Saturday, April 27, 2024

Scott's Take: Jean Grey: Flames of Fear by Louise Simonson


Jean Grey: Flames of Fear by Louise Simonson, illustrated by Bernard Chang, is another Fall of X title dealing with Jean Grey who died at the Hellfire Gala, but is not gone completely. She is in between being alive and dead. In the first three issues, Jean Grey explores her past and sees what would have happened if she chose a different thing. In the fourth Jean reflects and decides what to do from here.

 

The art and the stories are excellent. But. one must be somewhat familiar with her history as a character to appreciate the stories. One example, is in the first issue that deals with the question -- what if Jean when she was a teen and the rest of the original X-Men that had been sent to the future did not have their memories of the future wiped from them and instead chose to keep those memories to change their present.

 

This was a good book even if the final issue connects to an Immortal X-Men Volume I have not read yet since it was not out as I was reading this. This is a good Jean series, but one would get the most out of it if they are familiar with the comic book character’s history.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3TPZQ0f


My reading copy came by way of the Hoopla App and the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2024

Friday, April 26, 2024

Lesa's Book Critiques: WINNERS AND THIS WEEK’S GIVEAWAY

 Lesa's Book Critiques: WINNERS AND THIS WEEK’S GIVEAWAY

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 85 Calls for Submissions in May 2024 - Paying markets

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Finding Mr. Purrfect by Codi Gary

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Happiness Is A Book: FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE CASE OF THE TERRIFIED TYPIST BY ERLE STANLEY GARDNER

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Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE DEAD WORLD

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FFB Review: Carnosaur Weekend by Garnett Elliott

 

Imagine, if you will, a world where it is possible to go back in time to play golf in relative safety while dinosaurs move around you. That idea is just a small part of the three highly entertaining tales in Carnosaur Weekend. The three tales in the book are all good ones and highly entertaining.

 

“Carnosaur Weekend” opens the book where pterodactyls fly above the golf course and an allosaurus and a carnosaur are on the fairways. A RPG is a most helpful weapon in times like this where the super-rich are being courted by real estate developers selling time shares in the late cretaceous period. Those running this deal somehow got their hands on a “Zygma Projector” making their very questionable venture in the timeline possible. Damon Cole is already working the case in the far distant past and is under deep cover. Kyler Knightly is being sent in to assist because the deal has to be shut down before they screw up the past and cause irreversible changes in the present.

 

“The Zygma Gambit” comes next and was also published in the very good The Lizard’s Ardent Uniform and Other Stories. Set a bit before the preceding story, Kyler Knightly is one of those very special people known as “dreamers” and is employed by Continuity Inc. Through their dreams the dreamers have the ability to foresee the future. Kyler has been awakened by a dream in his own bed in the early morning hours of April 14, 2223. For this to happen outside of the Precog bays where he normally works means that this dream was very powerful and definitely coming true. Kyler has to get to his Uncle Damon Cole and tell him about the dream before Cole goes on his mission.

 

The final story title “The Worms of Terpsichore” is very good and highly reminiscent of the classic type of science fiction many of us grew up on. The spaceship Sallust sent off a one word message via their orbital beacon and then went radio silent. No further transmission has come from where they landed on the surface. The one word message also does not make sense. Clearly, something has happened.  Raj and Thea will go down to the site by way of a lander from their spaceship known as the Astarte. This type of search and rescue mission is just part of what they do as members of “Frontier Swift Response.” While this isn’t at time travel story and Damon Cole and Kyler Knightly are not involved at all, it is still a very good tale. After all, any story that uses a flame-gun is automatically pretty good.

 

Author Garnett Elliot’s bio and ads for other books from Beat To A Pulp including installments of the excellent Jack Laramie Drifter Detective series finish out the book.

 

The three science fiction tales in Carnosaur Weekend quickly yank readers to a very different time and place. The multiple characters involved have considerable depth that never gets in the way of the science fiction adventure. These are adventures when anything is possible as the dangers are many and one has to stay alive by one’s wits. The tales of Carnosaur Weekend are all very good ones very much worth your time.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3xShuYR

 

Material supplied by the publisher in exchange for my objective review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2014, 2020, 2024

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 72 Writing Contests in May 2024 - No entry fees

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 72 Writing Contests in May 2024 - No entry fees: This May there are six dozen free writing contests for short fiction, novels, poetry, CNF, nonfiction, and plays. Prizes this month range fr...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Golden Doves, Anxious People, Dreamland

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The Rap Sheet: A Trio of Pinckleys

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: The Habit of Widowhood and Other Murderous Proclivities

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George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #171: THE STAR TREK READER II By James Blish

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Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT

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Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: William Maxwelll, ALL THE DAYS AND NIGHTS, collected stories

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Tuesday, April 23, 2024

The Elysian: No one buys books by Elle Griffin

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The First Two Pages: “And Now, An Inspiring Story of Tragedy Overcome” by Joseph S. Walker

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Lesa's Book Critiques: THE MAYFAIR DAGGER BY AVA JANUARY

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SleuthSayers: The Magic of Malice

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Raven Thief by Gigi Pandian

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Review: Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery by Marcia Muller

 

Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery by Marcia Muller finds Sharon working a complicated case involving private street ownership. In San Franciso, there are more than 200 streets that are owned by private individuals or entities. As these streets are not city property, they are lucrative targets for land speculators and others.

 

As the book opens, it is almost midnight Halloween, and Sharon McCone is on a stake out. Being a co-owner of the agency with her husband, Hy Ripinsky, who is currently overseas, she is out in the rain so that she does not have to fool with trick-or-treaters and somebody else does not miss a party or spending time with their kids this dark night. The rain fits her mood. One that she has been in for months now. A mood that she can’t really explain to herself or others that have noticed.

 

She is on Rowan Court trying to prevent another vandalism attack. McCone & Ripinsky International has been hired by the wealthy homeowners on the street to stop a rash of vandalism that has been happening to their homes and vehicles. Not just stop it, but identify the culprits and why they are doing it. One of their members has been reaching out to other folks and have discovered that this sort of thing is happening on other private streets, rich and poor, across the city.

 

Soon McCone finds things are linked across various neighborhoods. Events start to move forward and become deadly.

 

Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery is a complicated and often slow-moving read. At least a third of the book, if not more, consists of reminisces of previous cases and things that happened to McCone, Hy, and many others in the past, and an acknowledgment and recognition of how far all those involved have come in the here and now. Even if one had not seen the guest post by the author at SleuthSayers announcing this book is the end of the series, it is clear with the way the book unfolds for the reader.

 

It is also a good read. The case is complicated and chugs along at a semi steady pace between the many memories of the past. Circle in the Water: A Sharon McCone Mystery ends the series well. 

 


Amazon Associates Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3JhwuSp 

 

My ARC reading copy came from the publisher, Grand Central Publishing, via NetGalley with no expectation of a review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2024

Monday, April 22, 2024

Lesa's Book Critiques: AT THE EDGE OF THE WOODS BY VICTORIA HOUSTON

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in March 2024

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Aubrey's Nye Hamilton Reviews: Robbed Blind by Roy Hart


Between 1987 and 1994 Roy Hart, a British avionics engineer, wrote nine police procedurals fronted by Detective Superintendent Douglas Roper of the Dorset County Criminal Investigation Department on the southern coast of England. In line with the procedural that was popular in the 1980s, they are all set in villages and the plots all focus on the investigation rather than the psychology of the crime. While there are quirky characters, they take a back seat to the detailed and systematic description of police activities in collecting and sifting clues to find the culprit. The fifth in the series Robbed Blind (Macmillan London, 1990) is a good example.

The night of Good Friday in the village of Little Crow Stella Pumfrey was found dead at the foot of the stairs in her home. Her shoe caught in the carpet on the landing bore mute testimony to an accidental fall that caused Stella’s head to collide with ferocity against the newel post. The post-mortem, though, showed the damage to Stella’s skull could not have been caused by the fall.

By the time the police received the autopsy report recommending further investigation, the crime scene had been thoroughly contaminated, much to Roper’s frustration. Initial inquiries reveal that Stella had money and her husband and her sister were in line to inherit it. Neither of them was on good terms with the victim. Then there was the lover rumored to be in the background. But perhaps it was not personal at all: an exquisite and valuable pair of earrings is missing. Could she have been surprised by the burglar that was known to be in the neighborhood? As Roper talks to Stella’s family and friends, he finds no shortage of possible scenarios and people with adverse interests to Stella’s.

This series seems to have flown under the radar in the U.S. The first two titles were not published here, and none of them seem to have been reprinted after the initial hardback and paperback issue. Roper isn’t given much of a back story, although there is some information about him, and perhaps he wasn’t vivid enough to capture lasting interest. A review from Publishers Weekly said he lacked the edge of a Sherlock Holmes, although both Publishers Weekly and Kirkus spoke highly of the series. While nine books is a respectable run, timing probably also affected its popularity, as reading tastes were moving towards gritty, violent crime fiction with lots of action.

I found this series entry a solid, capable detective story with complex plotting, plenty of red herrings, and plausible suspects. Recommended for fans of police procedurals and admirers of traditional mysteries.

 


·         Publisher: St Martins Press; First Edition (January 1, 1990)

·         Language: English

·         Hardcover: 206 pages

·         ISBN-10: 0312044143

·         ISBN-13: 978-0312044145

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/44b3G80 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024 

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

OUT NOW!! Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries Volume III


Though it was not supposed to be out yet, Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries Volume III, is now out at Amazon and should be available within days at Barnes and Noble. Published by the Sisters in Crime North Dallas chapter, the read is edited by Michael Bracken, and includes a forward from author Kathleen Kent. It also includes my short story, Whatever Happened To…?, set in my little part of NE Dallas.

I am very grateful to Michael Bracken, Karen Harrington, and to everyone involved in the process. It is my understanding that there will be book signings in early June and other events. My hope is that, health permitting, I will be at those events.

Lesa's Book Critiques: SUNDAY SPOTLIGHT – KIM HAYS

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Beneath the Stains of Time: The Conjure-Man Dies (1932) by Rudolph Fisher

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The Rap Sheet: A Chorus of Praise for Pochoda

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