The Mystery, Crime, and Thriller Group discussion
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Why do you like mysteries?
My love affair with mysteries began when I was a child. I was given a set of the Nancy Drew Mysteries and they really excited me. I quickly learned to follow the clues and "finger" the suspect before the end of the book. My reading tastes have matured over the years and I now read a lot of authors like John Sandford, Jeffrey Deaver, Jonathan Kellerman, and James Lee Burke.



May I suggest the In Death series by J.D. Robb. Very spicy romance in those!

Like a number of others on this site my love of mysteries began with Nancy Drew and quickly expanded to Agatha Christie and Mary Roberts Reinhart. Like Hayes, I like order and the solving of a mystery puts things in order.
I also like the "why" of mysteries - why did they do it? Human nature is amazing and always interesting.
Finallly, I like to learn new things. Mysteries can be set in different time periods and different world locations expanding my knowledge of world culture and history and with all the new forensics techniques you can get a science education as well.
I also like the "why" of mysteries - why did they do it? Human nature is amazing and always interesting.
Finallly, I like to learn new things. Mysteries can be set in different time periods and different world locations expanding my knowledge of world culture and history and with all the new forensics techniques you can get a science education as well.
I loved Dick Francis' books for that reason too, Donna. I love horses and was fixated as a young girl, so his books were heaven to me. And then he started branching out into other fields, like photography and wine, and every time I felt I had learned something.



I used to read almost exclusively nonfiction. I didn't want to read plots and narratives, I wanted to learn information. Reality. I think my turn from nonfiction to escapist fiction and mysteries was a turn away from the horrors of the real world (largely, the Bush administration) and what felt like powerlessness to do anything about it. At the end of a mystery, the mystery gets solved. In a true crime, we find out who did it. Our sense of powerlessness in the face of the real world is mitigated.


I love everything about reading a mystery, the suspense, the unknown, the clues, the Red Herring.
I also enjoy the variety of plots and settings from all the different mystery writers...English setting from George, LA setting from Connelly, NY setting from Deaver etc.
Nothing better than a great mystery you can't put down!

The main reason I fell in love with them was my love of a good puzzle... a great mystery is one where I never see the ending coming or the author keeps my solutions twisting and turning.

And I'm not reading for the puzzle either. Mostly I like books that are ABOUT SOMETHING. It is one of the reasons I've never really enjoyed most contemporary novels. And why most literary novels just leave me cold. Which is why I read science fiction, paranormal, romance and yes, mysteries.
I received the Nancy Drew inoculation early on too, then Sherlock Holmes and took off from there. My mother loved mysteries, and we'd read them together when I was a kid.
Now I like a wide range of mysteries, from Harlan Coben to James Lee Burke to Jo Nesbo and Shirley Rousseau Murphy. I love reading the why, the reasons people do the things they do, their motivations.
Now I like a wide range of mysteries, from Harlan Coben to James Lee Burke to Jo Nesbo and Shirley Rousseau Murphy. I love reading the why, the reasons people do the things they do, their motivations.

I guess in a mystery there is a defining moment (dead person usually) that brings all sorts of people together. I enjoy the interplay/relationships between these people. I don't try to figure out 'who done it', though I often know before the end of the book. I'm just so darn comfortable with and loyal to the core mystery series that I buy.

Now I like a wide range ..."
I to started out with the Nnacy Drew books ,they evolved into Agatha Christy . I think we all have a little sherlock in our hearts.
Absolutely Carol, no doubt about it. I still haven't read all of Christie by a long shot, but I do love the Hercule Poirot film adaptations with David Suchet. Very well done.

I'm sorry I don't get to watch much tv, so I am unfamiliar with that series. Is it available I wonder on netflix?
carol (akittykat) wrote: "They are available from netflix added some to my queue. Thanks for the recommendation"
Oh good! Suchet is undoubtedly the best Poirot I have seen. Ever. They used to broadcast them on the local PBS station, I finally had to go out and buy a few of the sets. :)
Oh good! Suchet is undoubtedly the best Poirot I have seen. Ever. They used to broadcast them on the local PBS station, I finally had to go out and buy a few of the sets. :)
David Suchet also reads several of the Christie stories in audio book version - they are excellent readings (you can't imagine he has a voice other than Poirot's but he does it brilliantly).
Bernadette wrote: "David Suchet also reads several of the Christie stories in audio book version - they are excellent readings (you can't imagine he has a voice other than Poirot's but he does it brilliantly)."
LOL I haven't heard those, but was totally blown away when I happened on D.S. in another role. Egads! :)
LOL I haven't heard those, but was totally blown away when I happened on D.S. in another role. Egads! :)



very good actor like Poirot player by David Suchet, it's better for me because I can take a face on the person. Sometime it's another actor, but I prefer David Suchet So sometimes i need read a new time those book


I like them because it is a break from serious non fiction reading.There is suspense in it and there is a lot of rational thinking involved in solving the mystery and you get involved in the process as you proceed with the book.




Then, years later when I was in college, one of my history professors recommended reading Josephine Tey's Daughter of Time (which I am getting ready to re-read shortly) and explained how historical research was like a mystery - you follow the trail wherever it leads. I've been reading mysteries ever since.
Most of my research now is just legal research for work. But, even so, sometimes there is still a trail to follow.

1. I love puzzles-some of them are obviously more comples (or convoluted) than others but I enjoy it anyway. I want to see if I can catch something before the detective.
2. the bad guy gets caught-justice!
I started reading Nancy Drew as a youth and have found many authors in this genre that I enjoy since then.

I'll dust this thread off, but I'll change it a little:
Which kind of crime fiction do you prefer and what is it exactly that you love about it?
Which kind of crime fiction do you prefer and what is it exactly that you love about it?
I said in my original post that it is my desire for order in the world that sparks me to read mysteries.
I tend to the cozy variety, no sex and violence. I don't like blood and gore or grisly moments with psychotic serial killers.
I like my mysteries to be intelligent, with likable characters. A dose of humor is always good. I really loved this month's group read, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, for example. And I love Dorothy Sayers and Janet Evanovich.
I tend to the cozy variety, no sex and violence. I don't like blood and gore or grisly moments with psychotic serial killers.
I like my mysteries to be intelligent, with likable characters. A dose of humor is always good. I really loved this month's group read, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, for example. And I love Dorothy Sayers and Janet Evanovich.

I guess, Hayes, that I do read and enjoy some of the more violent ones, as I love Tess Gerritsen's Jane Rizzoli/Mara Isles series. It's not too bad, but I think it is definitely a step beyond the above reads. Val McDermid can have some rather more graphic parts, but really not too bad. McDermid's The Grave Tattoo was a great book with an old manuscript of William Wordsworth entwined into the mystery. Which brings me to another favorite type of mystery, the literary mystery. In fact the literary mystery and the historical fiction mystery are my two favorite types.
I too have the desire for order and a sense of right and wrong that probably draws me to mysteries plus I have always liked all sorts of puzzles and brain teasers.
While there really is no substitute for a good cosy and a cup of tea - especially when you are under the weather - like Kathy I do enjoy some of the more violent and psychologically challenging series but I am not to proud to admit that on occasion I skim pages here and there to get to the solution of what makes people tick.
In the last few years I have really enjoyed works by international authors which are now being translated into English. It is very interesting to me to see the world from another perspective.
While there really is no substitute for a good cosy and a cup of tea - especially when you are under the weather - like Kathy I do enjoy some of the more violent and psychologically challenging series but I am not to proud to admit that on occasion I skim pages here and there to get to the solution of what makes people tick.
In the last few years I have really enjoyed works by international authors which are now being translated into English. It is very interesting to me to see the world from another perspective.
I wonder what it is about the darker, violent stories that turns me off. I love the Russell-Holmes books, but King has written some other stand alones, Folly being my favorite (about woodworking, depression and madness) and is just splendid as well as being a really good mystery.
That's another thing I look for in a mystery, it has to be about something else as well. I loved Dick Francis' books for that reason, horses or photography or glassblowing was always mixed in with the story.
Keeping Watch is almost a sequel to Folly, but it was just too grisly for me (child terror). It was good, but just too dark.
That's another thing I look for in a mystery, it has to be about something else as well. I loved Dick Francis' books for that reason, horses or photography or glassblowing was always mixed in with the story.
Keeping Watch is almost a sequel to Folly, but it was just too grisly for me (child terror). It was good, but just too dark.

I have read a couple of King's stand alones and enjoyed them, The Art of Detection and Touchstone, but I haven't read Folly yet. I actually have it. I, also, shy away from child terror or crimes against children type of books. I just cringe at the thought of it. However, the first Adelia Aguilar book, Mistress of the Art of Death, does involve solving the mystery of missing and dead children. I was able to read that one and love the series, not sure why, but I did. Maybe because it was set in such the distant past.

I can't believe I haven't read her mysteries yet. Working on it.

Hi Scout, I read somewhere that mysteries increase in popularity during times of general difficulty, like the Great Depression or in wartime, because they allow conflicts to be resolved and order restored.

I live close to the Gulf coast, and the oil spill is so depressing.
Oh, Scout. The pictures I've seen are just so awful. Yet another blow to the Gulf, the ecosystem, the economy. Are they making headway with the new procedure?
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I love them because they appeal to my desire to have things in order (and I am so disorganized!). In the story there is chaos, and then someone comes along and puts everything right, the bad guy (or girl) gets caught and sent to prison and everyone lives happily ever after... well almost.
How about you? Why do you love them?