In Reference to Murder
Monday, February 9, 2026
Media Murder for Monday
THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES
In a competitive situation, Netflix has acquired the action thriller Kill Switch from Harrison Query, with Jake Gyllenhaal attached to star. As Deadline noted, it's been described as falling somewhere between Collateral and Sicario, although the film’s logline is being kept under wraps. 6th & Idaho’s Matt Reeves & Lynn Harris will produce along with Gyllenhaal & Josh McLauglin’s Nine Stories banner and Scott Glassgold and his 12:01 Films. Kill Switch is the second hot package to sell recently from the same team. Last June, Query set up his political thriller short story, "Code Black," at Amazon MGM, with Gyllenhaal set to star, and the triumvirate of 6th & Idaho, Nine Storiesm and 12:01 aboard to produce.
Writer-director Kevin Interdonato’s indie feature, Dirty Hands, has been picked up by Saban Films for domestic release in the U.S. starting April 24. The action-packed thriller stars Patrick Muldoon, Kevin Interdonato, Michael Beach, Denise Richards, and Guy Nardulli. The film’s synopsis reads: Dirty Hands kicks-off in the underbelly of Chicago when a routine drug deal goes south for the Denton brothers, Richie (Muldoon) and Danny (Interdonato). Richie’s girlfriend, Sheila (Richards), struggles between her loyalties to Richie and his boss (Michael Beach), as rival leader, Rodney (Nardulli), and his gang are out for blood. With a Kingpin’s son murdered, the brothers must fight for their lives if they’re going to survive the night.
Quantify has launched international sales on the thriller, Blood Behind Us, one of the last films made by the late actor Michael Madsen. The movie also stars Tanner Beard, Jaime King, Michael Aaron Milligan, Russell Quinn, Ramsey Krull, and Katie Leclerc, and is directed by Brendan Gabriel Murphy. The storyline follows a troubled war veteran drawn back into violence through a motorcycle gang and a fractured relationship with his father, played by Reservoir Dogs actor Madsen in what producers describe as "a raw, commanding final turn."
TELEVISION/STREAMING
MASTERPIECE on PBS announced it will be co-producing the upcoming six-part police procedural, Winter. The series features an unconventional forensic pathologist, played by Richard Armitage (Missing You, Fool Me Once). Set in Bristol, England, Winter follows Dr. Ethan Winter (Armitage), one of the most gifted pathologists of his generation. He possesses an extraordinary analytical mind, capable of impeccable deductive reasoning which perfectly complements DI Lauren Bell, played by Annabel Scholey (The Sixth Commandment, Rivals), a meticulous, no-nonsense detective who is as driven as Winter when working on a case. Together they make a formidable team, as Winter’s genius and insight into the victims is invaluable to Bell and her murder squad detectives. Yet Winter is harboring a secret: the unsolved murder of someone close to him still haunts his every move, and he’s intent on unofficially investigating the death to bring the murderer to justice.
Channel 4 in the UK announced that production has commenced on the four-part thriller, Careless, an original drama by Australian broadcaster and streamer, Stan, produced in association with Channel 4 and others, and led by Solly McLeod (House of the Dragon), Robyn Malcolm (After The Party), Katie Leung (Bridgerton), and Richard Roxburgh (Rake). From creators Helen Fitzgerald (author of The Cry) and Louise Fox (Broadchurch), Careless will also star Mabel Li (The Testaments), Thomas Weatherall (The Narrow Road To The Deep North), and Alison Peebles (Dept. Q). The story centers on Scottish backpacker Robbie (Solly McLeod), who finds himself in Sydney, determined to become a live-in carer for a notorious rock’n’roll legend, Mike (Richard Roxburgh), who has been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. To his delight, he nails the interview and gets the gig. But, as he grows closer to Mike, he also grows closer to Mike’s wife Angela (Robyn Malcolm) and becomes a confidante to both Mike and Angela. As Robbie integrates himself further in their relationship, it becomes clear there’s something in Robbie’s past which may put Mike and Angela in serious danger.
Apple TV has set a release date for its upcoming drama series, Cape Fear. The 10-episode psychological thriller will arrive on the streamer on June 5, 2026 with the first two episodes, followed by new episodes every Friday through July 31. Cape Fear is based on the novel The Executioners by John D. MacDonald, which inspired Gregory Peck’s 1962 film and the 1991 remake directed by Martin Scorsese and produced by Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment. Billed as a tense, Hitchcockian thriller and an examination of America’s obsession with true crime, the description reads: a storm is coming for happily married attorneys Anna (Amy Adams) and Tom Bowden (Patrick Wilson) when Max Cady (Javier Bardem), the notorious killer they are responsible for putting behind bars, is let out of prison — and he wants vengeance. In addition to Bardem, Wilson and Adams, the cast includes CCH Pounder, Anna Baryshnikov, Jamie Hector, Lily Collias, Joe Anders, and Malia Pyles.
Kate Mara, Kerry Washington, and Elisabeth Moss have some dark secrets they’re keeping behind closed doors in the first official teaser for Apple TV’s Imperfect Women. The new psychological thriller, which is executive produced by Moss and Washington, was adapted from Araminta Hall’s 2020 novel of the same name. Per a description of the series, Imperfect Women examines a crime that shatters the lives of a decades-long friendship of three women. As the investigation unfolds, so does the truth about how even the closest friendships may not be what they seem.
Dark Winds has scored an early Season 5 renewal on AMC Networks. Season 5 begins filming in Santa Fe, New Mexico in March and will also consist of eight hour-long episodes set to debut in 2027. Based on Tom Hillerman’s Leaphorn & Chee book series, the drama follows Lt. Joe Leaphorn (Zahn McClarnon), Jim Chee (Kiowa Gordon), and Bernadette Manuelito (Jessica Matten) of the Navajo Tribal Police solving mysteries on their reservation as it is besieged by increasingly violent crimes in the 1970s. The series is created for television by Graham Roland. Season 4 focuses on the search for a missing Navajo girl, which takes Leaphorn, Chee, and Manuelito from the safety of Navajo Nation to the gritty terrain of 1970s Los Angeles in a race against the clock to save her from an obsessive killer with ties to organized crime.
PODCASTS/RADIO/AUDIO
The latest episode of Meet the Thriller Author featured crime novelist Jonathan Kellerman, the #1 New York Times bestselling author behind the iconic Alex Delaware series.
On Crime Time FM, Louise Welsh chatted with Paul Burke about her new novel, The Cut Up; Rilke; Glasgow; Scottish PEN; academia; and being decent people.
On Read or Dead, Katie McLain Horner and Kendra Winchester recommended some of their favorite historical mysteries.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Mystery Melange
Author James Sallis passed way last week after a long illness. Sallis was 81 years old. He began writing science fiction for magazines in the late 1960s and later branched out into crime fiction, penning a series of novels featuring the detective character Lew Griffin set in New Orleans, and the 2005 novel Drive, which was adapted into a 2011 film of the same name. He received the Grand Prix de Littérature policière (for 2012's The Killer is Dying), a Bouchercon lifetime achievement award, and the Hammett Award for literary excellence in crime writing.
The inaugural Newberry Crime Writing Workshop (NCWW), an intensive 4-week writers’ workshop for developing crime and mystery authors, will take place July 6-31, 2026, on the historic campus of Newberry College in Newberry, SC. Applications are open through March 15. This year's instructors are Joe R. Lansdale, Michael Bracken, Cheryl Head, and Warren S. Moore III. To apply, complete the workshop application form and pay the application fee; more information is available via this link.
International bestselling crime writer, Denise Mina, has been revealed as the guest programmer for the Bloody Scotland International Crime Writing Festival 2026, which will return to the historic city of Stirling from September 18-20. She follows the success of Sir Ian Rankin, who as the first ever guest programmer brought a host of big names to the 2025 festival including Kate Atkinson, Kathy Reichs, and the Reverend Richard Coles. Denise is working alongside festival director, Bob McDevitt, and the programming team of fellow authors, Abir Mukherjee, Lin Anderson, Craig Robertson, and Gordon Brown, to bring another world class line-up of authors and special guests to the prestigious Festival. The complete program will launch in June 2026.
Harrogate International Festivals have announced the full lineup of Special Guest headliners for the 2026 UK Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, taking place July 23-26 2026. Ann Cleeves, Brenda Blethyn, Anthony Horowitz, Holly Jackson, Chris Brookmyre, Chris Whitaker, Jane Harper, and LJ Ross join previously announced headliners Nadine Matheson, Gillian McAllister, Steve Cavanagh, Alice Feeney and David Baldacci in a line-up of crime writing legends and international bestsellers from the UK, Australia, Ireland and the US, curated by 2026 Festival Programming Chair, Lisa Jewell. An unmissable event for Vera fans will be writer Ann Cleeves and actor Brenda Blethyn, who played DCI Vera Stanhope for fourteen years, taking an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the much-loved TV series, as Cleeves unveils her latest Vera Stanhope novel. Plus Festival Chair Lisa Jewell will be conversation with Lee Child, iconic creator of the Jack Reacher novels.
The deadline for scholarships to this year's Thriller Fest, which takes place May 5 – May 9, 2026 at the New York Hilton Midtown in New York City, is coming up soon. The Fresh Perspectives Scholarship is offered to any underrepresented author, published or unpublished, while the Undiscovered New Voices Scholarship is for any unpublished author who is writing a mystery/thriller novel (80-100k words). Plus, there's a new opportunity this year, the Poisoned Pen / Barbara Peters Scholarship, which is open to any International Thriller Writer member (full members only) who has, at the time of submission to the scholarship, been published or is under contract for at least one novel of at least 80K words and has no more than three published novels. The deadline for all three scholarships in February 15th. For more information, check out the Thriller Fest website via this link.
The Museum of the Moving Image will pay tribute to HBO‘s iconic mob drama The Sopranos with an exhibition, opening February 14 in the NYC Museum’s Amphitheater Gallery, and three special screenings featuring showrunner and series creator David Chase and cast members Steven Van Zandt, Dominic Chianese, Edie Falco, and Annabella Sciorra. Stories and sets for The Sopranos will trace how the series’ narrative and visual worlds were established. Drawing from Chase’s personal archive, the exhibition features scripts, notes, and research that document the development of the series’ story arcs and character trajectories as it moved from a pilot into the first season. It also examines the design of the four principal sites where the series’ central action was set —Dr. Melfi’s office, the Soprano home, the Bada Bing strip club, and Satriale’s Pork Store—through concept art, construction drawings, and ground plans by production designers Edward Pisoni (pilot) and Dean Taucher (season one) .
In honor of Super Bowl this Sunday, Janet Rudolph posted a list of some Super Bowl and football (American style) themed mysteries.
This week's crime poem up at the 5-2 Crime Poetry Weekly is "Break the Cycle: A Fibonacci Poem" by F.I. Goldhaber.
In the Q&A roundup, Deborah Kalb spoke with Robert Dugoni (author of the Tracy Crosswhite mysteries) about his new novel, Her Cold Justice, the latest in the Keera Duggan series; writer and former police officer and attorney, Terrence P. Dwyer, chatted with Lisa Haselton about his new true crime memoir, The Badge Between Us: Duty, Marriage, and Family; and Simon Lewis spoke to Crime Time about No Exit: An Inspector Jian Novel, the latest in his series featuring a Chinese policeman in London.
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Topflight Thrillers
The International Thriller Writers association announced the finalists for the 2026
ITW Thriller Awards. ITW will announce the winners at ThrillerFest XXI on
Saturday, May 9, 2026, at the New York Hilton Midtown, New York City. Congratulations to all!
Best Standalone Novel
Megan Collins – Cross My Heart (Atria)
Ruth Knafo Setton – Zigzag Girl (Black
Spring Press)
Gilly Macmillan – The Burning Library
(William Morrow)
Sarah Pekkanen – The Locked Ward (St.
Martin’s Press)
Olivia Worley – So Happy Together (Minotaur)
Best Series Novel
James Byrne – Chain Reaction (Minotaur)
Robert Crais – The Big Empty (Penguin/Putnam)
John McMahon – Head Cases (Minotaur)
Christopher Reich – The Tourists (Thomas
& Mercer)
Vincent Zandri – Terminal Moonlight (Down
& Out Books)
Best First Novel
Chris Chibnall – Death At The White Hart
(Pamela Dorman Books)
Kelsey Cox – Party Of Liars (Minotaur)
Sophie Stava – Count My Lies (Gallery/Scout
Press)
Zoe B. Wallbrook – History Lessons (Soho
Crime)
Liann Zhang – Julie Chan Is Dead (Atria)
Best Young Audiobook
S. A. Cosby – King Of Ashes (Macmillan),
narrated by Adam Lazarre-White
Mark Edwards – The Wasp Trap (Simon
& Schuster), narrated by John Hopkins, Anna Burnett
Marisa Kashino – Best Offer Wins (Macmillan),
narrated by Cia Court
Xan Kaur – When Devils Sing (Macmillan),
narrated by Michael Crouch, Anjali Kunapaneni,
Jennifer Pickens, Landon Woodson
CN Mabry, N'Dia Rae – The Cheater's Wife
(Simon Maverick), narrated by Ruffin Prentiss, Machelle Williams
Michael Robotham – The White Crow
(Simon & Schuster), narrated by Katy Sobey
Best Young Adult Novel
Liz Lawson – Murder Between Friends (Delacorte
Press)
Margot McGovern – This Stays Between Us
(Penguin Young Readers)
Clay McLeod Chapman – Shiny Happy People
(Delacorte Press)
Diana Rodriguez Wallach – The Silenced
(Delacorte Press)
Julie Soto – The Thrashers (Wednesday
Books)
Best Short Story
Katrina Carrasco – “Level Up” (Bywater Books)
Scott William Carter – “The Seduction of Dr. Dimension” (Ellery Queen Mystery
Magazine)
Lee Child – “Eleven Numbers” (Amazon Original Stories)
David Lagercrantz – “False Note” (Amazon Original Stories)
Jessica Van Dessel – “The Violent Season” (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine)
Monday, February 2, 2026
Media Murder for Monday
THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES
08 Entertainment’s supernatural thriller, Unmerciful Good Fortune, has signed Oscar nominee Antonio Banderas to star opposite Rosario Dawson, Scott Eastwood, and Susan Sarandon in the film from writer-director Tirsa Hackshaw. The project is based on Edwin Sánchez’s stage play and centers on Maritza Cruz (Dawson), a high-end celebrity attorney pulled into a headline-making case involving a young woman accused of multiple murders—only for the defendant to claim she possesses psychic abilities and kills to prevent worse fates, plunging Maritza into a moral and spiritual labyrinth. Banderas takes on the role of Pito Cruz, while Eastwood plays Paul Leslie, and Sarandon is Dr. Irene Charles.
Concourse Media has landed worldwide sales for the heist thriller, The Smack, which has Oscar winners Casey Affleck, Sam Rockwell, Kathy Bates, and Marisa Tomei attached to star. Based on Richard Lange’s 2017 novel, the story follows a down-on-his-luck conman (Affleck) who teams up with a casino waitress to execute a high-stakes con targeting a hidden horde of stolen U.S. military cash. What starts off as an easy plan spirals into a deadly game as they collide with dangerous criminals chasing the same score. The film, which was announced a few years ago with a slightly different cast was written by David M. Rosenthal and Keith Kjarval, who adapted the novel.
Kate Beckinsale has signed on to star in The Savior, an action-thriller from director Russell Mulcahy (1986’s Highlander, Resident Evil: Extinction). The story follows a mother, Jordyn Parker (Beckinsale) struggling with addiction who is forced to resurrect a violent past to rescue her kidnapped daughter from ruthless human traffickers. The gritty thriller is billed as "being in the spirit of Man on Fire, Collateral, and Sicario." Marc Furmie (Viper, The Weight of Darkness) and Jason Mavraidis (Viper) wrote the script based on a story by Corey Large.
TELEVISION/STREAMING
HBO has given an eight-episode order to Damon Lindelof’s new limited series, The Chain, based on the Adrian McKinty book of the same name. Lindelof will serve as showrunner and is writing the pilot script alongside Carly Wray, with Breannah Gibson also contributing to the pilot story. The novel follows Rachel, a divorcée who is undergoing treatment for cancer, who gets a call that her daughter, Kylie, has been kidnapped and is now part of The Chain. To get Kylie back, she must kidnap another child after paying a ransom. Kylie will be released when the parents of the child Rachel has kidnapped take yet another child and continue the chain.
Ahead of The Lincoln Lawyer's Season 4 premiere on February 5, the Netflix and A+E Studios legal drama has been renewed for a fifth season. Season 5 will consist of 10 episodes and will be inspired by Resurrection Walk, the seventh book in the Lincoln Lawyer series by author Michael Connelly. The Lincoln Lawyer follows the redemption of Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia Rulfo), a Los Angeles attorney who regains much of what he lost due to addiction with hard work and hustle. His success is also thanks to his devoted supporters: his ex-wives Maggie (Neve Campbell) and Lorna (Becki Newton), his driver and unofficial sponsor Izzy (Jazz Raycole) and the best investigator in town — and Lorna’s newly minted fiancé — Cisco (Angus Sampson).
Dalziel and Pascoe, the iconic British crime drama that ran on the BBC from 1996 until 2007, is getting a reboot, with BritBox ordering a "contemporary reimagining" of the show. Based on the novels of the same name by Reginald Hill, Dalziel and Pascoe was a classic odd couple detective drama, pitting the blunt, old-school and frequently insensitive sleuthing style of detective superintendent Andrew Dalziel against the more methodical and modern techniques of his partner, detective inspector Peter Pascoe. The books and series were set primarily in the fictional town of Wetherton in the North English county of Yorkshire.
Sherlock & Daughter creator Brendan Foley has landed his next project, returning to the Nordic region to pen an adaptation of Finnish geopolitical thriller, Operation: Arctic Fox, by journalist and former army officer Helena Immonen. Set against escalating Arctic ambitions by Russia and China, the story follows a Finnish family of operatives navigating military conflict, biological warfare, and global espionage as geopolitical tensions reach a breaking point.
Rachel Keller (Fargo, Tokyo Vice) has secured a key leading role in the new CBS legal drama Cupertino, from Robert and Michelle King (The Good Wife, The Good Fight). Cupertino is a David vs. Goliath legal drama set in the heart of Silicon Valley that follows Michael (Mike Colter), a lawyer who is being cheated out of his stock options by his former employer, a tech start-up. Refusing to back down, he joins forces with Olivia (Keller), another recently fired attorney, to represent those taken advantage of by the tech elite and help them fight back in a high-stakes battle against the Goliaths controlling Silicon Valley.
Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjian (The Big Sick) and Tze Chun (Gotham, Once Upon A Time), are behind an adaptation of Image Comics’ Sex Criminals, which has landed an eight-episode series order at Amazon. Nanjiani also will appear in the series. Sex Criminals is centered around Suze, a normal girl with an extraordinary ability: when she has sex, she stops time. One night, she meets Jon, who has the same gift. And so they do what any other sex-having, time-stopping couple would do: they rob banks. The comics, which were written by Matt Fraction and illustrated by Chip Zdarsky, were originally published in 2013, and there have been six volumes.
Anjli Mohindra, Shaun Parkes, and Aidan Gillen will lead the cast of ITV’s six-part legal thriller, Saviour, written by criminal barrister, novelist, and screenwriter Imran Mahmood. The production follows Ben (Archie Fisher), who, after borrowing his dad’s police uniform for a costume party, gets into an altercation that results in a man’s death. Called to represent Ben is brilliant criminal defense solicitor Indy Sangar (Mohindra). In defending Ben from an allegation of murder, Indy is confronted with a world of police corruption and a defendant who is keeping secrets from her, but what she doesn't know is that deeply personal secrets of her own are finally coming to the surface and threatening to tear her career and her family apart. Indy is also up against a formidable adversary in Detective Inspector Jon Creasy (Parkes) who butts heads with Eddie (Gillen), his colleague and Ben’s father, who is ruthlessly intent on clearing his son’s name.
Netflix has renewed Danish crime series The Asset for a second season. The series follows the work of a young agent, who goes undercover and befriends a drug smuggler’s wife. Season 1 launched in October last year, and hit the number one position in 52 countries and top 10 in 90. Lead cast members Clara Dessau, Maria Cordsen, Afshin Firouzi, and Nicolas Bro are all returning. Details on Season 2 are scarce, with Netflix saying only the agents “will encounter their greatest challenges yet in the fight for survival and justice.”
Netflix also revealed a teaser-trailer for Jo Nesbo’s Detective Hole (Norwegian title: Jo Nesbøs Harry Hole). This is the first series based on Nesbø’s global bestselling books and will make its global debut on March 26. Tobias Santelmann (Exit, The Last Kingdom) is leading the cast as detective Harry Hole, alongside Joel Kinnaman (Altered Carbon, The Suicide Squad) as Tom Waaler, and Pia Tjelta (Made in Oslo, State of Happiness) as Rakel Fauke.
PODCASTS/RADIO/AUDIO
On Crime Time FM, Simon Beckett chatted with Paul Burke about his new Dr. David Hunter novel, The Bone Garden; writing series fiction as standalones; the psychological, gothic thriller, and more.
Elizabeth Camden joined John Charles to discuss Camden's new novel, Beyond the Clouds, on the Poisoned Pen podcast.
Murder Junction hosts Vaseem Khan and Abir Mukherjee interviewed crime writer Louise Welsh about her career and her latest novel, The Cut Up. They also discussed some of the most expensive books to be sold secondhand, and the death of playwright Christopher Marlowe.
Authors on the Air spoke with Wendy Walker and how her personal experiences played into writing her new psychological thriller, Blade.
On Pick Your Poison, Dr. Jen Prosser tackled a real-life scenario where a person can be found dead in an enclosed space, without evidence of trauma, intrusion, or even another person.
Sunday, February 1, 2026
Applause for Anthologies
The Short Mystery Fiction Society, a group of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories, unveiled the finalists for the Best Anthology Award. Although the Derringer Awards for excellence in short crime fiction have been handed out since 1988, this is only the second year for the Best Anthology honor. (The other categories are still being judged, with finalists to be revealed on April 1.) SMFS members will vote for the anthology winner, to be announced on Friday, May 1. This year's finalists include:
Gone Fishin': Crime Takes a Holiday, The Eighth Guppy Anthology, edited by James M. Jackson (Wolf's Echo Press): the latest anthology from the 1,100-member Guppy Chapter of Sisters in Crime features 23 stories representing a wide variety of crime fiction, including murder mysteries, psychological thrillers, and cozy capers.
Hollywood Kills: An Anthology, edited by Adam Meyer & Alan Orloff (Level Best Books - Level Short): shocking short fiction about the dark underbelly of show business—written by those who know it firsthand, with a close-up look at the dark side of ambition via an all-star cast of schemers, dreamers, killers, and con artists.
Midnight Schemers & Daydream Believers: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense: A Superior Shores Anthology, edited by Judy Penz Sheluk (Superior Shores Press): Desire or desperation, revenge or retribution—how far would you go to realize a dream? The twenty-two authors in this collection explore the possibilities, with predictably unpredictable results.
On Fire and Under Water: A Climate Change Crime Fiction Anthology, edited by Curtis Ippolito (Rock and a Hard Place Press): in light of increased average global temperatures that have wreaked havoc on ecosystems, economies, and people’s lives, 15 stories exploring the intersection of climate change and crime through the lens of fifteen short stories from some of today’s best crime fiction writers.
SoWest: Danger Awaits! A Desert Sleuths Anthology, edited by Claire A. Murray, Eva Eldridge, Suzanne E. Flaig, Denise Ganley, and Sarah Smith (DS Publishing): 25 stories filled with everyday people, private investigators, police personnel, husbands and wives, and others who solve crimes and mysteries their own way. A blend of historical, contemporary, paranormal, serious, and humorous, where each story features an Arizona setting.
Sunday Music Treat
Many folks have never heard of shape-note (or "Sacred Harp") singing, but it's an original American form of singing that involves reading shapes and syllables for notes instead of learning the usual scales and music notation. It's found primarily in the Appalachian regions of the U.S., such as the first clip from Cades Cove in the Smoky Mountains (not too far from where I grew up), which can serve an introduction, but I'll post a second clip by the LA Choral Lab singing the shape-note tune "Star in the East" from William Walker's Southern Harmony (still in use today):
xx









