Does Your Mum Have a Dark Side?

Does she never miss a murder documentary? Treat her to a True Crime Tour this Mother’s Day.

If your mum’s the type who has opinions on Ted Bundy, or quietly suspects she’d have made a pretty decent homicide detective, it might be time to skip the flowers this year.

Does Your Mum Have a Dark Side?

Book her in for something with a bit more edge – a Dark Stories True Crime Tour.

And yes, word on the street says crime drops every year on Mother’s Day.

If that’s true, it tells us a lot about how many crimes mums commit the rest of the year. Please try to stay safe out there, folks.

This Mother’s Day, share a few tales of crime, mystery, and murder – and give Mum a story she won’t forget.

Tours run weekly in cities across Australia. Or, if you’re unsure on timing, a gift card lets her schedule her own night delving into the darker side of history.

Mothers Day True Crime

Here’s hoping that if anyone could plan the perfect crime and still be home in time for dinner, it’s your mum.

Book for this Sunday, or grab a Gift Card and let Mum choose her own date with darkness.

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Easter Crime: The Bergen Train Was Looted Last Night

Each year, as Easter approaches, most people around the world think of chocolate eggs, family gatherings, amid moments of spiritual reflection.

But in Norway, something far darker creeps in with the snow — murder in the form of the country’s national obsession with crime fiction so intense that it has its own seasonal name: Påskekrim — Easter Crime.

While most cultures associate Easter with rebirth, Norwegians associate it with grisly murders, twisted detectives, and psychological thrillers.

Nordic Noir in Snow

During Easter week, Norway transforms into a true crime lover’s paradise: bookstores brim with new mystery novels, national TV stations roll out murder series marathons, and even milk cartons print short crime stories.

Thousands escape for the holidays to isolated mountain cabins with snow-covered views, a warm drink, and a stack of crime books in hand.

How did it all begin?

On the Sunday before Easter in 1923, a publisher ran an ad for a new crime novel titled “The Bergen Train Was Looted Last Night” (Bergenstoget plyndret i natt), disguised as a front-page newspaper headline.

In a move not unlike Orson Welles’ famous War of the Worlds broadcast years later, many believed it was real. It caused a sensation, and the book sold like crazy as people packed for their easter holiday mountain cabins, and a literary tradition was born.

Ever since, Norwegian publishers have timed their biggest crime releases for Easter, and Norwegians have gladly kept reading.

Just something to think about as you reach for your hot cross buns — even at this time of year, someone out there is curling up for the long weekend with a good murder instead.

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