Book of the Week 12.15.25
The disappearance of nine-year-old Roisin O’Halloran on the night of the summer solstice in 1999 has haunted two emotionally damaged women for 20 years. Deedee, Roisin’s grieving older sister, has joined the Gardai in her small Irish town of Bannakilduff so she can more easily investigate what happened after Roisin vanished into the mysterious Hanging Woods. Although she’s engaged to Sean, scion of the prominent Branagh family, DeeDee is barely holding it together, drinking too much and having a casual fling with a fellow officer. Caitlin Doherty, Roisin’s childhood friend and the last person to see her alive, is also living a chaotic life, surviving as a petty thief in London and trying to escape painful memories. But the death of her estranged mother forces her to return to her hometown and her dark past. As Caitlin and DeeDee warily circle each other, they gradually uncover secrets that expose long-buried shocking crimes. Winner of the UEA/Little Brown Crime Prize, Hannigan has written a twisty, atmospheric debut that captures the claustrophobic small-mindedness of a community willing to close ranks against the innocent to protect the guilty.
Mystery & Detective
Edison Bixby was a great detective for the LAPD, and he knew it. When a brain injury forced him to resign, he became the best insurance investigator in the Los Angeles area. The injury has removed his social filter, magnifying his already massive ego to inappropriate proportions. Wally Nash gets by acting in commercials for medications that cure digestive problems, or playing corpses. Bixby’s insurance company hires him to watch over their wildcard investigator and to interpret or deflect anything he says that could be considered offensive. They are given a case involving what appears to be a woman simply falling to her death on a mall staircase. The video shows the victim alone when she took the tumble, so why does Bixby think it’s murder? Goldberg draws on his background in television to create this mismatched duo that echoes Monk and other mystery shows featuring a quirky, brilliant detective and a helpful sidekick. The sarcastic tone reflects the privilege and sense of importance many LA residents seem to exhibit, and the narrator routinely breaks the fourth wall, creating a book that is both hilarious and thought-provoking. The mystery itself is complex, and somehow Goldberg balances the humor and drama to perfection. The second book in this series cannot come fast enough, and hopefully a TV series is in the future as well.
Daedalus is, of course, the famous Athenian inventor, sculpture, and craftsman, as well as the father of Icarus. So it’s quite appropriate to name a grand research library after him. The library depicted here is a bit of mash up, with references to many literary genres and many libraries, including New York Public’s vast research library at 42 second street and the infamously creepy Mütter Museum and Historical Medical Library in Philadelphia. Enter Aria, who rather relishes creepiness, and whose life is looking up these days. She’s moved to New York, has been hired to work as a bookseller, and even found her own micro-apartment. And then Aria’s boyfriend invites her to join him on Valentine’s Day for an after-hours tour of the Daedalus. What fun! Until the Library’s automatic door-entry closes shut, sealing their little tour group down in the lower decks. With time to reminisce until being saved, all the terrifying stories about the Daedalus start to tumble out. And then the inevitable happens: there’s a murder in their little group. And suddenly it would seem that no one is getting out alive. Campy, gothic-y, and a tad humorous, The Library After Dark takes the traditional closed-room novel, twists it inside out, then offers readers something quite different to enjoy
It gets personal for the Chicago PD when an officer’s family member is the latest victim of a lethal new street drug called Edge. Running the case is Harriet, or Harri, Foster, who’s the best kind of police procedural lead: a tough but kind cop with simmering issues. She’s struggling to move on from the death of her son from gun violence and reluctantly getting the help that everyone but her thinks she needs when this perplexing, dangerous case blows up her chance of recovery. We also meet two forces at loggerheads in the community: the Gamon family that has a tight hold on the neighborhood’s drug trade and resulting downstream crime, and pastor Clevon Pope and his wife, Faith, who are trying to be a bright spot in the chaos. Readers will eagerly follow Harri (I put aside almost all of Thanksgiving reading this) as she puts her smarts and grit to work, and will relish the nailbiting ending to this engrossing psychological thriller.
This 12th in the “Rachel Ryder” series has shades of Silence of the Lambs to it, in that a serial killer becomes obsessed with an investigator and involves her in a macabre game. Rachel Ryder has left her Chicago police career and is now a detective in Hamby, Georgia, PD, honoring a promise she made to her murdered husband. Hanging out at a barbecue with colleagues, she’s summoned to work to find that it’s because of a frightening gift: someone has couriered a photo to her at work, one showing a woman lying on a hotel bed with her throat slashed. All Rachel has are questions. Is this just AI? Or could someone she previously arrested be after her? Is it something to do with her husband’s death? Adding to the puzzle is that the mysterious sender is making allusions to a chess game, with Rachel one of the pieces. The tension ramps up till the last pages—especially during a mass-casualty event that’s described in terrifying detail—until a twist delivers the shocking conclusion. There’s no need to read the previous books in the series to enjoy this one, but you’ll want to go back and binge-read them anyway.
Even as a long time fan of Chris Bohjalian, whose work ranges from historical suspense to contemporary crime fiction to literary tales (and plenty else in between), I wasn’t prepared for the intensity of this story, the power of the narration, and the sheer brilliance of the book’s design. It’s 1978, and 18-year-old Mira Winston is a golf prodigy in a small, tony, Westchester town—it’s very Larchmont. Everyone, even Mira, expects that her life has been planned out for her, from Yale in a year to the LPGA after college graduation. Until a blazing-hot August morning when Mira is practicing at the local country club and drives a ball straight through the net at 150 miles per hour, slamming it into the head of high-school junior Kenny Foster, killing him immediately. A horrible accident? Yes, a horrible accident: somehow, there was a hole in the net, which allowed the ball easy passage. But as the story slowly unfolds in the months to come, and as Mira awaits trial, people’s opinion of the golfer starts to shift. Did you know Mira was having an affair with a man three decades her senior? And that Kenny’s younger sisters were consumed by grief? And that Mira has a history of recklessness, although it may be constructed? Slowly, Mira is flipped in public opinion from teen in trouble to woman in despair. But what keeps this book so honest, direct, and yes, at times, humorous is the first person voice of Mira, taking readers to another era we are unlikely to ever forget.
Death has gone on vacation here and there, but after she hears about a sabbatical while on a trip across the River Styx, the Boss agrees to her request for a break. Her sister Life gives her the chance to live in human form so she can understand humans better. Now Delara, working as a paralegal at a second-rate law firm in London, is shaken when she discovers an Unplanned Death caused by vampire fish—after all, it’s her department, and the Boss will not be happy if he finds out. She left the temp in charge—is that the problem? Of course, Life is all over Delara, asking how her creations could be snuffed out without regard for the Plan. The days of simply putting folks on the Boat could be over if she cannot find out how this aberration has occurred. No longer in a black sack and carrying a scythe, Delara is hot to get to the bottom of the issue when charming parasitologist Marco enters the investigation. Debut-author Dapunt fills this rollicking story with sideways glances at the afterlife, the underworld, and the Human Communications Director (HCD, aka Jesus). Beyond the central murder mystery, the novel explores themes of life and death, love and relationships, the meaning of existence, and human emotions. Satirical, funny, and packed with wry observations on how humans approach death, and life.
Book of The Week
Interested in a new and hilarious spin on motherhood? Then get on your reading list the laugh-aloud-funny/steer-wheel-gripping story of Tilly Turner, a single mom who will do anything for her identical twin daughters. When her career as a stand-up comic hits the shredder and her beloved mother has recently died, Tilly moves back to her hometown in Idaho, eager to establish community. Which, naturally, brings her to join a pole-dancing 101 class. And guess what? Pole dancing turns out to be a total blast. If only she didn’t wake up the next morning with a pounding headache, bad case of alcohol-induced amnesia, and a dead body scrunched in the trunk of the car. For starters, who is the dead man? Could Tilly have done him in? And where can she get a reliable babysitter whom the twins will love so that she can go figure out what’s happening and what the other strippers may know? Add to this the hottie agent from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives who keeps showing up at her home, not invited but not disinvited either. Sit back, relax, and enjoy what is sure to be one of the best blends of crime fiction with a good dollop of coziness to be published in 2026.
© 2025 firstCLUE Reviews
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It’s 1960, and Ormond Basil, semi-retired actor, encounters two friends who persuade him to join them on a yacht for a brief Mediterranean jaunt, ostensibly to discuss a possible acting opportunity. Basil made his fame by playing Sherlock Holmes in 15 films, and many still think of him in that role. An unexpected storm traps the three on a small island where there’s only a hotel and restaurant, and overnight, there is a classic locked-room murder. With no authorities on the island, and only seven guests and four hotel staff, somehow Basil is charged with the investigation. A Spanish author of pot-boiler mysteries becomes his Watson, and together they mull over the clues of this and the murders that follow. Basil’s internal dialog is full of old movie gossip, and his full memorization of the Doyle oeuvre gives color to their probing. There is of course a postmortem, which offers a solution to the question of whether Holmes was faced with Moriarty or Irene Adler. A wonderful three-pipe problem with all loose ends neatly tied up.
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A heartfelt animal cozy akin to David Rosenfeld’s Andy Carpenter series and Rita Mae Brown’s Sneaky Pie Brown books, along with all the sophistication of Only Murders in the Building. The small, coastal town of Framstone is dog heaven, with walkers providing their pooches with rural strolls, treats galore, and smells most intriguing. Until Charles Boardman is dragged deep into the woods by Ruby, his Staffordshire bull terrier. Has Ruby found a half-eaten burger? Try the corpse of a former cop who now owns a bar. It takes only milliseconds for the information to spread among the dog-walking community, with mid-thirtyish Charlie—who grew up in Framstone and has only recently returned—at the center of the investigation. But the story doesn’t end there. Charlie receives anonymous threats, and, even more frightening, another body surfaces on the beach. Can Charlie resolve the mystery and come out alive? Hogan’s prose is delightful, full of humor and wonderfully clever. This reader’s only wish is that this book is the first in a series.
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