- The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, by Agatha Christie
- The Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle
- Shine, by Lauren Myracle
- The Dark Days of Hamburger Halpin, by Josh Berk
- Pretty Little Liars, by Sara Shepard
- Lily Dale: Awakening, by Wendy Corsi Staub
- The Christopher Killer, by Alane Ferguson
- Hoot, by Carl Hiaasen
- All Unquiet Things, by Anna Jarzab
- Acceleration, by Graham MacNamee
- Eye of the Crow, by Shane Peacock
- The Uninvited, by Tim Wynne-Jones
- Kill Game, by Francine Pascal
- The Big Splash, by Jack D. Ferraiolo
- Last Shot: A Final Four Mystery, by John Feinstein
- I, Q: Independence Hall, by Roland Smith
- Finding Lubchenko, by Michael Simmons
- Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City, by Kirsten Miller
- The Agency: A Spy in the House, by Y. S. Lee
- The Falconer's Knot, by Mary Hoffman
- Rosebush, by Michele Jaffe
- Searching for Yesterday, by Valerie Sherrard
- The Bone Magician, by F. E. Higgins
- Kiss Me Kill Me, by Lauren Henderson
- Canned, by Alex Shearer
- The Death Collector, by Justin Richards
- The Chaos Code, by Justin Richards
- Paper Daughter, by Jeanette Ingold
- Dream Girl, by Lauren Mechling
- Agnes Quill: An Anthology of Mystery, edited
- The Mystery of the Third Lucretia, by Susan Runholt
- Torchwood: Another Life, by Peter Anghelides
- Endymion Spring, by Matthew Skelton
- Jack: Secret Histories, by F. Paul Wilson
- Res Judicata, by Vicki Grant
- Beautiful Dead: Jonas, by Eden Maguire
- The Hanging Woods, by Scott Loring Sanders
- Getting the Girl: A Guide to Private Investigation, Surveillance, and Cookery, by Susan Juby
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Teen Booklist - Mysteries
I spent May getting ready for Summer Reading, and was out of bright ideas for teen displays, so I settled on a time-tested genre display. I've never been much of a mystery reader, but inheriting a mystery book club has expanded my horizons a bit, and this list reflects that. I tried to include a little from different mystery subtypes: whodunits, thrillers, paranormal mysteries, fiction with mystery overtones, and of course, the ever-popular "problem novels" that happen to include a mystery as a central plot point.
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