An unfair accusation frequently levelled at British crime fiction is that the American and Scandinavian varieties are more often ‘about something’, with provocative issues energising the narrative.
Left-right: Psychological thriller authors Paula Hawkins, Clare Mackintosh and Shari Lapena British readers have ... said the rise in sales of crime fiction was mostly down to the "phenomenal ...
Bat Eater is an astonishing work of speculative crime fiction; Hotel Lucky Seven is more delightful the more it gives itself ...
An austere civil servant becomes enmeshed in a missing people case in Andrew Hughes’s Emma, Disappeared (Hachette Ireland, £14.99), which features one of Irish crime fiction’s most audacious ...
is a New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling author MOSCOW, November 8. /TASS/. British crime fiction writer Peter James is interested in the Salisbury events but has no plans to write a book ...
Rundell's latest book Impossible Creatures is the first in a new trilogy Katherine Rundell has been named author of the year at the British ... crime and thriller book of the year and audiobook ...
For the word puzzle clue of who first coined the term golden age which refers to the british crime fiction writing time of the 1920s and 30s, the Sporcle Puzzle Library found the following results.
The author’s 1937 Remington typewriter ... The exhibition, which celebrates 20th Century British crime fiction, will feature nearly 100 of the most famous, influential and best-selling crime ...
In 2021 we also created an annual bursary for crime fiction authors of colour. "We’ve run community projects at local schools in the community; donated books to many schools and libraries across ...