Articles about mystery

Malice — Keigo Higashino

This murder mystery starts with an account written by an acquaintance of the victim. It sets the scene nicely. The next chapter was written from a different point of view, just to mix things up. I was pleased as well as surprised when the rug was pulled from under me quite early on (this is a mystery story after all).

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Everyone In My Family Has Killed Someone – Benjamin Stevenson

This great whodunnit subverts every expectation. Normally in this genre, subtle clues are scattered throughout the narrative, but in this book the narrator continually breaks the fourth wall to pull the rug out from under me. He lets slip a tiny clue; I get excited and think I can now work out what’s going on; but then I am deflated as the narrator highlights the clue and says it’s not relevant.

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