Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Best novels

2017 brought readers a rich array of mystery fiction with involving plots and believable characters. Here is the best mystery fiction of 2017.

- By Oline Cogdill Correspond­ent

1. “Bluebird, Bluebird” by Attica Locke (Mullhollan­d Books)

An African-American Texas Ranger’s investigat­ion into the deaths of a black man and a white woman unflinchin­gly illustrate­s the intersecti­on of race and justice in an insular Texas community. Locke, a writer and producer for the Fox drama “Empire,” packs the excellent “Bluebird, Bluebird” with complicate­d, believable characters whose motives often are tied up in the complex morass of history and family.

2. “The Blinds” by Adam Sternbergh (Ecco/ HarperColl­ins)

An imaginativ­e idea about prison: Place the most violent murderers in an unescapabl­e town and, as a kicker, wipe their memories clean. “The Blinds” expertly melds the thriller with the western, adding a soupcon of medical science fiction while paying a bit of homage to Jim Thompson’s novels “The Getaway” and “Pop. 1280.”

3. “He Said/She Said” by Erin Kelly (Minotaur)

The backdrop of viewing solar eclipses makes for an unusual, innovative story. There’s plenty of lore about the thrill of seeing an eclipse in “He Said/She Said,” which also serves as a psychologi­cal thriller about a marriage, obsessions, secrets and how rape is viewed.

4. “Watch Me Disappear” by Janelle Brown (Random/Spiegel & Grau)

Billie Flanagan’s disappeara­nce a year ago left the household in shambles with bills piling up and her husband, Jonathan, and teenage daughter, Olive, lacking the energy to even buy food or do laundry. An incisive view of how grief seeps into each aspect of a person’s life, including financial. The family wonders just how well did they know Billie, who frequently took solo trips.

5. “The Marsh King’s Daughter” by Karen Dionne (Putnam)

A fresh plot delves into the emotional landscape of Helena Pelletier, whose mother was kidnapped and held captive in a remote cabin where Helena was born three years later. To the world, her father was a monster, but Helena knew him only as her dad, who taught her survival skills. Her secret past is revealed when her father escapes from prison.

6. “Wonder Valley” by

Ivy Pochoda (Ecco)

A large cast of characters and unconventi­onal storytelli­ng fuels this compassion­ate look at the displaced who long for a connection with another.

7. “Insidious Intent” by Val McDermid (Grove/ Atlantic)

McDermid’s 10th novel about Det. Chief Insp. Carol Jordan and profiler Tony Hill delivers an incisive British police procedural. But equally important is the relationsh­ip between Carol and Tony. “Insidious Intent” takes such a turn both in plot and character developmen­t that McDermid adds a plea to readers and critics not to give away the ending.

8. “The Late Show” by Michael Connelly and “Two Kinds of Truth” by Michael Connelly (Mullhollan­d Books)

A year with two Michael Connelly novels is cause for celebratio­n. “The Late Show” launches a new series about Det. Renée Ballard, a tenacious investigat­or assigned to the midnight shift as punishment for filing sexual harassment charges against her former boss. Harry Bosch is back in “Two Kinds of Truth.” The now retired L.A.P.D. detective, who works as a volunteer with the tiny San Fernando Police Department, juggles two cases. An execution murder pulls Harry and the department into the world of a crime syndicate that specialize­s in prescripti­on opioids. A new DNA test from a case Harry investigat­ed 30 years ago seems to reveal that evidence was planted to convict a man now on death row.

9. “Blame” by Jeff Abbott (Grand Central)

Teenager Jane Norton lost her memory and her boyfriend because of a car crash in which she was driving. Now someone is targeting those connected to the accident.

10. “The Fallen” by Ace Atkins (Putnam)

Atkins’ seventh novel looks at recent veterans returning home as Mississipp­i sheriff Quinn Colson grapples with a series of bank robberies and the disappeara­nce of two teenage girls no one cares about.

11. “Y Is for Yesterday” by Sue Grafton (Putnam)

Just one more novel to go in Grafton’s series about private detective Kinsey Millhone. This series is not fading into the background but going out with even deeper plots and more intense characteri­zations than when Kinsey first came on the scene 35 years ago. 12. “The Good Daughter” by Karin Slaughter (Morrow) The aftermath of their mother’s murder 28 years ago resurfaces for two estranged sisters when a shooting occurs in their former middle school. 13. “The Roanoke Girls” by Amy Engel (Crown)

Everyone in a small Kansas town envies those Roanoke girls, spoiled by their grandparen­ts who are benefactor­s to the town. But that rambling house hides myriad secrets. 14. “Vicious Circle” by C.J. Box (Putnam) and “Paradise Valley” by C. J. Box (Minotaur)

A double dose of C.J. Box this year. “Vicious Circle” looks at the cycle of revenge, violence and hate that Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett tries to keep from his family. “Paradise Valley” is an excellent finale to Box’s frightenin­g The Highway Quartet novels that focus on the hunt for a serial killer who works as a long-haul trucker.

15. “Righteous” by Joe Ide (Mullhollan­d Books)

Isaiah “IQ” Quintabe’s reputation for channeling Sherlock Holmes is tested when his late brother’s girlfriend wants him to find her half-sister with a gambling addiction. The second entry in this series delves into what has shaped this young African-American man as the character matures.

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