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THECrime fiction is a genre full of witty and decidedly unconventional protagonists. Their most famous ancestor is Miss Jane Marple, the old lady figment of Agatha Christie’s imagination, dedicated to knitting and apparently harmless. With her, the sleepy English village of St. Mary Mead turns into a labyrinth of passions, envies and obsessions of all kinds. A cult setting that still continues to fascinate crowds of readers all over the world.

New detective books and a bit of a rom-com: who are the detective protagonists

They are fallible women with ordinary, often messy lives, but they have a strong intuition and an irresistible ironic streak on their side. Detectives in rom-com crime novels stumble and get up again, whip up delicacies while spying on neighbors, make sarcastic jokes and solve crimes better than the police.

What is “cozy crime” and why is it so popular

In English, cozy means intimate, comfortable, everything you expect from reading these soft detective novels. In cozy crimes, in fact, there are no bloody crimes or splatter scenes. The story focuses on the resolution of the enigma, the atmosphere and the originality of the characters. The settings are often reassuring: small towns, bookshops, provincial guesthouses, tea rooms, neighborhoods where everyone knows each other and where the balance is suddenly shattered by a murder.

In these cases there is always someone, usually a woman, who is at the scene of the crime and has a more or less direct involvement with the victim. From that moment on, our heroine will demonstrate incredible logical skills that she will use to catch the murderer red-handed.

The writer Agatha Christie (1890 – 1976) in a photo from 1946, while writing in her home in Devon

Miss Marple & Co.: unlikely but gifted humint

The success of cozy crime novels consists in a narrative where the crime is intertwined with daily life and relationships within small provincial towns. The protagonists are equipped with what, in espionage, is called Humint (acronym for Human Intelligence), a term that connotes the oldest form of information gathering, based on interpersonal contacts and the observation of details invisible to most. They do not have cutting-edge scientific laboratories or sophisticated investigative algorithms, but they know how to interpret silences, grasp the nuances in dialogues and gestures, such as a hesitation or an object left there by chance. It is precisely this ability to move within the fabric of social relationships that makes them effective, albeit unlikely, investigators: librarians, retired teachers, bistro owners, florists or elderly ladies with a reassuring air who, behind kind ways and ordinary lives, hide a formidable deductive talent.

Angela Brigid Lansbury played Miss Marple in The Mirror Crack’d. (Photo by CBS via Getty Images)

Pedra Delicado and Imma Tataranni: heroines beyond clichés

Alongside Miss Marple, increasingly unconventional figures have arrived over the years. Like Petra Delicado, created by Alicia Giménez-Bartlett: a sarcastic policewoman, intolerant of the rules, very far from the impeccable heroines of traditional crime.

Vanessa Scalera as Imma Tataranni while looking at Matera, her city

Petra smokes, makes mistakes, makes fun of her male colleagues and approaches cases with a very clear eye on human relationships. Even Imma Tataranni, born from the pen of Mariolina Venezia, escapes every cliché: scruffy, abrupt and with a questionable idea of ​​elegance, she is endowed with an extraordinary investigative intelligence. His investigations are not limited to unmasking the culprits, they delve into the human frailties and secrets of the province of Matera, bringing to light illicit trafficking and ancient resentments. The charm of these protagonists lies entirely in their humanity: they don’t want to be perfect and solve cases thanks to empathy and a spirit of observation.

Imma Tataranni 5: the clip

The boom in crime novels written by women, 6 new releases in bookstores

In recent years, female crime fiction has become one of the most vital sectors of publishing. The authors have expanded the genre, transforming the crime into a tool to talk about contemporary issues such as hardship, loneliness, aging and power relations in the workplace. Also this is why detective stories written by women speak to a huge audience. They not only offer suspense, but build recognizable worlds and complex characters that are easy to identify with. In the gallery, we recommend 6 books hot off the press where they conduct the investigations, women who observe the world with freedom of gaze, intelligence and irony.

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