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Articles related to "Thriller Fiction"


After receiving a coded message from his missing brother, Tim Sutton is torn from a humble, small town life, and thrown into a journey of international intrigue.
John Delaney and Katherine Adams return for another page-turning thriller adventure by author Mitchell Graham.
The Shimmer by David Morrell is a fascinating novel that is a must-read for any thriller fan!
A detailed look at Deborah LeBlanc's Water Witch and publication details for would-be readers and fans.
Stephen King will floor the public with this hard-core page-turner, which is due to be released in November 2009.
Sydney Bauer has written a tightly-plotted legal thriller in Alibi, with defence attorney David Cavanaugh again taking the central role in a high-profile murder case
Boston criminal defense attorney David Cavanaugh is once again the central character in Sydney Bauer's latest suspense novel.
Three years ago, Elvis Cole helped attorney, Alan Levy acquit a man of murder. Now the man, Lionel Byrd, is found dead with evidence he committed the crime.
What would you do if gas were suddenly $6 per gallon, if you didn't have oil to heat your home, and food from all over the country couldn't make it to your grocery?
Sherry Moore is blind, but has the singular ability to read the last 18 seconds of a person's thoughts. Her talent is helpful to the police, but it's driving her mad.
Brilliantly conceived and artfully written, the gripping, award-winning fantasy novel offers a poignant new twist on reincarnation, winning a devoted cult following.
Take a Gothic novel, add a murder mystery, cloak it in hidden meanings and a half-remembered past, and you've got Sam Taylor's new, captivating novel.
Two favorite Connelly characters - lawyer, Mickey Haller and LAPD detective Harry Bosch get together to solve a high profile Hollywood murder case.
Can a brain injury change an individual's personality? That's the central question in this novel about an Iraq war veteran who always happens to be around for murder.
Dan Brown's novel "The Lost Symbol" sends Robert Langdon on a quest to uncover the secrets of the Masons. The society of Freemasons has long been shrouded in secrecy.
Humpty Dumpty Was Pushed is written in a unique voice that is fast, dangerous, disturbing and hilarious at the same time. It's like a hip-hop version of Sin City.
Bouchercon, the world's largest annual mystery convention, will once again award its prestigious Anthony Awards at the event's closing ceremonies.
If alligators weren't enough of a problem, a human predator is terrorizing the small town of Torrence, Florida.
Although it is often intriguing and complex, Neville's long-awaited sequel to The Eight is just not as good as the original.
A quickie, a murder and a husband who is not who he seems to be are the ingredients of James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge's murder mystery published by Headline in 2007
The past year has seen some long-heralded novels released, some near-forgotten classics re-released, and some surprisingly good efforts by new authors.
The Game by Derek Armstrong is a darkly comic take on reality TV that's full of twists, turns, and the occasional snake. Kellerman's Obsession is also interesting.
A Plague of Secrets is a solid crime novel that fails to meet Lescroart's criteria of having a human theme that exceeds the crime theme and an effective surprise ending.
Mary Higgins-Clark has earned the title of America's Queen of Suspense. Her books are world-wide bestsellers, selling over 85 million copies in the United States.
In an exclusive interview with Suite101, Christofferson shares her lessons on how everyone can play a role in protecting national parks and wildlife.
Goodkind's latest novel is a thriller-fantasy that may please die-hard fans but won't delight mainstream thriller devotees.
Alan Furst's The Spies of Warsaw details the spy vs. spy atmosphere in the salons and cafes of late-1930s Warsaw, where facts are unreliable and intentions inscrutable.
Grant McKenzie's thriller Switch hits UK bookstores on 2 July 2009. The Bookseller calls it a 'wonderfully devious' novel. The author talks crime and inspiration.


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