Anonymous wrote:I’m excited to read A Dangerous Business by Jane Smiley when my family travels over the holiday and I would love recs of other literary mystery novels I could add to my reading list. I read a ton of mysteries, including novels I have read before, because I find them to be good at helping me manage anxiety and insomnia. But with a break from work over the holidays I think I might have enough mental bandwidth to tackle some more challenging mysteries!
Anonymous wrote:I’m excited to read A Dangerous Business by Jane Smiley when my family travels over the holiday and I would love recs of other literary mystery novels I could add to my reading list. I read a ton of mysteries, including novels I have read before, because I find them to be good at helping me manage anxiety and insomnia. But with a break from work over the holidays I think I might have enough mental bandwidth to tackle some more challenging mysteries!
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we have similar taste (I love Christie, Tey, and Sayers!) and I highly recommend Anthony Horowitz for clever, well-written mysteries.
Magpie Murders (plus sequel) and I'm reading the Hawthorne/Horowitz series now and really like it.
Anonymous wrote:Strongly second the Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries by Dorothy L. Sayers! Gaudy Night is my favorite, but don’t start with that one.
Anonymous wrote:The Name of the Rose
The Alienist
The Lovely Bones
Alias Grace
And I haven't read it, but "Calamity Physics" is on my list.
Anonymous wrote:Sujata Massey’s series about the first female layer in Bombay is awesome. It’s called the Perveen Mistry series. First book is The Widows of Malabar Hill. So good!!!
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if these fit your definition of “literary”, but some of my favorites include:
- The earlier books in the series by Batya Gur. She does deep dives into the worlds of somewhat closed cultures, including
a psychoanalytic institute, a university, a kibbutz, and an orchestra / musical family.
- The earlier books in the series by Elizabeth George are good.
- Some of the Donna Leon books are great, and I love that there’s a cookbook that she co-wrote after multiple requests.
- I also like the earlier books in the series by Louise Penney.
I’m happy to make more recommendations if I can get a clearer idea re: what you’re looking for. As in: Would Jack Finney count?
Anonymous wrote:Ooh I have the perfect rec for you. An Instance of the Finger Post by Ian Fleming.
It’s the best use of unreliable narrator and multiple perspectives that I’ve ever read. It’s quite long and intricate (> 600 pages) and the topic sounds obscure (it’s set at Oxford during the English Restoration) but don’t let that out you off. It’s soooo good. Very literary,