Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Short Story Wednesday Review: Game Face by Mark Troy


From the archive…

  

Texas author Mark Troy brings together in this collection titled GAME FACE eight short stories featuring his signature character Val Lyon. A tough talking wise cracking private investigator that brooks no interference when there is a case to be solved. This former military brat calls Hawaii home.  Along with plenty of the sights, sounds, and history of the islands, readers get strong well written stories featuring complex cases and the always present search for justice.

 

After a forward that explains some of the history behind the character, the book opens with “Teed Off.” Glenn Floeck owns a line of golf shops under the name “Teed Off.” He plans to expand his company to the islands. That means he and his bodyguard, Frodo Baggins, need a car and a driver. Val Lyon can provide both along with plenty of attitude and investigative skills. By working undercover and getting close to him she can get the answers she needs. The answers will come one way or another in this very good story.  

 

Val Lyon is an athlete so there is a sports angle to every story in some way. In “Home Wreckers” star Julie Storm is dead and Coach Sherri Costello, head coach of the Tropical Storm, wants her help.  The players of the women’s Professional Basketball League are not supposed to be dead. But, Julie Storm is very dead and the team, as well as Val Lyon, is in huge trouble.  

 

Next up is “Kill Leader” when Val Lyon has to protect Paula Evangelista from a killer. Paula is something else when she is playing beach volleyball and seemingly scoring at will. She scores off the beach too with a clothing line, a generous sponsor, and work as a model. For somebody, all that is too much and he or she wants her dead.  

 

Val Lyon is at Memorial Arena on the campus of U. C. Santa Christa and back on the court she once played far too many games to count in “The Big Dance With Death.”  Head coach of the female basketball team, Carol Onofrido, needs her help and Val is more than ready to help.  Even if it means the legendary Val Lyon has to go undercover as an assistant coach to stop what appears at first to be stalking while the team works to stay in the tournament.  

 

“Wahine O Ka Hoe” opens with a tragedy in the sea surrounding the island of Oahu. Something went wrong aboard the canoe and now fellow teammate Nani is dead. The medical examiner thinks it was an accident caused by a rogue wave.  Was it? Did someone take advantage of the chaos at sea to kill one of the “Women of The Paddle” or was it an accident?  

 

Readers go from the sea to the air in “Drop Dead Zone.” A constant need in Val Lyon’s life is her need for adrenaline. Because of that, she is onboard a Cessna airplane preparing to make a parachute jump as this story opens. All the hard work of learning how to skydive is about to pay off as she and three others leave the safety of the airplane and begin their fall to earth. Not everyone lands via parachute. Was it an accident or was it murder?  

 

Somebody is swiping the sperm from award winning bulls and owner Doyle Gillispie wants it stopped in “Horns.” He doesn’t know who is the stealing his championship bull sperm, but he knows it is happening and makes it very clear he wants Val Lyon to stop it. The last thing Val wants is this case or this client.  But, you do what you have to do when you need to make the car payment. The championship bulls Gillispie owns and his possible suspect will be at the upcoming rodeo in Maui. So too will be private investigator Val Lyon.  

 

The bites on the surf board Alana Nichols was using indicate a serious shark attack in “Ripper.” There is blood on the remnants of the surf board, most likely blood from Alana Nichols, but there is no body. Terry, Alana’s mother, is convinced she is alive and not a victim of a shark attack.  She has questions, such as what happened to Alana’s computer, and wants Val’s help in finding her daughter.  

 

After eight very good stories, the book closes with Chapter One of the novel Pilikia Is My Business. Pilikia means “trouble” in Hawaiian and public defender Brian Magruder has quite the job for her. I have reviewed the novel before and it is a good one without question.  

 

Val Lyon is an interesting character and one can see how she changes through the years in these previously published stories. Now available as a collection of the single short stories, GAME FACE, not only brings them together, it also includes the cover art work from each single. A nice touch that works well in the collection. Filled with plenty of action, interesting cases, and difficult situations this book is a solidly good read. The book also serves to what the reader appetite for the novel Pilikia Is My Business.

 


One hopes there will be many more Val Lyon stories as well as a novel or two in the future.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4tW7SUA

 

 

Material supplied by the author in exchange for my objective review. 

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple © 2012, 2017, 2022, 2026

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Love and Other Flight Delays by Denise Williams

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Love and Other Flight Delays by Denise Williams

Happiness Is A Book: Death’s Bright Angel by Janet Neel

 Happiness Is A Book: Death’s Bright Angel by Janet Neel

Mystery Fanfare: LIBRARY MYSTERIES: LIBRARY WEEK

Mystery Fanfare: LIBRARY MYSTERIES: LIBRARY WEEK: This is National Library Week !  My most exciting library experience was getting my first library card . I could read by 4, and although I ...

ButtonDown.Com: Out Today: The Voice Said Kill

 ButtonDown.Com: Out Today: The Voice Said Kill

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Staff Picks for National Library Week: Madison & Keelan

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Staff Picks for National Library Week: Madison & ...:   Madison Billy Summers by Stephen King - King does an excellent job at exploring inner conflicts, and the struggle between good and evil...

The Stilleto Gang: Meeting the Agatha Nominated Authors for Best Debut Novel and Best Short Story by Paula Benson

 (Includes links to the stories) 

The Stilleto Gang: Meeting the Agatha Nominated Authors for Best Debut Novel and Best Short Story by Paula Benson

Monday, April 20, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: May Book Tasting

 Lesa's Book Critiques: May Book Tasting

Little Big Crimes: The Texas Chain-Store Manager, by Josh Pachter

Little Big Crimes: The Texas Chain-Store Manager, by Josh Pachter: "The Texas Chain-Store Manager," by Josh Pachter, in Crimeucopia: A Coterie of Dicks, edited by John Connor, Murderous Ink Press,...

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 Bradley Coo...

Jerry's House of Everything: BITS AND PIECES

Jerry's House of Everything: BITS AND PIECES: Openers:  "Wait a minute, now.  You're saying you want us to deal with a pig problem?" Leonard said. We were sitting in the ag...

Kathleen Marple Kalb: Too Hot to Handle

 Kathleen Marple Kalb: Too Hot to Handle

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: A Violent Masterpiece: A Novel by Jordan Harper

 

Jordan Harper’s newest piece of crime fiction is, like his last book, about the dark side of the entertainment industry and Los Angeles. In A Violent Masterpiece (Mulholland, 2026) three distinct voices narrate a graphic tale of grimy mayhem and amorality. Jake Deal comes alive when he livestreams the nightlife of Los Angeles to his sensation-seeking audience. Bloody crime scenes, devastating car crashes, nightclub brawls, all are grist to his mill. Of particular interest just now is a serial killer known as the LA Ripper. Kara Delgado works for a secret concierge organization that arranges for entertainment the upper crust of LA can’t buy on the open market such as, but not limited to, drugs and sex parties. She’s been quietly searching for her friend Phoebe who disappeared months earlier and has begun to fear Phoebe was a victim of the LA Ripper. Doug Gibson is a defense attorney who represents the underdog against a criminal justice system that overwhelmingly bulldozes over anyone without status or money.

One of the Hollywood elite normally supported by that system is arrested for pedophilia. The complaints have been piling up and the proof is undeniable. He hires Gibson to defend him, telling him he’s prepared to turn state’s evidence against the crowd he’s been supplying with underage girls to get a better deal for himself. Despite being on suicide watch, Gibson’s client is dead within hours of offering to rat out his friends to the authorities.

The paths of Jake, Kara, and Doug cross eventually and they realize they have common goals. They begin working together to expose the most privileged icons of Hollywood in a hair-raising and explosive resolution.

An explicit story of the worst of LA excesses, strikingly narrated in terse, mesmerizing prose. Expect to see this book on the 2026 best crime fiction lists and on multiple award nomination surveys. Starred reviews from Library Journal and Publishers Weekly.

 


·         Publisher: ‎Mulholland Books

·         Publication date: ‎April 28, 2026

·         Language: ‎English

·         Print length: ‎384 pages

·         ISBN-10: ‎0316458406

·         ISBN-13: ‎978-0316458405

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/41HqcVv

 

 

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 19, 2026

The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers: 4-19-26

 The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers: 4-19-26

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Book Club for Troublesome Women by Marie Bostwick

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Book Club for Troublesome Women by Marie Bostwick

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of April 19, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of April 19, 2026 

KRL Update

Up on KRL this week reviews and giveaways of 3 more fun mysteries-"The Whisking Hour" A Bakeshop Mystery by Ellie Alexander, “Death at a Firefly Tea" by Laura Childs, and "The Most Mysterious Bookshop in Paris" by Mark Pryor https://kingsriverlife.com/04/18/three-food-bookshop-mysteries/

And a review and giveaway of "Murder on Site" by TG Wolff, along with an interesting interview with her https://kingsriverlife.com/04/18/murder-on-site-by-tg-wolff/

 

We also have the latest Crime Writers of Color Coming Attractions https://kingsriverlife.com/04/18/crime-writers-of-color-coming-attractions-april-june-2026/

 

If you enjoy Southern Gothic stories, check out the special midweek guest post that went up last night on KRL written by mystery author Erica Wright https://kingsriverlife.com/04/15/the-enduring-appeal-of-southern-gothic-stories/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week, we have a review and giveaway of "Ours is a Tale Of Murder" by Nora Murphy https://www.krlnews.com/2026/04/ours-is-tale-of-murder-by-nora-murphy.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Murder on the Sea Otter Express" by Nikki Knight https://www.krlnews.com/2026/04/murder-on-sea-otter-express-by-nikki.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "The Boy in the Wall" by Jeffrey B. Burton https://www.krlnews.com/2026/04/the-boy-in-wall-by-jeffrey-b-burton.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie 

Jerry's House of Everything: THE SPIRIT #1 (APRIL 1952)

Jerry's House of Everything: THE SPIRIT #1 (APRIL 1952): The Spirit is private investigator Denny Colt, created by comics legend Will Eisner, and first appeared in as a feature (dubbed "The Sp...

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – From the Dust by David Swinson

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – From the Dust by David Swinson

SleuthSayers: Stealing the Show

SleuthSayers: Stealing the Show: Here's a look into my fascinating personal life: There are groups of folks I talk with pretty regularly about things like reading, writi...

Mystery Fanfare: The Big Shake: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake Mystery Fiction - Guest Post by Randal Brandt

Mystery Fanfare: The Big Shake: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake i...: At 5:12 a.m. on April 18, 1906—one hundred and twenty years ago today—the landscape of San Francisco was permanently altered by a 7.9 magnit...

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Ark (2022) by Haruo Yuki

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Ark (2022) by Haruo Yuki: When compiling and cobbling together " The Hit List: Top 10 Favorite Hybrid Mysteries ," I mulled over including a disaster-themed...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Staff Picks For National Library Week: Laura and Luke

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Staff Picks For National Library Week: Laura and ...: It's almost time for National Library Week!  We always ask for staff picks of favorite books, so we will be posting some of those over t...

Scott's Take: Absolute Superman Vol 2: Son of the Demon by Jason Aaron, and artists Rafa Sandoval, Carmine Di Giandomenico, and Fico Ossio

 

Absolute Superman Vol 2: Son of the Demon by Jason Aaron, and artists Rafa Sandoval, Carmine Di Giandomenico, and Fico Ossio,  the second volume in the series and follows, Absolute Superman Vol. 1: Last Dust of Krypton. The Lazarus Corporation is still after Superman, but he has potential new allies in the Omega Men. But both sides want him to join them and destroy the other side. What will Superman do?

 

This is a violent and brutal volume with multiple torture scenes and lots of action. The art continues to impress. I continue to like this version of a more alien Superman. This series will continue with Volume 3, untitled right now, and which will introduce Toyman, Parasite, and Lex Luthor.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/41292kX

 

I read some of this through the Hoopla App by way of the Dallas Public Library System and some through the DC Universe Infinite App.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026

Friday, April 17, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: My Grandfather, the Master Detective by Masateru Konishi

 Lesa's Book Critiques: My Grandfather, the Master Detective by Masateru Konishi

Mystery Fanfare: Orchid Day: Orchids in Mysteries and More!

Mystery Fanfare: Orchid Day: Orchids in Mysteries and More!: If you follow me on Facebook or Instagram, you know I post a flower photo every day, usually with the subject line  "Behind my Garden G...

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Murder in the Moor by Thomas Kindon

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Murder in the Moor by Thomas Kindon

Patricia Abbott: FFB: THE FOG, James Herbert

 Patricia Abbott: FFB: THE FOG, James Herbert

FFB Review: Still River: A Lee Henry Oswald Mystery by Harry Hunsicker

 

For what seems like a month now, several times a week, I have seen ads for the "Oswald Three Pack" which features this great series by Harry Hunsicker. Constantly seeing those ads finally reminded me that it has been quite awhile since I reminded you of the very first book in the series, STILL RIVER: A Lee Henry Oswald Mystery. This great series is the real Dallas, warts and all. My review that first ran over twenty years ago... 

 

 

Lee Henry “Hank” Oswald is a private investigator who walks the mean streets of Dallas, Texas. It begins as a favor for a former fellow high school classmate in the form of Vera Drinkwater. Crying in his office, she tells Hank that her brother Charles (Charlie to one and all) Wesson (two years behind both Vera and Hank in school) is missing and has been for a little less than twenty-four hours. She knows something is wrong. Hank knows at this point, Charlie hasn’t been gone long enough to raise an eyebrow or anything else at the Dallas Police Department. The fact that he is a former addict, allegedly clean and sober now, won’t speed anyone to look for him as in all likelihood, he is off on a binge.

 

Charlie had been a victim all through school both by bullies at school and a stepfather at home determined to make a man out of him one way or another. Hank has memories of those times as well as some guilt as he wasn’t in a position to really help but witnessed enough to have some idea of what Charlie endured. Those memories trigger his need to help and he agrees to make some calls and look for Charlie. It should have been easy enough.

 

But, one thing life has taught him with a name like his in Dallas, nothing is easy and this certainly isn’t. Before long, it turns into a huge mess involving crooked real estate developers, urban renewal in the form of yet another Trinity River project, the Russian mafia, drugs, guns, and wayward relatives. Through it all, Hank keeps going as he digs through the muck of Dallas whether they are rich and famous or the nobodies on the wrong side of the river.



Author Harry Hunsicker’s portrayal of Dallas has absolutely nothing to do with the chamber of commerce ads for the city. This is a hard-edged noirish style Dallas that serves as a backdrop for all sorts of things that no doubt happen on a routine basis and that no one ever talks about. While Still River stumbles at first in terms of clichés, the book builds a steady momentum and before long carries the reader violently along for a very enjoyable read.



Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4twTe6F

 

Or go wild and get the entire three book series. Three books at this price is almost like getting one free. https://amzn.to/4szQnbu



Kevin R. Tipple © 2005, 2012, 2019, 2026

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Dopesick, Naturalist, Murder in Constantinople

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Dopesick, Naturalist, Murder in Constan...:  Reported by Rita Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America by Beth Macy Beth Macy takes us into the epicent...

Thursday Treats: 4/16/2026

 

The latest reading opportunities…


 
SMFS list member James Patrick Focarile announced that his short story, “The Cold, Hard Weight of It”, was published online at The Literary Garage. You can read the story for free here.

 

SMFS list member Joan Leotta announced that her three part flash fiction tale, “Observed, Overheard in the Hallway”, had been published online at Spillwords. You can read it for free here.

 



SMFS list member Alan Orloff announced that his novel, The Family Biz, had been published by Level Best Books. You can get it in eBook or paperback formats at Amazon.

 


Last month, fellow SMFS Member M. E. Proctor had a guest post here about how the soon to be released new book, Kansas City Breakdown, cowritten with Russell Thayer, came to be. Published by Cowboy Jamboree Press, their new book is a sequel to Bop City Swing of last year. The book is now out. You can pick it up at Amazon and elsewhere.

 

Also now out is The Firefall: A Murder in Yosemite by Mark Thielman. Published by Severn River Publishing, this is the third read in The Johnson and Nance Mystery series. You can pick it up in a variety of formats at Amazon. You could also pick up the entire series, to date, as book four, scheduled to be out in January, is available too for preorder.  By the way, Mr. Thielman is the current President of the Sisters in Crime North Dallas Chapter, of which I used to be a member, he is also currently nominated for a Derringer Award in the “Best Long Story” category for his short story, Masterpiece, which appeared in Black Cat Mystery Magazine #16.

 

He is also one heck of a nice guy and tolerated my weird presence in public at two different book events we were both panelists at months ago. Experiencing the Tipple, on back-to-back days, has broken lessor beings.

 

Fellow SMFS list member Steve Liskow reached out to tell me that his short story, One on One, appears in Teach. Write.: A Literary Journal for Writing Teachers Spring/Summer 2026, Edited by Katie Winkler. Mr. Liskow add, ed: “My story concerns a first-year teacher who is caught between his rookie idealism and the reality of a student living in an abusive home.” You can pick up a paperback copy on LuLu. 

 

Back when I worked for a local school district here in the Dallas area, I used to hear some real horror stories regarding home life situations. What some kids go through is, literally, hell on earth.

 

My good friend Barry Ergang has the poem, Centerfold, in the latest edition of the online zine, Yellow Mama. SMFS list members, Elizabeth Dearborn (Lived My Life Too Fast), Joan Leotta (Luck of the Irish), and Bern Sy Moss (Bragging Rights) all have short stories in Yellow Mama 115. You can read it for free here.

 



The latest issue of Black Cat Weekly also came out. You can pick up Black Cat Weekly #241 here. You could also pick up a monthly or annual subscription too.  

 


Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine: May/June 2026 is now out. Available in bookstores and online, it includes short stories by SMFS list members Catherine Dilts (Murder at the Midtown Oasis), Paul Ryan O’Connor (Strangers on a Train on a Train), Elysia Whisler (Legacy), and Dave Zeltserman (Julius Katz Gets Arrested).

 


This also means that Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine: May/June 2026 is now out. SMFS list members DK Snyder (Home), S.B. Watson (Closing the Case) have short stories in the issue. SMFS list member Josh Pachter provided the translation of Herbert De Paepe’s short story, The Defixio Murders (Passport to Crime). You can pick it up at the website or at bookstores.

 

Mr. Pachter also served as editor for the recently released short story collection, Hot Shots: Celebrating Thirty Years of the Short Mystery Fiction Society.  Published by Level Best Books - Level Short, the book is currently available to in eBook and paperback format at Amazon.


By the way, Art Taylor’s “The First Two Pages” is currently running a feature highlighting several folks that are featured in the Hot Shots anthology. Things started off with “The Touch of Death” by BV Lawson, followed by “Famous Last Words” by Doug Allyn, with more stories highlighted in the weeks ahead. 

 

Also now out, if you like fantasy and science fiction are the new issues of Analog and Asimov’s.

 

 

Until next time….

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026