15 Books For Cold Winter Nights

What exactly is a winter read? Is it even a thing? I’m not the only one wondering about this. Sophie had a similar dilemma last week, and I don’t think we’ve reached a consensus.

Whenever the temperature drops to near zero, I find myself gravitating toward Nordic noir, Scandi crime, dark, gritty stuff and stories with winter settings more often than not.

I make a coffee topped with frothy milk, light a gingerbread scented candle, and sink into my blankies with a book similar to one of these babies for a cozy winter night.

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, and this week’s topic is cozy and wintry reads.

The Magpies by Mark Edwards

When Jamie and Kirsty move into their first home together they are full of optimism. The future, in which they plan to get married and start a family, is bright. The other residents of their building seem friendly too: the horror writer and the middle-aged herbalist who live upstairs, and the Newtons, a married couple who welcome them to the building with open arms.

At first, the two couples get on well. But then strange things start to happen. Dead rats are left on their doorstep. They hear disturbing noises, and much worse, in the night. After Jamie’s best friend is injured in a horrific accident, Jamie and Kirsty find themselves targeted by a campaign of terror.

As Jamie and Kirsty are driven to the edge of despair, Jamie vows to fight back – but he has no idea what he is really up against…


Crossing by Andrew Fukuda

A loner in his all-white high school, Chinese-born Xing (pronounced “Shing”) is a wallflower longing for acceptance. His isolation is intensified by his increasingly awkward and undeniable crush on his only friend, the beautiful and brilliant Naomi Lee.

Xing’s quiet adolescent existence is rattled when a series of disappearances rock his high school and fear ripples through the blue collar community in which he lives.

Amidst the chaos surrounding him, only Xing, alone on the sidelines of life, takes notice of some peculiar sightings around town. He begins to investigate with the hope that if he can help put an end to the disappearances, he will finally win the acceptance for which he has longed. However, as Xing draws closer to unveiling the identity of the abductor, he senses a noose of suspicion tightening around his own neck.


The Gingerbread House by Carin Gerhardsen

Ingrid Olsson returns home from a Stockholm hospital to discover a man in her kitchen. She’s never seen the intruder before. But he’s no threat – he’s dead.

Criminal Investigator Conny Sjöberg takes the call, abandoning his wife Åsa and their five children for the night. His team identify the body as that of a middle-aged family man. But why was he there? And who bludgeoned him to death?

Lacking suspect and motive, Sjöberg’s team struggle until they link the case to another – apparently random – killing. And discover they face a serial killer on a terrible vendetta . . .


Season of the Witch by Árni Þórarinsson

When the editors at Reykjavik-based The Afternoon News decide to expand the newspaper into northern Iceland—with their crime writer Einar as its sole reporter on location—the journalist feels as though he has stepped back in time. Compared to the hustle and bustle of the capital, where the nation’s economic and social crises rear their heads on a daily basis, the small town of Akureyri feels slow, quiet, and terribly old-fashioned.

So it’s only fitting that one of Einar’s first assignments is to cover a college theater production of Loftur the Sorcerer, an Icelandic folktale of ambition and greed. But that supposedly ancient history becomes ominously relevant when a local woman dies after falling overboard during a corporate boating retreat. All evidence indicates an accident, but when the victim’s mother cries foul play, kindhearted Einar agrees to investigate. Just days later, the lead actor in Loftur vanishes, leaving the locals reeling—and Einar unconvinced that a single village could be so accident prone. Keenly perceptive and hungry for the truth, Einar begins to chip away at the quaint small-town facade, uncovering a tangled web of power and greed that threatens to devour the historic community for good.


Blood on the Tracks by Barbara Nickless

A young woman is found brutally murdered, and the main suspect is the victim’s fiancé, a hideously scarred Iraq War vet known as the Burned Man. But railroad police Special Agent Sydney Rose Parnell, brought in by the Denver Major Crimes unit to help investigate, can’t shake the feeling that larger forces are behind this apparent crime of passion.

In the depths of an icy winter, Parnell and her K9 partner, Clyde―both haunted by their time in Iraq―descend into the underground world of a savage gang of rail riders. There, they uncover a wide-reaching conspiracy and a series of shocking crimes. Crimes that threaten everything Parnell holds dear.

As the search for the truth puts her directly in the path of the killer, Parnell must struggle with a deadly question: Can she fight monsters without becoming one herself?


Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow by Peter Høeg

She thinks more highly of snow and ice than she does of love. She lives in a world of numbers, science and memories–a dark, exotic stranger in a strange land. And now Smilla Jaspersen is convinced she has uncovered a shattering crime…

It happened in the Copenhagen snow. A six-year-old boy, a Greenlander like Smilla, fell to his death from the top of his apartment building. While the boy’s body is still warm, the police pronounce his death an accident. But Smilla knows her young neighbor didn’t fall from the roof on his own. Soon she is following a path of clues as clear to her as footsteps in the snow. For her dead neighbor, and for herself, she must embark on a harrowing journey of lies, revelation and violence that will take her back to the world of ice and snow from which she comes, where an explosive secret waits beneath the ice…


Raven Black by Ann Cleeves

It is a cold January morning and Shetland lies buried beneath a deep layer of snow. Trudging home, Fran Hunter’s eye is drawn to a vivid splash of colour on the white ground, ravens circling above. It is the strangled body of her teenage neighbour Catherine Ross. As Fran opens her mouth to scream, the ravens continue their deadly dance …

The locals on the quiet island stubbornly focus their gaze on one man – loner and simpleton Magnus Tait. But when police insist on opening out the investigation a veil of suspicion and fear is thrown over the entire community. For the first time in years, Catherine’s neighbours nervously lock their doors, whilst a killer lives on in their midst.


Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King

1922
The story opens with the confession of Wilfred James to the murder of his wife, Arlette, following their move to Hemingford, Nebraska onto land willed to Arlette by her father.

Big Driver
Mystery writer, Tess, has been supplementing her writing income for years by doing speaking engagements with no problems. But following a last-minute invitation to a book club 60 miles away, she takes a shortcut home with dire consequences.

Fair Extension
Harry Streeter, who is suffering from cancer, decides to make a deal with the devil but, as always, there is a price to pay.

A Good Marriage
Darcy Anderson learns more about her husband of over twenty years than she would have liked to know when she stumbles literally upon a box under a worktable in their garage.


The Hunger by Alma Katsu

After having travelled west for weeks, the party of pioneers comes to a crossroads. It is time for their leader, George Donner, to make a choice. They face two diverging paths which lead to the same destination. One is well-documented – the other untested, but rumoured to be shorter.

Donner’s decision will shape the lives of everyone travelling with him. The searing heat of the desert gives way to biting winds and a bitter cold that freezes the cattle where they stand. Driven to the brink of madness, the ill-fated group struggles to survive and minor disagreements turn into violent confrontations. Then the children begin to disappear. As the survivors turn against each other, a few begin to realise that the threat they face reaches beyond the fury of the natural elements, to something more primal and far more deadly.


Snowblind by Ragnar Jónasson

Siglufjörður: an idyllically quiet fishing village in Northern Iceland, where no one locks their doors – accessible only via a small mountain tunnel. Ari Thór Arason: a rookie policeman on his first posting, far from his girlfriend in Reykjavik – with a past that he’s unable to leave behind. When a young woman is found lying half-naked in the snow, bleeding and unconscious, and a highly esteemed, elderly writer falls to his death in the local theatre, Ari is dragged straight into the heart of a community where he can trust no one, and secrets and lies are a way of life.

An avalanche and unremitting snowstorms close the mountain pass, and the 24-hour darkness threatens to push Ari over the edge, as curtains begin to twitch, and his investigation becomes increasingly complex, chilling and personal. Past plays tag with the present and the claustrophobic tension mounts, while Ari is thrust ever deeper into his own darkness – blinded by snow, and with a killer on the loose.


Midwinter Sacrifice by Mons Kallentoft

The snow covered all the tracks, as the killer knew it would. But it couldn’t hide the victim, the man who now hung naked from a lonely tree on a frozen plain.

Malin Fors is first on the scene. A thirty-one-year-old single mother, Malin is the most talented and ambitious detective on the Linkoping police force, but also the most unpredictable. She must lead the investigation while keeping her fractured life on the rails.
No one knows the identity of the dead man. Or perhaps no one ever wanted to know. When all the voices of the investigation have fallen silent, Malin can rely only on herself and her own instincts. And as she follows in the frigid wake of the killer, Malin begins to discover just how far the people in this small town are willing to go to keep their secrets buried.


The Ice Princess by Camilla Läckberg

Returning to her hometown of Fjallbacka after the funeral of her parents, writer Erica Falck finds a community on the brink of tragedy. The death of her childhood friend, Alex, is just the beginning. Her wrists slashed, her body frozen in an ice-cold bath, it seems that she has taken her own life.

Erica conceives a book about the beautiful but remote Alex, one that will answer questions about their own shared past. While her interest grows into an obsession, local detective Patrik Hedstrom is following his own suspicions about the case. But it is only when they start working together that the truth begins to emerge about a small town with a deeply disturbing past.


Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane

The year is 1954. U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels and his new partner, Chuck Aule, have come to Shutter Island, home of Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane, to investigate the disappearance of a patient. Multiple murderess Rachel Solando is loose somewhere on this remote and barren island, despite having been kept in a locked cell under constant surveillance.

As a killer hurricane relentlessly bears down on them, a strange case takes on even darker, more sinister shades—with hints of radical experimentation, horrifying surgeries, and lethal countermoves made in the cause of a covert shadow war. No one is going to escape Shutter Island unscathed, because nothing at Ashecliffe Hospital is what it seems. But then neither is Teddy Daniels.


Winter’s Bone by Daniel Woodrell

The sheriff’s deputy at the front door brings hard news to Ree Dolly. Her father has skipped bail on charges that he ran a crystal meth lab, and the Dollys will lose their house if he doesn’t show up for his next court date.

Ree’s father has disappeared before. The Dolly clan has worked the shadowy side of the law for generations, and arrests (and attempts to avoid them) are part of life in Rathlin Valley. But the house is all they have, and Ree’s father would never forfeit it to the bond company unless something awful happened. With two young brothers depending on her and a mother who’s entered a kind of second childhood, Ree knows she has to bring her father back, dead or alive, or else see her family turned out into the unforgiving cold.

Sixteen-year-old Ree, who has grown up in the harsh poverty of the Ozarks, learns quickly that asking questions of the rough Dolly clan can be a fatal mistake. She perseveres past obstacles of every kind and finally confronts the top figures in the family’s hierarchy.
Along the way to a shocking revelation, Ree discovers unexpected depths in herself and in a family network that protects its own at any cost.


The Chestnut Man by Søren Sveistrup

The police make a terrible discovery in a suburb of Copenhagen. A young woman has been killed and dumped at a playground. One of her hands has been cut off, and above her hangs a small doll made of chestnuts.

Young detective Naia Thulin is assigned the case. Her partner is Mark Hess, a burned-out investigator who’s just been kicked out of Europol’s headquarters in The Hague. They soon discover a mysterious piece of evidence on the chestnut man – evidence connecting it to a girl who went missing a year earlier and is presumed dead, the daughter of politician Rosa Hartung. A man confessed to her murder, and the case is long since solved.

Soon afterwards, another woman is found murdered, along with another chestnut man. Thulin and Hess suspect that there’s a connection between the Hartung case, the murdered women and a killer who is spreading fear throughout the country. But what is it?
Thulin and Hess are racing against the clock, because it’s clear that the murderer is on a mission that is far from over . . .

How about you? What do you read during winter?

59 Comments

  1. I’ve read the Chesnut Man recently and god, it was a difficult and very upsetting read. But it was a good crime book.

    I’ve also read Shutter Island and Ice Princess, 4 and 3 stars in that order 😀 (I love Dennis Lehane)

    Meaning to read Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow by Peter Høeg I have it at least 2 years now, on my shelf! Need to grab it soon.

    Lovely post!! I’ve also add Spinning Silver and The Way Past Winter, which are books I have and plan to read in colden days 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m at 60%! Really enjoying it so far 🙂 (Chestnur Man i mean)

      I finally got a copy of Smilla, been meaning to read it for like 5 years. Hehe.

      I read shutter island such a long time ago, but i still remember how baffled i was with the ending 😀

      The Way Past Winter… haven’t heard of it, but i like the title ❤

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I love these choices, and I agree about snowy thrillers. I just picked up a read now one on NG- The Girl with No Skin (icky title) that takes place in Greenland I believe? Or Iceland? I also sometimes read a snowy holiday rom com in winter! ♥️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh how cool!
      I don’t read fantasy so much, but i used to play a lot of fantasy/rpg video games (as in a lot of hours, not a lot of titles), and i loved playing Icewind Dale during winter.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Ooopsie 😀
      Maybe if you hold off till the end of the month they will be on christmas sale and then you can justify buying them cuz you’ll essentially save money. (That’s what i keep telling myself) 😀

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Ha! Ha! Yeah, but I just might come out of the shop with 20 books, and the Other Half is going to give me that look. You know, *that* look! I might have to stagger purchases, and look innocent when asked why I’m going to the mall, again! 😉

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Oh, that look! 😀
          I often sneak home my purchases and then just inconspicuously leave them somewhere, pretending they’ve always been there 😀 Otherwise i get “that” look too.

          Liked by 1 person

    1. Well, it’s not a bad strategy! When it’s cold, and i’m reading these books set in the cold, i just end up feeling even colder. Haha 😀 Maybe i should try and read something summery as well.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m halfway through Chestnut Man and it’s really good!
      Haven’t read Snowblind yet, but had it on my kindle for ages and seemed like a good one for the season 😀

      Like

  3. Just looking at all of these books makes me feel cold and want to snuggle up underneath all of my warm covers. I haven’t read any of them, but GOSH some of these covers are so beautiful! Thanks for sharing your winter reads! Now I want to eat some gingerbread cookies and drink something hot 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I read nothing noir or nordic in winter! LOL Rather something warm and fluffy or gooey like hot chocolate to warm up my soul 😉 Great list for amateurs of the genre Norrie!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Ooh, great list! I really want to read The Hunger. It sounds like it would be quite the page-turner. 🙂
    I greatly enjoyed reading The Bear and the Nightingale during the winter last year. The story paired perfectly with snowy weather. Hope you’re having a cozy weekend full of good books and warm blankets! ❤

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, the Hunger would even fit in with your non-fiction goals a bit. I mean, yea, it’s part made up, also part based on true story.

      Have a lovely weekend too! ❤

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Oh wow! Great list, Norrie. I’m adding over half of them to my TBR. 🙂 Shutter Island is my favorite film, ever. I don’t know how I didn’t know it was a novel!

    I usually don’t read by seasons but for some reason, I’ve been trying to pick up romance novels set in the snow this month lol.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I watched the movie and remember i thought it was good. But also it was a bit different from the book. At least that’s what i thought then, but i couldn’t tell you in what way…

      Liked by 1 person

  7. It is the first time that hear about The Chestnut Man, and I am intrigued. I also prefer the movie to the book – Shutter Island, but perhaps I need to re-read.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I watched the movie Shutter Island, but don’t remember much. It was somehow different to the book, but i can’t tell now how or in what way.

      Like

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