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        <title>
            <![CDATA[ Frontlist | 15 best books to read for Halloween 2020 ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/public/15-best-books-to-read-for-halloween-2020 ]]>
        </link>
        <description>
            <![CDATA[ As the weather gets colder and the days darker, now’s the time to crack out a good crime story.

Here’s our pick of the best, from old favourites to recent releases.
<h2>Bad Penny Blues by Cathi Unsworth</h2>
<h3>Strange Attractor Press, out end of November</h3>
The queen of dark crime fiction moves to independent publishers Strange Attractor, who will publish her back catalogue starting with this addictive tale of murder in 1960s Soho.
<h2>Snow by John Banville</h2>
Banville finally shrugs off his Benjamin Black persona with this snowbound 1950s-set story about an Anglo-Irish detective sent to investigate a murder in Wexford.
<h2>Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo</h2>
YA sensation Bardugo’s first adult novel is an expertly constructed blend of fantasy and crime in which Galaxy “Alex” Stern tries to outrun her grim past while investigating a series of murders.
<h2>Heaven My Home by Attica Locke</h2>
In American crime star Locke’s latest novel black Texas Ranger Darren Matthews grapples with recent politics and the distant past when a white supremacist’s child goes missing.
<h2>DS Alexandra Cupidi series by William Shaw</h2>
If you haven’t read any William Shaw before start immediately. His present-day Alexandra Cupidi books are set in the bleak landscape of Dungeness and rarely put a foot wrong.
<h2>After the Silence by Louise O’Neill</h2>
The versatile O’Neill turns her hand to crime fiction with this impressive and atmospheric story of buried crimes and coercive control set on a remote island of the coast of Ireland.
<h2>The Stranger by Simon Conway</h2>
Conway is the master of the modern thriller. His latest finds MI6 operative Jude Lyon caught up in a dangerous game of cat and mouse. A taut, tight tale of divided loyalties.
<h2>Bloody Valentine by John Williams</h2>
Williams’ true crime classic about Lynette White’s 1988 murder is both a clever probe into a possible miscarriage of justice and a detailed picture of a vanished community. Only available second hand.
<h2>The Lies You Told by Harriet Tyce</h2>
Ex-barrister Tyce’s second novel is both a cleverly plotted story of revenge and an acerbic take-down of private school culture in which mother Sadie struggles to adjust to her daughter’s new school.
<h2>Bobby March Will Live Forever by Alan Parks</h2>
Parks’ 1970s-set Glaswegian novels make for bleakly addictive reading. His latest finds Harry McCoy caught up in the case of a missing teen.
<h2>Gaudy Night by Dorothy L Sayers</h2>
The second in Sayers’ classic Harriet Vane/ Peter Wimsey crime novels. The novelist returns to her former Oxford College and is caught up in a poison pen messages scandal.
<h2>These Women by Ivy Pochoda</h2>
Pochoda’s new novel is a well-plotted murder mystery and a smart dissection of the way in which society treats women. A haunting read but a quite brilliant one.
<h2>The Seven Doors by Agnes Ravatn</h2>
Ravatn’s nightmarish second novel confirms her as one of the stars of Norwegian crime fiction. A simple plot evolves into a tense and unnerving story of loss and grief.
<h2>A Ruined Girl by Kate Simants</h2>
Simants’ beautifully written crime novel <em>A Ruined Girl</em> follows the fall-out from a missing person case and tackles the failings in the care system. An addictive story with a solid twist.
<h2>Dead Fashion Girl by Fred Vermorel</h2>
A true crime tale mixes memoir, investigation and reconstructionto unpick the morality of a very different time. It focuses on the unsolved 1954 murder of Jean Mary Townsend.

&nbsp; ]]>
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        <language>en</language>
        <pubDate>Thu, 10 29, 2020 11:51 am</pubDate>
        <item>
            <title>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist | 15 best books to read for Halloween 2020 ]]>
            </title>
            <link><![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/public/15-best-books-to-read-for-halloween-2020 ]]></link>
            <description>
                <![CDATA[ As the weather gets colder and the days darker, now’s the time to crack out a good crime story.

Here’s our pick of the best, from old favourites to recent releases.
<h2>Bad Penny Blues by Cathi Unsworth</h2>
<h3>Strange Attractor Press, out end of November</h3>
The queen of dark crime fiction moves to independent publishers Strange Attractor, who will publish her back catalogue starting with this addictive tale of murder in 1960s Soho.
<h2>Snow by John Banville</h2>
Banville finally shrugs off his Benjamin Black persona with this snowbound 1950s-set story about an Anglo-Irish detective sent to investigate a murder in Wexford.
<h2>Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo</h2>
YA sensation Bardugo’s first adult novel is an expertly constructed blend of fantasy and crime in which Galaxy “Alex” Stern tries to outrun her grim past while investigating a series of murders.
<h2>Heaven My Home by Attica Locke</h2>
In American crime star Locke’s latest novel black Texas Ranger Darren Matthews grapples with recent politics and the distant past when a white supremacist’s child goes missing.
<h2>DS Alexandra Cupidi series by William Shaw</h2>
If you haven’t read any William Shaw before start immediately. His present-day Alexandra Cupidi books are set in the bleak landscape of Dungeness and rarely put a foot wrong.
<h2>After the Silence by Louise O’Neill</h2>
The versatile O’Neill turns her hand to crime fiction with this impressive and atmospheric story of buried crimes and coercive control set on a remote island of the coast of Ireland.
<h2>The Stranger by Simon Conway</h2>
Conway is the master of the modern thriller. His latest finds MI6 operative Jude Lyon caught up in a dangerous game of cat and mouse. A taut, tight tale of divided loyalties.
<h2>Bloody Valentine by John Williams</h2>
Williams’ true crime classic about Lynette White’s 1988 murder is both a clever probe into a possible miscarriage of justice and a detailed picture of a vanished community. Only available second hand.
<h2>The Lies You Told by Harriet Tyce</h2>
Ex-barrister Tyce’s second novel is both a cleverly plotted story of revenge and an acerbic take-down of private school culture in which mother Sadie struggles to adjust to her daughter’s new school.
<h2>Bobby March Will Live Forever by Alan Parks</h2>
Parks’ 1970s-set Glaswegian novels make for bleakly addictive reading. His latest finds Harry McCoy caught up in the case of a missing teen.
<h2>Gaudy Night by Dorothy L Sayers</h2>
The second in Sayers’ classic Harriet Vane/ Peter Wimsey crime novels. The novelist returns to her former Oxford College and is caught up in a poison pen messages scandal.
<h2>These Women by Ivy Pochoda</h2>
Pochoda’s new novel is a well-plotted murder mystery and a smart dissection of the way in which society treats women. A haunting read but a quite brilliant one.
<h2>The Seven Doors by Agnes Ravatn</h2>
Ravatn’s nightmarish second novel confirms her as one of the stars of Norwegian crime fiction. A simple plot evolves into a tense and unnerving story of loss and grief.
<h2>A Ruined Girl by Kate Simants</h2>
Simants’ beautifully written crime novel <em>A Ruined Girl</em> follows the fall-out from a missing person case and tackles the failings in the care system. An addictive story with a solid twist.
<h2>Dead Fashion Girl by Fred Vermorel</h2>
A true crime tale mixes memoir, investigation and reconstructionto unpick the morality of a very different time. It focuses on the unsolved 1954 murder of Jean Mary Townsend.

&nbsp; ]]>
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                <![CDATA[ Frontlist ]]>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 10 29, 2020 11:51 am</pubDate>
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