Artikel: The lonely passion of Harry Bosch

Fictional, schmictional. If you’ve read Connelly’s novels — there are 25 in all, with 18 featuring Bosch — then you know what Julia Keller means. Bosch is real. He’s real in the way that only made-up characters can be real.

Rezension: Julia Keller: “A Killing in the Hills”

In Julia Keller’s powerful “A Killing in the Hills”, Bell Elkins knows the problems, poverty and extreme drug use that plague Acker’s Gap, W. Va., where she suffered a traumatic childhood. Yet she has come back to this “shabby afterthought of a town”.

Artikel: Keller’s on the case: From solving mysteries to writing them

Today’s guest blog is by Julia Keller the author of “A Killing in the Hills”, a crime novel published by Headline.The first in a series of books to feature prosecuting attorney Bell Elkins who campaigns against the illegal trading of prescription drugs.

Rezensionen: Julia Keller, Benjamin Black, Fuminori Nakamura und Chris Ewan

Laura Wilson’s crime fiction roundup – review: “A Killing in the Hills” by Julia Keller, “Vengeance” by Benjamin Black, “The Thief” by Fuminori Nakamura and “Safe House” by Chris Ewan.

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Rezension: William Landay: »Defending Jacob«

Our blood is not our own. Like a tributary of some larger, older river, it runs in us for a little while but it hails from elsewhere. We like to think of ourselves as individuals, as distinctive and special, but in truth we are stamped and shaped by our ancestors.

Artikel: Sherlock Holmes in a skirt

When Tasha Alexander strolls the streets of Chicago, she doesn’t much see Wrigley Field or Chicago Rivers. She sees St. Paul’s Cathedral and the River Thames. Her imagination is perpetually tuned in to another place and time: London in the late 1800s.