Tuesday, March 03, 2026

Jim Nesbitt Reviews: Razor-Sharp & Bloody

 Jim Nesbitt Reviews: Razor-Sharp & Bloody 

Happiness Is A Book: Body Scissors by Jerome Doolittle

 Happiness Is A Book: Body Scissors by Jerome Doolittle

Publication Day Review: The Politician: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan

 

Peggy Frampton is very much dead in her bedroom as The Politician: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan begins. The cleaning lady had found her employer dead that morning. Now Cross, the Detective Sergeant from the Avon and Somerset Police, will lead the hunt for the killer or killers as this most definitely is a murder case.

 

At one time, Peggy Frampton was the Mayor of Bristol. In recent years, she has been a social media influencer through an advice column, and a writer. She has a massive online presence and impact, not only in her local Bristol, England, community, but far beyond. She tended to ruffle feathers, at times, with her blunt advice.

 

She is survived by her husband, Peter, and their adult children. Peter is a lawyer. As it happens, he is in London, on a case, and is on the way back home as DS George Cross looks at the body and the crime scene.

 

While some, such as DCI Ben Carson, believe this is aa case of a simple burglary gone wrong, DS George Cross does not. Before much can be done by the local police, due to the high-profile nature of the case, Chief Superintendent Heather Mathews is brought in to supervise. Fortunately for everyone, while she has never worked with Cross before, she knows of him and how he is, and so she allows him wide latitude to pursue the case as he sees fit. That means he can treat it like any other case and not be micromanaged by Carson or anyone else.

 

That is always a plus. Especially here with a case that is complex and constantly evolving as lines of inquiry are adjusted as evidence comes to light. As always, the reader knows that Cross will identify and build a case against those involved. The real question is what else will he and his team unearth in their pursuit of justice for the dead.

 

For that, you will have to read the book.

 

It would also be best if you started with the first read, The Dentist: A DS George Cross Mystery, and work your way forward to this fourth book of the re-released series. This is not a static police procedural series with very little change over time. Instead, and one of the things that makes it so good, characters constantly evolve and deal with things in life, relationships change, and more happens while the police work continues.

 

The Politician: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan is another very good installment of a really good police procedural series. What more could you want?

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3Nu5Hrp

 

 

I received a digital ARC from the publisher, Atlantic Crime, imprint of Grove Atlantic, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026 

Monday, March 02, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Lefty Award Winners

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Lefty Award Winners

Mystery Fanfare: Dr Seuss's Birthday & Read Across America Day!

Mystery Fanfare: Dr Seuss's Birthday & Read Across America Day!: Happy Birthday, Dr. Seuss! March 2nd is not only Dr. Seuss's Birthday, but it's also National Read Across America Day , a nat...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Little Book of Secret Societies by Joel Levy

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In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

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Beneath the Stains of Time: The Locked Village and the Eight Tricks (2024) by Danro Kamosaki

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The Rap Sheet: Only Winners Left

 The Rap Sheet: Only Winners Left

Don't Need A Diagram: George Orwell, “The Road to Wigan Pier”

 Don't Need A Diagram: George Orwell, “The Road to Wigan Pier”

Kathleen Marple Kalb: Keep it in a Box

 Kathleen Marple Kalb: Keep it in a Box

ButtonDown.Com: Shoulder Wound Sunday: Mugshots

 ButtonDown.Com: Shoulder Wound Sunday: Mugshots

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: The White Crow by Michael Robotham

  

The White Crow by Michael Robotham (Scribner, July 2025) is the second Constable Philomena McCarthy book. Like Clayton Burroughs in the Bull Mountain series by Brian Panowich, Phil is the daughter of a long-established gangster, only she’s in London and Clayton is in Georgia. They have both chosen to step outside their family’s deeply entrenched criminal organizations to join law enforcement, a decision that both bewilders and infuriates their fathers. Phil uneasily balances her love for her family with her deep investment in her job and so far she’s been successful.

Phil, patrolling the streets with her night shift partner, sees a child in blood-stained pajamas on a sidewalk. Phil takes her home and finds Daisy’s mother bound and dead on the kitchen floor. The family has been the target of a home invasion and the father, owner of a high-end jewelry store, has been driven to the store to allow the attackers to clean the place out.

In the meantime, someone is systematically sabotaging the McCarthy construction site where the latest and most ambitious building complex is taking shape. The saboteurs have been so determined that the work is months behind and the McCarthy capital operating budget has evaporated under the heavy costs of replacing damaged equipment. The banks are mumbling about foreclosure, the insurance companies are backing out, and the McCarthys are scrambling for a fix while searching for the culprit.

Robotham skillfully juggles dual plot lines and multiple POVs. The child outside at night is a good device to attract police to a crime scene. Brian McGilloway used it effectively in Little Girl Lost (Pan Macmillan, 2011). The underlying theme of motherhood and family is thoughtful and perceptive. Phil’s husband wants to start a family now, Phil wants to wait. Stepping in for Daisy’s absent parents gives Phil something to think about, as does watching Daisy’s godmother who is given temporary custody. The question of what actually makes a mother a mother is a good one: does a woman have to give birth to be a mother? And, can you love someone, even a close relative, when you heartily disagree with their life choices?

Dramatic and violent action with far-reaching implications for Phil and her father wrap up the plot. I am looking forward to seeing how they play out in the next book, which hopefully we will see soon.

Starred reviews from Library Journal, Kirkus, and Publishers Weekly for this fine story.

 

  • Publisher: ‎Scribner
  • Publication date: ‎July 1, 2025
  • Language: ‎English
  • Print length: ‎368 pages
  • ISBN-10: ‎1668031027
  • ISBN-13: ‎978-1668031025

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4rumaLx

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

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

Sunday, March 01, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: April Treasures in My Closet

 Lesa's Book Critiques: April Treasures in My Closet

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of March 1, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of March 1, 2026

Little Big Crimes: Love is Blue, by Lawrence Maddox

Little Big Crimes: Love is Blue, by Lawrence Maddox:  "Love is Blue," by Lawrence Maddox, in  in  Tennis Noir,  edited by John Shepphird, Level Best Books, 2026. This is my friend Law...

Writer Beware: Not Simon & Schuster: Deconstructing an Impersonation Scam

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Going to Beautiful: Anthony Bidulka

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: March New Fiction!

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Friday, February 27, 2026

Back Online

 We lost internet from just after noon yesterday to just after six or so tonight. Am back. 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

In Reference to Murder: Nonpareil Nonfiction for 2025

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Jerry's House of Everything: THE GREEN HORNET: THERE WAS A CROOKED MAN (MAY 24, 1938)

Jerry's House of Everything: THE GREEN HORNET: THERE WAS A CROOKED MAN (MAY 2...: Here's all the buzz: From Old Time Radio Downloads:  "The daughter of a crusading reformer is kidnapped to silence him...James Conw...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Tim MacNab Seeks a Story (1937) by Marten Toonder

Beneath the Stains of Time: Tim MacNab Seeks a Story (1937) by Marten Toonder: The concept of "lost media" is something of an obsession on parts of the internet and touched upon the subject myself, " Top ...

Thursday Treats: 2/25/2026


Welcome back to “Thursday Treats.”  Been a hard week. Mixed bag doc appointment Monday, a couple of falls, and then late-night Tuesday evening, my oldest called to tell me that they are getting divorced. She suddenly took the kids, my grandkids, from their place about six weeks ago, has not communicated one word since, and has now, apparently, filed for divorce. He has no idea why at all. I am too sick and too broke to be of any help at all. So, this week has sucked.

 

Publishing wise, things seem to be a bit light. A couple of things did cross my desk though….

 

SMFS member S. B. Watson announced that her new novella, Laughing Matter: An Impossible Crime, was now out. Published by Black Beacon Books, this is the first of three planned novellas they are releasing this year. It is only available in eBook format at Amazon.  These new novella’s join Cameron Trost’s Let Darkness Take Hold: A Tale of Suburban Suspense released in 2012.Weekly.

 


SMFS member Barb Goffman shared the news of the latest issue of Black Cat Weekly. Available at the website, Black Cat Weekly #234 is now out and features numerous short stories, novellas, and more. A single digital issue is $2.99, but the longer subscriptions are the real deal and the way to go.


 

We have also a well respected and solidly good market. SMFS Member Michael Bracken announced in a recent SleuthSayers blog post that Black Cat Mystery Magazine has closed down. It ran for 16 issues. I think I have several of them here in digital format in my TBR pile. Several are also reviewed here on the blog. I am sad to see it go. You can still pick up issues, for now at least at the publisher, Wildside Press, and at Amazon.

 

Then there are the publishing delays. Last week was supposed to see the release of Diversion: A Probation Case Files Mystery by Cindy Goyette. Thanks to the digital ARC from the author, I had the publication day review. It wasn’t until later in the day I learned that the publisher, Level Best Books, had delayed the release to some unspecified time in the future and had to correct the review and my social media posts. 


Delay with them has happened again this week. This time it is fellow SMFS member, and my VP when I was SMFS President, Kathleen Marple Kalb. She reports that her latest book, The Stuff of Malice, did not release on time as scheduled on Tuesday. This third book in the series that began with The Stuff of Malice: An Old Stuff Mystery is now “coming soon” with no new release date announced.

 

Level Best Books does have a spiffy new revamped website now so one hopes that is a sign they are getting back on track to fulfill their publicly  stated mission of being “… one of the premiere publishers of mysteries and thrillers.”


SUNDAY UPDATE: Since this column went live, and, apparently, while my AT&T internet was down from Thursday afternoon to Friday evening, the publisher got the eBook versions of both books listed at Amazon. Diversion can be found here. The Stuff of Malice can be found here. At this time, the paperback versions of these third books in very popular series are not available. 

Out now and reviewed by yours truly earlier this week is The Crossroads: A Joe Pickett Novel by C.J. Box. I am a big fan of this series featuring Wyoming Game Warden Joe Pickett. They made a tv series of it awhile back, but as almost always happens, the books are way better. If you missed my review of this new read, go here.

 


And, finally, The Politician: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan comes out next Tuesday. This is the fourth book in this excellent police procedural series being released here in the United States by Atlantic Crime, an imprint of Grove Atlantic. Like the Eve Dallas series, I came to this one by way of reviews by Lesa Holstine. I have been getting digital ARCs through NetGalley and have massively enjoyed the reads. Make sure you start at the beginning and read Lesa’s review of The Dentist. Come here Tuesday when my publication day review of The Politician: A DS George Cross Mystery will appear here.

 

 

Until next time….

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – A Study in Secrets by Jeffrey Siger

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – A Study in Secrets by Jeffrey Siger

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 83 Writing Contests in March 2026 - No entry fees!

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 83 Writing Contests in March 2026 - No entry fees!: This March there are more than six dozen free writing contests for short fiction, novels, poetry, CNF, nonfiction, and plays. Prizes range f...

The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: SMFS Spotlight: Cheryl Head

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George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #263: THE FINAL SCORE By Don Winslow

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Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: THE THREE DRUGS

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Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Booking for Trouble by Jenn McKinlay

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Booking for Trouble by Jenn McKinlay

Mystery Fanfare: MYSTERY READERS JOURNAL NEWS FOR 2026: Subscribe now!

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Happiness Is A Book: The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman

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SleuthSayers: Sixteen Lives

SleuthSayers: Sixteen Lives: Launched in 2017, BCMM lasted 16 issues. Black Cat Mystery Magazine —not to be confused with Black Cat Weekly , though it often is—lasted si...

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 34 Marvelous Writing Conferences and Workshops in March

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Vows and Villainy by Elizabeth Penney

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Jerry's House of Everything: INCOMING

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In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

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Publication Day Review: The Crossroads: A Joe Pickett Novel by C.J. Box

 

Marybeth Pickett always knew that being the wife of a Wyoming Game Warden meant the worse could happen at any time. She knows from the start of The Crossroads: A Joe Pickett Novel that it has almost happened. At least her husband is still alive, if only by a thread. 

 

That November morning a Wyoming Game and Fisheries Department pickup was found smack in the middle of Antler Creek Road by a hunter. It was riddled with bullet holes. Her husband, Joe Pickett, was also hit and suffered severe trauma.

 

She soon makes her way to the isolated scene where the ambulance crew is prepping him for an emergency helicopter ride to Billings, Montana. Shot, including once in the head, he needs a trauma unit and far more medical care that the small community hospital in Saddlestring, Wyoming, can provide. First, he has to survive the half hour plus chopper flight to get to the trauma unit.

 

With a newly elected sheriff in town, and other local law enforcement challenges, their three daughters decide that they will figure out who ambushed their dad. Sitting in the hospital with their mom isn’t going to help. Sheridan, April, and Lucy are known in the community which means people will talk to them. They know how to investigate having grown up in a household where both parents have investigated a lot of cases over the years.  They know they can do this. To figure out who did it, they have to figure out why he was on the road and where he was headed. They are going to figure it out.

 

And Nate Romanowski might get involved as well.

 

The Crossroads: A Joe Pickett Novel is the latest book in the long running series. It is also a mighty good read. In addition to the reminder of how Marybeth and Joe met and details of their marriage, readers are given a long glimpse into the lives of their adult daughters. Ladies that have seen a thing, or three, as they grew up and have the scars and internal resources to deal with any problem.

 

The Crossroads: A Joe Pickett Novel is an intense and very good read. This one will keep you up late-night reading, if you are not carful. Strongly recommended.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4qBcI8G 



My digital ARC came by way of the publisher, G.P. Putnam's Sons, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a review. 

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026