Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Wednesday Evening Humor Seen On Facebook

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: Cat Nap by Brian Lies

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Cat Nap by Brian Lies

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: MR. SMITH KICKS THE BUCKET

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: MR. SMITH KICKS THE BUCKET: "Mr. Smith Kicks the Bucket" by Fredric Brown  (first published in  Street & smith's Detective Story Magazine , August 194...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #257: THE BOOK OF I By David Greig

 George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #257: THE BOOK OF I By David Greig

Patricia Abbott: SSW: "The Fourth State of Matter" Joann Beard from the NEW YORKER in 1996

 Patricia Abbott: SSW: "The Fourth State of Matter" Joann Beard from the NEW YORKER in 1996

Review: Crimeucopia - The Not So Frail Detective Agency

  

Recently released by Murderous Ink Press, Crimeucopia - The Not So Frail Detective Agency, is a good read. The entertaining anthology focuses on the female private investigator and does so by way of a variety of tales set across multiple time periods and featuring women often not fully appreciated by others. In other words, just like women experience in real life every single day of the week. In this case, while these ladies may not have the brawn of a man, they also walk down mean streets and get the job done.

 

The anthology contains fifteen solid stories from as many authors. Several tales I personally preferred over others, as you can see below. No doubt your preferences would vary from mine. There is also no doubt that you will find lots of good reading here as you would in any of the long running series of Crimeucopia books.

 

The tales that resonated with me, in order of appearance, are:

 

Steve Liskow’s “Slam Dunk” where Tatiana, known to all as “Tats” for reasons soon made clear, takes a case where the client is sure the husband is cheating on her. He plays basketball for incredible money. AmyLee signed a prenup and she knows the kind of guy she married. But, now she is pregnant, and wants proof of what he is doing so she make sure that the child and her have a secure financial future.

 

It has been decades since she last saw her. Lorriane coming loudly into her office in Detroit was absolutely not a sight for sore eyes. She could have gone the rest of her life never thinking about Lorriane again. In Sandra J. Cady’s “High School Reunion,” she is back in Bonnie’s life and won’t take no for an answer. She wants to hire Bonnie to look into the death of her husband, Harvey Harris. He died a few weeks earlier, in a traffic accident, and the cops are not moving fast enough to suit her as she needs access to his money. She wants Bonnie’s help and is very willing to use her pollical connections to make sure Bonnie never works again as a private investigator should she refuse. It is very clear that in the more than three decades since they last saw each other that Lorriane has not improved one bit as a human being.

 

Kathleen Marple Kalb takes readers to the fall of 1987 with her very young private investigator in “Danno and the Babysitter.” Diana Czednik wants the case. A mutual friend, Gary Bigelow, sent Mark McKinnon to her. Somebody has been killing men in Shadyside, a gay friendly neighborhood in Pittsburgh. The cops, to this point, have done less than nothing. Gary, Mark, and others, have decided it is past time to get some professional help. She’s willing, but the owner of the agency and her boss, Mr. Kozakevich, does not want his rookie investigator on the front lines on a murder case and thus in danger from a serial killer. He severely limits what she can do at the start, but, before long, she is deep into it.

 

Crimeucopia - The Not So Frail Detective Agency has twelve more tales to interest you beyond the three that I highlighted. The read, as these books always do, showcases a variety of authors with varied writing styles, characters, time periods, and more. The read is full of interesting cases. It features female private investigators often dealing with those who do not understand their capabilities. They soon do, one way or another, in the very enjoyable read.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/45JBWZQ

 

 

My digital ARC was provided by the publisher with no expectation of a review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple © 2026

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Tuesday Evening Humor Seen On Facebook

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: Inside Man by John McMahon

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Inside Man by John McMahon

Happiness Is A Book: Stars for the Toff by John Creasey

 Happiness Is A Book: Stars for the Toff by John Creasey

The First Two Pages: “The Bank Heist Before Armageddon” by Avram Lavinsky

 The First Two Pages: “The Bank Heist Before Armageddon” by Avram Lavinsky

SleuthSayers: 2025 Year in Review: Writing and Other Things

SleuthSayers: 2025 Year in Review: Writing and Other Things: In my previous SleuthSayers post , I discussed my year as an editor; in the following I discuss my year as a writer, and I discuss some of ...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Too Old for This by Samantha Downing

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Too Old for This by Samantha Downing:   Reviewed by Kristin Lottie Jones has gotten away with murder. Frequently. Lottie thought her killing days were behind her, until s...

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

  

It has been a few months since the events of The Dentist as the police procedural, The Cyclist: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan begins, and DS George Cross is at, in all likelihood, a crime scene. An annoyed contractor wants to get his men back to work on the teardown of a row of garages, but the dead body wrapped in plastic and sitting in the bucket of a digger has meant that all work is stopped. Detective Sergeant George Cross of the Somerset and Avon police force flatly and calmly explains the reality of the situation in his unique style and returns to the business at hand—solving a murder.

 

The unique style of Detective Sergeant George Cross is due to the fact that he is on the autism spectrum with Asperger’s syndrome. He has a very hard time picking up on social cues and interacting with people. He does not recognize emotions and has to go through a sort of mental catalog to figure out the emotion a person is displaying on their face. So, he is working hard to be civil and polite with the contractor who wants nothing more than to get the project back underway, and doesn’t quite get why DS George Cross is saying what he is saying to him. DS Ottey is soon able to rescue Cross before things go sideways with the man.

 

DS George Cross is detail focused and driven and is an exceptional investigator though he drives everyone around him a bit mad at times. Of course, if everyone had his attention to detail, that would really help everyone. Since the pathologist clearly does not, she might have noticed clues on the body that would give them an idea as to the identity of the victim. The victim had no identification, no engraved watch, no cell phone, nothing at all that would identify him. But, in his close examination of the body in front of the perturbed pathologist in the morgue, DS Cross identified several clues that indicate the victim was a serious cyclist.

 

That fact soon proves out to be true and the team is able to identify the victim. Now that the victim is identified, they can actually start investigating him, his background, relationships, etc., and begin to make slow progress in a complicated case.

 

This second book in the series builds off the first book, The Dentist, and does so very well. Further character development of George Cross, as well as several other characters, is underway here and does not distract from the main storyline. Also present are the economic budgetary issues impacting the police in the name of efficiency and are, actually, doing the exact opposite. Also present is a complex mystery with far reaching implications.

 

A police procedural series that should be read in order, The Cyclist: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan is a highly entertaining read.

 


The book, and the series, to date, is highly recommended.

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2025

Monday, January 12, 2026

Monday Evening Humor Seen On Facebook

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling

The Hard Word: "I WANTED TO GET ACROSS HOW IMPORTANT- AND UNFORTUNATELY HOW RARE- FOR A MAN TO LIVE BY THE LIGHTS OF HIS OWN INTEGRITY": THE RED SCARE MURDERS' CON LEHANE

 The Hard Word: "I WANTED TO GET ACROSS HOW IMPORTANT- AND UNFORTUNATELY HOW RARE- FOR A MAN TO LIVE BY THE LIGHTS OF HIS OWN INTEGRITY": THE RED SCARE MURDERS' CON LEHANE

In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

 In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

Bitter Tea and Mystery: My Results for the 52 Book Club Reading Challenge 2025

Bitter Tea and Mystery: My Results for the 52 Book Club Reading Challenge ...:   This year I participated in the 52 Book Club’s 2025 Reading Challenge . It is a self-led challenge and how you decide to participate is up...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Murder Mindfully by Karsten Dusse

  

Karsten Dusse is a German lawyer, actor, and television scriptwriter. He’s received the German Television Award and the German Comedy Award. His debut novel Achtsam Morden was published by Heyne Verlag in 2019. It was translated into English by Florian Duijsens and published in the UK as Murder Mindfully by Faber & Faber in February 2025. It will be released in the US by Soho Crime in April 2026. Netflix realized what a gem it is and turned it into a series. Fortunately for all of us, there are four more titles in the series. The second, My Inner Child Wants to Murder Mindfully, also translated by Florian Duijsens, will be published by Faber & Faber on 15 January 2026. My copy is on pre-order with Waterstones.

Björn Diemel is just a plain ordinary lawyer, working far too many hours to keep the partners in his law firm happy and coping with a difficult client. A client so difficult that no one else in the firm can deal with him but Diemel seems to have a knack for pleasing the challenging Dragan Sergowicz. Diemel’s wife Katharina, however, is tired of Diemel working so much. She tells him he must find more time with his family or she will leave and take their daughter Emily. Diemel adores his daughter, so reluctantly he signs up for sessions with Joschka Breitner, a mindfulness coach who encourages Diemel to breathe deeply, to live in the moment, to only do the things he wants to do, and on and on.

Diemel begins to take Breitner’s advice with devastatingly unexpected but funny results. He gets rid of his client, he stands up to the draconian receptionist in his law office, he refuses to cower when the partners of the firm take him to task. Best of all, he gets more time with his daughter, which he realizes is the most important thing of all.

A tongue-in-cheek send-up of the “everything is beautiful” mindset with a comedic if violent approach to organized crime. The funniest bit may be when Diemel accidentally discovers a completely legal way to make useful people like police detectives and government officials obligated to him that doesn’t involve bribes, drugs, or lavish parties.

A wildly original and witty book. Highly recommended.

 


Publisher: Faber & Faber

Publication date: February 1, 2025

Language: English

Print length: 416 pages

ISBN: 9780571384044

 

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

  

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026 

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

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Sunday Evening Humor Seen On Facebook

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries by Marilyn Johnson

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries by Marilyn Johnson

Kathleen Marple Kalb: Nuts n' Bolts

 Kathleen Marple Kalb: Nuts n' Bolts

Substack: The Origins of Ed Earl Burch

 Substack: The Origins of Ed Earl Burch

Little Big Crimes: The Roosevelt Affair, by Adam Meyer

Little Big Crimes: The Roosevelt Affair, by Adam Meyer:  "The Roosevelt Affair," by Adam Meyer, in Crimecopia: The Not So Frail Detective Agency, Murderous Ink Press, 2026. A nice straig...

Review: Inside Man: A Head Case Novel by John McMahon

 

Inside Man: A Head Cases Novel by John McMahon is the very enjoyable sequel to Head Cases. As always in any good series, it is best to have read the first book before the sequel. Agent Gardner Camden leads an FBI unit named PAR. The Patterns and Recognition team exists to find peculiarities in cases that have stalled or gone cold. When they find something, the case goes back to the field office that sent in the case or to a team in Quantico. Led by Agent Garnder, the team consists of Joanne “Shooter” Harris, Richie Brancato, and Cassie Pardo. They solve cases by way of their unique mental skill set each member brings to the table. They look at things differently than most.

 

As Dick Wolfe would now say, “These are their stories…”

 

They have been working a Florida fraud case where a handful of people have been filing false unemployment claims and getting paid. They have identified clusters of where the bogus claims where being filed and the ATMs where, literally, thousands and thousands of dollars have been withdrawn each month for many months now. A person of interest, Freddie Pecos, was identified during the last three months they have been working the case.

 

Their big break came when Pecos got himself arrested for assault. Guilty as heck, he made a deal not to go to jail. He agreed to be an undercover informant. He also explained that what they were seeing is just the tip of the iceberg. The scam is being done to support a militia group that is led by an arms dealer, J. P. Sandoval.


PAR has stumbled across possible domestic terrorism. Sandoval is using the cash from the unemployment scam to accrue a cache of unmarked weapons. Weapons to be used again law enforcement.  They don’t know the specifics of the target or targets and they don’t know where the guns are located. They do know, according to their informant, the high-powered guns are free of serial numbers and therefore don’t exist in the manufacturing system. They can’t be traced and there are, at least, several hundred of them. But, where?

 

As the book begins, Camden and Harris have discovered the very dead body of their informant in his mobile home. He has been shot at very close range. From various indications in the trailer, the agents don’t think his cover was blown. They also soon realize that his cell will be there in minutes. As it is close to four in the morning, their options are limited to protect the case and to be able to continue the investigation with the targets unaware. They need to know where the guns are and where they are headed.

 

Camden makes the decision to do something that solves all the issues. It also might get him fired. The act makes logical sense. It is the only angle they have got to keep the suspects unaware of the presence of the FBI as well as the fact that some evidence is now in their possession. Camden’s decision and their actions at the crime scene keep the case going. And it is one heck of a ride.

 

This second book in the series is another good one from author John McMahon. Character development of the various main characters continues here as does the action and the complexity of the cases.

 

Regardless of the series, and author John McMahon has several now, he always delivers a great read. Such is the case here with Inside Man: A Head Cases Novel.

 


One hopes that the series continues as they are very good.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/44Ehx82

 

My digital ARC came by way of the publisher, Minotaur Books, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: A Grave Deception by Connie Berry

 Lesa's Book Critiques: A Grave Deception by Connie Berry

KRL Update

Up on KRL this week a review and giveaway of "The Last Death of the Year" the latest Poirot mystery by Sophie Hannah https://kingsriverlife.com/01/10/the-last-death-of-the-year-by-sophie-hannah/

And the latest Mystery Coming Attractions from Victoria Fair https://kingsriverlife.com/01/10/mystery-current-coming-attractions-january-2026/

 

We also have a mystery short story by Donalee Moulton https://kingsriverlife.com/01/10/mystery-short-story-moist/

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "The Sweetest Getaway" by Sasha Preston, along with an interesting interview with Sasha https://kingsriverlife.com/01/10/the-sweetest-getaway-by-sasha-preston/

 

And the last part of a 3 part series on female vampires by Sarah Peterson-Camacho https://kingsriverlife.com/01/10/blood-mothers-vamps-before-the-birth-of-dracula-part-3/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Murder For Shore" by Beth Prentice https://www.krlnews.com/2026/01/murder-for-shore-by-beth-prentice.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Not Our Crowd" by Michael Craft https://www.krlnews.com/2026/01/not-our-crowd-darling-by-michael-craft.html

 

And for those who enjoy fantasy, we have a review of "Turns of Fate" by Anne Bishop https://www.krlnews.com/2026/01/turns-of-fate-by-anne-bishop.html

 

Happy New Year!

Lorie 

Beneath the Stains of Time: Invitation to Murder (1953) by Ab Visser

Beneath the Stains of Time: Invitation to Murder (1953) by Ab Visser: Ab Visser was a Dutch writer, editor, critic, reviewer, poet and a tireless advocate of the Dutch detective story, who tried to position him...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: At Death’s Dough by Mindy Quigley

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: At Death’s Dough by Mindy Quigley:   Tommy, a local Butterball lookalike, with a copy of the book.  Reviewed by Jeanne Valentine’s Day approaches and while love is in the ...

Scott's Take: Carl’s Doomsday Scenario by Matt Dinniman

 

Carl’s Doomsday Scenario by Matt Dinniman is the second book in the Dungeon Crawler Carl series. In this read, Donut and Carl are now further in the game alongside Mongo (Donut’s pet dinosaur) and have reached their first major town. There are quests now being thrown into the game to make things more complicated. Carl and Donut and others must put a stop to a murder circus full of infected monsters. They also need to stop someone who is dropping dead hookers from the sky. All of that must be done while still trying to survive the alien factions that are running the games. 

 

I read the large print edition from my local library which includes a bonus short story about the meth dealing lamas from the first book.  This second book I think is better than the first because there are less exposition dumps than the first. There is still plenty of action, humor, and monsters. We have nudity, nudity, zombies, Krause (a type of monster), and a lot more.

 

Mongo has grown on me as a character in the last book I just found him annoying but I see why he is an important character now.

 

 I am currently on hold at my local library for the third book in the series, The Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4qLf8B8

 

 

My reading copy, in paperback large print, came from the Kleberg-Rylie Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026

Friday, January 09, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Jeff Meyerson’s Favorite Books of 2025

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Jeff Meyerson’s Favorite Books of 2025

MWA: New Books AND Short Stories by MWA Members – January 2026

 MWA: New Books AND Short Stories by MWA Members – January 2026

The Hard Word: CANNABIS & KILLING: KELLI STANLEY'S THE RECKONING

 The Hard Word: CANNABIS & KILLING: KELLI STANLEY'S THE RECKONING

Mystery Fanfare: Bookish: a new British mystery tv series

Mystery Fanfare: Bookish: a new British mystery tv series: Bookish , a new British mystery show on PBS, starts Sunday, January 11. I haven't seen it yet, but a six episode show about a bookshop o...

Don't Need A Diagram: Four Corners Voices – Volume 2

 Don't Need A Diagram: Four Corners Voices – Volume 2

Writer Beware: Reversion Redux

 Writer Beware: Reversion Redux

Rod Raglin: New sophisticated publishing scam targets struggling authors on Amazon

 Rod Raglin: New sophisticated publishing scam targets struggling authors on Amazon

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Printer’s Error by Gladys Mitchell

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Printer’s Error by Gladys Mitchell

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE VENUS PROBE

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE VENUS PROBE: The Venus Probe  by "David St. John"  (E. Howard Hunt), 1966 The race is on.  Kennedy vowed to place an American on the moon by th...

Patricia Abbott: FFB: WHO WILL RUN THE FROG HOSPITAL, Lorrie Moore

 Patricia Abbott: FFB: WHO WILL RUN THE FROG HOSPITAL, Lorrie Moore