Friday, May 01, 2026

FFB Review: The Lawyer: Six Guns At Sundown by Eric Beetner

 


From the archive...


Author Eric Beetner continues the excellent The Lawyer series published by Beat to a Pulp with his entry Six Guns At Sundown.  The Lawyer, who used to go by the name of J. D. Miller, is on a quest to find those responsible for the brutal murders of his entire family. He now delivers justice by way of the gun and no longer relies on the courts to provide justice to those wronged.

 

He moves from place to place on his mare, Redemption, as he follows the trail of those responsible. He is currently pursuing a man known far and wide as “Big Jim Kimbrough.” The trail seems to be leading him to the decrypt town of Sundown where every building seems to lean a different way as if the entire town was created by drunks. At least he can find a place for his horse and roof for the night. The Westward Railroad might be coming there to build not only the rail line and their headquarters, but for now the place is clearly in a bad way.

 

So is the man dragged in on a rope behind a horse early the next morning. The Lawyer had planned to move on until the unfolding spectacle put his plans on hold. According to a Mr. Buchanan who dragged the unfortunate man by way of a rope tied to his horse he is to be lynched. The black man’s crime was that was that he ate a piece of cherry pie Buchanan’s wife made right out of the pan and using Buchanan’s own silverware. Not that dragging the hogtied man on the ground behind the horse the entire way from the ranch to town wasn’t enough Buchanan intends to hang him as fast as possible.

 

The lawyer hates bullies and won’t stand for them. He also believes in the rule of law and wants to know the full details of the situation. Not only is what the man did not a hanging offense in this period after the Civil War, Buchanan’s attitude seems to be illustrative of a town attitude that needs to change. The hunt for Big Jim Kimbrough will have to wait as the lawyer is going to prevent a hanging in Six Guns At Sundown.

 

Picking up the mantle laid down by Wayne D. Dundee in The Lawyer: Stay Of Execution followed by The Lawyer: The Retributioners author Eric Beetner has crafted a very good western tale. The Lawyer: Six Guns At Sundown is a western tale of mystery and racism that resonates strongly with events of today. The read does not preach as the storyline moves over a couple days period in the Old West. The result is another excellent tale in the series and yet another very good read from Beat to a Pulp.

  

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

 

I picked this up by way of funds in my Amazon Associate Account in late February 2016.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2016, 2026

FFB Review: The Texas Capitol Murders by Bill Crider

 

From the archive…. 

 

The Texas Capitol Murders features romance, murder, a Texas Ranger, a governor afraid of his own shadow, strident anti-abortionists, at least one pervert (depending on your personal definition of “pervert” there could be a couple more), and other unique human beings. In other words, the read easily could be nonfiction, but author Bill Crider is offering this read featuring a cast of characters as a fictional mystery. Originally published in 1992 by St. Martin’s Press, the book has recently been released again in an e-book version with a much better cover than the original. The setting of the late eighties may be twenty plus years old, but the story itself is not dated and could easily be happening right now considering how things work at the state capitol.

 

Nearly everyone involved in this story is trying to use their job at the state capitol to move up to better things. The usual worst point of the day for many is when “Wayne the Wagger” comes out in view of tourists and staff and the drug addicted homeless man does what comes naturally. That does not ever go over well and the usual response by capitol police is to kick him out of the building for the day.

 

While they may tolerate Wayne inside the building when he does his thing when he goes outside and decides to use one of the small cannons flanking the entrance – cannons that may or may not have been used in both the Texas Revolution and the Civil War – as a public urinal, it gets him arrested. Too bad Wayne can’t remember witnessing the murder of a woman in the capitol building the night before because the police could really use his help. They don’t even yet know there is a dead woman in the building.

 

Shifting through a large cast of characters, Texas author Bill Crider weaves a story of romance, greed, lust, and political agendas run amok. Likeable and respectable characters are few in this wild tale where idiots (certified and otherwise) abound. Far different than his Sheriff Rhodes series where Sheriff Dan Rhodes is the main focus while investigating the latest murder, here author Bill Crider puts a number of characters into motion and unleashes chaos as those involved randomly collide and ricochet off each other while going through their day-to-day activities.

 

Occasionally a little raunchy, sometimes sarcastic, The Texas Capitol Murders is an entertaining tale that is quirky and funny while delivering a topflight mystery to its fitting dangerous end at the top of the capitol dome. Like the floor below, nearly everyone is cracked in this story that is well worth your time.

 


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

 

With the print copy unavailable at my local library, the material was purchased via a gift card by this reviewer for use in an objective review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2013, 2021, 2026 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

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Beneath the Stains of Time: Murder in the Tomb (1937) by Lucian Austin Osgood

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Thursday Treats: 4/30/2026

The latest reading opportunities…

 

Fellow SMFS list member Mark Edward Jones reported on the list that his short story, Eve, had been published in the latest issue of the Absolute Literary Journal. Led by student editors, per the website, it is the “…literary and artistic journal of Oklahoma City Community College.” The issue can be read for free by going to the website and clicking on the link for the pdf “Absolute 2026.” You can also learn more about the school by going to their Facebook page.

 

Fellow SMFS list member Jesse Bethea reported on the list publication of the short story, The Girls of Robin River, in the anthology, Of Beast & Bones. Published by Inky Bones Press, the read is available at Amazon in a variety of formats.

 

I have never liked horror as real life has always been scary enough. Author P.M. Raymond is one heck of a writer. She has a new short story collection out; Things Are as They Should Be and Other Words To Die For. Published by Uncomfortably Dark Horror, the read is available at Amazon and other vendors. You can also read about how the signature tale, Things Are as They Should Be, in her essay at Art Taylor’s The First Two Pages.

 

SMFS list member Edith Maxwell reported that her mystery, A Poisonous Pour: A Cece Barton Mystery Book, had been released. This is the 3rd book in her series and her 38th published book overall. Published by Kensington Cozies in a variety of formats, you can pick it up at Amazon, where you also could pick up the entire series as well, or at other vendors. She is also featured at this guest post at the Jungle Red Writers blog where she is offering a free copy of the book to one winner.

 

Also now out is the two book anthology series, The Rough Country Collection. Featuring the books, Rough Country, and, Hard Country, are twenty authors and their tales of western style crime fiction. Published by Hat Creek Books of Roan & Weatherford Publishing Associates in a variety of formats at Amazon, the charity anthology benefits the U.S. Marshals Fund.

 



The latest issue of Black Cat Weekly also came out. Black Cat Weekly #243 includes short stories by Robert Lopresti (A Bad Day for Good Samaritans) and H.K. Slade (Il Maestoso). You can pick up the latest issue here.  

 




Joining the ranks of those who have had novelettes published by Black Beacon Books, is fellow SMFS list member Bruce W. Most. His novelette, You Only Fall Once, was released on the Kindle platform earlier this week.

 



Also now out is The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene. Published by Thomas & Mercer, the read is a direct sequel to the Hollywood Hitmen novel of last year. My reviews of both books are here on the blog. Both books are available at Amazon and other vendors.

 

By the way, next week sees the release of The Teacher: A DS George Cross Mystery by Tim Sullivan as well as Steven Havill’s Reverse: A Posadas County Mystery Book. Thanks to ARCs through NetGalley, I will have reviews of both books for you.

 

Until next time….

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026


(The picture that drove my late wife nuts. The first time she saw it, which was on Facebook, she shrieked from the other room in the apartment, "Kevin! What is wrong with you? Take it down now!" She was not amused by the picture caption either--- What The Book Sees.  🤣)

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Pumpkin Spice Cafe by Laurie Gilmore

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Pumpkin Spice Cafe by Laurie Gilmore

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 78 Calls for Submissions in May 2026 - Paying Markets

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SleuthSayers: Location, Location, and... What Was It?

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood

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Patricia Abbott: Wednesday Short Stories: The Whimper of Whipped Dogs, Harlan Ellison

 Patricia Abbott: Wednesday Short Stories: The Whimper of Whipped Dogs, Harlan Ellison

Short Story Wednesday Review: Merrick: A Short Story by Ben Boulden

 

From the archive...

 

Almost from the beginning, the planned robbery of the armored stage goes wrong one day in Texas. Nobody was supposed to die. Clarence Tilley, had a good plan, but he didn’t plan for everything in Merrick: A Short Story.

 

A robbery gang is only as good as its weakest link. The point is proven again and again in this fast moving western tale by Ben Boulden. Filled with plenty of action, intrigue and deceit, as well as need for justice, the story recounts how Merrick does what needs to be done to settle things as best as can be done in the hard scrabble West. Like his novel, Blaze: Red Rock Rampage, the short story, Merrick, is highly recommended. 

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4d9bGMC

 

  

Digital ARC was provided by the author for my use in an objective review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2017, 2023, 2026

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Something to Look Forward To by Fannie Flagg

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Something to Look Forward To by Fannie Flagg

Happiness Is A Book: For Kicks by Dick Francis

 Happiness Is A Book: For Kicks by Dick Francis

The First Two Pages: “Things Are as They Should Be” by P.M. Raymond

 The First Two Pages: “Things Are as They Should Be” by P.M. Raymond

Publication Day Review: The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene


The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene is a direct sequel to the Hollywood Hitmen novel of last year. Like that book, this read is not really a thriller though it is a bit grittier. This read is more like an actual police procedural as well.

 

The plight of young children and teens on the streets is a nationwide problem. It is also the main storyline of The Lost Angels: A Thriller. Evie Peacock is one of those teens on the streets of Los Angeles doing almost anything to survive. As the book opens on a rainy night, she is seventeen, and very worried about her friend, Layla Waters. The same friend, Layla Waters, who had called her a couple of days earlier, and said the guy she had been living with was bad news after all. She had promised come back to Evie and the others in their small group who all look out for each other. She also wanted to show Evie something so they could figure out what to do and who to tell about it.

 

That was not to be.

 

Soon, Officer Cassidy Clarke, just back at work in the LAPD after a stress leave due to recent events, will be part of the hunt for the missing Layla. So, too will her father, Bill Clarke, who is on a better mental footing these days, thanks to the medication he is now on and other things. It would be helpful if the killer languishing in prison would stop calling for him.

 

Then there is Melinda Drake, director of the Kidz Club house, who is just about at her wits end. She runs a resource center and overnight shelter for homeless teens and runaways. Her place is a sanctuary for those living on the streets.  It is a well-known refuge and sorely needed.

 

She flags down Cassidy and Officer Sean Riley while they are on patrol. She wants to follow up on numerous phone calls she has made regarding several missing kids. She knows of at least five kids who used to be frequent guests and now have seemingly disappeared. She also knows of a very low-level pimp, Aiden Howe, who used to be around all the time, and now is not.

 

She’s called in repeatedly to report these situations. She’s talked to Captain Dykstra of the Hollywood Station, who promised somebody would come by and take a report. Nobody ever did, no matter how many times she called. So, she flagged down Cassidy and Riley to ask, again, that somebody listen and do something.

 

Using her data terminal in their patrol car, Cassidy files a report for each of the missing kids so that the investigative ball gets rolling. Cassidy isn’t about to just file the reports and move on either. Neither will her former detective father, now retired and working as a private investigator, as he never lets anything go. Both of them and others will work the cases of the missing kids while also working other cases and dealing with past and present events in various storylines.

 

While an incredibly depressing topic when one thinks about the thousands and thousands of kids living on the streets of this country, the topic is handled well in The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene. Plenty of action and mystery are present in this read that also concludes several over arching storylines from the first book. The resulting read is far more of a police procedural than the cozy style first book. That fact made it, for this reader, a far more entertaining and enjoyable read.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/42vms9L

 

 

My digital ARC came from the publisher, Thomas & Mercer, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Monday, April 27, 2026

In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

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Kathleen Marple Kalb: Caution Ahead

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Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Two Kinds of Stranger: A Novel (Eddie Flynn Series) by Steve Cavanagh

 

While I read the latest Eddie Flynn last year, courtesy of Waterstones and Royal Mail, when it was published in the UK, I acquired a US edition a couple of weeks ago when Steve Cavanagh stopped at a nearby bookstore on his tour to promote Two Kinds of Stranger after its US release in March. So now I have two signed copies!

Of course I had to re-read it. It’s an enthralling story of Elly Parker, a naïve but generous young woman who has quite a following on TikTok, posting videos that urge her followers to perform an act of kindness every day. She has recently married the man of her dreams and her posts overflow with happiness until a few weeks after the wedding she walks into her apartment while filming and finds her new husband and her best friend in bed. The post went viral and millions of people watched Elly’s perfect life shatter.

One of the viewers was a psychopath who decided to set Elly up for the murder of her husband and best friend. He enjoys killing people and he considers the possibilities of the situation too good to pass up. His plans don’t quite go as expected but Elly did get arrested. She had enough presence of mind to call Eddie Flynn, who by now is well known as the defense lawyer for dire cases.

The POV moves between Eddie trying to find a viable defense strategy and the killer trying to stay one step ahead. In a parallel thread Kevin, married to Eddie’s ex-wife, has run into trouble with a young man who courts wealthy elderly women that make wills in his favor and then die soon after. One of Kevin’s clients was a victim but Kevin had the will overturned and is now being threatened in retaliation. Eddie’s daughter asks him to step in, as Kevin is not at all equipped to deal with thugs.

Eddy’s attention is split between defending Elly and protecting his family. Fortunately Eddie’s team has grown since his first book. He now has astute Kate Brooks in partnership, his long-time friend Harry Ford the retired judge, two skilled investigators in Bloch and Lake, and Denise the secretary who holds the office together. Harry has become one of my favorite fictional sidekicks.

The psychopath here is quite possibly the most ingeniously evil character to grace the pages of crime fiction. (Steve Cavanagh seems so nice, how does he think of people like this?) The killer’s thoroughness in establishing Elly’s guilt is jaw-dropping, but Eddy’s expertise in countering him is no less. The final twist in the book though is downright brilliant, a deliciously appropriate form of retribution. Part legal thriller, part psychological thriller, and a thoroughly good read. Recommended!

Starred review from Publisher’s Weekly.

For the record, this is the only piece of crime fiction I’ve read that involves that scourge of gardeners and farmers, the Japanese lantern fly.

I am looking forward to Eddy’s next case which will be published in the UK in August.




·         Publisher: ‎Atria Books

·         Publication date: ‎March 24, 2026

·         Language: ‎English

·         Print length: ‎400 pages

·         ISBN-10: ‎1668093391

·         ISBN-13: ‎978-1668093399

 

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4tWY5Oa

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

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

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Little Big Crimes: Lest We Forget, by Marilyn Todd

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

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

ButtonDown.Com: Cat's Eye & City Hunter by Tsukasa Hojo

 ButtonDown.Com: Cat's Eye & City Hunter by Tsukasa Hojo

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 54 Writing Contests in May 2026 - No entry fees!

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Beneath the Stains of Time: The Double Turn (1956) by Carol Carnac

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Paula Messina Reviews: The Priest by Joseph Caruso

 Please welcome back author Paula Messina to the blog today. By the way, when I was looking for cover images for the piece today, I cam across this regarding the author and the West End Museum.

  


The Priest

 

by Paula Messina

 

 

I write historical fiction. One of my recurring characters and his family live in Boston’s North End. He occasionally ventures into nearby Scollay Square and the West End. Hoping to uncover some delectable morsel to use in my writing, I recently visited the West End Museum.

The museum was enjoyable, but I didn’t uncover anything I didn’t already know. That is until I spotted a dark blue, thin volume in one of the display cases, Joseph Caruso’s The Priest. Published in 1956, both novel and writer were new to me. I left the museum hoping that The Priest would provide that tasty tidbit I’d been searching for. I can’t say I found it. Instead, I discovered something far more rewarding, a gripping novel.

The priest in question is thirty-eight-year-old Father Octavio Scarpi, the eighth and youngest surviving son of an Italian fisherman. ‘Tavio is huge, so huge he cannot fasten his Roman collar. He is not Hollywood handsome, nor is he blessed with a plain face. A former boxer, fisherman, and World War II soldier, the priest has a “crooked, broken nose.” He’s an ugly giant whose exceptional strength is his undoing.

Father Scarpi is assigned to St. Dominic’s in the West End, where he grew up. He is haunted by the death of his brother Onofrio and a war-time rape. A priest who hears confessions and absolves others of their sins, he cannot forgive himself.

The novel begins as a jury returns to the courtroom with its verdict. Joseph Shannan, a gangster who unquestionably has earned a place behind bars, is found guilty of the murder of Ellen Greer. When asked by the judge if he wishes to speak before sentencing, Shannan tells the judge, “What’s there to say?...I been saying I didn’t do it.”

Father Scarpi is called to hear the confession of the dying Vincent Spinale. Grabbing the priest’s wrist, Spinale begs for absolution after divulging, “I have sinned….I killed a woman, father….Greer. I killed Ellen Greer. Save me, Father!”

Father Scarpi grants Spinale absolution as the confessor lapses into a coma. Bound by the seal of confession, the priest cannot reveal that Vincent Spinale is Ellen Greer’s murderer. All hope of convincing Spinale to confess to the authorities is doomed when he dies. Short of a miracle, the for-once-innocent Joseph Shannan will die in the electric chair.

His lips might be sealed, but that doesn’t keep Father Scarpi from attempting to right a wrong. He visits Shannan, whose real name is Peppino Schianno, in prison. Shannan recognizes ‘Tavio. Peppino and Onofrio were best friends. The meeting stirs Father Scarpi’s memory of the first time he and Peppino met. An enraged Octavio “poleaxed” his inebriated brother Onofrio. Their brothers Victor and Anthony as well as Peppino restrained the massive Octavio as he lifted Onofrio “to hit him again.”

The priest becomes obsessed with Shannan and disobeys his superiors in a desperate effort to save his dead brother’s friend. As he struggles to save Shannan from the electric chair,  Father Scarpi discovers Ellen Greer’s murder hinged on rape. Ultimately, Octavio Scarpi, who cannot escape his guilt in Onofrio’s death and the rape he committed during the war, cannot save Shannan. Devastated by his failure, the priest decides to leave the priesthood.

Caruso doesn’t sensationalize Father Scarpi’s dilemma. Instead, he depicts a very human, deeply vulnerable man haunted by his violent past. Father Scarpi has lots of company. St. Dominic’s other priests suffer from the same affliction as do others, including Beneditto Scarpi, the priest’s father, who blames himself for his wife’s early death. These Christians, who all believe God forgives sins, cannot forgive themselves.

Beneditto tells Octavio, “There is guilt in all of us, but at times the feeling of guilt is more than the act that brought it on.”

Because of his failure to save Shannan, ‘Tavio resoves his Roman collar and leaves the priesthood. His brother John is unable to convince him to return to St. Dominic. He tells the priest, “What I am doesn’t matter. It’s you that matters. You are another man’s hope….Would you deprive your parishioners of their hopes just for your own feelings of guilt?”

John sees what his brother Octavio, blinded by guilt, cannot see. Father Scarpi is respected by his parishioners, who seek and need his comfort and guidance. The priest, who believes his physical strength is his greatest weakness, fails to recognize his real strength, his faith.

The Priest portrays a vibrant community of Sicilians, Southern Italian immigrants, and their American children in the early 1950s. The men don’t attend Mass, but they and their wives have a deep faith that guides their lives. The men are “calfoni: fruit peddlers, laborers, fishermen.” In other words, they are uncivilized and crude. They may have accents and lack polish, but they live their Old World values, work hard to support their families, and trust in a God they pretend to eschew.

There’s another homicide that hovers unspoken over The Priest: the premeditated murder in the first degree of the West End by the City of Boston. In the name of urban renewal, Boston Mayor John Hynes targeted the destruction of the West End and exiled the calfoni. According to the West End Museum, in 1958 and 1959, more than 12,000 West Enders were evicted. Forty-six acres were leveled. Like the Joni Mitchell’s song, “Big Yellow Taxi,” the city tore down a thriving community to create a parking lot.

That gigantic parking lot remained until 1965 when two towers with 477 apartments were erected along with a gigantic sign that proclaims, “If you lived here, you’d be home now.”

Only the families that had occupied the land for decades could not go home. They couldn’t afford the luxury apartments. To this day, former West Enders lament the destruction of their homes.

Joseph Caruso (1924-2008) was born in Sicily and immigrated to the West End when he was seven years old. A writer, filmmaker, and painter who worked as an Art Director for the Post Office, he received a Bronze Star for bravery during World War II. Caruso was one of the founders of The Committee to Save the West End.

The families that lived in the West End couldn’t stop the government, nor could they stop the inevitable change already underway. The calfoni’s sons and daughters assimilated and abandoned the Old World ways of their parents and ancestors.

Those who lived in the West End still mourn for the vibrant community that was taken from them. Little of Caruso’s West End remains. One exception is St. Joseph Parish, the novel’s St. Dominic. It is still an active church. 

 

Paula Messina ©2026 

Paula Messina writes the Donatello Laguardia stories, which are set in Boston’s North End during the 1940s. They appeared in the Best New England Crime Stories 2024 and 2025 and another Donatello Laguardia short story is scheduled to appear in Black Cat Weekly. She lives near America’s first public beach.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Two Truths and a Lie by Mark Stevens

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Two Truths and a Lie by Mark Stevens

Joan Y. Edwards: Auras of Deceit by Sandra Warren, E. Jax Willoughby, James Salkeld, Annette Larkin, and John Stickney

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Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of April 26, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of April 26, 2026

KRL Update

Up on KRL this morning reviews and giveaways of 3 more fun cozies-"The Bush Tea Murder" A Caribbean Island Mystery by Ashley-Ruth M. Bernier, "Love a Comeback" A TV Detectives Mystery by Ruthie Knox and Annie Marie, and "A Crushing Walk in Cornwall" by Nicholas George https://kingsriverlife.com/04/25/end-of-april-mystery-catchup-2/

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Cashed Out Cold" by Anna St. John, along with an interesting interview with Anna https://kingsriverlife.com/04/25/cashed-out-cold-by-anna-st-john/

 

And a mystery short story by Kate Fellowes, https://kingsriverlife.com/04/25/mystery-short-story-the-last-secret/

 

We also have the latest Queer Mystery Coming Attractions from Matt Lubbers-Moore https://kingsriverlife.com/04/25/queer-mystery-coming-attractions-may-2026/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Here We Goat Again" by Janna Rollins https://www.krlnews.com/2026/04/here-we-goat-again-by-janna-rollins.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "The Stuff of Malice" by Kathleen Marple Kalb https://www.krlnews.com/2026/04/the-stuff-of-malice-by-kathleen-marple.html

 

And for those who also enjoy fantasy, we have a review of "The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigindale" by CM Waggoner https://www.krlnews.com/2026/04/the-somewhat-wicked-witch-of-brigindale.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie 

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 39 Marvelous Writing Conferences and Workshops in May 2026

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Mystery Fanfare: BOOKSTORE MYSTERIES: Independent Bookstore Day

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Staff Picks for National Library Week: Tonia & Jeanne

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Scott's Take: Enemy of My Enemy: A Daredevil Marvel Crime Novel by Alex Segura

 

Enemy of My Enemy: A Daredevil Marvel Crime Novel by Alex Segura is the second book in the Marvel Crime series. The series began with Breaking the Dark: A Jessica Jones Marvel Crime Novel that came out in the summer of 2024. The third book in the series, Truth to Power: A Luke Cage Crime Novel by S. A. Cosby, is scheduled to be released in September.

 

In this book, Daredevil agrees to represent the Punisher who is on trial for the murder of Wilison Fisk, aka Kingpin, and a cop. The death of Kingpin has started a gang war as various people fight over control of the criminal underworld of New York. At the same time,  there is a deeper conspiracy at work in the Punisher case. Can Daredevil stop this war while trying to uncover the truth?

 

This is action packed legal drama with various villains making appearances and a number of supporting characters. There are also some small tie ins to the first book with Jessica Jones and setup for the third book with Luke Cage. It is not necessary to have read the previous Jessica Jones book at all. The author clearly knows a lot about Daredevil and incorporates stuff from the comics as well as the various Netflix, Disney, television series.

 

The only things that bugged me, at times, was the overuse of animal sounds/metaphors/references. Also, the Punisher does not play a big role in this. I thought he would be basically the second main character and he is not. Unlike a Lincoln Lawyer type series novel, in this case, we do not spend much time at all actually in a courtroom at trial. Instead, the read is focused out of the courtroom while dealing with numerous aspects of the case.

 

I enjoyed this book far more than the Jessica Jones book and I highly recommend it. I am looking forward to the Luke Cage book.

 



Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4c4JQ3F

 

 

I read this book through Hoopla by way of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026