Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Not That Duke by Eloisa James

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Not That Duke by Eloisa James

SleuthSayers: The Second Time Around

SleuthSayers: The Second Time Around:   I came to a crucial decision recently. The second draft of a story is my favorite. I go through a lot of drafts.  I agree with Gore Vidal ...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in April 2026

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in April 2026: Basically in April I read four mystery novels and one graphic novel. So, not a lot of variety. But I enjoyed all the books, and that is what...

George Kelley: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #271: THE SPACE OPERA RENAISSANCE Edited by David G. Hartwell and Khatryn Cramer (Section IV)

 George Kelley: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #271: THE SPACE OPERA RENAISSANCE Edited by David G. Hartwell and Khatryn Cramer (Section IV)

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: THE RETURN OF THE SPECKLED BAND

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: THE RETURN OF THE SPECKLED...: "The Return of the Speckled Band" by Edward D. Hoch  (from the New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes , edited  by Martin H. Greenberg ...

Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: A Tangle by the Rapid River, Anthony Doerr

 Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: A Tangle by the Rapid River, Anthony Doerr

Short Story Wednesday Review: Scattered, Smothered, Covered & Chunked: Crime Fiction Inspired by Waffle House Editors Michael Bracken and Stacy Woodson

When the publisher Down & Out Books went under, it took down a lot of good crime fiction reading. Slowly, those books are coming back with new publishers. Such is the case here as Editor Michael Bracken recently announced on Facebook that the eBook version was now up at Amazon and elsewhere for preorders. So, I thought I would remind you of this great read that is now being published by Audecyn Books. I would also warn you that, at the time of this writing, to ignore the book description at Amazon and elsewhere as it pertains to a totally different anthology.

 

 

Edited by Michael Bracken and Stacy Woodson, Scattered, Smothered, Covered & Chunked: Crime Fiction Inspired by Waffle House is a fun crime fiction read. Some of the tales are noirish in style while others are more middle of the road crime fiction reads. There is humor, plenty of food references, and a number of folks who really should have known better than to do what they did.

 

There are sixteen short stories in the read. Every one of them is a good one. The short stories referenced here with my brief comments are those that really resonated with me. Your choices, no doubt, would vary.

 

It should also be noted that I am one of those people who just reads an anthology straight through from front to back. I don’t poke around reading people I know first or anything like that. So, the listing below is in the order that I came across them as I read and not any implied ranking of my favorites.

 

Alan Orloff’s “Well Done” features a place in a bad way, a need for money, and an arsonist that is willing to work cheap. Of course, the arsonist’s name is “Scorch.” It had to be his name and there is also one heck of a fire.

 

Win’s Waffles, owned and operated by Winfred Perkins III, is also having a hard time of things. The long running family business is going under in “The Price of Blood” by Nils Gilbertson. He knows the legacy is almost dead. He also knows that Duncan Dudley is an idiot who is constantly involved in failed money-making schemes. But, his latest venture is just crazy enough that it could work.

 

Editor Michael Bracken’s “Windfall” takes three characters and, on one hand, drops them in the exact right place at the right time. Another way of looking at it is that the three are in the wrong place at the absolute worst time. An armored car robbery and human nature is at work in this tale.

 

Lucie Heinz has always tried to keep her brother safe, not that he has listened very well over the years. Her brother, Carson, has made it very hard in “The Ham & Egger” by J. D. Allen.  They have been hiding, for good reason, and big sister thought that she could indulge her brother’s desire to get out after being house bound for days. She thought they could safely go out to the Silver Saddle Saloon for a couple of hours. What had seemed like a good idea, clearly wasn’t. Hindsight won’t help them now.

 

“The Heart of Darkness” by Tammy Euliano also features a sibling who was expected to do everything to protect the younger brother. When he left, Dad took it hard, and told him to never come back home. Mom is dead so he is back for the funeral and trying to figure out what happened during her last days.

 

Like when Jim Cantore of the Weather Channel shows up in your town, when the Waffle House closes, you know things are really bad. That has happened in Donna Andrew’s “When Even Waffle House Closes.” The winter storm is causing havoc and she is in trouble as the storm could kill her. So could the robbers who are as deadly as the southern snowstorm.

 

The sixteen short stories that are present here are all entertaining reads. The detailed bios at the end of the book help readers in their quest to read more by these authors.

 

Scattered, Smothered, Covered & Chunked: Crime Fiction Inspired by Waffle House is an interesting and highly entertaining crime fiction read. It incorporates a premise that could easily be used again and again for additional volumes in a potential series. This reader hopes that happens as Scattered, Smothered, Covered & Chunked: Crime Fiction Inspired by Waffle House, edited by Michael Bracken and Stacy Woodson is a mighty good read. It also might make you hungry

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4tOt12p

  

 

Published by Down & Out Books, my reading copy was a digital edition and purchased by yours truly using funds in my Amazon Associate Account.

  

Kevin R. Tipple ©2025, 2026

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Because It Was Funny

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: Ironwood by Michael Connelly

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Ironwood by Michael Connelly

Happiness Is A Book: Murder in High Provence by George Bellairs

 Happiness Is A Book: Murder in High Provence by George Bellairs

The First Two Pages: “Home” by DK Snyder

 The First Two Pages: “Home” by DK Snyder

ButtonDown.Com: No Man's Land by Szymon Kudranski

 ButtonDown.Com: No Man's Land by Szymon Kudranski

Little Big Crimes: It's Complicated, by Nick Guthrie

Little Big Crimes: It's Complicated, by Nick Guthrie:  "It's Complicated," by Nick Guthrie, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, March/April 2026. "There's a milli...

Jerry's House of Everything: OVERLOOKED FILM: BEHIND THAT CURTAIN (1929)

Jerry's House of Everything: OVERLOOKED FILM: BEHIND THAT CURTAIN (1929):  Charlie Chan was a fictional Honolulu detective created by Earl Derr Bigger in a series of six novels beginning with 1924's The House W...

Publication Day Review: Ironwood: A Catalina Novel by Michael Connelly

 

As Ironwood: A Catalina Novel by Michael Connelly begins, it is approximately one year after the events of Nightshade. While it is always preferable to have read the first book in a series first, one could start here as there are minimal references to the past events.

 

In the aftermath of a police operation gone horribly wrong, Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department Detective Sergeant Stilwell of the Catalina substation, is in a world of trouble. At least he is alive and relatively uninjured. Not that he cares. One of his deputies is dead. Another is very seriously wounded and may not survive the emergency medical helicopter ride to the mainland.

 

Making things worse, if that is possible, is the fact that the suspects got away. The Department will conduct an extensive investigation. Every decision and action by Detective Sergeant Stilwell will be heavily scrutinized and second guessed.

 

That process begins with the arrival from the mainland of his immediate boss, Captain Corum, accompanied by members of a team of investigators. After he is questioned by a number of people over a multi hour period where he has to go through everything over and over, detail by detail, Captain Corum finally tells him that he is in the clear, for now. He is grounded to the substation and on the bench. When he is on duty, he is to confine himself to the substation for his shift, and to take care of paperwork, storage concerns, and other issues. He isn’t to involve himself in the investigation of the events out on the tarmac which allowed a drug plane to escape and left one deputy under his command dead and another one near death.

 

As if being told to stay out of it is going to ever happen. Detective Sergeant Stilwell is used to working around the bosses. Part of the reason he is out on Catalina Island is the fact that the Department sends problematic folks out there for various disciplinary reasons. The posting is supposed to be a punishment. For him, it has grown into a very positive situation for many different reasons. At his heart, he is still law enforcement, and isn’t just going to sit around and do nothing.

 

He knows he chased a suspect down a hillside even though there is very little proof of that fact. He also has a pretty good idea of what the suspect looked like. That suspect is probably still on the island and holed up waiting for the first ferry of the day. Obviously, staking out the ferry and its passengers is the way to go.

 

His work leads him to a suspect, an arrest, and then an incident that gets him deeper into trouble. It also leads him into a separate cold case murder investigation, a serial killer, and work with Ballard and her team.

 

I’m intentionally skimming the surface, if that much, of this read in order to avoid spoilers. Simply put, Ironwood: A Catlina Novel is a might good read from the intense beginning right to the last sentence. Well worth your time.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4sPe4h9

 

My digital ARC reading copy came from the publisher, Little, Brown and Company, by way of NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Monday, May 18, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Deadly Cairns by Joana Snowdon

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Deadly Cairns by Joana Snowdon

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 Two-time Os...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Hero: A DS Walker Thriller by Patricia Wolf


The fifth book in the DS Lucas Walker series by Patricia Wolf, to be released later this month, is as good as the earlier titles. Wolf has the gift of creating immersive and original narratives that immediately pull me in. I raced through this one in a day.

Hero (Embla Books, May 2026) finds Walker back in Queensland, after being caught up in an internal political fracas within the Australian Federal Police. He ended up on the Queensland force, in a tiny town called Katima, an easy drive from his hometown Caloodie, where he spends his weekends with his family, something he couldn’t do in his previous job.

The body of a young man hanging from a tree was the first big case for Walker in his new job. Walker was suspicious of the supposed suicide arrangement from the start and sure enough the autopsy revealed the man had died of an overdose. Walker was attempting to identify the victim when a retired member of the force mentioned a cold case with strong similarities. The earlier victim was never identified and it always worried the retiree. A call from the Conroy estate sent the two cases from Walker’s mind, as Caden Conroy, the professional cricket player and national hero, had been bloodily murdered in his drawing room. The killing set off frantic demands for immediate arrests, and political strings were pulled at all levels. Walker as part of the local police was considered incapable of handling a major investigation. While he was forced to hand the Conroy case over to the federal police, he still had the other two cases to work, which began to show odd connections to the Conroy family and the cricket academy they ran.

The craze for sports gambling of all kinds and the potential for its abuse as well as the tendency to hold sports figures up as objects of adulation are examined thoroughly in this story. My knowledge of cricket, which is considered to be Australia’s national sport, is unfortunately limited to a chapter in Murder Must Advertise by Dorothy L. Sayers where Lord Peter Wimsey displays his skill at the game.

A thread about Walker’s niece demonstrates his attachment to his family and his desire to stay close to them. His late grandmother and her house remain deeply important to him, giving him a depth of humanity not always seen in crime fiction protagonists.

The settings are exotic, the characters are terrific, and the plots in this series are innovative and well executed. Fans of outback noir and police procedurals should definitely add these books to their TBR lists. Readers of the series will be delighted with this new entry. Recommended!

 

 

  • Publisher: Embla Books
  • Publication date: May 20, 2026
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 432 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1471422666
  • ISBN-13: 978-1471422669

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4nv7Qkx

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

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

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Kathleen Kalb: You Deserve a Break

 Kathleen Kalb: You Deserve a Break

Lesa's Book Critiques: A Sprinkle of Sweet Serendipity by Rachel Linden

 Lesa's Book Critiques: A Sprinkle of Sweet Serendipity by Rachel Linden

KRL Update

Up on KRL this week a review and giveaway of "Drafted in Deceit" by Simone Stier, along with an interesting interview with Simone https://kingsriverlife.com/05/16/drafted-in-deceit-by-simone-stier/

And week a review and giveaway of "A Crime Through Time" by Amelia Blackwell, along with an interesting guest post from Amelia about the unique premise of her series https://kingsriverlife.com/05/16/a-crime-through-time-by-amelia-blackwell/


 And a review and giveaway of "Murder in a Lavender Daze" by Daryl Wood Gerber https://kingsriverlife.com/05/16/murder-in-a-lavender-daze-by-daryl-wood-gerber/

 

We also have week a mystery short story by Guy Belleranti https://kingsriverlife.com/05/16/mystery-short-story/

 

Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author John Degan about the setting of his new book "Seldom Seen Road" https://kingsriverlife.com/05/13/is-that-a-real-place/

 

And another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Nicolas DiDomizio about the movies that inspired his main character in his new book "Murder Most Camp." https://kingsriverlife.com/05/13/a-murder-most-camp/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Death Under the Dogwoods" by Neil Plakcy and Joanna Campbell Slan https://www.krlnews.com/2026/05/death-under-dogwoods-by-neil-s-plakcy.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Mares and Murder" by Leslie Langtry https://www.krlnews.com/2026/05/mares-and-murder-by-leslie-langtry.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Wrought in Flesh" by Corinne Price https://www.krlnews.com/2026/05/wrought-in-flesh-by-corinne-price.html

Review: Mist and Malice: A Haven Thriller by Rachel Howzell Hall


Mist and Malice: A Haven Thriller  by Rachel Howzell Hall picks up within hours of the conclusion of the preceding novel, Fog and Fury. Several of the ongoing storylines from the first book are resolved here in this second read. There are also ongoing repercussions from that book that are part of the background to this read.

 

And while former LAPD Homicide Detective Alyson “Sonny” Rush  needs a break, working as a private investigator in the small town of Haven, California, means the cases keep coming. She works for her godfather, Ivan Poole, who now has a missing person’s case for her. Sonny Rush is now about to be on the hunt for Emiliano Rivas. He has been missing almost three months, since around Memorial Day, and his wife, Araceli Rivas, has finally come to them for help.

 

They are a young couple and money is tight. He is also undocumented so the police have been little to no help. She has no idea if he simply abandoned her or if something bad happened. He didn’t have a work permit. On the plus side, she claims that he has no criminal history. He did have a job at a local construction site. According to her, he is very well liked there. All she really knows is that he left one day to go get a propane tank refilled and never came back home.

 

She provides a couple of leads and Sonny begins to work the case while also dealing with a previous unsolved case of hers, and various other issues, personal and professional. She has a lot going on, besides the missing person’s case. A case that gets darker as she scratches the surface. Before long, as they say, she is deep in it, and the lives of her mom and her are very much at stake.

 

As Sonny very quickly learned soon after moving to town, Haven is no Heaven, no matter what some would claim.

 

This second book in the series is another good one. About half of this read is devoted to the current missing persons case and about half is devoted to tying up numerous situations/storylines from the first book. The result is an entertaining read that gives a lot of answers to readers of this series. Mist and Malice: A Haven Thriller by Rachel Howzell Hall is a good read while also providing a satisfying conclusion to the series. It also provides a possible way forward should the author continue the series.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4uPx7bP

 

 

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

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Teacher by Tim Sullivan

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Teacher by Tim Sullivan

Dru's Book Musing: New Releases ~ Week of May 17, 2026

 Lesa's Book Critiques: New Releases ~ Week of May 17, 2026

SleuthSayers: It's Still a Mystery

SleuthSayers: It's Still a Mystery: At a signing in a bookstore years ago, a lady (a.k.a. potential buyer) stopped at my table, picked up one of my books, pointed to the word ...

The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: SMFS Spotlight: John M. Floyd

The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: SMFS Spotlight: John M. Floyd: Elena Smith is back again to shine the spotlight on a member of SMFS. This time out, it's the incredibly prolific John M. Floyd, a Golde...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Murder in the Air (1931) by Darwin L. Teilhet

Beneath the Stains of Time: Murder in the Air (1931) by Darwin L. Teilhet: Darwin L. Teilhet was an American journalist, advertising executive, screenwriter and novelist who started out as a mystery writer, authori...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Cinder House by Freya Marske

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Cinder House by Freya Marske: Reviewed by Jeanne Ella is quite the homebody—literally.   Murdered at sixteen, she is tethered to her house while her stepmother Patric...

Scott's Take: The Gate of the Feral Gods (Dungeon Crawler Carl series) by Matt Dinniman

 

The Gate of the Feral Gods is the fourth book in the Dungeon Crawler Carl series by Matt Dinniman and continues the adventures of Princess Donut and Carl. In this adventure, the Princess Donut and friends must take down four castles in a row to escape this level.

 

They start in the desert in a little town being run by alien camels and being bombed by a bunch of airplane flying gnomes. They need to find a way to breach the flying castle in the sky to stop the bombings. If that is not bad enough, they also have the other castles to take down such as Necropolis, a submarine, and more. Obviously, some of those locations are not really castles, but they are classified as such for the game.

 

Carl and Donut also must work with the survivors assaulting the other castles. As nearly all the other survivors are pretty much idiots who have somehow still survived to this point, despite the fact that the AI clearly wants them dead, things are going to get harder for Carl and Donut.

 

This series remains fun and each book remains an action packed adventure with plenty of humor. There are things that happen in this book that should have major ramifications for the series. The print version still includes a bonus short story which I am still not sure what is the point of these characters yet.

 

This series is continued by the Butcher’s Masquerade which is book five in the series. I am currently reading this in eBook via the library. The crawlers have reached level six, The Hunting Grounds, so the space aliens who have been watching the show now can play as well. The space aliens that are now participating in the game have been classified as “Hunters” and have been assigned the mission to kill every crawler and their primary target is Carl. He has pissed off a lot of alien factions who have placed a bounty on his head. Can he survive this level?

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3Q6maU7

 

 

 

I read the print version of this book by way of a copy from the Polk-Wisdom Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026

Friday, May 15, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Captiva Memorial Library Highlights

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Captiva Memorial Library Highlights

Don't Need A Diagram: Michael Lewis, “The Fifth Risk”

 Don't Need A Diagram: Michael Lewis, “The Fifth Risk”

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: My Late Wives by Carter Dickson

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: My Late Wives by Carter Dickson

In Reference to Murder: Forgotten Books Friday - The Long Shadow

In Reference to Murder: Forgotten Books Friday - The Long Shadow: Celia Fremlin (1914-2009) was born in Kingsbury, England, the daughter of a doctor and the sister of nuclear physicist John H. Fremlin. She ...

FFB Review: See Also Murder: A Marjorie Trumaine Mystery by Larry D. Sweazy

 From the archive....


Living on a farm in Stark County, North Dakota in July of 1964 is hard, but it isn’t winter and that helps a little bit. Things are harder for Marjorie Trumaine than most because she is trying to manage it all pretty much by herself. It has been that way since her husband, Hank, had his hunting accident that left him blind and paralyzed. He spends his days, except for a rare trip away from home, lying in their bed unable to care for himself or the farm they both love.

 

The Knudsens on the next farm over were there for Hank and Marjorie long after everyone else in the small community got on with their lives and forgot about them. Erik, the father, supervised his sons, Peter and Jaeger, while they did chores on the place after they had finished work on their own farm. Lida, their mom and Erik’s wife, brought food for months while Marjorie and Hank slowly adjusted to the catastrophic change in their lives. Over time that help as well as Marjorie’s ongoing job as a freelance indexer has allowed them to survive in their new normal post-accident reality.

 

The news that Sheriff Hilo Jenkins brings Marjorie this July morning is hard to deal with on any level, but especially now after everything that has happened in recent months. Erik and Lida have been brutally murdered while they slept in their bed. Their sons, Erik and Jaeger, are physically fine as they slept through the murders in their home. Sheriff Jenkins does not believe the boys had anything to do with it though he does intend to question them about the murders. He does believe an amulet found in Erik’s dead hand plays some role in the case.

 

Marjorie has a reputation, one that she has tried hard to control and stifle, as being the smartest person around. She can’t help using words that many in the area don’t know or understand. Her love of books and knowledge has only increased the last several years as she has built a career of freelance work of writing indexes and meeting deadlines. What began as a source of extra income is now her sole escape from reality as well as the primary source of income  for the family. Sheriff Jenkins wants Marjorie to figure out what the amulet means so that he might figure out who killed Erik and Lida. It is his only real clue and he wants her role in the case kept secret. She reluctantly agrees to help it is the least she can do for the Knudsens – the living and the dead.

 

What follows is a very complex and highly atmospheric mystery by award winning author Larry D. Sweazy. The North Dakota landscape is a constant character presence in this novel that blends history and lore, a mystery full of twists and turns, and the role of family (by birth and other means) into a read that quickly pulls the reader into a different time and place far from home. Recently published by Seventh Street Books, See Also Murder: A Marjorie Trumaine Mystery is a highly addictive read that will keep you reading far past your bedtime. It is very much well worth your time. 

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3RF8CiV

 

 

Material supplied for my use by the good people of the Plano Public Library System.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2015, 2018, 2026

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: The 2026 winners of The British Book Awards (aka "The Nibbies") were announced on Tuesday. A Case of Mice and Murder by Sally Sm...

Criminal Minds: Old Dog, New Tricks from James W. Ziskin

Criminal Minds: Old Dog, New Tricks from James W. Ziskin: What writing lessons did you have to keep learning over and over? Writers are often advised to kill their darlings. This is usually good adv...

Thursday Treats: 5/14/2026


The latest reading opportunities…

  


Fellow SMFS list member Gerald Elias announced on the list that his short story collection, Murder on Vacation, is about to be released by White City Press. Releasing in a variety of formats, the book contains sixteen crime fiction tales billed as Stories from the Case Files of Maury Gross, NYPD (Ret.). You can get a copy at the White City Press store.

 

Last October, author Jeannette de Beauvoir was here on the blog to share some background on her book, The Everest Enigma: An Abbie Bradford Mystery. At the time, I set up an Amazon alert on her so that I would get updated regarding her books. I got an alert last week that her latest book, Trafficking In Murder: A Sydney Riley Provincetown Mystery was now out. Published by Becket Books, this 11th book in the  Sydney Riley Series, is available in eBook format at Amazon as is the entire series.

 


An Amazon alert was also how I found out that O'Neil De Noux also had a new book out this month. Ain't That New Orleans is now out. This 11th book in the LaStanza New Orleans Police Series is available in eBook and print formats at Amazon and other vendors.

 

This week saw the publication of The Emperor's Palace (The Turner and Mosley Files by LynDee Walker and Bruce Robert Coffin. Released by Severn River Publishing, this is the fifth book in The Turner and Mosley Files series, and is available in a variety of formats at Amazon and elsewhere. I am way behind in my reading of this very enjoyable action adventure series.

 

 


The latest issue of Black Cat Weekly also came out. Black Cat Weekly #245 includes short stories by SMFS list members Teel James Glenn (That’s Shoe Biz) and Anna Scotti (Man or Bear) among others. Also in this issue is a novella and a novel. You can pick up the latest issue of this weekly, multi genre, magazine here.

 

The latest roundup of publishing news of members was compiled and posted by SMFS President Joseph S. Walker. Among other items covered in the post on the SMFS Blog was the news that the latest issue of Dark Yonder is now out. Per Mr. Walker, fellow SMFS list members Mark Coggins, Christina Hoag. Veronica Leigh, and Steve Liskow, all have short stories in the issue. Yet another deal that I am way behind in reading.

 

Finally, author and editor Michael Bracken sends word that Michele Slung (first reader for Otto Penzler) is asking printed copies of original (i.e., first published in 2026, from January 1st to December 31st) stories to be mailed —- in paper form only, including all relevant publication info —- to:

 

Otto Penzler

BEST MYSTERY STORIES 2026

58 Warren Street

New York NY 10007

 

[Please understand that such material arriving in a variety of formats simply is too difficult to deal with.]

 

 

Until next time…. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Personal Note: Thank you to those who saw my plea and donated. Much appreciated. I am not sure what the future holds for us as Scott is still home. Today marks one month without work. What was supposed to be just a few days maybe a week has gone on far longer. He is still looking for a job. But, AI has really done a number on the job market in the last two to three months. Things do not look good at all.