Ten-year-old me once looked in the bathroom mirror wondering who I would become. I tried to memorize the patterns in the tiles to hold on to that moment and carry it with me. My fascination with memory and the past permeates my novels. I love a good cold caseâand my August Monet thriller trilogy is all about how the past weaves through the presentâinforming it, haunting it, transporting secrets. Maybe itâs our long, dark winters, but I see this same fascination in the novels of my fellow Canadian thriller writers. Many have created messy characters haunted by their messy pasts. Hereâs a list of my favourites.
A thriller with a kick-ass premise: Chloe wakes up on the side of a highway not knowing who the heck she is or how she got there.
Itâs a haunting, scary, unnerving story about a woman trying to figure out what could have happened to completely wipe out her memory. What I love about the novel is how Wongâs relentless pace matches lockstep with her protagonistâs frenzied and fractured state of mind.
Bits of the past begin to slip through the cracks as Chloe searches for the truth. I love that Wong chose to tell the story from Chloeâs POV so weâre only privy to what this messy character remembersâor chooses to tell us that she remembers. Twisted, damaged characters with secrets are my cup of tea.
âA chilling, nerve-jangling journey into lost memories and unforgettable terrors. Sandra Wong knows what scares us allâand what we can never forget.â âTess Gerritsen, New York Timesâbestselling author of Listen to Me
A jolting psychological suspense novel from an up-and-coming Chinese-Canadian crime writer about missing parents, a winning lottery ticket and the lies we tell ourselves in order to survive.
Some things are better left forgotten . . .
When a woman wakes up with amnesia beside a mountain highway, confused and alone, she fights to regain her identity, only to learn that her parents have disappearedânot long after herâŚ
Clare is on the run and on the hunt for a missing girl.
What kept me reading was the tumult of questions that kept bubbling to the surface as Clare reluctantly and relentlessly searchesâso many questions followed her on her solo journey. Who is she really running from and who is she working for? What is her end game? Where is the missing girl, Shayna and who doesnât want her to discover the truth?
Clare is a woman with a very messy pastâwhich is why sheâs perfect for the job. Sheâs got nothing to lose. But sheâs also got the past hot on her heels. Thereâs nothing like a strong, female character haunted by her past to get me turning the pages.
A taut psychological thriller in the vein of The Good Girl by Mary Kubica.
Clare is on the run.
From her past, from her husband, and from her own secrets. When she turns up alone in the remote mining town of Blackmore asking about Shayna Fowles, the local girl who disappeared, everyone wants to know who Clare really is and what sheâs hiding. As it turns out, sheâs hiding a lot, including what ties her to Shayna in the first place. But everyone in this place is hiding somethingâfrom Jared, Shaynaâs secretive ex-husband, to Charlie, the charming small-town drug pusher,âŚ
It is April 1st, 2038. Day 60 of China's blockade of the rebel island of Taiwan.
The US government has agreed to provide Taiwan with a weapons system so advanced that it can disrupt the balance of power in the region. But what pilot would be crazy enough to runâŚ
I picked up Tectorâs novel because itâs set in my hometown of Ottawa, and I kept reading because sheâs crafted a wonderfully flawed character who just wonât quit.
Cate Spencer is a coroner who relies on two things: her instincts and too much scotch to numb her painful past. When a woman is found hanging in the vaults of an archives building, Cate arrives on the scene.
It looks like suicide, but Cate canât bring herself to rule the death accidental. Not yet. Somethingâs not right. The more she digs, the more menace stalks her, and the more the past threatens to derail her world completely.
Was the death a murder and if so, why? Dripping with long-buried secrets, this thriller kept me reading long into the night.
âA literary joyride.â âLouise Penny, New York Times bestselling author of the Chief Inspector Gamache novels
More than ten years after The Foulest Things, murder and mayhem return to Ottawa in the highly-anticipated next installment of Amy Tectorâs acclaimed Dominion Archives Mystery series.
Itâs a stormy summer day when Ottawa coroner Dr. Cate Spencer is called to the scene of an alleged suicide. Inside a narrow vault in the Dominion Archivesâ nitrate film storage facilityâkept separate from the rest of the collection due to its dangerous combustibilityâofficers pressure Cate to rule the death a suicide. When parts of the sceneâŚ
What I loved about McKinnonâs thriller was the darkly twisted and funny ride she takes you on from the get-go.
In the opening pages, Lucas admits he had his wife murdered, so this is not so much a âwhodunnitâ as a âwill-he-get-away-with-itâ story.
McKinnon gives the reader a peek inside the mind of her very messy, down-right vile protagonist. Lucas shares all the details of his devious planâhow his heart-breaking past justifies what he did, how he charmed his way into his wealthy wifeâs life, married her, then carefully executed her demise.
The most compelling thing about the novel is that Lucas is kind of hard not to love, despite being utterly despicable. Thatâs not easy to pull off and McKinnon does it delightfully.
A grumpy-sunshine, slow-burn, sweet-and-steamy romance set in wild and beautiful small-town Colorado. Lane Gravers is a wanderer, adventurer, yoga instructor, and social butterfly when she meets reserved, quiet, pensive Logan Hickory, a loner inventor with a painful past.
Dive into this small-town, steamy romance between two opposites who find loveâŚ
In the opening pages of Bury Your Dead, Penny gives us a heart-pounding glimpse into a moment that went horribly wrong.
Right away, she lays bare the terrible incident in the past that now haunts her beloved character, Chief Inspector Armand Gamache in the present. Heâs come to Quebec City to get his head straight, to walk his friendâs dog, to disappear for a while. But nothingâs ever that simple.
A mystery bubbles up and Gamache canât resist getting involved. Itâs in his blood, despite still struggling with past demons. What I love about this novel is the snowy, history-laden atmosphere Penny creates that beautifully mirrors Gamacheâs desire to hide away from the world, making it a wonderful book to snuggle up with on a cozy winterâs night.
'Outstanding ... a constantly surprising series' THE NEW YORK TIMES
There is more to solving a crime than following the clues. Welcome to Chief Inspector Gamache's world of facts and feelings.
As Quebec City shivers in the grip of winter, its ancient stone walls cracking in the cold, Chief Inspector Armand Gamache plunges into the strangest case of his celebrated career.
A man has been brutally murdered in one of the city's oldest buildings - a library where the English citizens of Quebec safeguard their history. And the death opens a door into the past, exposing a mystery that hasâŚ
A suspenseful debut novel about a woman haunted by her past. Augusta (Gus) Monet is living an aimless existence when she inherits her great-grandmotherâs fortune. Gus ditches her loser boyfriend and returns home to find a dilapidated house and an old dog named Levi. In the basement, she stumbles across a trunk filled with childhood possessions. Hidden amongst her things are cold case files belonging to her mother, a disgraced police detective who died in a car crash. Her mother was obsessed with the case. Gus digs into the files, determined to finish her motherâs investigation but she inadvertently stirs up the past. Despite the dangers, she must uncover the truth of what happened that dark August night when her life changed forever.
This is the fourth book in the Joplin/Halloran forensic mystery series, which features Hollis Joplin, a death investigator, and Tom Halloran, an Atlanta attorney.
It's August of 2018, shortly after the Republican National Convention has nominated Donald Trump as its presidential candidate. Racial and political tensions are rising, and soâŚ
âRowdyâ Randy Cox, a woman staring down the barrel of retirement, is a curmudgeonly blue-collar butch lesbian who has been single for twenty years and is trying to date again.
At the end of a long, exhausting shift, Randy finds her supervisor, Bryant, pinned and near death at the warehouseâŚ