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The Ten Best Crime Novels

1. What the Dead Know, Laura Lippman

A psychological crime thriller in which a woman reappears after being abducted many years previously; it's built on a puzzle, but is also about identity - a sophisticated book.

Orion, £9.99

 

 

2. Child 44, Tom Rob Smith
Tom Rob Smith is a name to watch. A young Russian policeman who justifies the nasty things he has to do for the national good turns against the state when his wife is accused.
Simon and Schuster, £12.99 

 

 

3. The Broken Shore, Peter Temple
Winner of the highly prized Duncan Lawrie Dagger, this is a about a damaged detective who’s trying to solve a mystery involving Aborigines accused of murder. A clever novel.
Quercus, £6.99

 

 

4. Sharp Objects, Gillian Flynn
A failing journalist is sent back to her home town, where she suffers a poisonous relationship with her mother. It’s a clever story about the past and changing attitudes to class in the US.
Orion, £6.99 

 

 

5. The Art of Drowning, Frances Fyfield
Fyfield creates male characters who make male readers uncomfortable because the subject is violence towards women. It’s a tremendously exciting thriller, with a grisly ending.
Sphere, £7.99

 

 

6. The Girl with the Dragon, Stieg Larsson
This novel about a slightly autistic, computer-hacking, multi-tattooed punk girl, has been a hit in Sweden. Larsson, who died recently, makes her a very strong if unlikely heroine.
Quercus, £14.99

 

 

7. Restless, William Boyd
A woman discovers that her mother has a chequered past and has to unpeel the layers of her mother’s life and her own. A literary novel using crime or spy thriller conventions.
Bloomsbury, £7.99

 

 

8. The Naming of the Dead, Ian Rankin
In his final Rebus novel, Rankin gives us a showdown between the detective and his great rival, Rafferty, recalling Sherlock Holmes and Moriarty – but taking in Gleneagles and G8.
Orion; £6

 

 

9. Cold in Hand, John Harvey
Something of a state-of-the-nation novel and not comfortable reading. Harvey deals with social issues, but here shows Britain falling apart at the seams. Brilliant and unnerving.
William Heineman, £12.99 

 

 

10. Stalin’s Ghost, Martin Cruz Smith
The author of Gorky Park uses a reported sighting of the ghost of Stalin to illustrate this story set in Putin’s Russia, where people are glamorising life under the former dictator.
Macmillan, £7.99

 

 

20 February 2008, Chosen by Barry Forshaw