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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

From BookLinks

April 2013

April 2013 Issue
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Common Core Resources

Awards

Likely Stories
Book Group Buzz
Audiobooker
Bookends
Shelf Renewal

Review Of The Day

Onion Street
By Reed Farrel Coleman

Coleman’s latest—a prequel to the award-winning Moe Prager series—is a slam-dunk recommendation for readers drawn to smart, gritty crime fiction with label-defying characters. Onion Street chronicles Moe’s introduction to crime solving, showing him emerging from aimlessness and barreling toward purpose as his intuition for connecting crime dots is awakened. A Brooklyn College student in tumultuous 1967, Moe hasn’t become entangled in the radical movements sweeping campuses (mostly because he’s apathetic).

    >>Read More



Mystery Month Sleuths on Screen: 15 Famous Detectives and the Actors Who Played Them
By Ben Segedin

Adapting popular crime series for television and the movies comes with the challenge of casting the correct actors in the part of beloved characters. Casting the wrong actor in a role can condemn a series to a single outing, but good casting can create a franchise (and make billions of dollars, as in the case of James Bond—$6 billion and still counting). The actor is often the character since many more people may see the movies than will read the books. The actor in a crime series will forever define the character—until he or she is replaced by a younger actor. The James Bond series has survived and prospered using numerous actors in the starring role. Other franchises keep trying to find the perfect actor for the part. The Jack Ryan series is about to feature its fourth Jack Ryan in five films. Some characters transcend nationalities.

At Leisure with Joyce Saricks At Leisure with Joyce Saricks: Crime for Armchair Travelers
By Joyce Saricks

Like you, I look forward to Booklist’s Mystery Showcase every May. Not only do I devour the reviews—and reserve far more titles than I’ll ever have time to read—but I also eagerly anticipate discovering Bill Ott’s chosen location for his Hard-Boiled Gazetteer. Over the past 15 years, he’s taken us across the U.S. (for example, Chicago, Southern California, New York City, Pacific Northwest) and to international locales from Italy to Scandinavia, Great Britain, Russia, and beyond.

The hard-boiled crime novel may have originated here in the U.S., but it has clearly gone international. We can read about grisly murders, intriguing investigations, and dangerous characters around the world.

Mystery Month Everybody Must Get Stoned: 8 Mysteries That Will Give You a Killer Contact High
By Keir Graff

Solving crimes requires clear wits and steely concentration—two qualities that can be hard to come by when you’re zonked out of your gourd on hindu kush, marching to the beat of Bolivian marching powder, or amped to the eyeballs on speed. Sleuths may have sipped martinis or bourbon once upon a time, but, these days, they’re just as liable to be battling a serious case of cotton-mouth. They’re also just as likely to be botanists or drug dealers as detectives.

Almost Criminal . By E. R. Brown. 2013. Dundurn, paper, $17.99 (9781459705838).

Tate MacLane isn’t a user—in fact, he’s almost too clear-headed for his own good.

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).

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Bookends

One Came Home by Amy Timberlake
Posted by: Cindy Dobrez and Lynn Rutan

Cindy: If Annie Oakley had to solve her sister’s mysterious disappearance…you’d have One Came Home (Random/Knopf 2013) and one of the best books I’ve read so far this year. 13-year-old Georgia is a whiz with a rifle and is helpful in her family’s general store in Placid, Wisconsin. The book opens with this intriguing passage: [...]
Shelf Renewal

Dusty Book: A Field of Darkness by Cornelia Read
Posted by: Karen Kleckner Keefe

Now a Syracuse newspaper report, former Long Island debutante Madeline Dare can’t quite shake her upper class upbringing, no matter how far removed her current circumstances seem. In A Field of Darkness, her two worlds collide when a story about the 20-year-old murder of two young hippies points to her uber-preppy cousin as a main suspect. [...]
Audiobooker

Summertime and the Listening is Easy!
Posted by: Mary Burkey

Mystery audiobook family-listening favorites are featured in this Voices in My Head column. Use these suggestions to pack your vacation travel bag or load up the kids’ listening devices. May is Mystery Month here at Booklist, but why not take spend the whole summer with the very best narrators sharing great stories? It’s no mystery [...]
Book Group Buzz

Book Group Toolbox #78: The American Detective
Posted by: Kaite Stover

Looking for references and resources in the mystery genre always turns up a fun surprise. The latest item I found lurking in the 800s is The American Detective: An Illustrated History by Jeff Siegel. The flyleaf makes a grand claim about the 168 page book being “a comprehensive look at the evolution of one of [...]
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