When I was young and I swallowed all murder mystery series television casting (in the time allowed for parental authority), there was always a detail that I found the most annoying.
Because, see, what happened is that you saw "The Murder, She Wrote" and although I loved Mrs. Fletcher and phlegm that solve all kinds of crimes, had a serious credibility problem. The murder of another chapter chapter also placed a Cabot Cove, the quiet town of Maine (New England) in the top of the ranking of most dangerous places on earth, as if it were not enough Stephen King novels.
Over time and after having seen many series where the detective faced a criminal caseload and Humphrey Bogart in his best days, it is normal to conclude that the only way to make a series of this genre more or less credible if adopted would be ... murderer's point .
Obviously, it is less rare for a crime by chapter if the protagonist is a serial murderer, if it be a detective or an old lady writer.
Fortunately, this idea not only did I have and I imagine a few more. In particular, a certain Jeff Lindsay's novel published in 2004 called "The Dark Passenger" that later, the producer would take the anti-hero Dexter HBO. Finally, it was a series in which could be killed left and right without affecting too much the issue of credibility. And though it may raise some moral itching to see what comes to be quite an allegory of the death penalty (Dexter, unable to control his urge to kill, it makes choosing only to criminal justice which has thrown down the gauntlet ), the fact is that the show engages the basis of much black humor and plots of the most gruesome crime.
If there is like taking a book or local library does not offer juicy news, review the four seasons of "Dexter" can be a very satisfactory substitute. And every time the mechanisms novels take on more television and TV series are finally beginning to incorporate the best elements of mystery novels.