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Our 10 Favorite Crime Novels

Which sleuths made the cut? We pick the best detective fiction for your summer reading list.

 

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1. The Long Goodbye, Raymond Chandler: Philip Marlowe has no serious competition as the quintessential hardboiled private eye. Here he travels through a Los Angeles where nothing—or at least anything good—is what it seems.

2. Double Indemnity, James M. Cain: You'll never look at insurance salesmen quite the same. Pull down the shades, pull up the covers and don't plan on getting any sleep.

3. They Don't Dance Much, James Ross: In and out of print since it was first published in 1940, this blistering novel about a rural Carolina roadhouse with a dance floor is packed with enough desperate characters to make murder merely inevitable, but no less horrifying.

4. Red Harvest, Dashiell Hammett: Hammett's nameless detective, the Continental Op, sets off a war among the thugs who rule a mining town. The inspiration for Kurosawa's Yojimbo.

5. A Rage in Harlem, Chester Himes: The author has barely introduced his two Harlem police detectives, Coffin Ed Johnson and Gravedigger Jones before one of them gets acid thrown in his face. From there it just gets uglier.

6. The Killer Inside Me, Jim Thompson: A murderous, psychopathic small-town sheriff with a corny sense of humor. Hijinks and mayhem ensue.

7. The Hunter, Richard Stark (Donald E. Westlake): Parker, a professional criminal, goes on a rampage to get paid. A frightening, admirable man.

8. The Doorbell Rang, Rex Stout: Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin never met a case they couldn't solve, not even when they take on the FBI.

9. Chinaman's Chance, Ross Thomas: Funny and cynical, detectives Durant and Wu plow through a case involving a missing blonde, a million-dollar con game and enough memorable bad guys to populate five other books.

10. Laidlaw, William McIlvanney: A hard-drinking Glasgow detective investigates the brutal assault and murder of a young girl.

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: GeorgiaGirl @ 08/07/2009 3:15:22 PM

    Yes, reading the list, I, too, was struck by the fact it listed only male authors. A novel does not have to be testosterone-drenched to be a "favorite". Authors I have enjoyed include Agatha Christie, Anne Perry, Dorothy Sayers, P. D. James, and Ellis Peters. Alexander McCall Smith is male, however, his No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency series is a favorite of mine; sleuth Precious Ramotswe is strong, resourceful, endearing, and interesting. These books are set in Botswana, which is a colorful, exotic world for the reader to experience.

  • Posted By: tchurt @ 08/07/2009 1:05:41 PM

    If you haven't read Dark and Bloodt Ground by Darcy O'Brien, check it out, it is a good read. It covers a crime spree, involving murder and burglary, from Florida to eastern Kentucky. Mr. O'Brien does a great job bringing the characters to life.

  • Posted By: megz1285 @ 08/06/2009 2:54:08 PM

    How is "In Cold Blood" not on this list?

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