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The End of Everything
Megan Abbott (Little, Brown/Reagan Arthur)
This psychological thriller charts the friendship of two 13-year-old girls in pre-cellphone suburban America, one of whom disappears a few weeks before their eighth-grade graduation.

PW review
Girls on Top: Megan Abbott
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Started Early, Took My Dog
Kate Atkinson (Little, Brown/Reagan Arthur)
Semiretired PI Jackson Brody returns to his Yorkshire hometown to trace the biological parents of a woman adopted in the 1970s, but finds only questions in this intensely plotted, multilayered novel.

PW review
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
Kate Atkinson's Gumshoe Develops a Taste for Poetry
The Making of a Heroine: PW Talks with Kate Atkinson
Started Early, Took My Dog
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Revenger
Rory Clements (Bantam)
John Shakespeare, the playwright's older brother and spy, seeks the truth behind the mysterious disappearance of the colonists of Roanoke, Va., in this first-rate Tudor historical full of intricate plots.

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Shakespeare's More Prosaic Elder Brother: PW Talks with Rory Clements
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Hurt Machine
Reed Farrell Coleman (Tyrus)
Razor-edged contemporary whodunits don't get much better than Coleman's seventh Moe Prager mystery, in which the Brooklyn PI, recently diagnosed with cancer, looks into the stabbing murder of his ex-wife's estranged sister.

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A Simple Act of Violence
R.J. Ellory (Overlook)
A must-read for noir fans, this crime thriller charts the efforts of Det. Robert Miller to catch a serial killer strangling women in an upscale Washington, D.C., neighborhood.

PW review
The Candlemoth Stands Alone: PW Talks with R.J. Ellory
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Field Gray
Philip Kerr (Putnam/Marian Wood)
Set in 1954 with flashbacks to the 1930s and '40s, Kerr's outstanding seventh Bernie Gunther novel finds the tough, wisecracking Berlin cop under interrogation by the U.S. authorities for his role in saving the life of the future East German spy master, the real-life Erich Mielke.

PW review
Have Gunther, Will Unravel: PW Talks with Philip Kerr
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The Most Dangerous Thing
Laura Lippman (Morrow)
Childhood friends, long since splintered off, uneasily reunite after the death of one of their own, in this unsettling stand-alone from Lippman, who sets the action in the Baltimore suburb where she grew up.

PW review
Lady Baltimore
Topical Crimes
PW Talks to Laura Lippman
You Can Go Home Again: PW Talks with Laura Lippman
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A Trick of the Light
Louise Penny (Minotaur)
Chief Inspector Gamache of the Québec Sûreté and his team look into the mysterious death of a woman—found with a broken neck in the garden of artist Clara Morrow—in this subtle seventh entry in this acclaimed traditional series.

PW review
Good Fortune Leads to Great Crime
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Two for Sorrow
Nicola Upson (Harper)
Upson upsets readers' expectations with a surprise three-quarters into her psychologically rich third Josephine Tey mystery, in which the author of The Daughter of Time draws inspiration for her novel-in-progress from the 1903 execution of two women convicted for murdering babies.

PW review
A Cup of Tey: PW Talks with Nicola Upson
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