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    May 15, 2013              BOOKLIST

Spotlight on    SF/Fantasy
Top 10 SF/Fantasy
Story behind the Story:    Samantha Shannon's The    Bone Season
Carte Blanche: Suspending    the Old Disbelief
Another Look At: William    Sleator's Singularity
Top 10 SF/Fantasy for    Youth
Reference Showcase
Outstanding Reference    Sources
Focus: Inside the 2013    Dartmouth Medal Winner
Features
What's New with . . . Sage
Voices in My Head:    Summertime and the    Listening Is Easy


WEB EXCLUSIVES

Ladies in Waiting: 5    Authors Who Would Kill    to Be Ruth Rendell
Digging Deeper: Erin    Hart's Research for The    Book of Killowen
Trapped! 7 Thrillers That    Are a Claustrophobic's    Nightmare
You Can Always Count on    Crime: Mystery by the    Numbers
Take the Funny and Run:    14 Mystery Spoofs on    Page and Screen
Criminal Cliches: 7    Deadly Sins of Mystery    Writing
Hard-Boiled Eggheads: 16    Novels by Literary    Authors Who Really    Want to Play Detective
Great Reads: Latin    America in Historical    Fact—and Historical    Fiction

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April 2013

April 2013 Issue
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Shelf Renewal

Review Of The Day

Inferno
By Dan Brown

That Robert Langdon. He goes through more machinations in 72 hours than a phalanx of folk would in several lifetimes. This time out, the professor wakes up in a Florence hospital unable to remember the last several days. A bullet has grazed his head, and some bad people are after him, but with the help of the lovely Dr. Sienna Brooks, he’s able to escape—and escape and escape, as he slowly comprehends that a plague is quite deliberately about to be released, and it’s his job to figure out the puzzles and symbols that lead to its location.

    >>Read More



Mystery Month! No Clue Where to Shelve These: 6 Women’s Fiction Novels That Think They’re Mysteries
By Rebecca Vnuk

Women’s fiction is the hardest genre to pin down—probably because it’s not even a genre, per se, it’s actually a “reading interest.” Women’s fiction books can be funny, sad, suspenseful, historical, and, yes—even mysterious. Following are six novels that couldn’t quite decide whether they wanted to be women’s fiction or straight mystery. Although most of these books have been billed as mysteries (and may even be so branded on the cover), libraries should consider shelving them in general fiction, as die-hard mystery fans may be less than impressed.

As Husbands Go . By Susan Isaacs. 2010. Scribner, paper, $15 (9781416573081).

Top 10 Crime Fiction Audiobooks Top 10 Crime Fiction Audiobooks
By Karen Harris

Crime fiction has gone global in this year’s list, featuring titles that appeared in Booklist from May 1, 2012, through April 1, 2013, and are set in locales spanning from North America to the UK and Europe. But wherever the setting and whatever the circumstances, the forces of law are ever present.

The Beautiful Mystery . By Louise Penny. Read by Ralph Cosham. 2012. 13hr. Macmillan, CD, $39.99 (9781427226099); DD, $23.99 (9781427226105).

A monastery of cloistered monks in Quebec is an unlikely place for murder, and it’s up to persistent and analytical Inspector Gamache, portrayed to perfection by Cosham, to solve the crime.

Mystery Month Sniffing Out Clues: 12 Children’s Mysteries Solved by Animal Detectives
By Ilene Cooper and Keir Graff

From Walter R. Brooks’ pig who turned detective in Freddy the Detective (1932), to Don and Joan Caufield’s bulldog, crow, and cat in The Incredible Detectives (1966), children’s mysteries have long offered a veritable Noah’s ark of possibilities. And why not? Animals’ noses are closer to the ground, all the better to sniff out clues. Here we round up a dozen favorite books featuring sleuths that include a rabbit, a raccoon, a lizard, a guinea pig, rats, bunnies—and, of course, cats and dogs.

Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery . By Deborah and James Howe. Illus. by Alan Daniel. 1979. Atheneum, paper, $5.99 (9781416928171). Gr. 3–5.

Mystery Month My Raygun Is Quick: 8 of the Best SF Mysteries
By David Pitt

Gene Roddenberry famously (and possibly apocryphally) pitched Star Trek to the networks in the 1960s as “Wagon Train to the stars”—a western, in other words, with newfangled costumes and weapons and ways of getting around. You see, even when we’re trying to boldly go where no man has gone before, we tend to imagine it will be like someplace we’ve already been. And science fiction is a relatively young genre: legendary magazine editor Hugo Gernsback may have used the term in the mid-1920s, but the phrase didn’t show up in a book title (we think) until The Pocket Book of Science Fiction was published in 1946. So it’s only natural that sf creators would borrow stories and themes from other genres as they defined the conventions of their own.

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Web Crush of the Week: MysteryNet
Posted by: Karen Kleckner Keefe

If a website’s been around since 1995, it must be doing something right. What MysteryNet has been doing is creating a welcome haven for puzzle-solvers of all stripes. It has essays and links to awards and bookstores and reading lists, but what really sets it apart is its commitment to collecting online mysteries and mystery games. [...]
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