Friday, March 20, 2026

Bitter Tea and Mystery: A Brush with Death: Sheila Pim

Bitter Tea and Mystery: A Brush with Death: Sheila Pim:   Between 1945 and 1952, Sheila Pim, an Irish crime novelist and horticulturist, published four mysteries set in Ireland and with a focus on...

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: The Black Stage

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: The Black Stage: On a paperback copy of  The Black Stage by Anthony Gilbert dating from 1955, there was this bit of biographical info regarding Gilbert:  ...

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Medbury Fort Murder by George Limnelius

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Medbury Fort Murder by George Limnelius

Thursday, March 19, 2026

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: William Kent Krueger was honored with the Founder’s Award at this past weekend's Tucson Festival of Books. The award is given in recog...

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Case of the Case of Kilcladdich (2023) by P.J. Fitzsimmons

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Case of the Case of Kilcladdich (2023) by P.J....: P.J. Fitzsimmons '  The Case of the Case of Kilcladdich (2023) is the sixth entry in the Anthony "Anty" Boisjoly series of Wo...

Thursday Treats: 3/19/2026

 

The latest reading opportunities… 


Murderous Ink Press released the new anthology, Crimeucopia - A Coterie Of Dicks. SMFS list members Josh Pachter, Gerald Elias, Jim Guigli, M. E. Proctor, and others, have short stories in the read. Pick it up at Amazon and elsewhere.

 



Rock and A Hard Place announced their new book, A Woman’s Guide to True Crime by Mary Thorson was now out. Each piece in the book details a historical event by way of the victims, the killers, or the woman impacted by the crime. You can learn more about the book at their website.

 




Musician and author Tim Bryant has been busy. The Ballad of Peechie Keen: A Dutch Curridge Mystery is out as is the short story collection, Angels, Unaware: Stories from East Texas.

 




SMFS list member Nikita Costiuc announced that his short story, A Yellow Speck, appears online at the Canadian literary journal, Moonlit Getaway. He bills it as a “southern gothic” tale. You can read it for free at the website.

 



SMFS list member DK Snyder announced that her solve-it-yourself mystery, Harmonica Blues, was published in the March 23rd issue of Woman’s World Magazine. The issue is available now on newsstands, grocery stores, and elsewhere. You are looking for the issue with Valerie Bertinelli on the cover.

 


For Friday the 13th, Punk Noir published, Find What You Love and Let It Kill You #2 — a PUNK NOIR Magazine series. This series of short stories are all free to read online at their website. SMFS list member Elizabeth Dearborn (Shop Till You Drop) and Wil A. Emerson (Scored Zero), short stories appear as do others.

  

SMFS member Barb Goffman shared the news of the latest issue of Black Cat Weekly. As always, the issue is full of short stories, novellas, and more. You can pick it up here. A single digital issue is $2.99, but the longer subscriptions are the real deal and the way to go.

 


Inkd Publishing announced their Kickstarter for the anthology, Detectives, Sleuths, & Nosy Neighbors III. The book will include short stories by SMFS list members, N. M. CedeƱo (The Assassination Game), Shari Held (The Mansion on the Hill), Kathleen Marple Kalb (Spring Death Cleaning), Aime Kluck (Peril in Provincetown), Bev Myers (Three Fingers of Fate), Karen Oden (Murder at Angelique), and SB Watson (The Silent Herd), among others, are going to be in the anthology scheduled to be out in June.


 

Bev Myers also has a short story in the new anthology, The Dichotomy of Love. Published by Lowell & Benson Publishing, the read is available at Amazon and other vendors. 

 

 

 

Until next time….

 



Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Wednesday Evening Humor

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: The Harvey Girl by Dana Stabenow

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Harvey Girl by Dana Stabenow

SleuthSayers: Back to the Bay

SleuthSayers: Back to the Bay: Getting Historical with  Aubrey Hamilton, Diana R. Chambers, Karen Odden, S.J. Rozan  I spent the last week in San Francisco, eating Rice-a-...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #266: FLESH AND BLOOD: GUILTY AS SIN, EROTIC TALES OF CRIME AND PASSION Edited by Max Allan Collins and Jeff Gelb

 George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #266: FLESH AND BLOOD: GUILTY AS SIN, EROTIC TALES OF CRIME AND PASSION Edited by Max Allan Collins and Jeff Gelb

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: THE DEATH CRY

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: THE DEATH CRY:  "The Death Cry" by Arthur B. Reeve  (first published in Weird Tales , May, 1935; reprinted in The Television Detectives' Omni...

Monday, March 16, 2026

Lucy's Book Critiques: Bookworm by Lucy Mangan

 Lucy's Book Critiques: Bookworm by Lucy Mangan

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Trust in Me: A Novel by Luca Veste

 

Luca Veste is a UK author who has published a dozen crime fiction novels in as many years. Seven of them combine a police procedural with elements of psychological thrillers and the others are stand-alone thrillers. The paperback edition of Trust in Me, a psychological thriller, is being released by Black Spring Crime in early April 2026. 

Sara grew up in a small town in southwestern England and ended up married to a U.S. citizen, living in suburban Connecticut. She’s developed a successful career as a trauma counselor and she’s immersed in her role as a mother to her two children Olivia and JJ. Her husband Jack is deeply engrossed in his investments job, to the extent that he routinely misses family events and meals.

A new client arrives at Sara’s office one day and under the seal of patient confidentiality tells Sara she killed someone. Dumbfounded, Sara listens to the circumstances of the murder which are eerily similar to a situation that occurred to Sara some 20 years earlier in England, where her then-boyfriend got into a drunken fight with another young man, who died as a result of the brawl. Only according to the new client, she was responsible for the death, not her boyfriend. 

Sara was staggered that someone else should have had a similar experience. The situation was never reported and as far as Sara knew, only she and her then-boyfriend knew about it. In the following days she became convinced that the new client in fact was talking about her and the long-past incident and was trying to make her admit to it. A car with a couple of strangers follows her, she receives random threatening telephone calls, and other eerie episodes make her increasingly frightened and unnerved, resulting in erratic behavior on her part. What follows is an adrenalin-fueled nightmare that twists and spins in unpredictable ways to a stunning conclusion.

Veste creates tension-filled scenes, credible characters, and a surprise conclusion that in retrospect I realized had been hinted at all along. Fans of domestic thrillers and psychological suspense will want to add this title to their reading lists.


Publisher: ‎Black Spring Press

Publication date: ‎April 7, 2026

Language: ‎English

Print length: ‎362 pages

ISBN-10: ‎1917788029

ISBN-13: ‎978-1917788021



Amazon Associate Purchase Link:  https://amzn.to/4uq0SQO



Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

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

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Tryst by Elswyth Thane

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Tryst by Elswyth Thane

Kathleen Marple Kalb: Who am I?

 Kathleen Marple Kalb: Who am I?

Little Big Crimes: Glass Beach, by Michael Bracken

Little Big Crimes: Glass Beach, by Michael Bracken:   "Glass Beach," by Michael Bracken, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, January/February 2026. This is the twelfth appea...

ButtonDown.Com: Shoulder Wound Sunday: Biotope

ButtonDown.Com: Shoulder Wound Sunday: Biotope 

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 HernƔndez Cava & BartolomƩ Segui - quick take

 ButtonDown.Com: The Roots of Chaos by Felipe HernĆ”ndez Cava & BartolomĆ© 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