Last week a lot of you had some stern words to say about grouping “mystery” with “thriller and crime” as a genre!! I think I’d still defend it for the purposes of our reading poll, but I do agree it warrants a closer look. Here’s some of your responses to last week’s newsletter.
Gretchen H. wrote: “I'm a female reader of mysteries, not thrillers or crime. The ‘good wins, bad punished’ is very comforting. Not particularly a ‘cozy’ lover, but prefer the ‘Golden Age.’ Perhaps the male mind doesn't need the assurance the evil will be banished?”
Alicia M., a bookshop owner, wrote: “Just like Romance, the Mystery/Thriller genre has character tropes and regular narrative beats that readers expect, which is a comforting kind of reading experience. While we do sell a lot of ‘dad-aged men reading the next C. J. Box or Michael Connelly,’ we also sell a lot of those books to mom-aged women. One of my former mentors (late 50s/early 60s) lives for the latest Connelly novel. We also sell a lot of cozy mysteries here at our store, usually to women. Many of those books feature a ‘spunky lady detective’ (like Maisie Dobbs) or a ‘meddling mature woman’ (like Miss Marple) - which are understandably relatable tropes among our women customers.”
Suzan H. wrote: “I joke that I relax when I am about to close my eyes before bed by reading Louise Penny Gamache mysteries (and since I've read all of them, I have to start all over with them at volume one). I also have a friend that turned me onto romantasy, which is a nice blend of romance books, which I never much cared for, and science fiction fantasy, which I do enjoy. I do also read nonfiction, but that isn't what I'm reading before bed or when I'm looking to relax. Lately reading to relax has been paramount.”
That’s it for today! See you next week.
P.S., if a friend sent you this newsletter and you want to sign up, the place to do it is npr.org/newsletter/books. :)
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