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i like books about crimes and mysteries.(alot of twist and turns alot of surprises) what are good books/authors for this type of genre?

2007-02-17 17:22:02 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

7 answers

Some of my fav mystery authors, in no particular order:
Lilian Jackson Braun
Carole Nelson Douglas
Camille Minichino
M. R. Sellars
Karen Irving
Jasper Fforde
Sandra Tooley
Lee Driver
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Agatha Christie
Harry Kemelman
Margaret Truman
P. D. James
Matthew Pearl
Martha C. Lawrence
Ellery Queen
Ralph McInery
Tony Hillerman
Erle Stanley Gardner
Susan Wittig Albert

2007-02-18 01:09:45 · answer #1 · answered by BlueManticore 6 · 0 0

A book I used to get out of the library all the time that was a great mystery was called Wrapt in Crystal by Sharon Shinn. It has a scifi/fantasy futuristic setting and it follows a military official as he attempts to unravel the serial killings of nuns devoted to the two religious orders on a far-out planet that is being pressured to join the military federation. I know it sounds cliche, but it is soooo good!

2007-02-17 17:31:46 · answer #2 · answered by Cat Loves Her Sabres 6 · 0 0

The most famous authoress in the field of mystery is of course Agatha Christie.Read any of her books,you will better understand mystery.The other one I can suggest you 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' by Robert luise Stevenson

2007-02-18 00:33:06 · answer #3 · answered by Krutika T 2 · 0 0

Well, Agatha Christie is fantastic. There's one book in particular which I have just read and enjoyed immensely. It's called "Ten Little *******" (I hope it doesn't asterisk that, it's just the title). It's sort of like Saw Two set in the 1930's, or 40's. It's fantastic.

2007-02-17 18:57:05 · answer #4 · answered by Kreen 4 · 1 0

The Avram Cohen Mystery Quartet
By Robert Rosenberg


"Having created a highly intelligent detective to handle the brainwork in this series, Mr. Rosenberg does not waste that shrewd and subtle mind."
Marilyn Stasio in The New York Times Book Review, on House of Guilt

"The lessons that Robert Rosenberg learned covering the Jerusalem crime beat as a reporter have been put to excellent use in this intricate tale of the murder and madness in the holiest of cities." Jonathan Kellerman, on Crimes of the City, selected by the New York Times as notable thriller of the year, 1991

All the Avram Cohen Mysteries at Amazon

Get one or all of the books in the
Avram Cohen Mystery Quartet


"Having created a highly intelligent detective to handle the brainwork in this series, Mr. Rosenberg does not waste that shrewd and subtle mind." -- --New York Times Book Review


Crimes of the City The first book in the Avram Cohen Quartet, in which the veteran Jerusalem detective investigates the murder of two Rusian nuns and uncovers the Jerusalem Syndrome, a mysterious psychosis affecting the susceptible in that holy city. The New York Times Notable thriller of 1991 Originally published by Simon&Schuster, and Penguin paperback, and translated into German, Dutch, Romanian, and Japanese, Shown is the Poisoned Pen Press 2nd edition cover
More about Crimes of the City, including the first chapter.


The Cutting Room Out of print in both hardcover and paperback (But possibly available in a used edition from Amazon the second book in the quartet finds Cohen unhappily retired, on his way to Hollywood to visit his boyhood friend, like Cohen, a Dachau survivor. But when he arrives, he discovers a suicide that is really a murder, and to find the killer, he must delve into his darkest memories of the concentration camp -- and understand the significance of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Download it as an e-book for free in html here. After unzipping it to its own directory, start with the index.htm file.
More about The Cutting Room, including the first chaper.


House of Guilt Between the Hebron Massacre and Rabin's assassination, Avram Cohen is emotionally extorted into a hunt for the missing heir to a fortune. Now a wealthy man from an unexpected inheritance, Cohen follows the case from the anarchy of Tel Aviv's night life to the zealotry of the settlements, and on the way is forced to look at his own failures -- and Israel's -- in a new light.
More about House of Guilt, including the first chapter.


An Accidental Murder What appears to be an accident in the desert turns out to be the murder of Cohen's surrogate son, and by ignoring police pressure to stay away from the case, Cohen's investigation leads him to the Russian Mafia's innermost circles in Israel, and to a suprising conclusion about his own place in Israel, and the world. So far, the last of the Cohen books, An Accidental Murder is a profile of a man -- and a country -- trying to be normal in abnormal circumstances.
More about An Accidental Murder, including the first chapter.


PLUS Secret Soldier: The True Life Story of Israel's Greatest Commando is the autobiography of IDF Col. (ret) Muki Betser, the hero of the Entebbe rescue raid, a pioneering veteran of Israel's air marshall defense forces, the Sayeret Matkal officer thrice assigned the job of getting Yasser Arafat -- yet a proponent of the peace process with the Palestinians -- and a warrior who went into battle knowing how to control his fear. His story is an epic, behind the senes account of Israel's war against terrorism, a dramatic story about life at the tip of the IDF's spear. More about Secret Soldier, including excerpts, and the author's introduction.

2007-02-17 17:31:50 · answer #5 · answered by BLack RoSe 1 · 0 0

Can't go wrong with Dean Koontz...start with Mr. Murder...then Odd Thomas, then Forever Odd....Velocity is good....I love his stuff...Stephen King is good too!

2007-02-17 17:30:27 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

try Ed McBain,P.D James,Agatha Christie

2007-02-17 17:32:31 · answer #7 · answered by asso 4 · 0 0

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