Didn't get enough thrills last week? Here are three more to check out courtesy of Kerri!

 
The Thread
 
The Thread's Must Read

Three more thrillers to end your summer with


Book Riot had an interesting feature last month about how women have been drawn to thrillers since the Victorian era.  

Writer Kathleen Keenan points to the way women devoured Wilkie Collins’ “Woman in White” and Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s success with “Lady Audley’s Secret," a novel about a woman who stuffs her husband down a garden well so she can inherit his fortune.  

Keenan adds: “Sensation fiction blended the juiciest, most sensational romantic and Gothic plot lines — think secret babies, kidnapping, poisoned spouses, and adultery, like Victorian-era soap operas.”

One-hundred-sixty years later, women are still reading more thrillers than men, but those thrillers read less like Victorian-era soap operas and more like sophisticated spy novels, police procedurals and psychological suspense stories. Last week, I recommended three of my favorite thriller reads of the summer. This week, I have three more:

I’m a big Barry Eisler fan. He created the John Rain series about the Japanese-American assassin who operates in the Pacific Rim. My favorite is titled “Killing Rain.” I thought I had read the whole series, but I’d missed “Zero Sum” and it’s an excellent addition to the John Rain genre. Rain has been working in the Philippines and he’s headed back to his home base of Tokyo where he encounters the new thug-in-charge and many more scores to settle.

If you’ve read Roxane Gay’s essays and memoirs, you may not know that she wrote a thriller set in Haiti called “An Untamed State.” It features Mirielle Duval Jameson, the wealthy, cossetted daughter of one of Haiti’s richest men, and it follows the standoff between her kidnappers and her father when he hesitates to pay the ransom. Gay knows how to turn the screws on the tension and the descriptions of Haiti are magical.

Finally, there's "My Lovely Wife” by Samantha Downing — and I have to come clean about something. This book was so disturbing in places that I put it down for a few weeks and had to think twice about finishing it. But even though the plot line of this novel is wildly far-fetched, the husband’s narration is twistedly persuasive and I just couldn’t leave the ending unread!

-Kerri Miller
Sponsor
Sponsor
 
This Week on The Thread
Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie headline 2019 Booker Prize shortlist

Atwood made the list for her sequel to "The Handmaid's Tale," and Rushdie for his reimagining of "Don Quixote." Chigozie Obioma, Elif Shafak, Lucy Ellmann and Bernardine Evaristo round out the finalists.

More
Hear Margaret Atwood read from 'The Testaments,' her sequel to 'The Handmaid's Tale'
In this recording, exclusive to NPR, Atwood returns to the world of "The Handmaid's Tale," reading from her long-awaited sequel. Some 15 years after the first book, it introduces a few new voices.

More
Talking Volumes 2019 season guide

MPR and the Star Tribune are proud to announce the 20th season of Talking Volumes. This season will feature interviews with Alice Hoffman, Saeed Jones, Tim O’Brien, Karen Armstrong, Lindy West and Tracy K. Smith.

More
In 'Dear Haiti, Love Alaine,' Haiti comes alive as a character
"Dear Haiti, Love Alaine" by Maika and Maritza Moulite
Buy this book

Sisters Maika and Maritza Moulite tackle heavy issues in this novel about a girl who gets sent to live with her aunt in Haiti, and discovers more than she bargained for about the women of her family.

More
'Fashionopolis' tells us why we should care about clothes
"Fashionopolis" by Dana Thomas
Buy this book

Fashion journalist Dana Thomas' book is a snappy, clear-minded attack on the fashion industry's rampant labor and environmental abuses — and also offers a path forward for consumers and the world.

More
'The Grammarians' diagrams the push and pull of sisterhood
"The Grammarians" by Cathleen Schine
Buy this book

Cathleen Schine's new novel follows redheaded twin sisters whose obsessive love of language brings them close as children — and begins to drive them apart as increasingly competitive adults.

More
'The Testaments' takes us back to Gilead for a fast-paced, female-centered adventure
"The Testaments" by Margaret Atwood
Buy this book

Margaret Atwood's long-awaited sequel to "The Handmaid's Tale" brings readers new voices (and one familiar one) and a whole new view of Gilead, the dystopian theocracy that was once the United States.

More
Structural injustice is at the core of 'We, The Survivors'
"We, The Survivors" by Tash Aw
Buy this book

Tash Aw's beautifully written new novel focuses on class issues in contemporary Malaysia, where his compelling protagonist is struggling to lead a quiet life after a long-ago murder conviction.

More
'Just Ask!' says Sonia Sotomayor. She knows what it's like to feel different
"Just Ask!" by Sonia Sotomayor
Buy this book

We're all different and that's good, says the U.S. Supreme Court justice. Her new children's book about embracing diversity portrays kids of all abilities working together to create a gorgeous garden.

More
In 'The Ventriloquists,' the true story of a fake newspaper
"The Ventriloquists" by E.R. Ramzipoor
Buy this book

E.R. Ramzipoor's novel tells the story a group of resisters in Belgium during World War II who lampooned the Nazis by putting out a satirical edition of the newspaper Le Soir, then a Nazi mouthpiece.

More
'Palestine + 100' explores contested territory, past and future
"Palestine + 100"
Buy this book

A new anthology invites Palestinian writers to imagine their homeland in 2048 — 100 years after the creation of Israel. The stories are inventive, dextrous, painful, and even sometimes playful.

More
If you love Octavia Butler, Colson Whitehead and Toni Morrison
"An Unkindness of Ghosts" by Rivers Solomon
Buy this book

Bookseller Nialle Sylvan says that Rivers Solomon’s novel earns comparisons to some of the biggest names in literature.

More

Preference CenterUnsubscribe

This email was sent by: Minnesota Public Radio
480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101