K. O. Dahl & J. A. Jance
Crimeculture is delighted to publish two new interviews by Professor Charles Rzepka, with K. O. Dahl and J. A. Jance. Riding
Crimeculture is delighted to publish two new interviews by Professor Charles Rzepka, with K. O. Dahl and J. A. Jance. Riding
So many different ways of disappearing: five of the best missing person novels Reviewed by Lee Horsley When someone goes
James Guiliani and Charlie Stella, Dogfella (Da Capo, 2015) Review by Kate Horsley When a London TV company proposes making
Helen Fitzgerald, Viral, Feb 2016 Review by Lee Horsley “I sucked twelve cocks in Magaluf.” From its attention-grabbing opening line
Peter Swanson, The Kind Worth Killing (Feb 2015) Review by Lee Horsley In Peter Swanson’s The Kind Worth Killing, murderous plans are initiated in the
Hakan Nesser, A Summer with Kim Novak (1998; trans. 2015) and The Living and the Dead in Winsford (2014; trans. 2015) Review by Lee
Megan Abbott, You Will Know Me (Little, Brown & Company, July 2016) Review by Kate Horsley Megan Abbott says that when she was
Kevin Wignall, A Death in Sweden In Kevin Wignall’s A Death in Sweden, his protagonist, Dan Hendricks, thinks “how strange it was
Kate Hamer, The Girl in the Red Coat (2015) Review by Kate Horsley Eight-year old Carmel, “the girl in the red coat”, disappears
Rory Flynn, Dark Horse Review by Kate Horsley Dark Horse is the second novel in Rory Flynn’s Detective Eddy Harkness series, recounting the exploits