Thursday, July 16, 2026

Mystery Fanfare: MAIGRET, Season 2, news

Mystery Fanfare: MAIGRET, Season 2, news: MASTERPIECE PBS has announced that Season 2 of   Maigret   will premiere on Sunday, October 18 at 9/8c on PBS . It will also be available t...

ButtonDown.Com: Lynx (links) of interest

 ButtonDown.Com: Lynx (links) of interest

Beneath the Stains of Time: Out for Delivery: "The Jersey Devil" (1971) by Edward D. Hoch

Beneath the Stains of Time: Out for Delivery: "The Jersey Devil" (1971) by Edw...: Some months ago, I reviewed a short story from Edward D. Hoch's Captain Leopold series, " The Rainy-Day Bandit " (1970), which...

Thursday Treats: 7/16/2026

Some reading opportunities of interest this week.

 


I am leading off with this publishing news as I am in the new issue this week. Black Cat Weekly #254 is out and includes my crime fiction short story, A Plan Comes Together. Also in the issue are frequent guests here, Tom Milani (Andrea GutiĆ©rrez) and Paula Messina (A Little Help). You can pick up the latest issue here. 

 

 


Also now out is the latest issue of Kings River Life Mystery Magazine. In addition to the book giveaways, reviews, and other pieces, Leslie Budewitz announced that publication of her short story, Pepper Reece and the Ghost of Arthur Goodwin: A Spice Shop Short Mystery. You can read it for free here.

 



Janet Rudloph announced that the latest volume of the Mystery Reader’s Journal was now out. Mystery Readers Journal: Mysteries Set in France (Volume 42:2) is available here. By the way, if you are not already paying attention to her great Mystery Fanfare blog, you should be. I watch a lot of British, and elsewhere, mystery television and I get most of my news on the programs via her blog.

 


 

Author James H. Lewis announced that his latest novel, The Boy in the Mirror, is now out. You can pick it up direct from the author here, or through several vendors including Amazon.

 

 


Author Allen Wyler announced that his latest novel, Deadly Odds 9.0 was out. Published by Stairway Press, the latest in a long line of techno-thrillers is available at Amazon and other vendors.

 

 




SMFS Derringer Coordinator Mark Schuster sent word that John Joseph Adams has curated the Magic & Mystery collection scheduled to be released on July 28th. These are seven Amazon Original Tales on Kindle. Learn more at Amazon. 

 

 



Speaking of SMFS, recently re-elected President Joseph S. Walker posted his latest compilation of recent publishing news of the members. News of the various books and short stories can be found here.

 

By the way, Joseph’s post title reminded me of the great blog, Make Mine Mystery. While it is dormant now, you can still read the posts if you go to the Make Mine Mystery blog here.


 

The anthology, Bad Intentions: A Crime Fiction Anthology Based on the Music of Warren Zevon, has been released by Literary Garage. Edited by Michael K. Downing, the read features fifteen stories from authors, Chance Adorjan, Colin Brightwell, Jesse Binger, Geonn Cannon, Andrew Careaga, Dylan Demasi, Zakariah Johnson, Whiskey Leavins, Scott MacLeod, Bruce W. Most, Joel Nedecky, Nathan Pettigrew, Keith Roysdon, DJ Tuskmor, and Mike Zimmerman. Cover design by Frank Vatel. All proceeds go to benefit Philabundance, a Philadelphia-based charity working to end food insecurity. You can pick it up in print or digital formats at Amazon and other vendors.

 

 

Until next time…. 

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Birds of Prey

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Birds of Prey

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: The Best American Mystery...:   The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century is an anthology edited by Tony Hillerman and Otto Penzler and published in 2000. The ant...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #279: GOING INTERSTELLAR Edited by Lee Johnson & Jack McDevitt

 George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #279: GOING INTERSTELLAR Edited by Lee Johnson & Jack McDevitt 

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: TAPPAN'S BURRO

Jerry's House of Everything: SGORT STORY WEDNESDAY: TAPPAN'S BURRO: "Tappan's Burro" by Zane Grey  (first published in Ladies' Home Journal , June 1923; reprinted in Pearson's Magazine ,...

Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: TOP TEN BEST SHORT STORY MYSTERIES OF ALL TIME (The Strand)

 Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: TOP TEN BEST SHORT STORY MYSTERIES OF ALL TIME (The Strand)

Publishing News: A Plan Comes Together in Black Cat Weekly #254


As you may already know, I got published this week. My short story, A Plan Comes Together, appears in Black Cat Weekly #254. They say "write what you know" and the narrator is very much me and my life these days. Though what happens is not. I hope you will pick up the issue and check out my story. Hope you like it too. You can pick up the latest issue here. 

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Book Tour by Emily Ohanjanians

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Book Tour by Emily Ohanjanians

Happiness Is A Book: Scoundrel by Bernard Cornwell

 Happiness Is A Book: Scoundrel by Bernard Cornwell

The First Two Pages: “Woodpeckers” by Jessica Slee

 The First Two Pages: “Woodpeckers” by Jessica Slee

Mystery Fanfare: MYSTERIES SET IN FRANCE: La FĆŖte Nationale aka Bastille Day

Mystery Fanfare: MYSTERIES SET IN FRANCE: La FĆŖte Nationale aka Bas...: Celebrate   La FĆŖte Nationale aka Bastille Day  with the hot off the presses issue of  Mystery Readers Journal: Mysteries Set in France (V...

Jerry's House of Everything: OVERLOOKED FILM: THE CANARY MURDER CASE (1929)

Jerry's House of Everything: OVERLOOKED FILM: THE CANARY MURDER CASE (1929): Ogden Nash famously write "Philo Vance needs a kick in the pance."  The pompous fictional detective created by S. S. Van Dine has ...

Monday, July 13, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Lessons From Cats for Surviving Fascism by Stewart “Brittlestar” Reynolds

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Lessons From Cats for Surviving Fascism by Stewart “Brittlestar” Reynolds

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 Matthew Mic...

Little Big Crimes: Pitchapalooza, by Robert Parker

Little Big Crimes: Pitchapalooza, by Robert Parker:  "Pitchapalooza," by Robert Parker, in Black Cat Weekly, #253, 2026.  The main character  of this tale is Geneva Slitherbee (grea...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: The Devoted: A Novel by Catherine Cho

 

Catherine Cho is a literary agent and the founder of her own literary agency. She wrote a critically acclaimed memoir that was shortlisted for the Sunday Times' Young Writer of the Year Award, the Jhalak Prize, and New York Times' Editor's Choice.  Her debut novel, The Devoted (Washington Square Press, July 14, 2026) is a compelling tale of a young woman who is born into the shadow of transnational crime syndicates and has to decide what she will do about it. I found her character to be similar to a young Michael Corleone who also was determined to move outside his family’s lawlessness.

Told in flashbacks between childhood and maturity, the story describes Eunha growing up with her older brother in Hong Kong in the care of her grandmother, her mother’s mother, in an isolated cottage. Her mother is institutionalized for some vague illness. A caretaker whom Eunha eventually realizes is a personal security officer assigned by her father is omnipresent. His nephew appears periodically and joins the family. Eunha’s father visits occasionally, focusing his attention on his son.

By the time Eunha reaches her late teens, she understands that her father is a Dragon, the head of a Triad, and that her brother will follow her father into the world of organized crime. She marries into what she believes is an ordinary family but she learns when her son is kidnapped that the shadow of her family and its activities is far-reaching.

Cho’s writing is lavish with imagery and opulent turns of phrase. It’s often at odds with the gritty world it describes. The cultural melting pot of Hong Kong simmers in the background, contrasting mainland Chinese, British colonialists, and immigrants from elsewhere in the East, all of whom settled on the island that serves as a bridge between East and West. Hong Kong’s status as a financial nucleus in the East is a magnet for many, including the Triads.

The Devoted is a compulsive piece of crime fiction and I expect to see it on many of the nominations lists for 2026 awards. Starred reviews from Library Journal and Booklist.

 


·         Publisher: ‎Washington Square Press

·         Publication date: ‎July 14, 2026

·         Language: ‎English

·         Print length: ‎256 pages

·         ISBN-10: ‎1668099462

·         ISBN-13: ‎978-1668099469

 

 

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

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026 

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

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Favorite Books of 2026, So Far

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Favorite Books of 2026, So Far

Kathleen Kalb: Critique Group Therapy

 Kathleen Kalb: Critique Group Therapy

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Case of the Running Man (1958) by Christopher Bush

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Case of the Running Man (1958) by Christopher ...: The Case of the Running Man (1958), the 52nd entry in the Ludovic Travers series, rang in the last phase of Christopher Bush 's decades...

SleuthSayers: Unsolicited Thoughts on Spider-Noir

SleuthSayers: Unsolicited Thoughts on Spider-Noir: One of two things would happen with Episode One of Spider-Noir (Amazon Prime, 2026). Either I would press the stop button quickly, or I wou...

ButtonDown:Com: Private Eye July: Atom Agency: The Begum's Jewels

 ButtonDown:Com: Private Eye July: Atom Agency: The Begum's Jewels

KRL Update

Up on KRL this week a review and giveaway of "A Botanist's Guide to Tradition and Treachery" by Kate Khavari, along with a fun guest post by Kate about poisonous plants https://kingsriverlife.com/07/11/a-botanists-guide-to-tradition-and-treachery-by-kate-khavari/

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Dreidels and Dead Ends" by Nancy Cohen https://kingsriverlife.com/07/11/dreidels-and-dead-ends-by-nancy-cohen/

 

And a review and giveaway of "Voted Most Likely to Murder" by Lacey Moon, along with an interesting interview with Lacey https://kingsriverlife.com/07/11/voted-most-likely-to-murder-by-lacey-moone/

 

We also have a fun mystery short story by Leslie Budewitz https://kingsriverlife.com/07/11/pepper-reece-and-the-ghost-of-arthur-goodwin/

 

Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Greta Sinclair about the fun research she did for her latest book, "Murder by Meringue" https://kingsriverlife.com/07/08/when-research-tastes-this-good/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of the latest Irregular Detective Mystery, "The Vampyre Client" by Jeri Westerson https://www.krlnews.com/2026/07/the-vampyre-client-by-jeri-westerson.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Hemlock Bay" by Martin Edwards https://www.krlnews.com/2026/07/hemlock-bay-by-martin-edwards.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "The Redemption Center is Closed On Sundays" by Andrea Hairston. This one is a mystery with a lot of twists--it's a scifi mystery with a dog detective https://www.krlnews.com/2026/07/the-redemption-center-is-closed-on.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie 

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: A Dark Path by Linda Castillo

 Lesa's Book Critiques: A Dark Path by Linda Castillo

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of July 12, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of July 12, 2026

Jerry's House of Everything: MORTIFIED #10 (UNDATED)

Jerry's House of Everything: MORTIFIED #10 (UNDATED): Mortified  is a continuing series from CNCC Classic Comics.  On May 3, 2024 on this blog, I quoted the Comic Book Plus website:  "CNCC ...

Scott's Take: This Inevitable Ruin by Matt Dinniman (Dungeon Crawler Carl Series)

 

This Inevitable Ruin by Matt Dinniman is the seventh book in the Dungeon Crawler series. Warlords Donut and Carl are leading the former Crawlers who have returned to the Dungeon, alongside the remaining Crawlers, against the alien tyrants and their mercenary forces. Luckly, they have allies in the NPC army, but they are still vastly outnumbered. Can Donut and Carl beat thousands and thousands of soldiers even with the help of the former crawlers? Can Donut and Katia find a way to escape the curse of the Sepsis Whore?

 

This is action packed humor filled war tale with Donut becoming a sniper. Yes, she even has her own little ghillie suit. The main former Dungeon Crawlers are fully realized heroes of their own tales and one could imagine them having their own separate series. Jamal the mechanical shark (an NPC hero) is introduced and is given a giant flamethrower. I enjoyed this character’s sense of humor immensely.  I really liked how the author explored the toll the war is having on Donut and how the Crawlers band together to help Donut deal with the trauma she goes through.

 

There is no shortage of villains in the tale and plenty of high stakes. The third act gets incredibly weird. Even weirder than the last book and I did not think that was possible.

 

The short story in the hardback highlights the Shadow Mimics that have infiltrated the backstage of the Dungeon and their plans.

 

 The next book in the series comes out May Twelfth and is titled, A Parade of Horribles. Donut, Carl, and those who chose to remain are going to compete in a death race while the AI continues to lose his mind.

 

As of right now, there are two more books planned, a Peacock tv series in production, a graphic novel adaption which can be read for free on webtoon, a separate graphic novel planned for next year that will feature, Florin, the shotgun wielding human turned into a Crocodile. There is also an increasing amount of merchandise such as shirts and other things. There is also now a table top game. And, Libby signed a deal to be the exclusive home of the eBooks for  libraries. It is rather amazing how this series has exploded in so many ways.

 

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4nqN6uq

 

  

I read the eBook by way of the Libby/Overdrive App in the Dallas Public Library System. While in the middle of the eBook, the hardback showed up at my local branch as it had been transferred from the Lakewood Branch. That allowed me to read the short story.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026

Friday, July 10, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Ulysses S. Cat and Other Animals I Have Known by Scott Simon

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Ulysses S. Cat and Other Animals I Have Known by Scott Simon

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Body Behind the Bar by Cecil Freeman Gregg

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Body Behind the Bar by Cecil Freeman Gregg

In Reference to Murder: Friday's Forgotten Books: The Yellow Turban

In Reference to Murder: Friday's Forgotten Books: The Yellow Turban: Charlotte Jay was the pen name of Australian mystery author Geraldine Halls (1919-1996). Her marriage to Albert Halls of UNESCO enabled her...

Patricia Abbott: FFB:BLACK FRIDAY, David Goodis

 Patricia Abbott: FFB:BLACK FRIDAY, David Goodis

Mystery Fanfare: The Chelsea Detective News

Mystery Fanfare: The Chelsea Detective News: I am  so looking forward to this season!  The Chelsea Detective premieres Monday, August 3 on Acorn TV Season 4 sees DI Max Arnold (Adrian ...

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: I missed this bit of news earlier, but the shortlist for the Bloody Scotland Debut Prize was announced. This year's finalists include: ...

Paula Messina Reviews: The Fireballer by Mark Stevens

  

Please welcome author Paula Messina back to the blog today…


The Fireballer

by Paula Messina

 

The Fireballer, a novel by Mark Stevens, is the story of Baltimore Oriole rookie pitcher Frank Ryder who can put the ball over the plate at more than 100 mph. Fueled by Ryder’s gas, the hapless Orioles are at last truly in the pennant race. Ryder is haunted by an accident his errant ball caused when he was twelve years old. Ten years later, Ryder is a phenom, a pitcher who is untouchable.

He has achieved his goal of playing in the majors, but he can’t relax and enjoy his success. Ryder misses Maggie, his girlfriend, who is hundreds of miles away in school, but if he’s willing, there are plenty of women lined up who are even more willing. He has the sudden wealth that is heaped on athletes, so he can afford a fancy condo with a fabulous view. But it’s icy, not a home. He’s been convinced to wear expensive duds, but he feels like a fraud. Ryder is recognized everywhere he goes, and he has no clue how to handle himself. He’s a once-in-a-lifetime pitcher driven by his love for the game. All he wants to do is throw strikes and win games.

And underlying everything is that accident Frank Ryder cannot escape.

Fireballer is about guilt and redemption. It is also about baseball, a big business that eats its own.

Ryder’s pitching prowess makes him a freak. His success makes the baseball union and the commission decidedly uncomfortable. They want to ban those 105 mph pitches. After all, how can the bigwigs watch baseball’s best hitters stand helplessly at the plate while their batting averages wallow in the toilet. Not to mention the possibility fans will become bored with all that Frank Ryder winning.

Before the union and commission can impose a speed limit, Ryder’s teammate is beaned and out for the rest of the season. The unwritten rule in baseball is that the pitcher retaliates. Tit for tat. We lose one. You lose one. His teammates on the field, in the dugout, and in the bullpen expect Ryder to do the right thing, seek revenge. Only Ryder is having none of it. He shakes off his irate catcher’s signals to bean the batter.

The next pitch has a mind of its own and hits the batter in his torso. He’s down, definitely out, and not moving.

Nobody believes it was an accident. Ryder is suspended.

But far worse, Ryder’s arm goes AWOL. He’s a pitching phenomenon who cannot pitch.

The reader roots for Frank Ryder to overcome his past and find happiness because he is a normal Joe, a good person overwhelmed by circumstances. His pitching is freakish. He is not. We know Frank Ryder. He’s your next-door neighbor, the kid you went to high school with, or your first cousin lucky enough to make it to the majors. He’s normal in every way except when he picks up a baseball and steps onto the mound.

Can Frank Ryder revive his arm, or is he a flash in the pan whose time has already come and gone?

 At times, it’s painful to read Ryder’s story. I mean this in the best way possible. His agony is so real, so visceral the reader can’t help but be moved. Most of us never come close to that kind of fame and success, but we all experience guilt and the need for redemption. We know what it’s like to struggle to recapture a part of ourselves that was lost. It’s man’s fate.

The novel’s tension dips when Ryder turns his energy to philanthropy by visiting a school. This isn’t a surprise. Ryder’s humanity spends most of the novel hovering around the edges waiting to surface, but Ryder and the students struggle to communicate. The chapter would have benefited from a bit of judicious pruning. It’s the pressure Ryder puts on himself and inflicted by the Orioles staff, the union, and the baseball commission that fuels the novel. The Orioles’ race for the American League Pennant and the biggest prize of all, the World Series, keeps the reader turning pages. We want Frank Ryder to prevail because he is one of us.

Despite the philanthropy dip, the writing is solid. Stevens creates characters that readers identify with and care about. He’s a master of description. Ryder’s twin brother “broods on problems. Ryder only played chess with Josh if they used a timer.”

Stevens lets the reader hear the ball as it smacks into the pitcher’s glove and the sound of the fans in the bleachers. “The crowd buzzes. It’s the hum of humanity. It’s restlessness. It’s wonder. It’s 37,700 squirming fans who have agreed through some sort of telepathic communion to react as one.”

 Fireballer reminds us that baseball once was America’s favorite pastime, and within its pages, Frank Ryder, is our favorite player.

Mark Stevens, a Massachusetts native, lives in Colorado and writes The Flynn Martin Thriller and The Allison Coil Mystery Series. In 2016 and  2023, Stevens was recognized as the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers’ Writer of the Year. Stevens knows his baseball, and he is a wise man. He does not like the designated hitter, neither does Frank Ryder.

The Fireballer is a grand slam that should be designated to the top of your to-be-read pile.

 


 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4g4y1ct

 

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.