Buried Under Books

Category: Crime


‘The Unremarkable Heart’: a chilling short story

This is so good that when I picked it up to check if I read it last year, I ended up reading it again. ‘This’ is ‘The Unremarkable Heart’, a short story by well-established crime writer Karin Slaughter, and, yes, that is her birth name. (She has said previously that it’s a good thing she […]

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‘The killing of Polly Carter’: Agatha Christie in the Carribean

No one could have killed Polly Carter…but someone did. This is a locked room mystery that takes place in a garden with a cliff top and some extremely convenient shrubbery. Oh, and it takes place in the Carribean. And Polly’s a celebrity (of course: who else would have a cliff top with beach access conveniently […]

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Stasi Child: welcome to the corrupt and dangerous world of the DDR

East Berlin, 1975, a murdered child, a staged crime scene. You know how sometimes you’re not completely sure about something, but you take a punt and you LOVE IT? That’s my relationship with this book. What’s it about? When Oberleutnant Karin Muller is summoned to investigate a young girl’s body, found at the foot of […]

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‘under your skin’: a perfect life implodes

Endings can be incredibly powerful. An unexpected ending can completely change our perspective on what has gone before, and I have persevered with several very dull or irritating books in the hope that their endings would somehow redeem their middles. (This is doubtless because I remember finding Louis de Bernieres’ ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’ a real […]

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The Woods: where buried secrets are about to be unearthed.

What if the past didn’t happen the way you thought it did? What if you could dig up the truth? Would you want to? Should you? What might you learn if you did? Such is the premise of Harlan Coben’s seventeenth crime novel, ‘The Woods’. What’s it about? Twenty years ago four teenagers enjoying summer […]

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Uncomfortable narrators, or further reflections on ‘Tom-All-Alone’s’

Self-editing is definitely the most difficult kind of editing. Recently I reviewed Lynn Shepherd’s excellent novel ‘Tom-All-Alone’s’, a literary murder mystery with its roots in Charles Dickens’ ‘Bleak House’. I had a lot more to say about it than could comfortably fit in one post, so below are some more thoughts about the narrative style […]

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