Whodunnits? The readings in this Year of the Thrillers
I am a thrillers fan.
This obsession sort of started in my early teens when I would devour The Hardy Boys and the Nanacy Drews in the school library and went back asking for more. My father and mother, both avid readers, had the entire Sherlock Holmes' collection at home. Someone gave me a Sidney Sheldon as a birthday present and a few years later my uncle opened the doors of his home library to me (which washout of bounds till I was a certain age) and I was almost drowning in the worlds created by James Hadley Chase, Alistair MacLean, Leon Uris and the likes.
If you have been a regular reader of my blog then you would know
how after my daughter was born I completely lost touch with reading till a friend gifted me a Poirot ( It was the first one that Sophie Hannah had written resurrecting the little detective with an egg shaped head).
As I got more and more involved in the business of thrillers, mysteries and crime novels, I found myself getting intrigued by the books and more by the circumstances in which a detective inspector or a private investigator appears- in short, their first case. This year I am dedicating my reading mostly to such novels and books where a detective made their first appearance.
Following the trail that I have set on, I have travelled from Delhi with Vish Puri to New Zealand with Harry Hole. This journey has been so exciting as a reader also because sometimes it is the mundane things that I have managed to give me the creeps and sometimes it is the back story of a certain character that has made me wince with his/ her pain.
I have often gone back for stuff that would comparatively be called lighter reading and come back refreshed for more thrills. Sometimes an author's writing or the character has been so interesting and alive that I have gone back asking for more of the same like JA Konrath's Detective Inspector Jack Daniels. There are others like this Canadian fellow here and this lady from Botswana here that I will b going back to at a more leisurely pace because these detectives have been sheer joy.
There have been some amazing stand-alones like No Time for Goodbye and the very recent Your Truth or Mine? also that I have read and enjoyed and I can't recommend them enough if you are looking to pace up your heartbeat.
All in all I am always looking for more and more recommendations. Nothing gory or macabre, mind you. I can only deal with shivers once in a while but any investigator that has appealed to you because of his/ her smartness, back story or just guts, please feel free to recommend. If you do have someone you would like me to read, do leave it in the comments section and I will read it and get back to you for a long bookish discussion.
I am taking my blog to the next level with @BlogChatter's activity #MyFriendAlexa.
Alistair MacLean |
If you have been a regular reader of my blog then you would know
Hercule Poirot |
As I got more and more involved in the business of thrillers, mysteries and crime novels, I found myself getting intrigued by the books and more by the circumstances in which a detective inspector or a private investigator appears- in short, their first case. This year I am dedicating my reading mostly to such novels and books where a detective made their first appearance.
The book that gave me the creeps |
Following the trail that I have set on, I have travelled from Delhi with Vish Puri to New Zealand with Harry Hole. This journey has been so exciting as a reader also because sometimes it is the mundane things that I have managed to give me the creeps and sometimes it is the back story of a certain character that has made me wince with his/ her pain.
I have often gone back for stuff that would comparatively be called lighter reading and come back refreshed for more thrills. Sometimes an author's writing or the character has been so interesting and alive that I have gone back asking for more of the same like JA Konrath's Detective Inspector Jack Daniels. There are others like this Canadian fellow here and this lady from Botswana here that I will b going back to at a more leisurely pace because these detectives have been sheer joy.
There have been some amazing stand-alones like No Time for Goodbye and the very recent Your Truth or Mine? also that I have read and enjoyed and I can't recommend them enough if you are looking to pace up your heartbeat.
All in all I am always looking for more and more recommendations. Nothing gory or macabre, mind you. I can only deal with shivers once in a while but any investigator that has appealed to you because of his/ her smartness, back story or just guts, please feel free to recommend. If you do have someone you would like me to read, do leave it in the comments section and I will read it and get back to you for a long bookish discussion.
I am taking my blog to the next level with @BlogChatter's activity #MyFriendAlexa.
Comments
Noor Anand Chawla
Oh, also - if you haven’t read it, I can’t recommend the The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair by Joël Dicker enough. It’s absolutely brilliant!