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The End Game by Gerrie Ferris Finger: winner of the Malice Domestic Best First Traditional Mystery Novel competition, or so the cover tells us. The award might have a cumbersome name, but it does indicate that this crime novel set in Atlanta and following an ex-cops investigation into missing children, is sure to be a page turner, but not one with gratuitous violence and sex. (That's the traditional part).
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American Subversive by David Goodwillie: Set in contemporary New York City and exploring ideas of American culture in the face of domestic terrorism. A bomb goes off in a NY building, a blogger investigates in a book that Kirkus has called "[A] smart, edgy, suspenseful first novel". The author's previous book Seemed like a good idea at the time is a memoir, which also prominently features life in NYC.
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Brown Dwarf by K.D. Miller: this slim, unassuming looking title is part mystery, part psychological drama. Set in 1960s Hamilton, it explores the relationship between two women, one a well know mystery author, as they pursue a serial killer thought to be hiding in their area.
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