Friday, February 13, 2026

Jim Nesbitt's Substack Review: High Speed, Low Drag

 Jim Nesbitt's Substack Review: High Speed, Low Drag

The Hard Word: A NEW YEAR, A NEW NOIR AT THE BAR

 The Hard Word: A NEW YEAR, A NEW NOIR AT THE BAR

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Gideon's Fire

 In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Gideon's Fire

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Footsteps That Stopped by A. Fielding

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Footsteps That Stopped by A. Fielding

Jerry's House of Everything: A FORGOTTEN BOOK TWOFER

Jerry's House of Everything: A FORGOTTEN BOOK TWOFER:   Mike Mars Flies the X-15  by Donald A. Wollheim  (1961) Air Force!   by Frank Harvey (1959) Two books celebrating the early years of the s...

Patricia Abbott: FFB: THEY CALLED US ENEMY, George Takei

 Patricia Abbott: FFB: THEY CALLED US ENEMY, George Takei

The Rap Sheet: Nothing Will Replace the Original

 The Rap Sheet: Nothing Will Replace the Original

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: The 2026 Pulp Factory Awards finalists have been announced, voted on by members of Pulp Factory, a professional association of pulp writers,...

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Hit List: Top 10 Favorite Hybrid Mysteries

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Hit List: Top 10 Favorite Hybrid Mysteries: In 2021, John Pugmire's Locked Room International published Masahiro Imamura's Shijinso no satsujin ( Death Among the Undead , 201...

Thursday Treats: 2/12/2026

Welcome back to “Thursday Treats.”  Viewership dropped significantly again, week to week, so maybe this was not the bright idea I thought it was when I started it.


Michael Bracken recently announced that his short story, Takes the Cake, appears at the “Micromance Magazine Substack.” You can read it here for free. By the way, he also announced that the Mickey Finn: 21st Century Noir annual anthology series will continue. He has a new publisher (no word if the previous volumes will also be republished) and that once he has release dates for the sixth and seventh books with the new folks, he will put the call out at his website. http://www.CrimeFictionWriter.com

 

Authors John M. Floyd, Steve Liskow, Nick Guthrie and several others appear in Black Cat Weekly #232. This is a weekly publication featuring short stories and novellas in multiple genres. You can buy individual issues or one of the far better subscription deals at blackcatweekly.com.

 



Nick Guthrie also announced that his short story, The Youth of Today, appears online at the Urban Pigs Press. You can read it for free here.

 




Fellow SMFS list member by Justin L. Murphy announced on the list that his true crime book, Ruth Snyder: The Real-Life Murderess Inspiring The Modern Femme Fatale. Available at Amazon in digital form, the book details the 1927 Ruth Snyder case. This is the fourth book in his True Crime series.

 


Author Kris Bock reached out recently to me recently to let me know she had another book in her The Accidental Detective Mystery Series about to come out. Something Prowling in Paradise Park: A Kate Tessler Amateur Sleuth Mystery comes out on March 2nd in digital format from Thule Publishing. You can preorder it now on Amazon and other vendors. Make sure you come to the blog this Sunday as she is contributing a guest post featuring an excerpt from the new book. Just as she has done for previous book in this series and her other reads.

 


Author Tom Milani announced his short story, Someday You Will, appears at The Yard: Crime Blog. You can read the tale for free here.

 




The March/April issue of Alfred Hitchock’s Mystery Magazine is now out. Authors Kevin Egan, R. T. Lawton, and others, are in the new issue. Learn more at the website.

 



So, if AHMM is out, you already know that the new issue for Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine is out. It is and includes short stories by Ashley-Ruth M. Bernier, David Dean, John M. Floyd, Robert Lopresti, Josh Pachter, Marilyn Todd, and others. Learn more at the website.

 




Author Lois Winston announced that her latest novel, Embroidered Lies and Alibis, is now out. This is the 15th book in her long running  Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery Series. You can learn more about the mystery on her website or just go straight to Amazon and get it in various formats.

 

 

Until next time….

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026 

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Future Boy by Michael J. Fox

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Future Boy by Michael J. Fox

Mystery Fanfare: VALENTINE'S DAY MYSTERIES. //VALENTINE'S DAY CRIME FICTION

Mystery Fanfare: VALENTINE'S DAY MYSTERIES. //VALENTINE'S DAY CRIME...: Although Valentine's Day is all about love, but  love and hate are often quite close emotions. Valentine's Day  is perfect fo...

Something Is Going To Happen: Newberry Crime Writing Workshop (by Michael Bracken)

 Something Is Going To Happen: Newberry Crime Writing Workshop (by Michael Bracken)

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: More Short Stories by the Lockridges

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: More Short Stories by the L...:   I read the first few stories in Flair for Murder by Francis & Richard Lockridge in January 2025. Now, over a year later, I have finis...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #261: THE BATMAN ANNUALS, VOLUME TWO

 George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #261: THE BATMAN ANNUALS, VOLUME TWO

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: NOBODY LIVES THERE NOW, NOTHING HAPPENS

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: NOBODY LIVES THERE NOW, NO...: "Nobody Lives There Now, Nothing Happens" by Casrol Orlock  (from Women of Darkness , edited by Kathryn Ptacek (1988) This short, ...

Patricia Abbott: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY-"For a Long Time This was Griselda's Story" Anthony Doerr from THE SHELL COLLECTOR

 Patricia Abbott: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY-"For a Long Time This was Griselda's Story" Anthony Doerr from THE SHELL COLLECTOR

Jim Nesbitt's Guest Post Review: The Poison Dart by Geri Dreiling

  

Please welcome back author Jim Nesbitt back to the blog today with his latest guest post review …

 

The main character in Geri Dreiling's second mystery novel, The Poison Dart, isn't a cop or a shamus so she doesn't carry a badge or a gun.

 

But Debbie Bradley, an investigative reporter, uses some of the same sly, dogged, bold, deceitful and sometimes illegal tricks a detective routinely pulls out of their hat.

 

Her lies are smooth and sweet. Her trespassing skills are stealthy and cat-burglar quick. Her stake-out chops are tenacious and iron-bottom sound. And she's a master at chasing the social media breadcrumbs that show the connects between the subjects of her stories.

 

Best of all, she takes the reader on a fast-paced ride-along as she shuffles through her tradecraft tricks to discover the next tendril of an ever-more-dangerous web of rich-kid heroin addicts, sleazy roadside deadbeats, redneck money mules, cartel killers and a Mexican family shackled to a network of ruthless drug traffickers.

 

Bradley, known as Crime Beat Girl for her underworld stories in a slick city magazine and the accompanying podcast that gives her a certain measure of fame, also takes readers on a tour d'horizon of St. Louis and its satellite towns.

 

It's a place where the top two questions everybody asks a stranger are: Where did you go to high school? And, which parish do you belong to? Yeah, it's a clannish town more than it is a city, very much focused on its storied past rather than its threadbare present, and the author takes the perfect snapshots that show its insular folkways.

 

There's a great riff on a St. Louis institution, the Wednesday lunch at St. Raymond's, the Maronite church just south of downtown that serves as the spiritual home for the city's Lebanese and Syrian immigrants. It's still a place where deals are made and pols, cops, mobsters and just plain folks rub elbows.

 

One of Bradley's regular podcast guests is a retired cop still known as Captain Jack Flannery, a renown raconteur who gives listeners -- and readers -- a fast, colorful summary of the mob wars of the early 1980s between the Mafia, the Syrian faction and a crew with connections to The Outfit in Chicago. More than a few tit-for-tat car bombings.

 

But this is a sideshow to the book's main event -- Bradley's initial intent to do a story about rich kids hooked on heroin, centering on the overdose death of a teen named Caleb Webb, the son of prominent real estate developers and twin brother to Connor.

 

This leads Bradley to Macie Holloway, Caleb's semi-girlfriend who blames herself for his death because she believes the source of his last heroin hit was someone she touted. Macie has the gaunt, doom-struck look of heroin addict deeply depressed about Caleb's death and his constant, spectral presence as a ghost whispering in her ear.


While Bradley is worming her way into Macie's confidence, a big drugs-and-money raid takes place out in the boonies west of St. Louis. At first, this seems like an event only tangentially related to Caleb's death.

 

But as Bradley pulls at the tendrils of this web, it becomes apparent that there's a direct connection between Caleb's death and the cartel that got stung by the raid and the murderous boss who runs it, El Duro.

 

Every tendril is another step in harm's way. But Bradley is relentless, locked on the trail of a suddenly far bigger story, refusing to back down, jazzed by the thrill of the hunt. After all, she's the Crime Beat Girl, a nickname she lives up to in this terrific novel by Geri Dreiling.


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

 

 


Jim Nesbitt ©2026

 

Jim Nesbitt is the award-winning author of five hard-boiled Texas crime thrillers that feature battered but dogged Dallas PI Ed Earl Burch. The fifth Ed Earl Burch novel, THE FATAL SAVING GRACE, has just been released. Nesbitt was a journalist for more than 30 years, serving as a reporter, editor and roving national correspondent for newspapers and wire services in Alabama, Florida, Texas, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Washington, D.C. He now lives in Athens, Alabama, where he is writing his sixth Ed Earl Burch novel, THE PERFECT TRAIN WRECK.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Crimeucopia

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Crimeucopia

Submission Problem at Reckon Review

 This was just posted to Twitter....




The Hard Word: "I NEVER KNOW WHAT THE WOMAN'S GOING TO DO.": THE LOST COAST AND OTHER SHARON MCCONE STORIES' MARCIA MULLER

 The Hard Word: "I NEVER KNOW WHAT THE WOMAN'S GOING TO DO.": THE LOST COAST AND OTHER SHARON MCCONE STORIES' MARCIA MULLER

Happiness Is A Book: Another Reprint Recommendation: I Start Counting By Audrey Erskine Lindop

 Happiness Is A Book: Another Reprint Recommendation: I Start Counting By Audrey Erskine Lindop

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Ossman and Steel’s Classic Household Guide to Appalachian Folk Healing

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Ossman and Steel’s Classic Household Guide to Appa...:   Reviewed by Jeanne The subtitle is A Collection of Old-Time Remedies, Charms, and Spells which comes closer to describing the content...

Mystery Fanfare: Murder at the Olympics: Crime Fiction set at the Olympics

Mystery Fanfare: Murder at the Olympics: Crime Fiction set at the O...: I hope you're enjoying the Winter Olympics. I am. If you're a mystery reader, it should come as no surprise that the Olym...

Publication Day Review: Robert B. Parker’s Big Shot: A Jesse Stone Novel by Christopher Farnsworth

 

Paradise Police Chief Jesse Stone is on the night shift as Robert B. Parker’s Big Shot: A Jesse Stone Novel begins and he likes it. He really likes it. It is something he does from time to time as they are an eleven member police department. There Is plenty of money in Paradise, Massachusetts, so the sight of the McLaren sports car on its own is not surprising. At the same time, summer is over and that means the summer people are gone. So, it is something to look at as it is just parked at the side of the road.

 

When Jesse looks closer he realizes the driver is passed out in the car. Woken up by Jesse, he comes out of the car belligerent and very intoxicated. Not only does he refuse to cooperate, he takes a swing at Jesse. Before long, he is in cuffs and on his way to the jail.

 

It isn’t until late in the morning of the next day that Molly informs him that he arrested and jailed a notorious celebrity. The man is Ramsey Devlin. The same Ramsey Devlin that beat the federal fraud case, moved out of NYC, and into a newly constructed mansion monstrosity in the area. The same house that many of the neighbors complained to the police about as the eyesore was being constructed even though the situation had nothing to do with the police.

 

Like his client, his attorney, Gordon Wilkes, is arrogant and aggressive. The attorney claims that the arrest is nothing more than police harassment at the behest of the federal government. Neither he nor his client see that Devlin was out of line. Instead, they plan to sue the department into oblivion.

 

Unfortunately, that first incident is not the last. All too soon, Jesse is accused of murder and gets another lesson regarding actual friends.

 

Robert B. Parker’s Big Shot: A Jesse Stone Novel by Christopher Farnsworth is a mighty good read. As author Reed Farrel Coleman did with the series years ago across several books, and as Mr. Farnsworth did in the last novel, Buried Secrets, he again captures the voice and spirit of the series as written by Robert B. Parker. The book comes alive for the reader. It only takes a handful of pages before that the tale is from somebody other than the original author. He has every aspect of those reads down and this new tale just flows for the reader.

 



Strongly Recommended.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/48ZTwtx

 

 

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

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Monday, February 09, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Theater Kid by Jeffrey Seller

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Theater Kid by Jeffrey Seller

In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday: It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news: THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES   In a comp...

Kathleen Marple Kalb: To the Letter

 Kathleen Marple Kalb: To the Letter

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Best Offer Wins: A Novel by Marisa Kashino

  

Best Offer Wins (Celadon Books, November 2025) by Marisa Kashino is Kashino’s debut novel. She covered the Washington DC real estate market for the Washington Post and the Washingtonian, and she knows what she’s talking about.

Margo Miyake and her husband Ian have been house hunting in the Washington DC, suburbs for 18 months. No matter how much they offer, they lose to the well-heeled buyers who can offer all cash and more of it than Margo and Ian can possibly hope to finance. They have lost 11 listings in the DC real estate market war zone and Margo is beginning to despair of ever leaving the cramped apartment they took after they sold their DC row house. She wants desperately to start a family; at the age of 37 her biological clock is ticking more loudly every day. But she must have a home first in which to raise a family, so the house has become an urgent priority.

When she hears about a residence in an upscale Bethesda area before it goes on the market, she and Ian go look at it, ostensibly just to check out the neighborhood. But Margo can’t resist walking around the house to examine the back yard and to look in the kitchen windows and she gets caught by one of the owners. She pretends that she’s lost. Ian has driven away rather than be mortified by his wife who is unashamedly trespassing.

Margo can’t stop scheming how to convince the owners of the house to accept their offer before they list the house on the MLS, despite the huge event her PR firm is hosting in just a few days. Margo is responsible for a large part of the details that will make the event stand out. If successful, their client will put the firm on retainer, a giant PR plum. But she is busy plotting her next real estate maneuver while she should be listening in meetings and taking notes. Margo has a laserlike focus that guided missiles would envy.

Her next move is to stalk the owner she met. She finds out where his yoga class is and “accidentally” joins his class. Not just joins the class but sits next to him. Nothing subtle about Margo. She goes from one embarrassing attempt to another without batting an eye or paying the least bit of attention to her job. Or her husband. Her ability to lie to her manager, her husband, and to her real estate agent is awe-inspiring.

It is not possible to say much more without giving away the entire story line. Suffice it to say, this book is cringe-inducing, hilarious, and scary. It will strike fear into the hearts of buyer’s agents everywhere. I can’t wait to see what Marisa Kashino writes next.



·         Publisher: ‎Celadon Books

·         Publication date: ‎November 25, 2025

·         Language: ‎English

·         Print length: ‎288 pages

·         ISBN-10: ‎1250400546

·         ISBN-13: ‎978-1250400543

 

 

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

  

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026 

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

Sunday, February 08, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Crypt Thief by Mark Pryor

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Crypt Thief by Mark Pryor

Little Big Crimes: The Summer Tournament, by Jason Starr

Little Big Crimes: The Summer Tournament, by Jason Starr:  "The Summer Tournament," by Jason Starr, in Tennis Noir, edited by John Shepphird, Level Best Books, 2026. Ah, the first antholo...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Death Below the Dam (1936) by Esther Fonseca

Beneath the Stains of Time: Death Below the Dam (1936) by Esther Fonseca: Not much is known today of Esther Haven Fonseca, except for scraps and pieces of bio-and bibliographical information, but, what can be said ...

Review: A Study in Secrets: A Redacted Man Mystery by Jeffrey Siger

 

As A Study in Secrets: A Redacted Man Mystery by Jeffrey Siger begins, Michael likes to sit in his penthouse window and imagine the lives of the people he sees that pass by his home. The wealthy recluse has a good perch as his townhouse faces an entrance to the neighborhood park directly across the street. A former intelligence operative who gave a lot to this country, physically, emotionally, and every other way possible, lives a life of quiet isolation. He rarely goes out and has very limited social contact. If it wasn’t for his housekeeper, Mrs. Baker, he might not speak to another person for days.

 

He has many people to people watch from his perch as he envisions their imaginary lives. He does not know their names, their occupations, or anything else real about them. He watches them, the strays and the regulars, and creates stories in his head of them and how they are going about their day. That includes a regular, a young woman in her gray coat, who daily sits on one of the park benches at the entrance to the park. She arrives shortly before dawn each day, and once the sun is up, walks deeper inside the park and becomes lost to his view.

 

While he imagines her life one way, her actual reality is far different. She has a routine that she must follow, with no exceptions. Her boss made that very clear on her first day. The same boss who is soon very dead on the floor of the apartment she shares with two other women.

 

Thanks to her boss being shot in the head, she now has no job. She can’t stay there. She can’t go to the cops. She certainly can’t tell anyone about her job. How much the roommates know about what she does, she has no idea, but they can’t be trusted either. She has no money, no resources, and no option other than to sleep on the bench at the edge of the park. It is dangerous, but that park bench is the one place that she feels any safety at all.

 

Fortunately, for her, Michael is awake and watching when she goes to the bench and lies down to sleep. He has always been intrigued by her. Haunted by those he failed to save, the elderly man is not going to let her sleep there unprotected. He certainly can’t just walk over and bring her home. With no other choice, as he sees it, he calls a person he has not spoken to in decades to ask for help for her.

 

That action by Michael starts a domino chain of events as the figure on the bench needs a lot of help. That help will come in many different ways as the threat to her life evolves again and again.

 

Beyond the obvious references to the legendary Sherlock Holmes, what struck my me most was how much this setup reminded me of the original The Equalizer TV show. During the last half of the 80s, CBS aired the drama. Edward Woodward was the dashing and sophisticated Robert McCall. He was a former intelligence operative and a man of considerable means. He was also your way out if you had no one else to help. All you had to do was call him by way of his newspaper ad. Back then, it was must see viewing for my late wife and me. It was also far and away superior to the rebooted version that CBS came up with in recent years.

 

That premise seems to be at work here, as I read the novel. Elderly man with a cane and plenty of money, a recluse who retired after a long career in the intelligence services, disengaged from the world, is pushed into a situation where he is compelled to help a very vulnerable young woman. That push to help begins to break him free of the protective shell he has created around himself. He gradually reengages with the world and the people around him, one slow step at a time.

 

That decision to contact somebody he has not spoken to in decades to get her help as she laid on the bench that cold night, starts a chain that changes everything for quite a few people in this very enjoyable first book of the new series. A solidly good read that gradually builds the tempo to a very satisfying conclusion. A Study in Secrets: A Redacted Man Mystery by Jeffrey Siger is well your time and attention.

 

 

For another perspective on the book, make sure you read Lesa Holstine’s recent review here.

 

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Saturday, February 07, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: March Treasures in My Closet – Part 2

 Lesa's Book Critiques: March Treasures in My Closet – Part 2

KRL Update

Since the main KRL website is down right now, we are posting everything on KRL News and Reviews this week-

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week the latest Mystery Coming Attractions Valentine's Day Edition by Victoria Fair https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/mystery-coming-attractions-february.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Call In For Murder" (together with some other goodies) by Tammy Barker, along with an interesting interview with Tammy https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/call-in-for-murder-by-tammy-barker.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Gull and Bones" by Sally Goldenbaum https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/gull-and-bones-by-sally-goldenbaum.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "A Grace Deception" by Connie Berry, https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/a-grave-deception-by-connie-berry.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Murder Plays Second Fiddle" by Heather Weidner https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/murder-plays-second-fiddle-by-heather.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Mayhem and Malice in Malta" by Victoria Tait https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/mayhem-and-malice-in-malta-by-victoria.html

 

And another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Kristine Delano https://www.krlnews.com/2026/02/what-i-learned-about-storytelling-from.html

 

Happy Reading,

Lorie 

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of February 8, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of February 8, 2026 

SleuthSayers: The Long Walk

SleuthSayers: The Long Walk:   I like Stephen King. I've read all his writings--novels, novellas, short stories, even the essays and other nonfiction--and I think I ...

Happiness Is A Book: Nomination for Classic Crime Reprints

 Happiness Is A Book: Nomination for Classic Crime Reprints

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Spin #43 for the Classics Club, February 2026

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Spin #43 for the Classics Club, February 2026:   The latest Classics Club Spin has been announced. To join in, I choose twenty unread books from my classics list and list them in a post ...

Scott's Take: The Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook by Matt Dinniman

  

The Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook by Matt Dinniman is the third book in the Dungeon Crawler Carl series and my least favorite of the series so far. I got tired of the basic concept of the book before the end.

 

In this book, Carl and friends are forced to fight underground in a series of tunnels, subways, etc. And that’s the book. They flight underground in various locations and conditions.

 

There is intrigue from human crawlers, and world building, and a ton of action. The human crawlers are finally working together. A lot of the supporting characters get to come back here. There is humor and it is a fun read, but the concept does not really need a five hundred plus page book. I just got tired of the idea of the book before the author wounded it up. He had a lot of clever ideas in this one, but it just did not work for me.

 

There is a map that is added at one point that is supposed to help explain things.  As maps go in a fantasy series, the one here is pretty weak and not very good. I have seen way better. I did like how some of the chapters had little illustrations on top.

 

There is a short story included that continues the things happening backstage. One hopes at some point that stuff will matter.

 

The next book sounds way better. The Gate of the Feral Gods where Carl and friends deal with a series of castles. One of which is a floating fortress guarded by gnomes. A castle made of sand. A robot guarded submarine.  A haunted crypt. Somehow, I guess all four count as castles.

 


 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4a9FiXs

 

 

My hardback reading copy came from the Forest Green Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026