Last year I compared the best mysteries and thrillers to
phyllo dough pastries as you never know what delicious treat is inside them. The best mysteries and thrillers of 2013
reminded me of a tasty appetizer I've made more times than I can remember. Brie
with Caramelized Cranberry Onion Chutney is a staple at all our family’s holiday
gatherings. The tangy sweet and sour taste of the cranberry onion chutney is a
wonderful counterpoint to the creaminess of the brie just as the combination of
evil juxtaposed with the sweetness of light trying to conquer it is in these
books. (As a New Year’s gift, the recipe appears at the end of this post as
well as in the incomparable Tastes and Tales Along the Tunnel of Trees Cookbook.)
The Best Mystery of 2013
How
the
Light Gets In by Louise Penny
The mystery's title is an homage to Leonard Cohen’s poem/song “Anthem” that states Ring the bells that still can ring, -- Forget
your perfect offering, -- There’s a crack in everything. – That’s how the light
gets in. Penny beautifully depicts
series hero Inspector Gamache’s evil boss Francour and the unspeakable horror
he tries to let loose in Quebec. Intertwined
plots involving the murder of the last surviving Ouellet quintuplet and more
intrigue behind the scenes in the town of Three Pines make this the
best in a long line of fabulous mysteries.
If you haven’t read any in the series, start at the beginning with Still Life so you’ll be able to savor
all the characters and understand how they've evolved. All you have to do is read one of these books
and you’ll want to move to Three Pines.
The Runner-Up:
The
Cutting Season by Attica Locke (published in 2012)
The
Cutting Season stirs up questions about slavery’s cruel past
while providing a chilling, atmospheric mystery. Caren and her young daughter
live on a historic Louisiana plantation where her mother cooked and her
ancestors were enslaved. She runs it as a wedding and event site for the
wealthy owners but a migrant worker’s murder at the edge of the property
threatens to derail her carefully composed life. This southern Gothic novel was
the first work published by Dennis LeHane’s new imprint.
The Best Suspense Novel I read in 2013
31
Hours by Masha Hamilton (published in 2009)
When 21-year-old Jonas’s mother wakes up in the middle of
the night she just knows that her son is in danger. Neither she nor his girlfriend
have heard from him and they can’t reach him. Should she call the police? Could
a good kid become a fanatic? Can the police find him and stop him in the next
31 hours? I held my breath for the last
fifty pages. Only someone with Hamilton’s Middle East knowledge could write a
story like this and make it so real and terrifying.
The Runner-Up:
The
Intercept by Dick Wolf (published December, 2012)
Wolf, the creator of TV’s “Law and Order” knocks it out
of the park with this suspense-filled thriller featuring two NYPD intelligence
officers trying to find a suspicious passenger who’s disappeared after a
terrorist incident on a jet over the Atlantic. With it set just before the Fourth of July and a dedication at Ground Zero,
readers will not be able to sleep as time runs out on the detectives in this Day of the Jackal-like thriller.
The Best Mystery/Historical Fiction I read in 2013
The
Gods of Gotham by Lyndsay Faye (published in 2012)
Gods
of Gotham is set in 1845 New York City
when Irish immigrants are flooding the city and anti-Catholic sentiments run
high. Timothy Wilde is a fledgling Cop (named for his copper star) in the newly
formed police department when a 12-year-old murder victim and a girl named Bird
lead him to an underground world with its own language. It’s extraordinary and
the good news is that Wilde is back in the sequel Seven for a Secret. This
is also a great book club choice.
The Best Psychological Thriller I read in 2013
Broken
Harbor by Tana French (published in 2012)
Two small children and their father are murdered in their
home in Broken Harbor, an abandoned, half-built “luxury” development outside
Dublin. Jenny, the mother, clings to life as Detective “Scorcher” Kennedy tries
to find clues in all the baby monitors, holes in the walls, and an unexplained
break in. But something bad happened to Scorcher’s family in Broken Harbor
years before and it might derail the investigation. French really knows how to
write psychological thrillers and this one with its look at how families can
disintegrate during a recession is no exception.
The Best Debut Mystery/Thriller of 2013
The
Guilty One by Lisa Ballantyne
Scottish author Ballantyne’s debut is a psychological
thriller for fans of Defending Jacob and
Tana French’s novels. When eight-year-old
Ben Stokes body is found in a playground outside London, his 11-year-old
neighbor, Sebastien, is charged with the crime.
Daniel, Sebastien’s lawyer, doesn’t know what to think of the brash
child and his edgy mother and irritating father but the case haunts him and
brings up his own troubled childhood. In alternating chapters Daniel’s past
with his foster mother, Minnie, is slowly revealed showing why Daniel has such
empathy for his client. When Sebastien’s
father hires a new lawyer and Daniel learns more about Minnie, the book soars. Minnie
is such a great character that I hope this will be made into a movie so I can “see”
her again. It’s a perfect choice for
book clubs as there’s so much to ponder.
The Best Mystery with Characters
We Rarely Encounter
Mission by
Peter Robertson
Mission is a traditional mystery with a unique setting and a compelling protagonist. After Tom, a Scottish expat, helps pull the body of a homeless man from the surging waters of Boulder Creek he attempts to find out why the man died and learns more about his own past. It’s a nuanced look at those we rarely see. A mystery that introduces realistic homeless characters alongside people from churches, libraries and an industry (no spoilers on the industry) we seldom encounter is cause for celebration.
Here’s the recipe. Find it
and many more in Tastes and Tales Alongthe Tunnel of Trees Cookbook available from bookstores and retailers in
northern Michigan.
Brie with Caramelized Cranberry Onion Chutney
Ingredients:
2
tablespoons butter, melted in a 10” skillet
1
medium onion, thinly sliced and quartered
1/2
cup dried cranberries, blueberries or cherries, chopped
1
tablespoon packed brown sugar
1
tablespoon white balsamic vinegar
Cooking
spray
1
round (15 ounces) Brie cheese
Unflavored
water crackers
· Melt butter over medium heat. Cook onion in butter for 10 minutes, stirring frequently. Stir in berries, brown sugar and vinegar. Cook an additional 5 minutes, stirring frequently until mixture thickens and caramelizes.
· Preheat oven to 350⁰ and spray an ovenproof glass or pottery tart or pie pan with cooking spray. Place cheese on center of pan. Bake uncovered 10 – 15 minutes or until cheese is soft.
Spoon cranberry and onion topping over
cheese. Serve with unflavored water
crackers.
The topping can be made up to 24 hours ahead
and covered and refrigerated. Reheat the topping in the microwave.