List of female detective/mystery writers Megan Abbott (born 1971) Christine Adamo (born 1965) Deborah Adams Harriet Stratemeyer Adams (pseudonyms: Carolyn Keene, Franklin W. Dixon) (1892–1982) Jane Adams (born 1960) Carolina Garcia-Aguilera (born 1949) Joan Aiken (1924–2004) Catherine Aird (born ...
1 Tana French. French’s Into the Woods does a remarkable job twisting together two mysteries ... 2 Patricia Cornwell. Not exactly an unknown, Cornwell is probably the most famous murder mystery ... 3 Jo Nesbo. When Stieg Larsson took over the bestseller list with his Millennium series, ...
John Grisham is a prolific author of crime novels. His books fit in the legal thriller subgenre, and instead of detectives, his main characters are often lawyers. 12. John le Carre John le Carre is a historic author of spy and detective novels.
John Grisham is a prolific author of crime novels. His books fit in the legal thriller subgenre, and instead of detectives, his main characters are often lawyers. 12. John le Carre John le Carre is a historic author of spy and detective novels. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is one of his best-known tales. 13. Michael Connelly
Heather Benedict Terrell (born November 24, 1968) is an American novelist and lawyer who writes some of her novels under the pen name Marie Benedict....Heather TerrellNationalityAmericanEducationBoston College (BA) Boston University (JD)GenreHistorical fiction novelSpouseJim Terrell6 more rows
​ Her latest novel, HER HIDDEN GENIUS, about the brilliant British scientist Rosalind Franklin who discovered the structure of DNA but whose research was used without her permission by Crick and Watson to win the Nobel Prize.
53Â years (November 24, 1968)Heather Terrell / Age
"Marie Benedict brings human warmth and in-depth science to a novel on the life of Rosalind Franklin... Benedict is terrific at showing how male exclusivity operates and has researched the science in magnificent depth... A humanly as well as scientifically engaging read."
Christie a true story? The Mystery of Mrs. Christie is a true story in that Agatha Christie did disappear for eleven days in December 1926; however, it is hotly contested what occurred during those eleven days.
"The Only Woman In The Room" is a true story about a wonderful person. It starts when Hedy Kiesler is a 19 year old aspiring actress in Vienna being pursued by Fritz Mandl the wealthiest man in Austria. He gained his wealth by selling munitions in the period leading up to World War II.
Boston CollegeHeather Terrell / EducationBoston College is a private Jesuit research university in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Founded in 1863, the university has more than 9,300 full-time undergraduates and nearly 5,000 graduate students. Wikipedia
She became the most successful career woman in the world during the decades of her running that institution. But the only way she was able to have the success that she did was by hiding her identity as an African American woman.
“Carnegie's Maid” follows this same pattern. The difference in this book is that Clara Kelley is not a real woman and the events of this story are all part of Benedict's imagination of what possibly could have happened to steer Carnegie in a new direction.
Marie Benedict is a historical fiction author from Pittsburg best known for her series of interconnected historical fiction. She studied at Boston College where she graduated magna cum laude and then went to the Boston University School of Law.
Inspired by true events, “The Personal Librarian,” by Pittsburgh native Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray, brings to life the lost story of Belle da Costa Greene, personal librarian to J.P. Morgan, one of the most powerful men of the early 20th century.
1. Agatha Christie. Talking about crime thriller writers is nearly impossible without reference to Agatha Christie, who is perhaps one of the most famous in this genre. Known for her unique twists and “who done it” style writing, she is an easy read and quite enjoyable.
With titles like Whose Body, books by Dorothy L. Sayers are clearly of the crime fiction genre. Most of her works feature Lord Peter Wimsey, a sleuth with a great track record for solving crimes.
A crime thriller is a subgenre that combines crime books with thriller books to create page-turning action that leaves the reader guessing “who done it” until the final words reveal all.
Some of the best crime novels have come from this prolific author. His crime thrillers End of Watch and Mr. Mercedes both earned the Goodreads Choice Award for their categories.
That passion has turned into a career as a crime novelist. His first novel, Absolute Power, became a movie starring Clint Eastwood, and he continues to write crime thrillers and novels for adults and young readers alike. Sale. Absolute Power.
Val McDermid has written a series of crime novels featuring Dr. Tony Hill as the main character. Her murder mysteries have ample suspense to land them in the thriller genre.
Ann Cleeves is a New York Times bestselling author who writes crime novels. Her lead characters, Vera Stanhope and Jimmy Perez, solve crimes in Northumberland and the Shetland Islands. This lends an interesting setting to serve as the backdrop of the stories. Raven Black: Book One of the Shetland Island Mysteries.
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Please only add first-in-series books from series where the protagonist is a female detective or investigator of some type. Armchair detectives, mysteries, and thrillers are all acceptable genres.
2. Patricia Cornwell. Not exactly an unknown, Cornwell is probably the most famous murder mystery writer alive.
Jo Nesbo rode that wave, and his Harry Hole (pronounced Harry Hoola in Norwegian) series is violent, intricate, and highly literate, with interesting digressions into Harry’s personal struggles, the history of Oslo, and Oslofolk.
Jo Nesbo. When Stieg Larsson took over the bestseller list with his Millennium series, many other Scandinavian mystery writers started getting attention in America that they had previously only enjoyed in their native countries.
It’s also suspenseful, intelligent, and great beach reading. There are 11 books in the series, beginning with Baltimore Blues.
Caroline Lawrence (born 1954) is an English American author, best known for The Roman Mysteries series of historical novels for children. The series is about a Roman girl called Flavia and her three friends: Nubia (a freed slave girl), Jonathan (a shunned Jewish boy) and Lupus (a beggar boy without a tongue). The series has won numerous awards and has been published in many different languages worldwide. In March 2010, Lawrence was commissioned to write another history mystery series of books called The Western Mysteries, set in Virginia City, Nevada Territory in the early 1860s.
Lawrence has also worked on the University of Reading 's educational website Romans Revealed, creating stories about Roman Britain closely based on archaeological finds.
In 2000 she wrote The Thieves of Ostia, the first in a series of children's adventure stories set in Ancient Rome, the book was published in 2001. The Roman Mysteries combine Caroline's love of art history, ancient languages and travel. Her other passions include cinema, jazz and London.
His latest is Parkland: Birth of a Movement.
Stevenson is a lawyer and an author . His most famous work is Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, an autobiographical account of Stevenson’s work on the Walter McMillian case. This story about race and inequality in our justice system and should be required reading for all Americans.
Jon Krakauer. Krakauer might be best known for Into the Wild , but several of his works fall under the category of true crime. Missoula is an exploration of sexual assault on a college campus. Under the Banner of Heaven investigates crime in the Mormon Fundamentalist community.
Larson’s most famous work is Devil in the White City , which profiles Dr. H.H. Holmes and the making of the World’s Fair. In general, he specializes in nonfiction exploring personal stories at the heart of major historical events.
Interested in the scientific of crime? Blum has quite a few books on the subject, including her most famous, The Poisoner’s Handbook . It’s about two Jazz Age scientists who helped create the beginnings of forensics as we know it today.
If you already know everything about Edward Snowden, check out The Spy Who Couldn’t Spell. It follows the FBI investigation into Brian Regan, a dyslectic codebreaker who sold government secrets to various foreign sources.
In Cold Blood is hailed as the ultimate true crime classic, and for good reason. Years after reading I remain haunted by Capote’s description of the crime scene—the family home where an entire family was slaughtered by two men. The book explores the before, during, and after of the murders that shook Holcomb, Kansas.
And in this historical mystery series, Sherry Thomas reimagines Sherlock Holmes as a female detective working under the assumed name Sherlock. Charlotte Holmes’s detective journey begins with A Study in Scarlet Women . In this novel, Charlotte must solve a murder mystery in order to clear her family’s name. But the mysteries don’t end there.
Between 1920 and 1975, Agatha Christie wrote 33 novels, 2 plays, and more than 50 short stories featuring the detective character. Thankfully, Poirot is a fascinating character and these a fun reads, so it will be well worth your time.
In this novel, Charlotte must solve a murder mystery in order to clear her family’s name. But the mysteries don’t end there. Currently, there are four books available in the Lady Sherlock series, with the fifth book, Murder on Cold Street , expected to come out later this year.
But who is this character who launched a series that was never meant to happen? Dobbs is a psychologist and investigator who was a nurse during World War I. After the war, she returned to London to work with her mentor, detective Dr. Maurice Blanche. Then Blanche retired and Dobbs went on to open up her own agency. The first book follows her story as she opens up her agency and goes on her first assignment.
Here’s another British mystery series written by an American author, but if you can excuse G.M. Malliet’s American citizenship, this series is actually very good. Max Tudor is a former MI5 agent who leaves his violent past behind in order to become the vicar of St. Edwold’s in the idyllic village of Nether Monkslip near England’s South West coast. But even in this small village, Max can’t seem to escape murder and violence.
But Peter Wimsey’s story did not end with Dorothy Sayers. After Sayers’s death, author Jill Patton Walsh continued the series, written with the permission of and at the request of the estate of Dorothy L. Sayers. Walsh completed the novel Thrones, Dominations, which Sayers started in 1938 but never completed.
In fact, Agatha Christie’s website has an entire page dedicated to the greatest moments of Poirot’s mustache. While Poirot himself is not British but rather Belgian, these books are undeniably British. The author is British, and the majority of these novels take place in the UK.