clock.' 1930 jacket illustration from The Nancy Drew Mystery Stories series by Edward Stratemeyer and Harriet Stratemeyer Adams.. Fine Art. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/140_1659262/1/140_1659262/cite. Accessed 3 May 2017.
While you're waiting for new titles by Paula Hawkins, Donna Leon, Anne Hillerman, and other bestsellers with long hold lists, why not check out some other mysterious and suspenseful reads you might have missed?

Standalones



DIS MEM BER and Other Stories of Mystery and Suspense by Joyce Carol Oates

The Whole Art of Detection: Lost Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes by Lyndsay Faye 

What's Become of Her by Deb Caletti

What My Body Remembers by Agnete Friis 

Dreamland Burning by Jennifer Latham [YA]

I'll Eat When I'm Dead by Barbara Bourland

Never Let You Go by Chevy Stevens

I See You by Clare Mackintosh

A Fever of the Blood by Oscar De Muriel 
 
Series

The Thirst by Jo Nesbo [Harry Hole, 11]

Cold Earth by Ann Cleeves [Shetland, 7]

The Chalk Pit by Elly Griffiths [Ruth Galloway, 9]

Duplicity by Ingrid Thoft [Fina Ludlow,4]  

Take Out by Margaret Maron [Sigrid Harald, 9]  

The Templars' Last Secret by Martin Walker [Bruno, Chief of Police, 10] 

Glass Houses by Louise Penny [Inspector Gamache, 13] 

Old Bones by Trudy Nan Boyce [Sarah Alt, 2] 

What the Dead Leave Behind by Rosemary Simpson [Gilded Age, 1] 

The Secrets of Gaslight Lane by M.R.C. Kasasian [Gower St. Detective, 4]

Alice and the Assassin by R. J. Koreto [Alice Roosevelt, 1]

The Pearl Thief by Elizabeth Wein [YA; prequel to Code Name Verity]


Saturday, April 1, 2017

Mormon Murder Mysteries? Meet Mette Ivie Harrison



Whenever I hear the word "Mormon" or "Latter Day Saints" I'm transported to my childhood in Idaho Falls, Idaho and the neighborhood I grew up in, across the street from the Cook family. Their father was a kind farmer who generously gave each child an egg during our first grade visit to his farm. The Cook family had eight kids and counting by the time we moved away to Albuquerque in the 1980's. We were the only Catholics I knew of in our neighborhood and the Cook daughters Stephanie, Cammie, and Analiese gave me the first glimpses into their world of no caffeine, clean living, forever families, and the afterlife as interpreted by children. I first heard about sacred garments when we played with my paper dolls who were deemed immodest for having two piece underwear and swimming suits.

Idaho is next door to Utah and predominantly Mormon, or the preferred term LDS (Latter Day Saints). The Idaho Falls Temple is the first image you will see if you google "Idaho Falls". Until we moved away, I had never heard the major swear words and led a very sheltered existence in this insular community. Because we did not belong to the LDS church, we were outsiders and if I had finished growing up in Idaho Falls, that sense of being on the outside looking in would have most likely increased over the years, along with my curiosity.

Idaho Falls Temple @CC0 Public Domain


Latter Day Saints are part of an all-American religion, deeply woven into the fabric of our society. Founded in 1830 by their prophet Joseph Smith, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is a Christian restorationist church that members consider to be a restoration of the original church founded by Jesus Christ. The LDS church's headquarters are located in Salt Lake City, Utah and is the fourth largest denomination in the United States of America. During the pioneer era of their church, Latter Day Saints trekked across the United States and settled in Salt Lake City under the theocratic leadership of their second president, Brigham Young. LDS history at times has been controversial, due to the short-lived practice of polygamy, refusal of the priesthood to black men (which was overturned through spiritual revelation in 1978), and staunch gender roles and family values that helped to defeat the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) in the 1970's. As a younger religion, Mormonism is distinctly unique compared to other Protestant religions, due in part to their missionary program, sacred text The Book of Mormon, and strong, wholesome communities that rely on their members to fulfill the roles that would normally fall under the authority of a paid clergy.

Mette Ivie Harrison is an author of young adult books and made her foray into the adult mystery genre with her ground-breaking book: The Bishop's Wife. Harrison is a Latter Day Saint, along with being an author, a Princeton graduate with a Ph.D in Germanic Languages and Literature, a mother of five, a contributor to The Huffington Post, and an All-American triathlete. Her debut mystery novel The Bishop's Wife is set in Sandy, Utah and the main character Linda Wallheim is married to Kurt Wallheim, a solemn Mormon bishop who serves their local ward (or what Catholics would call their parish) on top of being a full-time accountant.

Linda is the mother of five grown boys and spends her time in a supportive role consisting of comforting and visiting members of her ward in the capacity of a bishop's wife. As a bishop's wife, Linda works closely with their Relief Society, providing casseroles to distraught families in crisis and arranging for their home teachers to offer them spiritual support. Linda is a deep thinker, a dutiful, practicing Mormon, but has her own opinions about the patriarchal nature of her religion. Linda draws readers into the world of every day Mormonism in a way that is respectful and honest, allowing us to see challenging situations through her eyes, which are tempered with critical thinking and wary skepticism.

As a true crime aficionado, I immediately saw that The Bishop's Wife was inspired by the Susan Powell tragedy, a mother of two who disappeared under bizarre circumstances and has never been found. Her husband Joshua Powell was the prime suspect and before the police could make their case against him, Powell committed a murder-suicide, taking the couple's two boys' lives before he killed himself and set their home on fire.

The novel opens on a cold Utah winter morning, when neighbor Jared Helm and his daughter turn up at the Wallheim's home, claiming that Jared's wife Carrie has disappeared. The circumstances are suspicious, especially since Carrie would never abandon her five-year-old daughter. Linda is convinced that Jared murdered his wife and is determined to get justice for Carrie and her daughter, despite Kurt's pleas that she not get involved. The novel does not resort to a predictable narrative and Harrison will keep you transfixed until the shocking moment of truth.


Harrison's second mystery His Right Hand is even more compelling and thought-provoking. Harrison does not whitewash or sidestep contemporary and sensitive issues such as the difficulties of being homosexual in the LDS church, which has developed difficult policies for members and their families, leaving many people having to make hard choices between their religion and authentic identities. At the same time, Mormon feminists like Kate Kelly are making their case for ordination and finding themselves excommunicated instead.

Linda Wallheim finds herself embroiled in another murder in her ward where her husband Kurt is still serving as a Mormon bishop. One night, a distraught member named Emma phones Linda and Kurt to report that Carl a second counselor of the ward is late coming home from a church meeting. Kurt and Linda drive over to the church, where they find Carl strangled with a woman's scarf. The autopsy reveals that Carl was transgender. This revelation surprises everyone, including Emma and their two adopted children. In a church where women are not allowed to hold the priesthood, Carl has been living as a man and performing functions such as providing blessings and temple work. As the church leaders struggle to keep the news of Carl's gender concealed, Linda begins to uncover facts unknown to the police, and she has to choose between supporting her distraught husband or finding Carl's killer. Kurt Wallheim, who is portrayed as a compassionate but very Orthodox Mormon, struggles with this knowledge and the impact it has on his own sense of discernment and masculinity.

A subplot of His Right Hand is the Wallheim's youngest son coming out as a gay man who still wants to serve his church as a missionary. Samuel believes in church doctrine, but by his sexual orientation has an unavoidable conflict with it, if he chooses to not be celibate. We learn about Linda's first failed marriage to a closeted gay man and how their subsequent divorce fractured her relationship with her conservative family and church community and drove her to become an atheist until she finally returned to the church and married Kurt. The tensions between loving and accepting homosexual family members and remaining in religious life are treated with sensitivity and courage.



The Mormon church may have renounced polygamy in the 19th century, but for some Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints, "plural marriage" is still a part of their faith. For Time and All Eternities begins with Linda Wallheim learning that her son Kenneth has gotten engaged to a young woman from a polygamous family. Naomi Carter no longer practices the religion she grew up in, but the Carters will still be the Wallheims' in-laws once Kenneth and Naomi are married. Stephen Carter, Naomi's father and the patriarch of the Carter clan, invites Linda and Kurt Wallheim to the Carter family compound in the remote foothills of the mountains outside Salt Lake City. Stephen Carter wishes to meet his future in-laws, and introduce them to his five wives and twenty-two children. Linda considers polygamy to be an abusive practice that harms women and children and prepares to look for signs that Stephen's wives and children are in need of help. However, when the patriarch is found dead, the question isn't who did it, but who didn't want to kill him? Once again, Linda is determined to find the killer and protect the wives and children left behind while contending with her own spiritual challenges.

To learn more about the Latter Day Saint movement abcreads recommends the following books:

The Mormon People the Making of an American Faith by Matthew Bowman

American Crucifixion: The Murder of Joseph Smith and the Fate of the Mormon Church by Alex Beam
  
The God Who Weeps : How Mormonism Makes Sense of Life by Terryl Givens, Fiona Givens

 Wrestling the Angel: The Foundations of Mormon Thought: Cosmos, God, Humanity by  Terryl L. Givens 
 
The Book of Mormon a Very Short Introduction  (ebook) by Terryl L. Givens
  
The Mormonizing of America: How the Mormon Religion Became a Dominant Force in Politics, Entertainment, and Pop Culture by Stephen Mansfield

When Men Become Gods: Mormon Polygamist Warren Jeffs, His Cult of Fear, and the Women Who Fought Back by Stephen Singular

Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith by Jon Krakauer

Prophet's Prey: My Seven-Year Investigation Into Warren Jeffs and The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints by Sam Brower













Thursday, November 10, 2016

On the Trail: Mysteries Featuring Rangers, Game Wardens, and Land Management

The National Park Service turned 100 in August, and they are celebrating all year long! There are so many ways to celebrate: design your own park picture; get an Every Kid in a Park Pass for your fourth-grader; share your park experiences; visit one of New Mexico's 15 national parks (1,714,677 previous visitors can't be wrong!); and, our favorite, read! There are many items in the library catalog for adults and children about national parks across the 50 states, and, for the mystery fans among you, we've rounded up several series whose protagonists are park rangers, game wardens, or involved in land management. If you can't get to a park this weekend, why not do the next best thing?

Wild Indigo by Sandi Ault [eBook, Large Print, Audiobook]

Track of the Cat by Nevada Barr 

Calamity Jayne by Kathleen Bacus 

Open Season by C. J. Box 

The Poacher's Son by Paul Doiron 

Ice Hunter by Joseph Heywood 

Habitat by Skye Kathleen Moody 

On Deadly Ground by Michael Norman 

Bone Dry by Ben Rehder 

Shell Games by Kirk Russell [eBook]

Death Stalks Door County by Patricia Skalka

Border Prey by Jessica Speart 

Shadow of the Raven by David Sundstrand 

Canyon Sacrifice by Scott Graham

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Laying Down the Law: Mysteries Featuring Sheriffs

Have you been reading Amy Stewart's mystery series based on real-life turn-of-the-century deputy sheriff Constance Kopp? Girl Waits With Gun came out last year and Lady Cop Makes Trouble just came out. This has been an interesting series for us - Amy Stewart first came to our attention as a writer of non-fiction, with books such as Flower Confidential (a behind-the-scenes look at the flower industry), The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms, and Wicked Plants: The Weed That Killed Lincoln's Mother & Other Botanical Atrocities. Stewart brings all her research skills to bat for this new fictional series and the early 20th century lifestyle she portrays feels very real, but her historical characters are clever and her retellings of their adventures, ripped from news headlines of the day, are entertaining and well-crafted.

As a tribute to Constance Kopp, the first female sheriff, we've compiled a list of other mystery series with sheriffs for protagonists, including local favorite Longmire!

Desert Heat by J. A. Jance

The Cold Dish by Craig Johnson

Killer Weekend by Ridley Pearson

Coyote Wind by Peter Bowen [eAudiobook]

One Perfect Shot by Steven Havill

Murder Most Fowl by Bill Crider 

The Ranger by Ace Atkins 

Artscape by Frederick Ramsay

Dangerous Undertaking by Mark de Castrique 

The Blight Way  by Patrick F. McManus 

Darkness Bids the Dead Goodbye by Gary McKinney 

Cypress Grove by James Sallis

Lying Wonders by Susan Rogers Cooper

Season's Revenge by Henry Kisor 

Glare Ice by Mary Logue

Known Dead by Donald Harstad 

Thursday, November 3, 2016

We Never Saw That Coming: Killer Plot Twists

I love a good twist. I love the moment when the story aligns and you can see the events through two different lenses—the lens of what you’ve assumed is happening, and the lens of what you now know is happening—and all the subtle clues and contrasts between the two become visible. It’s two stories for the price of one: the story you thought you were reading, and the second story hidden inside the first like a geode. Even when I can see the twist coming before it does, it’s still fun to watch the intersection between those two stories.
~C. A. Higgins, "It Was All a Lie: Five Books With Plot Twists that Flip Your Perception"

Do you enjoy a good plot twist?  In movies, the most famous plot twists we think of are in The Usual Suspects, Fight Club, The Sixth Sense. In books, And Then There Were None always comes up in discussion, and of course, more recently, Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train. What's your favorite plot twist? We continue to be fooled by the Unreliable Narrator, and are always disappointed by what the pop culture wiki TVTropes calls the Captain Obvious Reveal - this is usually caused by heavy-handed foreshadowing, or if the reader is particularly genre-savvy.

For your reading pleasure, we've put together a list of reads recommended by various scribes of the internet for their finely tuned plot twists, which are practically guaranteed to shock! Some are more recent, some are older, and they are not all mysteries. Which ones have you read? Which ones surprised you most? If we're missing any great plot twists in our list, please let us know in the comments.

Lost Among the Living by Simone St. James

We Were Liars by E. Lockhart [YA]

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd: A Hercule Poirot Mystery by Agatha Christie 

Girl With All the Gifts by M. R. Carey 

Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane  

The Turn of the Screw by Henry James  

Tell No One by Harlan Coben  

Sweet Tooth by Ian McEwan  

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters [audiobook, eAudiobook] 

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson  

The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton 

I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh   

The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks  

The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón  

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: A Savannah Story by John Berendt [eBook, eAudiobook] 

November 9 by Colleen Hoover  

The Tourist by Robert Dickinson  

The Trap by Melanie Raabe
 
Links

10 Books With Unexpected Plot Twists [Early Bird Books] 

15 Books to Read If You Love a Shocking Plot Twist [Bustle]

Gone Girl and Other Thrillers With Shocking Plot Twists [Bookish]

The 36 Books With the Biggest Plot Twists [For Reading Addicts]