Sunday, March 15, 2026

KRL Update

Up on KRL this week reviews and giveaways of 2 mysteries by Victoria Gilbert-"Schooled in Murder" and "A Deadly Clue" https://kingsriverlife.com/03/14/a-pair-of-cozy-mysteries-by-victoria-gilbert/

And a review and ebook giveaway of "More Than You Know" by Anne Canadeo, along with an interesting interview with Anne https://kingsriverlife.com/03/14/more-than-you-know-by-anne-canadeo/

And in honor of Saint Patrick's Day, we have a review and giveaway of "Buried in Shamrocks" by Lisa Q. Mathews https://kingsriverlife.com/03/14/buried-in-shamrocks-by-lisa-q-mathews/

We also have a fun mystery short story by Michael Bracken https://kingsriverlife.com/03/14/mystery-short-story-wealth-of-knowledge/

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "Missing" by David Beckler https://www.krlnews.com/2026/03/missing-by-d-e-beckler-reviewgiveaway.html

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Round Up the Unusual Suspects" by Elizabeth Crowens https://www.krlnews.com/2026/03/round-up-unusual-suspects-by-elizabeth.html

Happy reading,
Lorie

Guest Post: Reprise - Kansas City Breakdown by M.E. Proctor

 

In the middle of next month, Kansas City Breakdown, will be released by Cowboy Jamboree Press. The book by M. E. Proctor and Russell Thayer is a sequel to their Bop City Swing of last year. Please welcome back M. E. Proctor to the blog today as she explains how the new book came to be in this guest post.

 

 

Reprise - Kansas City Breakdown

 

by M.E. Proctor

 

 

When Russell Thayer and I started Bop City Swing two years ago (already!), neither of us had ever written a piece of fiction in collaboration. My only experience with a vaguely similar joint effort goes back to producing a 200-page report with a colleague on the dry subject of alternative forms of work organization (I’m not going to go into the nuts and bolts of that) when I was on a research contract with a European university. I don’t remember how we managed the writing part. What I recall is how much fun we had in the sandbox coming up with wild ideas. And how much fun my research partner was. I can still picture him. A dude tall as a giraffe, under thirty but with less hair left on his head than a newborn chicken. He was quirky and brilliant. Christopher Lloyd in Back to the Future. I suspect he smoked more than the cigarettes that he puffed on constantly when we were together. Damn it, man, open the window! We shared a tiny office, next to a rumbling mechanical room, blissfully remote from the rest of the Economics Department and its stern director. We locked the door to keep snoops away.

So yes, I like to work with people. They should be a little mad and chaotic, to balance my very organized mind.

If we had sat down to ponder methods and objectives, Russell and I might never have gotten out of the starting blocks. We just said, what the hell let’s do it, let’s write a story featuring these two characters that we have put in a bunch of stories already, and see where it takes us.

We created an inciting incident, a political assassination in 1951 San Francisco, and threw our characters into it. My protagonist, SFPD Homicide Detective Tom Keegan, worked the case. The role of Russell’s leading lady—Vivian Davis aka Gunselle, a killer-for-hire—was more of a head-scratcher. We brainstormed options, discarded a bunch of them before landing on a promising one: Vivian was hired to shoot the guy but somebody beat her to it. She’s pissed off because she was robbed of a fat paycheck. Both Tom and Viv are hunting the killer. They each have part of the solution. Eventually their paths will cross with explosive results.

Bop City Swing was conceived as a stand-alone. Then we found a publisher (Cowboy Jamboree Press) and started thinking about a follow-up. Tom and Vivian were great characters and deserved another walk in the spotlights.

Follow-ups, reprises, book #2 in a series can be tricky.

First problem. The characters have a common history now. Supporting players have been introduced. There’s a chronology of events, and continuity to think about. No more meet-cute: he’s a cop and she’s a killer. Their interactions are ambiguous, by definition. Add to that the attraction she feels for him and the temptation she represents for him. The sexual tension between them added spice to the first book. In the second one, it has to be picked up and given an extra tug. To make things even more complicated, Tom is in a long-term relationship with a spunky San Francisco Chronicle crime reporter.

Second problem. The plot and the theme. Bop City Swing revolved around politics and the misdeeds of the moneyed class. It was also a story of revenge and trauma wrapped inside a murder investigation. Book #2 has to go in a completely different direction.

One way to mark a radical shift is to change locations. We left San Francisco and decided to go to Kansas City. Jazz music, still, but with a side of barbecue. Then we opened the Noir Codex on a couple of new pages. Under G and M for Gangsters and Goons, Mobsters and Molls. And Russell and I went to work using our favorite technique, the key questions:
Why would Vivian and Tom get together and what are they doing in Missouri?

As is always the case when you put all the ideas in a big pot and stir vigorously, answers come and keep coming as the plot progresses. Secondary characters walk on stage and demand attention. Some almost get killed but survive because we like them so much. Others aren’t so lucky. And the end is never exactly what you have in mind at the beginning.

Here’s how we answered our key questions.
The book starts with an FBI undercover operation. The plan is to infiltrate a high-level Kansas City Mob meeting to gather information. A San Francisco gangster is going to the conference and is considered a ‘soft’ target. He can be seduced. A honey trap. If the right woman for the job can be found. Tom knows somebody who could pull it off, but what will he have to do to convince her? Vivian doesn’t work for the police. Tom has a stake in the success of the mission. He’s her designated handler. His job is to get her out alive.

The book is called Kansas City Breakdown.

In music, according to Wikipedia, a ‘breakdown’ is a section of song characterized by solo performances. Vivian and Tom have their starring moments. They also play well together.    


--

Latest Publication:

 

Kansas City Breakdown

By M.E. Proctor and Russell Thayer

 

Publisher: Cowboy Jamboree

April 2026

Paperback

eBook

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

 

 

M. E. Proctor ©2026 

M.E. Proctor was born in Brussels and lives in Texas. She’s the author of the Declan Shaw detective mysteries: Love You Till Tuesday and Catch Me on a Blue Day (Shotgun Honey Books). She’s the author of two short story collections, Family and Other Ailments and A Book to Live By. She’s also the co-author with Russell Thayer of two retro-noirs: Bop City Swing and Kansas City Breakdown. Short fiction in VautrinToughRock and a Hard PlaceBristol NoirMystery TribuneReckon Review and Black Cat Weekly among others. She’s a Shamus and Derringer short story nominee.
Author Website: www.shawmystery.com. On Substack: https://meproctor.substack.com.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of March 15, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of March 15, 2026

Murder is Everywhere: The Top Ten Best Short Story Mysteries of All Time

Murder is Everywhere: The Top Ten Best Short Story Mysteries of All Time:   Jeff–Saturday There is so much (good) news I have to share...but cannot talk about quite yet. All I can say is that it's kept me so bu...

ButtonDown.Com: The Roots of Chaos by Felipe Hernández Cava & Bartolomé Segui - quick take

 ButtonDown.Com: The Roots of Chaos by Felipe Hernández Cava & Bartolomé Segui - quick take

Beneath the Stains of Time: Panic Party: Case Closed, vol. 97 by Gosho Aoyama

Beneath the Stains of Time: Panic Party: Case Closed, vol. 97 by Gosho Aoyama: Gosho Aoyama 's 96th volume of Case Closed starts out, as is tradition, with the conclusion to the story that closed out the previous v...

Jerry's House of Everything: PEP COMICS #1 (JANUARY 1940)

Jerry's House of Everything: PEP COMICS #1 (JANUARY 1940): Pep Comics  was the third anthology comic book published by MLJ Publications.  In issue #42 (December 1941) it introduced the character of A...

Scott's Take: Absolute Flash Vol 1: Of Two Worlds by Jeff Lemire and Nick Robles (Illustrator)

 

Absolute Flash Vol 1: Of Two Worlds by Jeff Lemire and Nick Robles (Illustrator) is a read in the Absolute Universe where The Flash is reimagined. In this universe, the legacy of The Flash is gone, there is no speed force, and Wally is on his own. After an accident at a government facility military brat Wally West became a speedster. Feeling overwhelmed by these new powers and dealing with the loss of his mother he went on the run. The government is going to track him down and bring him back. They want his powers at any cost. His father thinks he can control the situation and protect his son.  Of course, the government does not care about the boy. They just want his powers at any cost. They will bring him in either alive or dead.

 

The art is excellent. It’s also nice to read a Jeff Lemire title in the DC universe again. I like his writing, but he is mostly doing indie horror comics now, and I am just not a horror guy. I really like this new version of Grodd that is introduced in this volume. The Rogues are now government operatives instead of just bank robbers. They are now “the good guys” instead of the bad guys. This series will continue with Absolute Flash Vol 2: Still Point.

 



Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4c2z2DF

 

 

I read the eBook copy of this through the DC Universe Infinite App.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026

Friday, March 13, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – The Cyclist by Tim Sullivan

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – The Cyclist by Tim Sullivan

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: How to Support Your Favorite Authors (Even When Money Is Tight) by Caroline Clemmons

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: How to Support Your Favorite Authors (Even When Mo...:  Why Your Support Matters   Books and groceries now compete more than ever for the same dollars, and I know many of you are watching every p...

Writer Beware: Deadline Approaching to File a Claim in the Anthropic Settlement

 Writer Beware: Deadline Approaching to File a Claim in the Anthropic Settlement

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run by Paul McCartney, edited by Ted Widmer

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run by Paul McCa...:   Reviewed by Kristin How many books have been written about The Beatles, individually or collectively, and/or about their post-Beatle m...

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Hasty Wedding by Mignon G. Eberhart

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Hasty Wedding by Mignon G. Eberhart

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: A Different Kind of Summer

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: A Different Kind of S...: Gwendoline Butler (1922-2013) had limited success as a writer before she began a police procedural series featuring a young Scotland Yard In...

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: MY BROTHER MICHAEL

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: MY BROTHER MICHAEL: My Brother Michael  by Mary Stewart (1959; reprinted in omnibus volume Three Novels of Suspense , undated,  but 1960) This was the March sel...

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: Libby, the leading library reading app, unveiled the winners of the third annual Libby Book Awards. Celebrating the best in digital reading,...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in February 2026

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in February 2026:   This was another good reading month. Mostly mysteries this month, but that is OK. I read a very long, very heavy graphic memoir, but it wa...

Jerry's House of Everything: BOX 13: THE BITER BITTEN (JULY 17, 1949)

Jerry's House of Everything: BOX 13: THE BITER BITTEN (JULY 17, 1949): Box 13  was a syndicated radio show which ran for fifty-two episodes in 1948-49.  It followed the adventures of reporter turned mystery nove...

Paula Messina Reviews: Strange Houses by Uketsu

 

 Please welcome back author Paula Messina to the blog today…

  

 

Strange Houses

 

by Paula Messina

 

 

Strange Houses by Uketsu is one strange book. I can imagine English teachers throughout the country hurling it against a wall and screaming, “There’s no character development.”

They’d be right. There’s also no plot, setting, or the requisite digging for clues in a mystery.

But that’s mere quibbling.

After all, who needs plot, character, and setting when the reader has Uketsu?

Houses isn’t nearly as strange as the writer. Well, that might be nitpicking. Both book and writer are bizarre. The strangest thing of all is that I, a connoisseur of the those typical requirements -- you know, plot, character, setting – for labeling a manuscript a novel, especially character development, read through to the end.

Truth is I’m a sucker for books with pictures. Houses has a ton of them, so many that it’s probably a novella disguised as a novel.

The “About the Author” at the back of the book states that Uketsu “only ever appears online, wearing a mask and speaking through a voice changer.” He has 1.5 million followers, and his mysteries have sold “nearly 3 million copies in Japan since 2021.”

His real name and identity are unknown. In the lower right hand corner of the book’s cover, there’s a minuscule photo of Uketsu wearing a white mask. Well, we’re supposed to believe it’s the author. It could be anyone wearing a mask, or a badly carved pumpkin, or Angelina Jolie getting a facial. Take your pick.

According to Wikipedia, “Uketsu's fiction blends conventional prose with visual elements (drawings, diagrams, floor plans) that are presented as clues within the text.” Indeed, Houses is replete with renderings of different houses that harbored murderers. In one sense, those drawings are reminiscent of the Golden Age mysteries that contained maps or layouts of buildings. Those drawings were never the focus of the story. They were visual aids. Uketsu’s renderings are vital to the story.

I question that Uketsu uses “conventional prose.” In fact, there is little prose for most of the book. Instead, there’s lots of dialogue that is presented in a format reminiscent of a play minus stage directions.

As for setting, yes, the book is about houses, but they are explored as architectural renderings or through dialogue, not as environments occupied by characters.

The story begins when a friend calls the unidentified narrator—is he Uketsu?—to say he’s considering buying a house. However there’s something odd about it. It has an inaccessible space in the kitchen, a space that could not possibly serve any purpose. The friend is wisely leery about moving in any time soon.

The narrator agrees to investigate. He doesn’t put on his deerstalker hat and grab a magnifying glass. No. He calls Kurihara, “a draughtsman with a prestigious architectural firm.” Through Kurihara’s amazing powers of deduction, the narrator learns that many other aspects of the house are weird. The strangest aspect of all is that it’s a charnel house.

I’m positive Kurihara will never replace Sherlock Holmes as the world’s most beloved detective. Sherlock was a genius, but he worked to solve his capers. Kurihara, on the other hand, has an uncanny ability to discover a house’s secrets by simply looking at its layout. He never tests his hypotheses, and he’s never in doubt. If he were a professional baseball player, his end-of-season batting average would be one thousand. Not even the Babe achieved that record.

Back to that inaccessible space. Kurihara quickly determines its use without considering and rejecting other possibilities. For example, maybe the husband wanted a dumbwaiter so he wouldn’t have to carry his late-night snacks upstairs. Or the wife wanted shelves for her cookbooks and changed her mind. Kurihara simply knows the space’s purpose.

Armed with Kurihara’s insight, the narrator, a freelance writer, does what any writer in that circumstance would do. He writes an article about the strange house his friend is leery of buying.

And then a body is found. Missing a left hand.

Yuzuki Miyae, the wife of the dead man, approaches the narrator. With her input, the narrator connects the house to the Katabuchi family. A series of houses and the gruesome details of that family’s curse begin to unfold.

It was difficult to keep all the names straight. Many begin with the same letter, which can be confusing even when the names are familiar. At least Kurihara is not a member of the Katabuchi family. The friend who got the ball rolling at the beginning of the story is Yanaoka. Yuzuki’s mother is Yoshie. It’s enough to make a reader yell, “Try some other letters of the alphabet.”

Strange Houses, as much as it examines anything, examines what happens when a family believes it’s been cursed and must go to extremes to maintain its status. Uketsu likes to pepper his work with drawings. It would have been beneficial if he’d included one more, a road map so the reader could keep straight all the Katabuchi generations and their efforts to save the family’s status. He piled twist upon twist to tie up all the loose ends. By the time I approached the finale, I needed a stiff drink.

Strange Houses was translated by Jim Rion. The cover states that it is “the chilling Japanese mystery sensation.” I wouldn’t describe it as chilling. I’m not sure it qualifies as a mystery sensation either. It’s all talk and little action. The narrator and Kurihara never step foot in one of those strange houses. Kurihara’s analysis of those architectural drawings is pretty much the sum and substance of the detecting. The great reveal is a long narration. The many twists at the end were a bit overwhelming.

I’m glad I read Houses. It’s an intriguing writing experiment of how far an author can go and still maintain reader interest. And sell enough copies to make most writers jealous. Readers who like the unusual will enjoy this book. More conventional readers might find it annoying.

 



Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4sC5BND



Paula Messina ©2026

Paula Messina is writing an historical mystery set in Boston’s North End. Donatello Laguardia, the WIP’s main character, solves crimes in Devil’s Snare and Snakeberry. Her contemporary fiction appears in Black Cat WeeklyThe Ekphrastic ReviewTHEMA, and Wolfsbane. And yes, her Donatello Laguardia stories have recurring characters.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

Thursday Treats: 3/10/2026

 The latest reading opportunities…

 

SMFS member David Hendrickson announced the start of his Kickstarter project to find the publication of his mystery, Pain Train. Billed as “Travis McGee meets Mathew Scudder,” the read drops late next month. You can learn more at Mr. Hendrickson’s Facebook page.

 




SMFS Member by
Elle Higgins announced that her novel, The Burmese Kitten: An Emma Grant Mystery, was now out. The read is available in both eBook and print formats at Amazon.




SMFS member Barb Goffman shared the news of the latest issue of Black Cat Weekly. SMFS list member Andrew Welsh-Huggins has the featured cover story. As always, the issue is full of 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.

 



Speaking of Andrew Welsh-Huggins, he has a new book coming out on the 24rth. The Delivery: A Mercury Carter Thriller, is being released by The Mysterious Press. This is the second book in the series that began with, The Mailman. Released in January 2025, it was reviewed by Aubrey Nye Hamilton that same month here.

 


Last, but not least, SMFS member Michael Bracken announced on Facebook that his short story, “Under the Proctor Street Bridge,” was published in the anthology, Time After Time: 13 Original Mysterious Tales Inspired By History. Published by Thalia Press, the read is available in eBook and paperback formats at Amazon



  

Until next time….


 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Norah O’Donnell, Author of We the Women

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Norah O’Donnell, Author of We the Women

Happiness Is A Book: The Mourner by Richard Stark

 Happiness Is A Book: The Mourner by Richard Stark

SleuthSayers: Tips for Writing Humor

SleuthSayers: Tips for Writing Humor: Later this week I'm going to be one of the speakers at a Short Mystery Fiction Society zoom meeting. The topic is writing humor. Humor i...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Fear of Fear (1931) by Florence Ryerson and Colin ...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Fear of Fear (1931) by Florence Ryerson and Colin ...: Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements were an American husband-and-wife writing tandem, " of varied and prodigious talent ," whose o...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Amalfi Curse by Sarah Penner

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Amalfi Curse by Sarah Penner:   Reviewed by Jeanne Haven’s father was a diver and a dreamer.   He never did quite get the big find he was always searching for, but he...

Monday, March 09, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Quiet Girl in a Noisy World by Deborah Tang

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Quiet Girl in a Noisy World by Deborah Tang

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   Jason Cla...

Little Big Crimes: Dear Mr. Townsend, by E.A. Aymar

Little Big Crimes: Dear Mr. Townsend, by E.A. Aymar:    "Dear Mr. Townsend," by E.A. Aymar, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, January/February 2026.  This is the second appeara...

Kathleen Marple Kalb: Building a Presence

 Kathleen Marple Kalb: Building a Presence

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: The Poet’s Game: A Spy in Moscow by Paul Vidich

  

Paul Vidich was an executive in the entertainment industry, specifically in music and media at Time Warner, AOL, and Warner Music Group, where he was Executive Vice President in charge of global digital strategy. He presently serves as an independent board director, investor, and advisor to internet media companies in video and music. He also works on the boards of directors of Poets and Writers, The New School for Social Research, and the Elizabeth Kostova Foundation. He is the author of several well-regarded novels.

The Poet’s Game: A Spy in Moscow (Pegasus, 2025) is his seventh spy thriller, conjuring up memories of John LeCarre and his books about Cold War espionage. CrimeReads called it a Top Five Espionage Novel of the Year and The Financial Times listed it among the Best Thrillers of 2025.

Alex Matthews was the Moscow Station chief at the CIA for years. With the change in administrations came a change in agency priorities, and Alex did not hold back his criticism of the alterations. His dissatisfaction with the new agency direction in addition to dramatic changes in his personal life led to a timely retirement that seemed mutually beneficial. Matthews turned his knowledge of Russia into investments in the Russian economy and created a thriving financial business. He still spent a good bit of time in Russia, putting pressure on his marriage and his relationship with his teenage son.

Because he could travel freely to and within Russia, the CIA director asked him to meet one of Matthews’ former agents to collect information the agent said was critical to the protection of the sitting U.S. president. Matthews wanted to say no but the CIA could throw roadblocks into his dealings with Russia and he agreed to this one last job as he made arrangements to sell his Russian business and wrap up his life there.

Nothing about the job is as simple as he was told it would be. Fortunately he didn’t expect it but the degree of scrutiny he received from multiple levels of Russian authority told him matters were more complicated than he understood.

Layers upon layers of duplicity and double-dealing, some expected as merely part of the job, but others were surprises; one betrayal rocked Matthews to his core. The long-term impact of living a double life in an authoritarian regime meant every agent never knew entirely who could be trusted. A truly prepared agent had an exit strategy that could be exercised at any time. This is a paranoia-laden story of Cold War espionage filled with the unexpected right through to the end. 

 

 

  • Publisher: Pegasus Crime
  • Publication date: May 6, 2025
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 336 pages
  • ISBN-10: 163936885X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1639368853

 

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3OOZiI9 

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

 

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