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My
Favorite Books Published in 2025 With the end of 2025 dangling on the horizon, it is time
to look at the best of the best of all the terrific mystery fiction published
during the year. My survey of the genre, of course, is limited to what I read
with my own eyes. And truthfully my reading faltered not long after mid-year
for a couple reasons I’ve explained in earlier posts. So this is a favorites
list rather than a best list. And I tell you, I read some dandy
tales in 2025. My only regret: I wish I had read more! So… without anymore
wrangling, here are my five favorite mystery books published in 2025. The list
is ordered by publication date. |
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THE MAILMAN – Andrew Welsh-Huggins (Mysterious Press / Jan. 28). This first installment in a new series
by the author of the Andy Hayes, P.I. books, is a full-throttled thriller
with action, violence, and plotting so good it is a shame it had to end. In
my review I wrote: “The Mailman is a nail-biting escapist
thriller with twists and whirls and everything else the genre promises. It’s
damn fun, too.” Read the
review here. |
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GALWAY’S EDGE – Ken Bruen
(Mysterious Press /
Mar. 4). Bruen’s final novel, and the eighteenth entry in his
Jack Taylor series, is a moody gash of humanity—the beauty and ugliness are rendered
with an expert hand and a melancholy sort of acceptance. As I wrote in my
review: “Galway’s Edge is, as is Ken Bruen, the real
deal—interesting, thought-provoking, and in equal parts ugly and redemptive.”
Ken Bruen died on March
29, a few weeks after Galway’s Edge was released in the U.S. His voice
will be sorely missed, but his work will resonate for decades more. Read the review here. |
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In a word, Skin and Bones is terrific! Read the
review here.
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MARGUERITE BY THE LAKE – Mary Dixie Carter (Minotaur / May 20).
This psychological thriller is a suspenseful novel in the mold of Daphne du
Maurier’s gothic masterpiece, Rebecca. But it is more than simply
an homage: it is original, clever, and spell-binding. As I wrote in my
review: “[The] unreliable narration—made so by her own paranoia and guilt—is
taut with suspense and infused with a teetering madness that makes it both
terrifying and fascinating…. Marguerite by the Lake is a splendid
and inventive thriller, and it is hands down the best book I’ve read so far
this year.” And it still just may be my favorite book from 2025. Read the review here. |
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PHOTOGRAPH – Brian Freeman (Blackstone / Oct. 7). Freeman is a master at weaving the
supernatural into the mainstream thriller form, and Photograph—which features
a Daytona Beach P.I., Shannon Wells—is no exception. As I wrote in my review:
“The action is lively: there are gunfights, tightly ratcheted tension, and
surprise after twisty surprise. While the concept is big and (some might say)
over-the-top, Freeman’s clever plotting, his attention to detail, and his
likable heroine smooth Photograph into a nail-biting,
exciting, and caffeinated literary treat.” Read the review here. |
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HONORABLE
MENTIONS: Ceylon
Sapphires, by Mailan Doquang (Mysterious Press / June 3); and a special
shout-out for two novelettes—“BAE-I” and “Room E-36”—written by Douglas
Corleone. |
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1 comment:
Good picks. Keep up the great reviews in 2026. Cheers!
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