Monday, March 23, 2026

Spring in the Air, Books in the Bag



Incredible as this seems, The Rap Sheet will turn 20 years old in 2026. (Its actual “birth date” is May 22.) And throughout most of those two decades, I've assembled lists of forthcoming crime, mystery, and thriller releases to help readers choose what they should pick up next. Those started as just occasional lists, but they quickly evolved into quarterly offerings. Rarely since then have I failed to deliver my selections on schedule and at rather intimidating length. My fall 2025 rundown, for example, extended to more than 425 reading recommendations from both sides of the Atlantic.

But last summer I found I was desperately short of time and unable to post my usual seasonal selections. Then the computer crash I experienced at the end of 2025 put an end to my hope of compiling picks for the first three months of this year. I promised myself I would get back on track again come spring; yet here we are near the close of March, and my suggestions of which new books from our favorite genre deserve special attention remain incomplete.

Rather than wait any longer, I’ve decided to go with what I have so far: more than 200 works of note due out in the United States between now and the end of May. Those include fresh novels by headliners in the field such as Charles Todd, Tana French, Anthony Horowitz, Jane Harper, Vaseem Khan, Sujata Massey, John Katzenbach, and Michael Connelly, together with stories from less-familiar fictionists on the order of Nicola Whyte, Joshua Moehling, Libby Klein, Jeff Boyd, and A. Rae Dunlap. The next three months will deliver to bookshops the late Anne Perry’s Death Times Seven, her concluding case for attorney Daniel Pitt; Craig Johnson’s The Brothers McKay, his 22nd Sheriff Walt Longmire novel, inspired by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov; Murder and Acquisitions, “a gripping story of greed, rivalry, and revenge in the publishing industry” by veteran publisher Thomas Dunne; the third and last installment in Kim Sherwood’s Double O Trilogy, Hurricane Room, which imagines a perhaps “broken” James Bond joining his fellow British secret agents to head off a worldwide cyberattack; Alison Gaylin’s Booked, her latest lively yarn featuring Sunny Randall, Robert B. Parker’s other Boston private invetigator; and Michael Crichton’s never-before-published Tinseltown thriller, Murder in Hollywood.

Beyond all those, expect three more George Gross police procedurals by Tim Sullivan; Jordan Harper’s new portrayal of Los Angeles' criminal underbelly, A Violent Masterpiece; Mad Mabel, Sally Hepworth’s clever tale of a cantankerous 81-year-old woman with a “shady past,” who becomes entangled in her neighbor’s dubious demise; and Thomas Perry’s The Tree of Light and Flowers, the presumably final outing for trouble-tackling Native American “guide” Jane Whitfield (as that Edgar-winning author perished last September).

While I regret not including here my customary myriad listings of coming attractions from UK publishing houses, it cannot be helped. The time necessary to gather all of those as well might delay the posting of The Rap Sheet’s list until mid-April, when it would be signally less useful. I shall simply have to find another way, either through a separate compilation or perhaps by including more British titles in my “Revue of Reviewers” posts, to get the word out about near-future releases from the opposite side of the pond.

As it is, I suspect there are a few fine U.S.-published works of crime fiction absent from the lengthy catalogue below, which I shall endeavor to find and add in updates over the next two and a half months. (Please let me know in the Comments section at this post’s end if you are already aware of any I have missed.) For now, though, I invite you to explore the following 200-plus. Non-fiction works are marked here with asterisks (*); the rest are novels or short-story collections.

MARCH (U.S.):
Agatha Christie Seek-and-Find: Find Clues and Criminals in 20 Classic Mysteries! by Sarah Dvojack (Chronicle)
The Antique Hunter’s Murder at the Castle, by C. L. Miller (Atria)
A Bad, Bad Place, by Frances Crawford (Soho Crime)
The Baffle Book, by Lassiter Wren and Randle McKay (Penzler/American Mystery Classics)
Beatrice Ophelia Is Flickering Out, by Megan Gerig (Lamplighter)
The Best Little Motel in Texas, by Lyla Lane (Harper Perennial)
Bloodlust, by Sandra Brown (Grand Central)
The Boy in the Wall, by Jeffrey B. Burton (Severn House)
Buried in a Book, by T.C. LoTempio (Severn House)
Chaos Man, by Andrew Mayne (Thomas & Mercer)
A Crime Through Time, by Amelia Blackwell (Pan)
The Dark Time, by Nick Petrie (Putnam)
The Daughters, by Joanna Margaret (Mysterious Press)
A Day of Judgment, by Charles Todd (Mysterious Press)
A Defiant Woman, by Karen E. Olson (Pegasus Crime)
The Delivery, by Andrew Welsh-Huggins (Mysterious Press)
The Dreadfuls, by A. Rae Dunlap (Kensington)
The End of the Sahara, by Saïd Khatibi (Bitter Lemon Press)
Enemy of My Enemy, by Alex Segura (Hyperion Avenue)
Everyone in This Bank Is a Thief, by Benjamin Stevenson (Mariner)
Everything on Black, by F.T. Grant (Vigilante Crime & Pulp)
Felony Review: Tales of True Crime and Corruption in Chicago, by Randy E. Barnett (Encounter)*
Finlay Donovan Crosses the Line, by Elle Cosimano (Minotaur)
From the Dust, by David Swinson (Mulholland)
A Ghastly Catastrophe, by Deanna Raybourn (Berkley)
Girl in a Shroud / The Girl Who Was Possessed / The Lady is Available, by Carter Brown (Stark House Press)
A Good Person, by Kirsten King (Putnam)
A Grave Mistake, by Kate MacLean (Kate MacLean)
The Guilty Daughter, by Victoria Jenkins (Bookouture)
Hard Times, by Jeff Boyd (Flatiron)
The Harvey Girl, by Dana Stabenow (Head of Zeus/Aries)
The Hiding Season, by Ava Glass (Bantam)
I Came Back for You, by Kate White (Thomas & Mercer)
I Did Not Kill My Husband, by Linda Keir (Blackstone)
The Imposter, by Adriane Leigh (Podium)
Incidentals, by Sheila Yasmin Marikar (Little A)
The Jewish Policeman, by Jonathan Dunsky (Lion Cub)
Judge Stone, by Viola Davis and James Patterson (Little, Brown)
The Keeper, by Tana French (Viking)
Killing Me Softly, by Sandie Jones (Minotaur)
The Last Celebrity, by Madeleine Henry (Little A)
A Lie for a Lie, by Ren DeStefano (Berkley)
Missing, by E.A. Jackson (Atria/Emily Bestler)
Missing Sister, by Joshilyn Jackson (Morrow)
The Most Mysterious Bookshop in Paris, by Mark Pryor (Kensington)
Murder As a Fine Art, by Carol Carnac (Poisoned Pen Press)
My Grandfather, the Master Detective, by Masateru Konishi (Putnam)
Never Spar with a Viscount, by Lindsay Lovise (Forever)
No Good Deed, by Katherine Kovacic (Poisoned Pen Press)
The Perfect Girl, by Andy Maslen (Thomas & Mercer)
The Pie & Mash Detective Agency, by J. D. Brinkworth (Berkley)
A Place to Die For, by A.M. Strong and Sonya Sargent (Thomas & Mercer)
The Plans I Have for You, by Lai Sanders (Simon & Schuster)
The Politician, by Tim Sullivan
(Atlantic Crime)
The Primrose Murder Society, by Stacy Hackney (Morrow Paperbacks)
The Pryce of Fame, by Kari Bovée (Vinci)
Robbie McNeil’s Hit List, by Brianna Heath (Poisoned Pen Press)
Ruby Falls, by Gin Phillips (Atlantic Crime)
The Secret Lives of Murderers’ Wives, by Elizabeth Arnott (Berkley)
Served Him Right, by Lisa Unger (Park Row)
She Fell Away, by Lenore Nash (Atria/Emily Bestler)
Sisters in Yellow, by Mieko Kawakami (Knopf)
Society Women, by Adriane Leigh (Harper Perennial)
Sorry for Your Loss, by Georgia McVeigh (Dutton)
Stakeouts and Strollers, by Rob Phillips (Minotaur)
The Star from Calcutta, by Sujata Massey (Soho Crime)
Storm Warning, by Alice Henderson (Morrow)
Strange Buildings, by Uketsu (HarperVia)
Strangers in the Villa, by Robyn Harding (Grand Central)
The Survivor, by Andrew Reid (Minotaur)
The Tree of Light and Flowers, by Thomas Perry (Mysterious Press)
The Story of Marceau Miller, by Marceau Miller (Blackstone)
This Story Might Save Your Life, by Tiffany Crum (Pine & Cedar)
Two Kinds of Stranger, by Steve Cavanagh (Atria)
Vanished in the Crowd, by Rhys Bowen and Clare Broyles (Minotaur)
Vengeance in Venice, by Erica Ruth Neubauer (Kensington)
Want to Know a Secret? by Freida McFadden (Poisoned Pen Press)
What the Fields Saw, by Linda Norlander (Severn River)
Where the Truth Lies, by Katherine Greene (Crooked Lane)
Whidbey, by T. Kira Madden (Mariner)
Yesteryear, by Caro Claire Burke (Knopf)

APRIL (U.S.):
Agnes Sharp and the Wedding to Die For, by Leonie Swann
(Soho Crime)
All Them Dogs, by Djamel White (Riverhead)
The Architect of Deception, by Debbie Baldwin (Gatekeeper Press)
As Far as She Knew, by Diana Awad (Mindy’s Book Studio)
Brenda, by Samuel S. Taylor (Stark House Press)
The Caretaker, by Marcus Kliewer (Atria/Emily Bestler)
Cat on a Hot Tin Woof, by Spencer Quinn (Minotaur)
Cats Don’t Need Coffins, by Dolores Hitchens (Penzler/American Mystery Classics)
The Chambermaid’s Key, by Genevieve Graham (Simon & Schuster)
City of the Muse, by Kate Hilton
(Simon & Schuster)
Confessions of an Amateur Sleuth, by Lynn Cahoon (Kensington Cozies)
Countdown, by Sara Driscoll (Kensington)
A Cruise to Die For, by Heather
Graham (Mira)
Dark Hazard / The Quick Brown Fox, by W.R. Burnett (Stark House Press)
The Dead Can’t Make a Living, by Ed
Lin (Soho Crime)
A Deadly Episode, by Anthony Horowitz (Harper)
The Dead Ringer, by Dane Bahr (Counterpoint)
Death Times Seven, by Anne Perry and Victoria Zackheim (Ballantine)
Double Shadow, by Andrew Ludington (Minotaur)
The Edge of Darkness, by Vaseem Khan (Hodder & Stoughton)
The Ending Writes Itself, by Evelyn Clarke (Harper)
An Enigma by the Sea, by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini
(Bitter Lemon Press)
Everyone Is Perfect Here, by Jane Haseldine (Severn House)
Fair Chase, by Travis Mulhauser (Grand Central)
Gimme Shelter, by Libby Klein (Kensington)
The Girls Trip, by Ally Condie (Grand Central)
Guilt, by Keigo Higashino (Minotaur)
Gunner, by Alan Parks (Pegasus Crime)
Her First Lie, by Lucinda Berry (Thomas & Mercer)
Hollywood Payback, by Jon Lindstrom (Crooked Lane)
Holy Island, by L.J. Ross (Poisoned Pen Press)
Hope Rises, by David Baldacci (Grand Central)
How to Cheat Your Own Death, by Kristen Perrin (Dutton)
The Insomniacs, by Allison Winn Scotch (Berkley)
In the Spirit of French Murder, by Colleen Cambridge (Kensington)
Kill Dick, by Luke Goebel (Red Hen Press)
Last One Out, by Jane Harper (Pine & Cedar)
Liar’s Creek, by Matt Goldman (Minotaur)
The Lost Angels, by Michele Domínguez Greene (Thomas & Mercer)
The Lost Book of Elizabeth Barton, by Jennifer N. Brown
(St. Martin’s Press)
Mad Mabel, by Sally Hepworth (St. Martin’s Press)
The Missing Ones, by A.R. Torre (Thomas & Mercer)
The Monk, by Tim Sullivan (Atlantic Crime)
Mrs. Shim Is a Killer, by Kang Jiyoung (Harper Perennial)
Murder Mindfully, by Karsten Dusse (Soho Crime)
Murders and Acquisitions, by Thomas Dunne (Blackstone)
The Museum of Unusual Occurrence, by Erica Wright (Severn House)
Obelists Fly High, by C. Daly King (Penzler/American
Mystery Classics)
One Second Away, by Rick Mofina (Doubleday Canada)
The Patriot’s Daughter, by Brittany Butler (Crooked Lane)
The Plunge, by Lila Raicek (Park Row)
Pomona Afton Can Totally Catch a Killer, by Bellamy Rose (Atria/Emily Bestler)
Raskin’s World, by Charlie Stella
(Stark House Press)
Reasonable Suspicion, by James Chandler (Severn River)
Redbelly Crossing, by Candice Fox (Crooked Lane)
Revenge Prey, by John Sandford (Putnam)
Sanctuary, by James Cleary (Berkley)
The Secrets of the Abbey, by Jean-Luc Bannalec (Minotaur)
Short Circuit, by Wolf Haas (HarperVia)
The Silent Ones, by Anna McPartlin (Canelo)
The Silver Fish, by Connor Martin (Mysterious Press)
Spies and Other Gods, by James Wolff (Atlantic Crime)
Staged Evidence, by Traci Hunter Abramson (Shadow Mountain)
The Summer House Murder, by Ava Roberts (Crooked Lane)
The Ten Teacups, by Carter Dickson (Poisoned Pen Press)
Thanks for Watching, by Kate Cavanaugh (Inimitable)
This Weekend Doesn’t End Well for Anyone, by Catherine
Mack (Minotaur)
Too Close to Home, by Seraphina Nova Glass (Park Row)
To the End of Reckoning, by Joseph Moldover (Mysterious Press)
Two Truths and a Lie, by Mark Stevens (Thomas & Mercer)
A Violent Masterpiece, by Jordan Harper (Mulholland)
The Washashore, by Christopher Mirabile (Slack Tide Press)
We Would Never Tell, by Anne-Sophie Jouhanneau (Sourcebooks Landmark)
What Happened Next, by Edwin Hills (Thomas & Mercer)
When the Wolves Are Silent, by C.S. Harris (Berkley)
Yours Always, by Corinne Sullivan (Thomas & Mercer)

MAY (U.S.):
An Accidental Death, by Peter Grainger (Union Square)
And the Corpse Wore Tartan, by Stuart MacBride (Macmillan)
The Anniversary, by Alex Finlay (Minotaur)
The Architect, by John Katzenbach (Blackstone)
The Author Weekend, by Laura Zigman (Blackstone)
Beneath a Broken Sky, by Joshua Moehling (Poisoned Pen Press)
The Brothers McKay, by Craig Johnson (Viking)
Caller Unknown, by Gillian McAllister (Morrow)
City on Fire, by Simon Elegant (Pegasus Crime)
Dissection of a Murder, by Jo Murray (Dutton)
The Divorce, by Freida McFadden (Poisoned Pen Press)
Dreadful Summit, by Stanley Ellin (Penzler/American
Mystery Classics)
The Echo of Crows, by Phil Rickman (Atlantic)
The Fine Art of Lying, by Alexandra Andrews (Harper)
Five, by Ilona Bannister (Crown)
A Fortune of Sand, by Ruta Sepetys (Ballantine)
Going, Going, Gone, by Nasheema Lennon (HarperNorth)
The Great Houses of Pill Hill, by Diane Josefowicz (Soho Crime)
Hawai’i Rage, by Tori Eldridge
(Thomas & Mercer)
Hidden in Lies, by Viveca Sten
(Amazon Crossing)
Hurricane Room, by Kim Sherwood (Morrow)
Ironwood, by Michael Connelly
(Little, Brown)
I, Spy, by L.M. Kemp (Minotaur)
The Last Mandarin, by Louise Penny and Mellissa Fung (Minotaur)
The Lemon Twist, by Élan Les Vies (Keylight)
The Library After Dark, by Ande Pliego (Bantam)
A Little Bit Bad, by Cassandra Neyenesch (S&S/Summit)
The Lost Soldiers, by Andrey Kurkov (HarperVia)
The Mediator, by Robert Bailey (Thomas & Mercer)
Moonlight Murder, by Uzma Jalaluddin (Harper Perennial)
Murder at the Hotel Orient, by Alessandra Ranelli (Gallery/
Scout Press)
A Murder in Hollywood, by Michael Crichton (Blackstone)
Murder Like Clockwork, by Nicola Whyte (Union Square)
Murder on the Rocks, by T.E. Kinsey (Thomas & Mercer)
My Name Was Gerry Sass, by Tiffany Hanssen (Atlantic Crime)
Not to Be Taken: A Puzzle in Poison, by Anthony Berkeley
(Poisoned Pen Press)
Ode to the Bones, by Carolyn Haines (Minotaur)
The One Day You Were My Husband, by Rosie Walsh (Pamela Dorman)
An Ordinary Sort of Evil, by Kelley Armstrong (Minotaur)
Red Verdict, by James Comey (Mysterious Press)
Robert B. Parker’s Booked, by Alison Gaylin (Putnam)
Reverse, by Steven F. Havill (Severn House)
Safari Murder Party, by Rachel Moore (Berkley)
Storm Warning, by James Byrne (Minotaur)
The Teacher, by Tim Sullivan (Atlantic Crime)
The Tuxedo Society, by Paul Rudnick (Atria)
26 Beauties, by James Patterson (Little, Brown)
The Vampyre Client, by Jeri Westerson (Old London Press)
A Very Vexing Murder, by Lucy Andrew (Morrow)
You Can Tell Me, by Melinda Leigh (Montlake)

Wish me luck in trying to get things back in order here, so I can produce a full summer books list for early June.

No comments: