You can listen to the entire programme right here, and below is the script from our segment which begins at 39 minutes.
A brief introduction to action thrillers
The action thriller never seems to go out of fashion.
Books in this sub-genre tend to be written by men with male protagonists. They’re usually fighting a conspiracy of some kind, and doing so against the odds. And they’ll be resourceful enough, and violent enough, to survive.
Action thrillers are often enjoyed for their escapist qualities – action, thrills, unexpected plot twists and often a fairly black and white standoff between the good guys and the bad guys. But they’re getting more clever, more varied and although a sense of place and atmosphere isn’t as important in action thrillers as in psychological crime fiction, for instance, you’ll find today’s action thrillers do offer plenty of social commentary.
Burning Bright by Nick Petrie
One day he climbs a tree to escape from a bear and finds there’s someone else up there. June Cassidy is an artificial intelligence expert being hunted by the feds and their treetop escape is just the beginning of the action.
Deep Down Dead by Steph Broadribb
The protagonist is a female bounty hunter who freelances for a bail bond agency in Florida. Lori Anderson’s daughter Dakota has cancer and she’s struggling to keep up with the bills. A well-paid job comes in but there are two catches. One, there’s nobody to babysit nine year old Dakota. Two, the fugitive she needs to round up is her former lover.
She takes her daughter with her, and it isn’t long before things go south and the child is kidnapped. Plenty of dark and desperate action as they try to get her back.
Underground Airlines by Ben H Winters
Winters projects a country where slavery wasn’t abolished in 1865, and four southern states still practice it in the modern day. Victor, a former slave himself, is trying to infiltrate the underground airlines, which helps slaves escape. As you can imagine his loyalties are split, but he has no choice – do the job or return to slavery.
All the violence and brutality of the practice of slavery is laid bare in this action thriller.
Turning back the clock
The other thing you can do if you’ve read all the offerings of current action thriller authors like Lee Child and David Baldacci, is to go back to the roots of this sub-genre.
It’s the classic book in the genre, and you can also enjoy it in the form of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1935 movie, or as an interactive book by The Story Mechanics, with animations, mood music, clues to examine and puzzles to solve.
Or there’s Geoffrey Household’s Rogue Male, written in 1939. The unnamed rogue male was on a mission to kill a despotic head of state but was caught. His captors try to kill him by throwing him off a cliff but somehow he survives, and has to hide out in the wilds of Dorset as he’s hunted by the regime.
It’s as wild, visceral and suspenseful as any book you’re likely to read.
So, these are some contemporary and classic action thrillers for you to explore if you’ve become hooked on Lee Child. For more, keep coming back to Crime Fiction Lover where we report on and review the latest crime novels.
Let us know what your favourite action thrillers are below.