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Louisa Scarr's Reading List

Louisa Scarr is the author of the Butler and West police procedural series. She studied psychology at the University of Southampton and has lived in and around the city ever since. She also writes about serial killers as Sam Holland.

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Best Police Procedurals (2022)

Scraped from fivebooks.com (2022-11-28).

Source: fivebooks.com

Susie Steiner · Buy on Amazon
"I love Susie Steiner’s writing. One of the things that I think distinguishes her books from some of the other police procedurals is it focuses as much on Manon and her home and personal life as it does on the case and the police side. Especially in Remain Silent – there’s a hell of a lot about her and the mess of her life. In this one, her world is actually starting to take shape, she’s got a bloke called Mark and you really get to know her; picking up the book was like coming back to an old friend and remembering everything that I loved about Manon. I like books where you can really get to know the characters and where they feel real. Susie Steiner wrote that character so perfectly. It’s such a wonderful book. That’s always the question with series – and all the books I’ve chosen are series. It’s tricky isn’t it? I would always recommend starting from the beginning because you get to know the characters over the course of the books. But equally, people don’t have all the time in the world and there are always too many brilliant books to read! Generally I think just read what takes your fancy: all these books are written in a way that you can just pick one up and you’re in it. All the cases are unique. Yes, it is. She died quite soon after, so this is the last one she wrote which made it poignant for me. I think knowing that when I was reading it made it unique, in a way."
Russ Thomas · Buy on Amazon
"Yes, it’s the first in the series. I’ve read all three. The main character is a detective called Adam Tyler. Full disclosure here! I have a thing for dark, slightly disturbed main detectives. I know it’s a cliche, 100% a trope, but I love it. Adam is one of those in this book. I think Russ Thomas’s point of difference with Adam is he’s gay and I don’t know many other detective stories where the main character is gay. Mari Hannah’s Kate Daniels series is another one, but there aren’t many. I just really enjoy the way that Russ writes him and the way that the story takes shape because of Adam and his relationships with the team – and how he invariably screws up. It’s a brilliant book and Adam Tyler is a fantastic, layered character. There are there a number of people in the team. There’s an inspector called Jim Doggett as well. It’s more about the dynamic. They’re not particularly close, they tend rub up against each other, and not necessarily in the best way. They banter and don’t like each other and fall out and then get back together again. It’s good fun."
Jørn Lier Horst & Thomas Enger · Buy on Amazon
"This is a Scandi noir so it’s all the cold and ice and darkness that we like so much. I tried to look for police procedurals that have something different about them. Something original. What I find interesting about this one is that it’s written by two people. As a writer, you spend so much time alone it baffles me how any two authors would write a detective story together, but they do. The chapters are very, very short. Thomas Enger’s background is in journalism, Jørn Lier Horst was a cop, and whatever experiences they bring to the table it obviously works because the books are great. Unhinged is the third in the series. Again, I’ve read all of them in order but Unhinged …I don’t want to say much about the plot and spoil it, but it’s certainly the most heartrending of all the books. The ending is particularly good. When you’ve got to that point with the characters, and then that happens… Yes, Emma Ramm is a journalist and Blix is the cop, so it reflects the two authors’ backgrounds. Blix and Ramm aren’t a couple. It’s more an adopted father and daughter relationship."
Mo Hayder · Buy on Amazon
"You have to take a very deep breath before you read The Treatment . Mo Hayder’s books are generally violent, but The Treatment takes it to another level. If you can get through it without feeling disturbed or physically sick at some point, then credit to you. Mo Hayder wrote police procedure astonishingly well. Her research was amazing. How on Earth did she know all this stuff? But at the same time, the story is just astonishing. It’s got another dark, disturbed lead detective, Jack Caffery. He’s morally a bit off. My editor wouldn’t allow me to write some of the things he does. The book is such a mindfuck. You’ll come away going, ‘What the hell was that??’ It’s the most brilliantly done, disturbed book you’ll ever read. I’ve read another one of hers recently which is a follow on. It’s still quite dark because it’s Mo Hayder, but not as disturbing as The Treatment ."
Joseph Knox · Buy on Amazon
"Yes, again I picked the first one because I’ve read all three. This is less police procedural because it features a detective called Aidan Waits who tends to go off piste. It’s very dark, very gritty. The book starts with a girl going missing and he’s brought on to the case to try and find her. It brings him into a shady world of prostitution and organized crime. I absolutely love Aidan Waits. There’s definitely a theme here: another dark, disturbed man who you’d never want to go out with but you’d probably want to sleep with. I love that. And I love the way that Joseph Knox writes him in these stories. It’s a fantastic series. I deliberately made them all standalone, but there are some events that happen in the first book that are referenced throughout. So Seen to be Believed is the fourth book in the Butler and West series, which follows DS Robin Butler and DC Freya West. When they meet in the first book, neither of them are in a great place. Robin had a sister, basically his only family, who died in a car accident. We quickly learn that the man Freya was having an affair with is the victim in the murder they’re investigating. So that’s the set up for the first book and it forges a bond which continues in the others. Seen to be Believed begins as a woman is attacked in her home. It’s a mystery because the attack is brutal but they’re not sure of the motive. The guy who did it hasn’t made any attempt to conceal his identity. He hasn’t taken anything of great value. Robin starts to think it might be related to the company that the husband—who wasn’t home at the time—owns called Hamilton Grace. It’s a virtual reality software company based in the middle of nowhere, where there are lots of secrets. So they start to investigate it further… Yes, it’s very unusual for me as well. I tend to kill quite a lot of people! It’s very strange. I thought about it, but I came to the conclusion it would make it nastier than it needed to be. It was just killing someone for the hell of it. It makes a better story in this case if nobody dies. It’s written! It’s with my editor at the moment. It’s the last book in the series and it was deliberately designed as a five-book run in terms of the character arc between Freya and Robin. I always knew where I wanted to go with the two of them, so you’ll have to keep reading to find out!"

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