Recommend me a good...
 

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[Closed] Recommend me a good crime/thriller fiction author/book

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I don't read as much I'd like to but having read all the Andy McNab / Chris Ryan books and many non-fiction modern war books, I'd like to try some crime/thriller books. I enjoy prog's like Luther, Whitechapel etc. and would like a decent read that's not too epic. Can you recommend a decent author/book?


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:25 pm
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Ian Rankin's Rebus books are ace.

Though if you've not read 'em, I'd have a go at the original Sherlock Holmes as well.
Great stories and a window into another time.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:27 pm
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I like David Baldacci books...


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:30 pm
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Complicity by Iain Banks. One of my all time favourite books.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:33 pm
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rankin + 1

he's written plenty to keep you going for a while.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:33 pm
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Lee Child and Vince Flyn are both goof IMO.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:34 pm
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Try 'The Winter Queen' by Boris Akunin. It's set in the 1870's and concerns the exploits of a Russian Police Officer (of sorts) named Erast Fandorin. Clever, fun and not too taxing.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:34 pm
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Chris kuzneski ,reading Death Relic at the moment.

http://www.chriskuzneski.com/


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:34 pm
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Anything by Elmore Leonard, short stories, excellent plots and chracters.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:51 pm
 akak
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Certainly Sherlock Holmes, I also liked girl with the dragon tattoo but the sequels not so much.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:54 pm
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Not exactly what you were asking for, but the last series of books that gripped my imagination were the Bernard Cornwell's 'Saxon' stories.

The description of viking battles (and approach to battle) should appeal to you if you liked the Chris Ryan/Andy McNab books, but they are much more bloody and gruesome!


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:55 pm
 kilo
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anything by Stuart Mcbride


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 8:57 pm
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Michael Connelly. Lee Child's are further removed from literature but thoroughly gripping.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:01 pm
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Connelly's great, as is Rankin, but both need a fair bit of commitment compared to the Ryan/McNab books.

Lee Child provides instant gratification and lots of action, with decent characters and writing.

I'd give one of the Lee Child books a go, writing is probably a good cut above Ryan/McNab.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:13 pm
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Tom Cain and duncan falconer are same as Ryan and mcnab etc.
The Bourne books are good and there's a good few of them.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:15 pm
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There are options ^ up there for sure but is anyone aware of a website (not trying to selling you anything) that works along the lines of "if you like reading this.... you might want to try this...."


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:19 pm
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The Harry Bosch series by Michael Connelly

The Elvis Cole series by Robert Crais.

The first is the better written and the second has the higher body count.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:23 pm
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lee child/David Baldacci as mentioned
Robert Ludlum (of bourne fame) but the covert one series
Just read C.J Box "nowhere to run" It was really good I'll try more of his
Jason Pinter. Start with "The Mark" then "the Guilt"
Peter James Roy Grace series start with "Dead Simple" Policeman based in brighton, really good reads
Linwood Barclay is good as well


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:35 pm
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Jo Nesbo . Make sure you read them in the correct order though as they all sort of link together.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:41 pm
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nick great thread mate ,going to read some of these myself 😀


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:47 pm
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Crikey, just logged back on and loads of replies thanks all. I shall take a look at these on amazon and see what takes my fancy.

I'm more of a magazine kinda reader so books have to grab me quickly to keep me interested. I'm a bit of a simple soul when it comes to books, I like the Ryan/McNab books as they don't require too much brain power, have plenty of action and I can pick them up for a quick read here and there and be kept interested enough to read through them.

Anything along a similar vain would be good. Cheers once again.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:48 pm
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I really enjoyed "The Penal Colony" by Richard Herley which was recommended on here as a free Kindle download.

Otherwise if you have never read Flashman by GMF do so - a great treat instore.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:54 pm
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[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Wambaugh ]Joseph Wambaugh [/url]is a bit of a genius.
Does both fiction and non fiction, both great.

The Dangerous Davies novels by Leslie Thomas are well worth a read.

Oh, and anything by Ed McBain.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:54 pm
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James Patterson (Alex Cross books not womens club)and Lee childs I would say- not heavy and move quite quickly
I would go in the charity stores - pick them up for under £1 and its a good cause


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:55 pm
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I'll reiterate what others above have said, Lee Child is your man!


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:56 pm
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There's a fair number of Sherlock Homes, Lee Child and Ian Rankin Rebus books when browsing those series/authors - any particular stand out books in each of these to look out for?

Good idea on charity shop pop larkin plenty in town will go searching!


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 9:58 pm
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I'll 2nd the James Patterson 'Alex Cross' books but my faves are the Nelson Demille 'John Corey' ones. Start with 'Plum Island' & go from there. Proper New York cop black humour.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:01 pm
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I just started reading Agatha Christie "and there was one"

Quite good.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:03 pm
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Anything by jo nesbo, stieg larsson, andrew taylor, and bernard cornwell for historical fiction works for me, lee child too.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:18 pm
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Another vote for Michael Connelly - I'd never heard of him, but was given about 6 of his books that someone else had finished with. Couldn't put them down, especially the Harry Bosch ones.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:24 pm
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right,

go and get Killing Floor by Lee Child
Its the first in the Jack Reacher series
If you don't love it from what you've said you like I'll be staggered


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:34 pm
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Broaden your horizons and try Alexander McCall Smith.. lovely books.. 🙂


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:35 pm
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If you like the McNab/Ryan books then give Scott Mariani's Ben Hope series a try. I have just finished them, good books, hard to put down at times. I'm just about to start Duncan Falconers fiction series, read his factual book First in to Action many years ago when it first came out, and recall it was better writen and more believable than B20 and Immediate Action.

Also consider Steve Berry's Cotton Malone series, these are a little heavier than McNab/Ryan but still a good relatively light read, all have some historic mystery element to the story kinda like Da Vinci Code.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:38 pm
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right,

go and get Killing Floor by Lee Child
Its the first in the Jack Reacher series
If you don't love it from what you've said you like I'll be staggered

+1

Though you don't really have to worry about reading out of sequence, they all stand alone just fine. And there are millions of them!


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:41 pm
 Bear
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just found cj box myself too and he is very good. Read most of the above mentioned authors.

But really like James Lee Burke who should keep you going for a while.

Although I think a lot of thriller writers have a similar flawed hero as the centrpeice.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 10:56 pm
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Some of my favourtie series are, I like travelling through reading, are

Connelly - Bosch & the Lawyer ones - Los Angeles
Donna Leon - Brunetti - Venice
Michael Dibdin - Zen novels, all over Italy, can be a bit whacky.
James Lee Burke - Robicheaux - New Orleans and Louisana
Nesbo - Hole - Oslo
Rankin - Rebus - Edinburgh
Robert B Parker - Spenser - Boston
Mankell - Wallender - Ystad

James Elroy, Elmore Leonard and George V Higgins are also worth reading. Carl Hiassen for a comic thriller.

Others from late 20th century:
Simenon - Maigret - Paris
Freeling - van der Valk - Amsterdam
van de Wetering - A trio of Police Officers - Amsterdam
Ed McBain - 87th Precinct - New York

The Classics:
Sherlock Holmes, Dashiel Hammett's novels, Raymond Chandler's, James M Cain's, Chesterton's Father Brown etc.

I could go on and on.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 11:00 pm
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Michael Marshall, Jeff Abbott, Mark Billingham. Also a fan of Michael Connelly and David Baldacci. Michael Marshall - 'Blood of angels' is fantastic but the backstory from the prequels helps.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 11:22 pm
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For real "old school" thriller try Alistair McLean (Ice Station Zebra, etc.) Robert Ludlum is no good after a couple of beers as the plots are so convoluted


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 11:29 pm
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I tried an Ian Rankin Rebus book and found it really boring. I'm more a fan of the easy full of action stuff like Lee Childs Reacher books.

Have you read Stieg Larssons Millenium Trilogy? Well worth a read.


 
Posted : 04/03/2012 11:42 pm
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Carl Hiaasen - he's written a series of books which are all one-offs, but are all set in the same area (Florida) and feature many of the same characters, often the main character in one will feature as a very minor character in another, so when you read a few you recognise the events of another book going on in the background.

They're all crime/investigative type thrillers, although perhaps 'thriller' isn't the right word, very much filled with cynical black humour though. The general background for the books is corrupt politicians/businessmen/rednecks causing environmental damage, and someone out to stop them.

Very, very funny books with a crime theme, highly recommended.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 12:42 am
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Ian Rankin and Lee Child is what the missus reads she has loads of them so I can only assume they must be good.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 12:59 am
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Red Dragon by Thomas Harris

It was described by James Ellroy as "the greatest suspense novel ever written"

Ellroy wrote the first of the Lloyd Hopkins books then read Red Dragon, he went on to write two more books as he said that Red Dragon was so far a head of anything else ever written in the genre that it made his book look like shit and he had to write two more in an attempt to do himself justice.

`Tis very good indeed.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 1:05 am
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Glad I posted this thread now, some really good recommendations thanks all. I'm going to give Killing Floor by Lee Child a go first as his books have come up more than most.

On a side note, just finished Sniper One by Sgt Dan Mills if anyone fancies a really good modern war non-fiction read http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0141029013/ref=asc_df_01410290136853249?smid=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE&tag=googlecouk06-21&linkCode=asn&creative=22206&creativeASIN=0141029013

We should start a book swap on here!?


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 8:08 am
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Sherlock's definitely worth it. I got the complete set on amazon for bugger all (I think they're all free now though on download) which is great... but 1300 pages long so it's a sod to read when in the bath/dropping the kids off at the pool.

I've read a couple of Reginald Hill - Dalziel and Pascoe - and was very impressed.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 8:16 am
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Can't really go wrong with the Lee Child/Reacher books
Pulp fiction at its very best


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 8:25 am
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Another great STW book thread.......my NY resolution only to read fiction in 2012 is going swimmingly. Have settled on great crime fiction as the sweet spot between fine literature and cant-put-downability.

Raymond Chandler - The Long Goodbye, The Big Sleep - Think Humphrey Bogarde.
James Ellroy - Read the LA detective novels, it's basically like watching an extended "LA Confidential", one of my favourite movies. Just finished The Black Dahlia, now onto The Big Nowhere.
Elmore Leonard - They are all brilliant, no-one paints funny/sleazy Americana like him. Get Shorty a good start point, as is Killshot. Gangsters, cops, low-lifes.

For true crime you must MUST read David Simon, Homicide. He camped out with the Baltimore Police Department Homicide Detectives for a year, wrote this incredible piece of reportage, then went and made The Wire. Tremendous book, I've read it twice in a year.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 8:39 am
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Not crime as such but if you want someting with humour give Chris Brookmyre a go. Easy reading with a great sense of humour, but it helps if you understand west of Scotland prejudices and language. A good place to start is The Sacred Art of Stealing about Dadaist bank robbers.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 8:47 am
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I was about to say Brookmyre too. A bunch of them sort-of follow on from each other; A Big Boy Did It And Ran Away is the first in a loose series that includes Sacred Art... - I'd advise reading that one first.

If you fancy something with a slight supernatural bent, Mike Carey's Felix Castor novels are ace.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 8:53 am
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If you like Elmore Leonard, you should read George V Higgins, who he credits as his biggest influence - it's where the dialogue comes from. "Friends of Eddie Coyle" is a good start and generally most highly regarded.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 9:03 am
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If you like true crime, In Cold Blood by Truman Capote is well worth a pop.

Stunning book by a very interesting character.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 10:52 am
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If you like Elmore Leonard, you should read George V Higgins, who he credits as his biggest influence - it's where the dialogue comes from. "Friends of Eddie Coyle" is a good start and generally most highly regarded.

mefty, as a long time EL fan I have to be pedantic and point out this this is not quite right as Higgins first book Eddie Coyle wasn't published till 1970 and Leonard has been writing awesome dialogue since 1950. Leonard did rate Eddie Coyle highly though.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 10:55 am
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Jo Nesbo . Make sure you read them in the correct order though as they all sort of link together.

Just finishing off The Redeemer having read all the previous from The Redbreast(first 2 weren't available on Kindle) and can't wait to start on The Snowman.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 10:58 am
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[url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Relentless-Simon-Kernick/dp/0552153125/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1330946294&sr=8-1 ]Relentless by Simon Kernick[/url], you won't be able to put it down.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 11:20 am
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As you seem to like gritty London-type stuff (Whitechapel and Luther you mentioned), try Ordinary Thunderstorms by William Boyd. I thought it was excellent and have since read loads of his other books - very diverse themes, but OT will float your boat I hope.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 11:23 am
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Elmore Leonard's forward to the Friends of Eddie Coyle, I agree they overlapped but Higgins's ability to do dialogue heavily influenced Leonard as he says himself.

Introduction
In the winter of 1972 my agent at the time, H. N. Swanson in Hollywood, called to ask if I’d read a recently published novel called THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE. I told him I hadn’t heard of it and he said, “This is your kind of stuff, kiddo, run out and get it before you write another word.” Swanie was a legend in the movie business having represented F. Scott Fitzgerald, Raymond Chandler, and James M. Cain. I did what I was told, bought the book, opened to the first page and read: “Jackie Brown at twenty-six, with no expression on his face, said that he could get some guns.”
I finished the book in one sitting and felt as if I’d been set free. So this is how you do it.
The reviews were all raves. Joe McGinnes in THE NEW YORK TIMES said that George Higgins has “given us the most penetrating glimpse yet into what seems the real world of crime – a world of stale beer smells . . . and pale unnourished little men who do what they have to do to get along.”
Walter Clemons in NEWSWEEK said EDDIE COYLE “isn’t a thriller (though it is – stunningly – that) so much as a highly specialized novel of manners.”
The review in THE NEW YORKER nailed it in the opening paragraph by listing these friends of Coyle – the man himself described as “a small fish in the Boston underworld” – the bank robbers Jimmy Scalisi and Artie Valantropo; the gun dealer Jackie Brown; Dillon the bartender, a character to keep your eye on; and a dealing T-man, Dave Foley. They’re the book. They reveal themselves not only by what they do, but also by the way they speak, their sounds establishing the attitude or style of the writing.
To me it was a revelation.
I was already writing in scenes, trying to move my plots with dialogue while keeping the voices relatively flat, understated. What I learned from George Higgins was to relax, not be so rigid in trying to make the prose sound like writing, to be more aware of rhythms of coarse speech and the use of obscenities. Most of all, George Higgins showed me how to get into scenes without wasting time, without setting up the scene, where the characters are and what they look like. In other words, hook the reader right away. I also realized that criminals can appear to be ordinary people and have some of the same concerns as the rest of us.
George Higgins learned all this on his own. He majored in English at Boston College, which was my major at the University of Detroit, another Jesuit school. Higgins went on to Stanford, he said “to learn how to write fiction,” which he found out “can’t be taught, but I didn’t know that then.” I left school to write Chevrolet ads and also failed to learn anything about writing. Higgins joined the Associated Press as a rewrite man, a step in the right direction referred to as “like toilet training.” He returned to Boston College for a law degree, got a jog as an assistant U.S. Attorney and loved it, meeting a parade of characters he would soon be using in his novels.

Still, getting published was tough. Along the way from Stanford to EDDIE COYLE, Higgins wrote as many as ten books that he either discarded or were rejected by publishers – perhaps for the same reason my first novel with a contemporary setting, THE BIG BOUNCE, was rejected by publishers and film producers eighty-four times in all, editors calling the book a “downer,” void of sympathetic characters – the same ones I’m writing about thirty years later. Higgin’s agent at the time of EDDIE COYLE read the manuscript, told him it was unsalable and dropped him. Let this be an inspiration to beginning writers discouraged by one rejection after another. If you believe you know what you’re doing, you have to give publishers time to catch up and catch on.
In the beginning, both Higgins and I had to put up with labels applied to our work, critics calling us the second coming of Raymond Chandler. At the time we first met, at the Harbourfront Reading in Toronto, George and I agreed that neither of us had come out of the Hammett-Chandler school of crime writing. My take on THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE, for example – which I’ve listed a number of times as the best crime novel ever written – makes THE MALTESE FALCON read like Nancy Drew. Our method in telling stories has always been grounded in authenticity based on background data, the way it is as well as the way such people speak. We also agreed that it’s best not to think too much about plot and begin to stew over where the story is going. Instead, rely on the characters to show you the way.
Five years after EDDIE COYLE, a NEW YORK TIMES review of one of my books said that I “often cannot resist a set piece – a lowbrow aria with a crazy kind of scatological poetry of its own – in the Higgins manner.” And that’s how you learn, by imitating.
Higgins has been called the Balzac of Boston while I’ve been labeled the Dickens of Detroit. We didn’t discuss it, so I’m not sure what George thought of his alliterative tag. What I wonder is who I’d be if I lived in Chicago.
George V. Higgins died on November 7, 1999, only days short of his sixtieth birthday. During the past twenty years or so his name and mine have appeared together in the press – often in the same sentence – some 178 times. I’m honored.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 11:57 am
 Bear
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Second William Boyd , excellent book.

Also Donald Harstad and Harlan Coben.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 1:38 pm
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Any book by JOHN GRISHAM,they are all great reads, and give british crime writer VAL McDERMID a try ,also THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE.this is a must see movie if you can dig it up


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 3:34 pm
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I agree with Nealy on relentless- it is a stonking book but you will read it in a weekend cus it is unputdownable.

Harlan Coben as well does some good stuff.


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 4:06 pm
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NICK you need a kindle with all these books lol 😀


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 9:10 pm
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Your not wrong foxski, not to mention the number of hours I will need to read them all. I've been v impressed with the response from everyone and now have plenty of literature to look at and choose from.

Still think a book swap would be good. Anyone want to swap Sniper One by Sgt Dan Mills for a Lee Child or Ian Rankin book?


 
Posted : 05/03/2012 9:29 pm
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I’ve just finished reading The Case of The Melted Fox on Amazon Kindle and highly recommend it. It’s a bit different – the main character (Jason Vann) is a walking talking Alsatian detective. That doesn’t mean it’s a book for the kids, though. An intriguing read by AJ Wolf, which is the first in The Chronicles of Jason Vann.

At seventy-something pages, it’s short, which is brilliant for when you just want a quick read. My interest was held throughout and I just had to get to the end.

Hope this helps 🙂


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 2:40 pm
 LsD
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Peter Temple
[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 3:56 pm
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I’ve just finished reading The Case of The Melted Fox

Out of interest, how long did it take you to write it?


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 4:26 pm
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Agree Sherlock Holmes for a look into another age, and cheap to buy or free to download.

To me the greatest detective fiction writer of all time is Raymond Chandler. If you haven't tried you must Again, amazingly evocative of a past world - 1940's Hollywood in the case of Chandler and I think these are the birth of what we now call pulp fiction (just my opinion - I know nowt...)

Sadly he didn't write that much, so for a more modern substitute (albeit nowhere near as good) try Robert B Parker.

I will be trying a few from earlier posts myself. Thanks to all!


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 5:49 pm
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I highly recommend the Tempé Brennan books by Kathy Reiche, the books that spawned the [i]Bones[/i] tv series; highly readable, and great characterisation. William Gibson's recent trilogy, [i]Pattern Recognition, Spook Country, Zero History[/i], can reasonably be described as thrillers, and are a great read, and Neil Stephenson's latest, [i]Reamde[/i], is very similar. I'm reading it now on my phone and iPad, depending on where I am, and I'm loving it, gaming, Islamist terrorists, Russian gangsters, MI6, feisty females... I really, really recommend this book.


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 6:31 pm
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Falconers books were good and right up your alley if you like Ryan and mcnabb.

For a great war story read but not fiction read Sniper one. I really enjoyed this and it had a gripping account of the British sniper division in Iraq during a siege on their base. Well worth the read IMO.


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 8:57 pm
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Any thing by Simon Kernick, as above Relentless is brilliant


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 10:09 pm
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Everything by James Crumley, the successor to Raymond Chandler if that's possible.


 
Posted : 28/03/2012 10:24 pm