Thursday, June 11, 2026
Beneath the Stains of Time: Foreboding Foretelling at Ficklehouse Felling (2023) by P.J. Fitzsimmons
Thursday Treats: June 6/11/2026
The latest reading opportunities…

Fellow SMFS list member Wil A. Emerson announced
that his short story, Norms and Values, appears in the 3rd edition
of The Writers Monk. His piece appears on page 98 of this free to read
flip magazine. You can read it here.
Fellow SMFS list member Leslie Elman, announced that her short story, When
I Go, was published online at Guilty Flash (part of Guilty Crime Magazine). The
story is free to read here.
Fellow SMFS list member David H.
Hendrickson has been busy. He announced that his short story, Apt Pupil, was
published in the latest issue of Thrill Ride Magazine. This is their 14
issue and is titled Thrill Ride Magazine: Assassins and Vigilantes.
Learn more at the publisher
listing
or go to Amazon to get it.
Mr. Hendrickson also announced that his
short story, The Mona Pizza and The Johnny Pesky Wannabe, appears in the
recently released anthology, Romance for All Seasons: Sunkissed Summer.
Mr. Hendrickson co-edits the anthology series with SMFS list member Annie Reed
who also has the short story, Getting Away From It All. It is available at Amazon and other vendors.
Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine: July August 2026 issue is now out. Fellow SMFS list member S. B. Watson made the cover with the short story, Tricks on the Table. Also included in this issue are short stories by fellow SMFS list members O’Neil De Noux (Charming Charlie Lovely Eyes” and Dave Zeltserman (Alfred & Hitchcock). Mike Ciaraldi of the list also reported that he received another Honorable Mention in the “Mysterious Photograph Contest.” Learn more at the publisher.

Of course, if the AHMM new issue
is out, so too is the new EQMM. That new issue, Ellery Queen
Mystery Magazine: July/August 2026, also features short stories by fellow
SMFS list members O’Neil De Noux (Le Rouge, 2B), Tom Larsen (
Finally, a reminder that the anthology, Crimeucopia - New Kids In Da 'Hood, is now out. Editor John Connor of Murderous Ink Press 16 crime fiction short story tales in the read. That includes a short story by fellow SMFS list member Thomas F. Gorham III (Classless Reunion). It can be picked up at Amazon.
By the way, if you like what we do here, please consider spreading the word of these posts. Also, if you can, please consider making a donation through the PayPal widget on the left side of the blog. I try not to talk about it, or beg, but the desperation is very real. The hits keep coming here and things are really bad.
Until next time….
Kevin R. Tipple ©2026
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
The Rap Sheet: Bullet Points: No AI Content Here Edition
Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: OLD FAGS
SleuthSayers: Wish Upon a Crime
Guest Post: Branded, Independent Thought, and more with Professor John A. Tures
Please
welcome Professor John A. Tures to the blog today….
My name is
John A. Tures and my book is Branded, published by Huntsville
Independent Press (https://www.huntsvilleindependent.com/product-page/branded), and it’s a story about a product
placement scandal and the attempt by researchers to uncover what really
happened.
Remember
the O.J. Simpson slow-speed chase?
Even if
you were pretty young, you’ve probably seen it on a Netflix documentary.
Here’s a
trivia question: What was the vehicle?
Spoiler
Alert Here: White Ford
Bronco
Most
people recognize the make and model, even the color when I ask them.
Now who
was with O.J. Simpson in the car?
Probably
need to Google it. I’ve had one person at a book event know the answer.
You may
not know this, but Ford was strongly considering phasing out the Bronco, but
after the incident, they all sold out. The company kept it around for at least
a decade. And now they’re back, thanks to all of those O. J. Simpson
documentaries.
Here’s a
second trivia question: There was a notorious unsolved case of a serial killer,
who was inserting cyanide into capsules for a painkiller throughout Chicago in
the early 1980s.
What was
the painkiller?
Spoiler
Alert Here: Tylenol
Did you
also know that their parent company, Johnson & Johnson had to spend
billions on recalling all of the capsules, replacing them with caplets?
Here’s the
“what if:” What if the O.J. Simpson slow speed chase was manufactured to sell
White Ford Broncos? What if a rival painkiller paid to put a hit on Tylenol in
a bid for market share?
In my
story Branded, a marketing professor and his students unwittingly
uncover part of the scheme while entering a marketing competition involving
research and presentations. The cases are fictitious, as are the characters,
but they’ll feel real.
It rarely
takes one person to pull off this kind of research. The protagonist will get
help from his wife (a tenured professor at their college), the students, fellow
faculty and others at the college, and even their kids. It’s a little different
from some thrillers where the main character is super wealthy or has access to
untapped resources. It’s a David-and-Goliath story, but one where you’ll find
yourself at the end saying “Yeah, I can see that happening.”
My second
book Independent Thought comes out later this summer, also published by Huntsville Independent Press.
When people find out that I am a political science professor, they don’t ask if
I am a Democrat or Republican, or if I’m a conservative or liberal. They ask me
“Why don’t we have a third party in America?”
In Independent
Thought, several characters from Branded are recruited to help with
a new third party. Led by a political maverick, the organizers of the new party
find out just how hard it is to start a third party, and all of the barriers
they face.
Just as
the new party gets its footing, and starts to challenge the political
establishment, strange things and accidents seem to happen to the members of
the campaign. What could be behind these incidents? And the aftermath of the
election may be more exciting than the voting itself!
Amazon
Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4evuAxY
John A. Tures
©2026
The
author, John A. Tures, started writing at age 15 for the El Paso Herald-Post,
then continued in college for the school’s newspaper. After earning his
doctorate, he became a weekly columnist for a number of newspapers and
magazines. In 2020, he started working on Branded, which came out late last
year. A third book, Moral Hazard, in the editing stage covers an international
crisis and its impact on U.S. politics.
Tuesday, June 09, 2026
The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Beat the Heat with these Cool Reads
The First Two Pages: “The Briar Patch” by Tom Milani
Comicon.Com: Talking To Writer Charles Ardai About ‘Gun Honey: Doubles Down’ From Titan Comics by Olly MacNamee
Jerry's House of Everything: THE LENA BAKER CASE
In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday
Monday, June 08, 2026
Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Every Lie I Told by Hilary Davidson
Hilary
Davidson is a Toronto native now living in New York City. Her first work of
crime fiction The Damage Done (Forge Books, 2010) won the 2011 Anthony
and Crimespree awards for best first novel and was shortlisted for the Arthur
Ellis and Macavity awards for best first. She’s written dozens of short
stories. Every Lie I Told (Blackstone, June 2026) is her eighth work of
crime fiction.
Jackie Swift
is just another hamster on the enormous wheel of New York, running endlessly
trying to reach the next rung on the ladder of success. Her parents died when
she and her sister Madi were young, leaving them to the questionable care of an
uncle. Jackie has been trying to overcome the disadvantages of her early life
ever since, while pretending to have the upper-crust life that she wants. She
learned early that her lack of family connections and resources would keep her
out of her chosen field of journalism, no matter how hard she worked. She slid
sideways into a dubious public relations firm with some credible clients and a
lot of shifty ones. Her habit of shading the truth about her life quickly
expanded to covering up for wealthy people behaving badly. Dissembling about
everything, from her customers’ actions and intentions to the store where she
bought today’s outfit, became routine.
Jackie is
overwhelmingly protective of Madi, who dabbled far too often in drugs and made
other unwise decisions. Jackie had come to keep Narcan on hand for emergencies
so when Madi called in the early hours of Monday morning that she needed help,
Jackie scrambled for the naloxone and drove to an Upper East side townhouse.
She could not find Madi but she did find the quite dead body of her former
mentor and employer. The police focus early on Madi as the likely killer and as
they search for her, Jackie does everything she can to throw suspicion on
others, including an ex-wife who tried to kill the dead man more than once.
The story delivers
credible insight into the inner workings of publicity firms and marketing
psychology, which I found thought-provoking. With a driving pace and one
surprise after another, the story held my attention to the end despite my lack
of sympathy with most of the characters, who were singularly unpleasant. Fans
of contemporary psychological thrillers and unreliable narrators will love this
book.
·
ISBN-13: 979-8228475151
·
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing, Inc.
·
Publication date: June 16, 2026
·
Edition: Hardcover
·
Language: English
·
Print length: 371 pages
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4fv3o3j
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal
It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
Sunday, June 07, 2026
Little Big Crimes: The Orient Club, by Robin Hazard Ray
Guest Post: The Inspiration Behind "Murder on Vacation" Wasn't Murder After All by Gerald Elias
Please welcome author Gerald Elias
to the blog today. As I recently noted in a “Thursday Treats” post, Mr. Elias’
latest book is his short story collection. Published by White City Press, Murder on Vacation:
Stories from the Case Files of Maury Gross, NYPD (Ret.), is available at
the publisher, Amazon, and other vendors in digital and
print formats.
Where does an author get ideas for
a story? From personal experience? Deep contemplation? From a passing comment
or casual glimpse? From other authors? Totally from out of the blue?
How about by accident?
Eight years ago, my wife and I
stayed at a modest motel on the beach in the cozy coastal town of Cambria,
California, in order to attend our niece’s ritzy wedding in wine country.
During our stay, which lasted only a long weekend, three curious things popped
out to me. (Maybe they were curious only to me because murder mysteries run in
my blood.)
The first was an elderly couple
strolling along the beach’s boardwalk. What was curious about that? Not that
they were elderly—Who isn’t these days?—but that the gentleman in question was
dressed in what his wife—who I imagined determined his attire–– probably
considered appropriate for a California vacation: a 1950s style pair of Bermuda
shorts and a gaudy Hawaiian shirt. And ankle-length, black socks—Don’t forget
those—to round out the eye-catching ensemble.
The second curiosity was a
state-of-the-art Porsche sportscar in the motel’s parking lot, which might have
cost more than the motel itself.
The third and final item was the
colony of dozens of elephant seals lolling on the beach about 10 miles north of
us. In your mind’s eye, do not mistake an elephant seal for a sea lion. They’re
twice as big, up to 4,000 nasty pounds, with a protruding proboscis which gives
them their name. They only spend about a month per year out of the water, and
you can imagine what they do while on shore leave, like most seafarers: rest,
fight, and screw. And when they fight, it’s not for play. It’s for keeps: to
become king of the hill or, more appropriately, king of the beach. Why? To win
the dear damsel of choice, of course. Why else?
As my wife and I observed elephant
seal festivities safely ensconced on a bluff with a chain link fence high above
the beach, I got an idea to package curiosities one and two together with
number three and write a short mystery. What emerged after a few days of
resharpened pencils and crumpled paper was a draft of a story I initially
called “Elephant Seals,” starring retired NYPD Police Chief Maury Gross and his
wife Bobbi (the couple on the boardwalk).
I wrote this story only to amuse my
wife and myself, with no further thoughts about where it might end up. But I
really liked my two protagonists, and so did my wife, so on our next vacation I
gathered more curiosities for a story. And the next. And the next…
Fifteen Maury Gross stories later,
I had spanned the wonders of our great nation from sea to shining sea and
decided they were worthy candidates for a collection. There is a great saga to
be told how I ultimately found the perfect publisher in White City Press, but
that’s another story in its entirety.
Suffice it to say that Maury Gross
is the nicest, most unassuming and thoughtful cop you’d ever want to meet, and
Bobbi is not only his longtime soulmate but also his astute partner in crime
solving. And they’re both sharp as a tack.
The title of the first story,
“Elephant Seals,” was changed to “Murder on Vacation” and, appropriately, is
the name of the whole collection. If you’re looking for entertaining summer
reading, here’s my advice: get an ice-cold beverage, a comfortable chair or
lounge, a shady spot, and Murder on Vacation. As Maury would say, “What’s not
to like?”
Amazon Associates Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4alkqNN
Gerald Elias ©2026
Silver Falchion finalist Gerald
Elias can’t help writing about everything that interests him, from his Daniel
Jacobus mystery series (and audiobooks) set in the dark corners of the
classical music world, to his Western mystery, Roundtree Days. His short story
collections, It’s a Crime! and Murder on Vacation (May, 2026, White City Press)
cover everything from spies to sea elephants.
A former Boston Symphony musician,
Elias is an internationally recognized violinist, conductor, and composer. He
spends his free time enjoying the outdoors, travel, coffee, good food, and most
of all, being a devoted grandpa. https://www.mysteriesandmusic.com/
Saturday, June 06, 2026
ButtonDown.Com: Knockturn County
KRL Update
Up on KRL this week a review and giveaway of "A Death in the Dark" by Ellie Alexander https://kingsriverlife.com/06/06/a-death-in-the-dark-by-elle-alexander/
And review and giveaway of "Press to the Nines" by Misty Simon along with a fun guest post by Misty about research she did on flowers for the book https://kingsriverlife.com/06/06/pressed-to-the-nines-by-misty-simon/
The audiobook of Jack Townson's dark fantasy vampire novel "The Lightslayer" (which has some mystery in it as well) just released this week! Up on KRL this week I'm re-posting my review of this awesome book and giving away an ebook copy, and I have an interview with Jack, and with the other narrator, Krys Janea. This is also the first of our many features of LGBTQ+ artists for Pride month! https://kingsriverlife.com/06/06/the-lightslayer-by-jack-townson-audiobook-release/
We also have the latest Mystery Coming Attractions from Victoria Fair https://kingsriverlife.com/06/06/mystery-current-coming-attractions-june-2026/
Up on KRL during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery/thriller author Carlisle Richardson about the memories that led him to write his new book "The Soft Underbelly" https://kingsriverlife.com/06/03/a-call-to-action/
Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "Hunted" by D.E. Beckler https://www.krlnews.com/2026/06/hunted-by-d-e-beckler-reviewgiveaway.html
And a review and giveaway of "Hawai'i Rage" By Tori Eldridge https://www.krlnews.com/2026/06/hawaii-rage-by-tori-eldridge.html
And a review and giveaway of "The Man on the Bench" by Hy Conrad https://www.krlnews.com/2026/06/the-man-on-bench-by-hy-conrad.html
Happy reading,
Lorie
SleuthSayers: Goldie Locke and the Three Barretts
Scott's Take: The Eye of the Bedlam Bride (Dungeon Crawler Carl) by Matt Dinniman
The Eye of the Bedlam Bride:
Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman is a weird book even for this
series. This is also the sixth book in a series that must be read in order.
So, the Crawlers are sent back to a copy
of Earth before Earth’s destruction. Our heroes are sent to Cuba. There is now
a new battle system in place based on cards. Donut, now as squad leader, must
use cards to battle the monsters on this copy of Earth. There are quite a few
new characters added to the squad on this level. That includes my favorite two new
characters -- Uzi Jesus and the Yule Cat.
On this copy of Earth, Crawlers can
defeat enemies, and flag them before they die in order to put them in their own
squads PokƩmon style. Donut and Carl decide to recruit one of the most
dangerous creatures to help them. The Bedlam Bride, a Demigod Spider Woman sort
of thing, with her own plans and own motivations is the one they want. Of
course, things get worse for our heroes.
This is an action-packed adventure that
sees Donut and Carl traumatized even further.
This is even darker book than what has gone on before as there is drug
use, bestiality, child abuse, suicide, and more in this read. There is also plenty
of humor as there has been all along in the series.
The third act consists of twists upon
twists upon twists. While there are always twists upon twists, in this case it
was ridiculous. There are way too many twists in my opinion. Most of them are based
on information the readers do not have. That
was annoying.
I read parts of The Eye of the
Bedlam Bride: Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman by way of the eBook
and parts by way of the physical hardback. By having the hardback arrive from
the library after I was more than halfway through the library eBook, I had access
to the bonus short story. A tale that I thought was awful, but also included yet
another twist, only included there, so it would be helpful to read for this
series.
The seventh book is in my library TBR pile
and it is titled, This Inevitable Ruin:
Dungeon Crawler Carl, where the Faction Wars have begun. So, its
armies vs armies now as the Crawlers have formed one faction and various alien
groups have formed factions of their own. The AI continues to go crazy. It now has
agreed to turn the safeties off for the alien leaders. That means that the alien
leaders can die just like Donut and the others. The result is a more level
playing field. Now it is kill or be killed for everyone. Can Warlord Donut and
friends win?
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4edRRVu
Entire Series Amazon Associate Purchase
Link:
While both formats came by way of the
Dallas Public Library System, my hardback reading copy came from the White Rock
Hills Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Scott A. Tipple ©2026

















