A weekly look at the best new crime, suspense, and detective writing. This week's book, "The Thirst," by Jo Nesbo.
Social worker Brooke Gittings, whose wildly successful Convicted podcast tells the story of imprisoned killer Richard Nicolas, talks to True Crime about taking on host duties for A&E's new Cold Case Files podcast.
Travis Yates, editor in chief of LawOfficer.com, and a police officer in Tulsa, OK, talks about the toll an officer's death takes on the community, the families and fellow officers.
We asked courtroom artist and fine-art painter Jane Rosenberg what it's like to have a front row seat at some of the biggest trials of our time, why she never travels without a razor (but never in court), and what she expects at the upcoming Bill Cosby trial.
Learn about a place that profiles the people executed for crimes on a given day.
Q&A with Plum Sykes, author of the suspense novel Party Girls Die in Pearls: An Oxford Girl Mystery, on how mystery novels don't always have to be super dark, what it's like to work at Vogue, and the allure of floppy-haired British boys.
Podcaster Christine Schiefer, co-host of true crime and paranormal podcast And That's Why We Drink, reviews the Cold Case Files episode "The Night Shift."
In a Q&A, Alexis Robie, Executive Producer of The First 48, reveals what he's learned over the course of 14 years of making the show–which includes 584 cases, and 859 arrests–including the worst crime he ever covered.
Q&A with Bill Kurtis on his prison fan mail, the worst case he ever saw, and how you can go home again.
A run-down of the cold case of a Baltimore nun, currently the subject of a Netflix docuseries.