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You don’t need to read 60 thrillers a year. You just need someone who did.
I spent 20 years as a high school librarian matching readers with books, and if that job taught me anything, it’s that the best book on the shelf is rarely the one with the biggest display. Everyone’s read the thrillers the algorithm keeps pushing. These twelve are the ones it skipped: small presses, quiet releases, debut authors, and stories that got buried under bigger names the same week they came out. I’d press every one of these into your hands.
The Last Hitman by Robin Yocum. He killed for a living. Now lunch at the diner is the highlight of his day, until the FBI comes knocking. A character-driven mob story that deserves so much more attention. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Molka by Monika Kim. Feminine rage from page one. A dark, unflinching revenge thriller about hidden cameras and the women who fight back. Not an easy read, but a necessary one. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Dead Man Blues by S.D. House. Your ex-wife married your best friend. Now he needs your help solving a murder or two. Yes, it’s as good as it sounds. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Fun City Heist by Michael Kardos. A washed-up drummer, a dying friend, and one last job on a crumbling Jersey Shore boardwalk. Funny, chaotic, and with way more heart than a heist book has any right to have. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Where the Bones Lie by Nick Kolakowski. A drought reveals a barrel at the bottom of a dried-up lake with a long-missing mob boss inside. Sharp, twisty noir with a bourbon-loving Hollywood fixer you’ll root for. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Headlights by C.J. Leede. Part police procedural, part horror, completely gripping. An FBI agent pulled back into the bizarre unsolved case that broke him. I had no notes. None. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Saint of the Narrows Street by William Boyle. A gritty Brooklyn family crime drama where secrets and lies won’t hold. Atmospheric and quietly devastating. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Dark Neon & Dirt by Thomas Trang. A Vietnamese war orphan turned master thief in Los Angeles. One of the most original premises I’ve read in years, from an author nobody’s talking about yet. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Fadeaway Joe by Hugh Lessig. An aging enforcer whose boss goes legit and leaves him out in the cold. Tons of personality and a character who sticks with you. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Penitence by Kristin Koval. A small-community crime story that flew under the radar. A quiet, powerful debut worth finding. Grab a copy on Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Only Way Out by Tod Goldberg. A hapless lawyer engineers a heist, then dies before he can enjoy it, leaving a mess behind. Darkly funny with a great premise. Grab a copy at Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Dead Money by Jakob Kerr. A Silicon Valley fixer, a murdered tech CEO, and a debut author who came out swinging. Twisty and smart. Grab a copy at Bookshop.org. Read my full review here.
Want the whole dozen in one place? I put them all on a Bookshop list so you can browse the covers and grab whichever one calls to you.
Which one are you adding to your list? Tell me in the comments, and if you’ve got a hidden gem of your own, I want to hear about it.

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