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A woman browsing in a Waterstone's. A critic said domestic noir is popular because it reflects ‘some very real fears’. Photograph: Foto-Story/Alamy View image in fullscreen A woman browsing in a Waterstone's. A critic said domestic noir is popular because it reflects ‘some very real fears’. Photograph: Foto-Story/Alamy Nine of ten bestselling novels in UK have one thing in common: a woman is murdered Author Wendy Jones highlighted the trend in an Instagram post: ‘What is going on here?’ Nine of the 10 bestselling fiction paperbacks in the UK this week have one thing in common: a woman is murdered. The novels, which appear on this week’s Sunday Times bestseller list , include The Secret of Secrets, The Divorce, The Names , The Family Friend, The Widow, The Impossible Fortune, The Hallmarked Man , My Husband’s Wife and Boleyn Traitor. While the titles range from historical fiction to domestic noir and police procedurals, each centres on the death of at least one female character. Only The Correspondent, a novel about the art of letter writing, breaks the pattern. The trend was highlighted on Instagram by the author Wendy Jones, who wrote: “So 84% [sic] of the books people bought and read in the UK this week involved a woman being murdered for entertainment. What is going on here?” The concentration of currently popular novels about femicide may be striking but is not a new literary phenomenon. From the gothic suspense of Daphne du Maurier to the psychological thrillers of Gillian Flynn, the murdered woman has long been one of fiction’s most enduring plot devices. Flynn’s Gone Girl , published in 2012, helped propel novels centred on murdered or endangered women into one of the most commercially successful genres, with publishers spending much of the following decade searching for the next “girl” thriller. But why does commercial fiction keep returning to the same story? Critics argue that repeatedly turning women into victims risks normalising violence against them. Yet the genre’s paradox is that women are also its biggest consumers, with some arguing its appeal may be a way of processing real-world fears. The crime writer Mel McGrath wrote that the genre has, in some ways, moved on from the time of male authors such as Raymond Chandler and Mickey Spillane killing off women chiefly so the men investigating their deaths could be heroes. “Reading crime fiction written by women remains a powerfully feminist act,” she said. The crime writer and critic Laura Wilson explained that domestic noir is popular at the moment because it reflects “some very real fears”. “Female murder victims are far more likely to have been killed by people they know, such as intimate partners or family members, than male murder victims, who are significantly more likely to die at the hands of strangers,” Wilson said. “Every industry survey that’s been done on this subject indicates that women account for the majority of crime fiction sales.” skip past newsletter promotion aft
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  • 2
    This disturbing trend reveals how our culture has become obsessed with female suffering as entertainment. While crime fiction can be compelling, the sheer volume of domestic noir featuring murdered women suggests a troubling fixation rather than genuine literary merit. Were witnessing the commodification of fear, turning real trauma into bestseller lists.
  • 0
    Why does murderespecially female murderseem to be the plot device that makes stories truly unforgettable? What does this say about our collective obsession with violence as a narrative catalyst?