Riot Headline The Best Amazon Prime Day Deals for Readers (UPDATED October 9)
Unusual Suspects

Nonviolent True Crime Memoir, Birdwatcher Mysteries, and Mystery News!

This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Jamie Canaves

Contributing Editor

Jamie Canavés is the Tailored Book Recommendations coordinator and Unusual Suspects mystery newsletter writer–in case you’re wondering what you do with a Liberal Arts degree. She’s never met a beach she didn’t like, always says yes to dessert, loves ‘80s nostalgia, all forms of entertainment, and can hold a conversation using only gifs. You can definitely talk books with her on Litsy and Goodreads. Depending on social media’s stability maybe also Twitter and Bluesky.

Time for your bi-weekly mystery goodness! In new releases, I’ve got a nonviolent true crime memoir and a translated crime novel. For backlist reading, I was inspired by a birdwatcher’s memoir! Enjoy!

Bookish Goods

a wristlet bag with book nerd in bold colorful font and a name personalized below

Book Nerd Personalized Wristlet by shopCarolinaMade

You can personalize this cute wristlet, which would also make a great bookish gift. ($14)

New Releases

cover image for Never Saw Me Coming by Tanya Smith

Never Saw Me Coming: How I Outsmarted the FBI and the Entire Banking System—and Pocketed $40 Million by
Tanya Smith

For fans of nonviolent true crime memoirs!

Tanya Smith recounts her life of crime, from her childhood obsession with Michael Jackson—which prompted her to want his home address so bad she figured out how to use the phone company’s system to make it look like she was calling from one of their departments in order to get information—to her time in prison, with some very interesting people (including celebrities). In between all that time is how she gradually learned to up her phone company scam to use it in the banking system, once home computers were a thing, to steal large amounts of money via wire transfers by exploiting a vulnerability in the system. It was a smart and organized system she had of stealing money from the banking system, and for years, even when the police were on to her, they wanted to use her to get to the person in charge. They were certain that a Black woman was the bottom of the crime chain, and they wanted her to lead them to the top white guy.

This is the kind of crime memoir in which I find myself rooting for the author and ultimately wish someone had just sat Smith down early in life and told her how to spot a terrible man because, as far as I see it, that was her only problem(s) in life. This is definitely one of my top favorite reads of the year because of Smith’s interesting dive-head-first-into-what-you-want life, the reminder of life before our current internet, and her personality.

Robin Miles was an excellent choice to narrate the audiobook, which had me feeling like I was actually a part of Smith’s life and was watching her through it.

(TW sibling with drug addiction / domestic abuse)

cover image for Time of the Flies

Time of the Flies by Claudia Piñeiro, Frances Riddle (Translator)

For fans of crime novels, revenge, and translated novels!

Inés spent 15 years in prison for murdering her husband’s mistress. Now she’s out and partnered with a friend, who also previously served time, in a fumigation business. After a new wealthy client reveals to Inés that her true reason for hiring her is to get Inés to buy her poison that can kill her husband’s mistress, Inés isn’t sure if this is a real deal—with money she needs—or if she’s being set up.

I’ve really enjoyed the previous crime novels I’ve read from Piñeiro, and am really looking forward to reading this one. Hopefully it also gets an English audiobook (I saw there is a Spanish language one, El tiempo de las moscas, but I’m not sure if it’s available in the U.S.—an investigation for later).

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

I read Christian Cooper’s Better Living Through Birding: Notes from a Black Man in the Natural World last year and still find myself randomly thinking about it. He, unfortunately, went viral during a racist incident in Central Park, but he has lived a really interesting life (including his years as a writer and editor at Marvel Comics) and is just a lovely person—which is the majority of this book, with the viral incident getting a chapter.

If you read memoirs, it should definitely be on your list, and if you listen to audiobooks, go with that format as Cooper narrates. That is all to say that this memoir inspired the two mysteries below, thanks to “birding.”

bianca torre is afraid of everything book cover

Bianca Torre Is Afraid of Everything by Justine Pucella Winans

For fans of the”Did I just witness a murder?!” trope!

This is a fun and funny YA amateur sleuth mystery with a character to love and a heaping dose of friendship. Bianca Torre has so many anxieties that they keep a list. While trying to tackle their many fears and trying to figure out their gender, they end up joining a bird-watching group! Also, they maybe spy on the neighbors a bit, which is how Bianca ends up seeing a neighbor’s murder! Since the police label it a suicide, Bianca and their best friend decide they must solve the case.

(TW suicide assumed in murder case/ anxiety, fears, panic attack/ animal cruelty, bird)

cover image for The Birdwatcher

The Birdwatcher by William Shaw

For fans of British police procedurals!

William South is a police sergeant in Kent who is trying to get out of being assigned a murder case. The reasons for not wanting the case, that he can share with people, make sense: he doesn’t want to miss the arrival of migrating birds—as he’s a birdwatcher—the victim is one of his neighbors, and also a birdwatcher. The real reason he can’t tell anyone: He’s a murderer himself. I know! His boss doesn’t know the latter, nor care about the other excuses, so he’s partnered with Alexandra Cupidi, who has her own baggage, and off they go to solve a murder. What could go wrong?

News and Roundups

Browse the books recommended in Unusual Suspects’ previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2024 releases and mysteries from 2023. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy —you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you or you read it on bookriot.com and you’d like to get it right in your inbox, you can sign up here.