Thursday, May 28, 2026

Don't Need A Diagram: David Szalay, “Flesh”

 Don't Need A Diagram: David Szalay, “Flesh”

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 86 Calls for Submissions in June 2026 - Paying markets

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 86 Calls for Submissions in June 2026 - Paying mar...: This June there are more than seven dozen calls for submissions. All of these are paying markets, and none charge submission fees. As always...

Thursday Treats: 5/28/2026

The latest reading opportunities…

 

Punk Noir has published, Champagne For My Real Friends, Real Pain For My Sham Friends — Issue 3.This series of short stories are all free to read online at their website. You can also read the first issue for free here as well as the second here.

 

A few weeks back, fellow SMFS member Judy Sheluk announced that her short story, The Last Detail, was published online at Brown Hound Press. She also said this was a great publication to work with and was very enthusiastic about the market for other writers. Fellow SMFS list member Shelly Jones was equally enthusiastic when she announced that her short story, Bloom, was published by Brown Hound Press. You can read the tale, for free, here. A reminder for fellow writers, this is a paying market.

 

Fellow SMFS list member Nick Guthrie announced that his WWII mystery short story, In the Ruins, was published online at Cold Caller. You can read the tale for free here.  

 

Fellow SMFS list member Christina Hoag announced that her non fiction book, I Am the Famous Carlos: The Story of the Jackal, the World's First Celebrity Terrorist, was released earlier this month. Published by Three Jandals Press, the read is available at Amazon and other vendors.  

 

According to Amazon, Scenic & Sinister: An Indiana Landmarks Anthology was released back in April. It was only this past week when two fellow SMFS list members announced it was out and that they had stories in it. Michael Dabney (Death—In 9 Innings) and Shari Held (Send in the Clowns) reported their presence in the anthology published by Speed City Press (publishing imprint of the  Indiana chapter of Sisters in Crime). You can get the book at Amazon or other vendors.

 


The latest issue of Black Cat Weekly also came out. Black Cat Weekly #247 includes short stories by fellow SMFS list members  John Floyd (200 Feet) and Shari Held (Cruisin’ for Trouble) among other works. You can pick up the latest issue of this weekly, multi genre, magazine
here.

 


Finally, fellow SMFS list member, Michael Bracken,  announced that the anthology, Wish Upon A Crime: Crime Fiction Inspired by Fairy Tales was now up on Amazon for preorder ahead of the June 2nd release. Coedited with Stacy Woodson also of the SMFS, the book features short stories from Donna Andrews, Michael Bracken (editor), David Dean, John M. Floyd, Barb Goffman, Debra H. Goldstein, James A. Hearn, Adam Meyer, Tom Milani, Laura Oles, Josh Pachter, Joseph S. Walker, Andrew Welsh-Huggins, and Stacy Woodson (editor). Published by Level Short (an imprint of Level Best Books), the anthology is available in both print and digital book versions at Amazon.

 

Until next time….

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Brothers McKay by Craig Johnson

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Brothers McKay by Craig Johnson

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 57 Writing Contests in June 2026 - No entry fees!

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 57 Writing Contests in June 2026 - No entry fees!: This June there are more than four dozen free writing contests for short fiction, novels, poetry, CNF, nonfiction, and plays. Prizes range f...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "A Touch of Petulance" by Ray Bradbury

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "A Touch of Petulance" by ...:   The story I am featuring comes from the collection Killer Come Back to Me: The Crime Stories of Ray Bradbury . It was published by Hard Ca...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #272: NO MIDDLE NAME: THE COMPLETE COLLECTED JACK REACHER STORIES By Lee Child

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #272: NO MIDDLE NAME: THE COMPLETE COLLECTED JACK REACHER STORIES By Lee Child 

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: DRY SEPTEMBER

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: DRY SEPTEMBER: "Dry September" by William Faulkner (first published in Scribner's Magazine , January 1931; reprinted in Faulkner's collec...

Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: "The Best of Everything" Richard Yates

 Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: "The Best of Everything" Richard Yates

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Final Target by Nora Roberts

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Final Target by Nora Roberts

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 47 Glorious Writing Conferences and Workshops in June 2026

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 47 Glorious Writing Conferences and Workshops in J...: This June there are nearly four dozen writing conferences and workshops. Some conferences and workshops will be held online, but most will b...

The First Two Pages: “Trust” by Susan Alice Bickford

 The First Two Pages: “Trust” by Susan Alice Bickford

Happiness Is A Book: The Dust and the Heat by Michael Gilbert

 Happiness Is A Book: The Dust and the Heat by Michael Gilbert

Little Big Crimes: Pandora's Bounty, by Gilbert M. Stack

Little Big Crimes: Pandora's Bounty, by Gilbert M. Stack:   "Pandora's Bounty," by Gilbert M. Stack, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, May/June 2026. I was surprised that th...

Beneath the Stains of Time: The First Television Murder (1940) by Val Gielgud and Eric Maschwitz

Beneath the Stains of Time: The First Television Murder (1940) by Val Gielgud ...: Val Gielgud , an actor, director and broadcaster, was a pioneer of radio-and television drama at the BBC and served as head for both their d...

Publication Day Review: Murder by Design: A Thriller by Lee Goldberg

  

Lee Goldberg’s Murder by Design: A Thriller is the first read in the new Edison Bixby series. It is also a bit weird and takes some time getting used to as the story unfolds. This is not your regular book from the author. Those who choose to stay with it will find a lot to like about the read.

 

Start with the basic idea of Sherlock Holmes and Watson. Now, make it contemporary. Now, replace Sherlock with the brilliant and often very rude, Edison Bixby. Bixby was a living legend in the LAPD. He solved murders and did it while being wealthy, eccentric, and a ton of style. He saw the world very differently. He saw a world where every crime, every human interaction, every behavior, could be traced back to the design around the person. That design of the building or whatever played a key role in whatever happened.

 

Then he took a bullet to the head. He survived the traumatic brain injury mostly intact. He still sees everything and everyone being influenced by the design of everything around them. That bullet did not take that from him. It did take his job with the LAPD and any mental filters he had. It also left him with a need for a driver and somebody to try and smooth over the ruffled feathers of others that Bixby encounters. Watson, if you will.

 

These days he solves crimes for Triax Global Insurance. He needs a driver, gopher, communicator, and everything else. He needs all that and more bundled up in his Watson.

 

Triax may have found his Watson in an actor that looking for his break in Hollywood. The guy gets auditions, even gets cast in commercials for various drugs, and then brings in his idea of the character he is playing in his role. He creates elaborate backstories and storylines for the minute or so he is on screen in a commercial. He overthinks each one to an incredible degree as he sees the world around him full of characters playing their respective roles. His elaborations tend to annoy directors and others and that results in being fired a lot. He refuses to change his behavior as he believes he is building hos craft.

 

Bixby sees the world as driven by design in very way possible. Some designs make crime easier and, in a way, encourage it. Our narrator, the actor, sees the world as a stage, literally, where everyone is at all times a player in a role. They make quite the duo and before long are working increasingly complex cases.

 

Such as the main case of the book where a person died at the mall. In theory, it is a simple slip and fall where a woman died because she became impaled on exposed rebar. Bixby is sure that it is far more than a slip and fall. He sees it as an ingenious murder and intends to solve the case.

 

Murder by Design: A Thriller is a complicated tale and far different in style, tone, and in any other way than the normal mystery read. Humor is frequently present as are descriptive explanations of how our everyday world is designed to influence our behavior in various ways. Several cases are worked in the read and there are numerous complications. It is also a read that will get you looking at your everyday world far differently. Especially if you drive by a mall.

 


Recommended.

 

 

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

 

 

My digital ARC came from Thomas & Mercer, by way of NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Monday, May 25, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Diva Hosts a Murderer by Krista Davis

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Diva Hosts a Murderer by Krista Davis

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 Digit...

Beneath the Stains of Time: That Thing Upstairs: "The Doctor Sees a Ghost" (1933) by Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements

Beneath the Stains of Time: That Thing Upstairs: "The Doctor Sees a Ghost" (19...: I recently reviewed Fear of Fear (1931) and Blind Man's Buff (1933) by Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements, a husband-and-wife writing...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Storm Warning: A Dez Limerick Thriller by James Byrne

  

Storm Warning (Minotaur, May 2026) by James Byrne is the latest in the very fine thriller series about Desmond Aloysius Limerick (Dez to his mates), a military veteran with unusual skills, a smart mouth, and an irresistible ability to make friends wherever he goes. He’s in New York when this book opens, learning how to cook in a high-end restaurant and enjoying life when the FBI asks him to accompany a Department of State executive, her security guard, and a hostage rescue team to a scientific research center in an isolated part of coastal Newfoundland. It seems all communications with the town and the research center have been lost and the assumption is the group is being held hostage, possibly for the sensitive information held by the multinational scientists working there. Dez’s skills as a gatekeeper are expected to be needed to enter the facility.

The night before the rescue team leaves, Dez is approached by a group of thugs who offer him cash not to go on what was supposed to be a highly secret rescue mission. He declines but worries about this open indication that someone has a vested interest in keeping the research center sequestered and has learned about their plans.

A pair of competing blizzards with the Canadian east coast as their target complicate the flight to the remote village where the center and the scientists are. The plane with the hostage rescue team falls behind and only a small group of diplomats and security guards reach their destination. Once they land, the action never stops. As with all of the books in this series, Dez is relentless in his focus and endlessly creative in achieving his goals.

He's particularly challenged here as people are not always who they seem to be, right up to the end of the book. I found my belief of who were the good guys and which ones were the bad guys was constantly undergoing revision.

Dez does have a tendency to think he knows what’s best for everyone around him. I was amused to see his arrangements for one character were politely but firmly declined, setting him back on his heels for a bit. It was no doubt a salutary experience for him.

Highly recommended! This book can be read as a stand-alone but since Dez tends to acquire friends in each adventure and take them with him from one story to the next, the reader who wants to fully understand the back story of every title should probably read the books in order.

Starred review from Publishers Weekly.

  

·         Publisher: ‎Minotaur Books

·         Publication date: ‎May 26, 2026

·         Language: ‎English

·         Print length: ‎400 pages

·         ISBN-10: ‎1250319811

·         ISBN-13: ‎978-1250319814




Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4e1byiA

 

 

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 24, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Storm Warning by James Byrne

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Storm Warning by James Byrne

Kathleen Kalb: Trouble Signs

 Kathleen Kalb: Trouble Signs

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Signing up for 20 Books of Summer 2026

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Signing up for 20 Books of Summer 2026: This is my eleventh year of participating in the 20 Books of Summer reading challenge. The event was originally hosted by Cathy at 746Books ...

SleuthSayers: The Urge to Kill

SleuthSayers: The Urge to Kill: My ancestry is Scottish. I was born in New Zealand, but my family line (on both sides) is only a couple of steps out from Scottish soil. S...

The Rap Sheet: Particularly Promising Premieres

 The Rap Sheet: Particularly Promising Premieres

Review: The Brothers McKay: A Longmire Mystery by Craig Johnson

 

Pepper McKay is very dead. Hated by nearly everyone, Pepper McKay ran his life, his family and pretty much everything and everyone else, for miles around for many decades. While he had his business interests, his marriage a number of years ago gave him control over what is known as the “O-Kay Ranch.” Located at the mouth of Crazy Woman Canyon, the dude ranch, is in Absaroka County, Wyoming. That means his death has to be investigated by the local sheriff, Walt Longmire.

 

That means the good sheriff and his number, two, Victoria Moretti, need to get to the scene as fast as possible. It does not help that they are stuck in a barely moving traffic jam on the road in thanks to one of two lightning caused wildfires that started overnight. The fires are running wild, thanks to drought and dead trees and whatnot, and will go where they want and when they want.

 

Eventually, they get to the former working ranch that is now operated as a dude ranch. For decades it was operated by the Harris family. Then the granddaughter, BeeBee, turned it into a dude ranch, then married Pepper McKay, and then he went work taking control and running roughshod over everyone and everybody.

 

Pepper McKay, a hard drinker, and pretty much hard at everything, had gone fishing in Crazy Woman Creek that morning. He had lunch and other food with him, but hadn’t been seen since. One of the long-time ranch hands had gone looking for him and had finally found him floating face down in the water. The ranch hand had pulled the body up onto the bank and then called 911.

 

Walt Longmire had a long history with Pepper McKay going back some four decades. So, the fact that the man was drinking in his last hours is no surprise. Beyond that obvious fact, as Vic examines the body, she advises Longmore and the newly assigned to the area Wyoming Highway Patrol Trooper, Shane Wilson, that the back of Pepper McKay’s head shows obvious signs of some sort of traumatic brain injury. She also notes the numerous contusions and abrasions, but those could have happened as the body moved downstream through the churning waters and hit rocks and such. She also notes that by how heavy he feels, his lungs are probably full of water.

 

It is clear to all three of them that an intoxicated Pepper McKay could easily have slipped and fallen, striking his head in the process, before drowning. It is also very possible to all that he might have been hit in the head with a rock and left to drown. So, the question is—accident or murder?

 

If it was a murder, it would also be a very complicated case with a laundry list of suspects. For decades Pepper McKay lived his life like a human wrecking ball—he smashed through obstacles and people with wild abandon. That means the suspect list, inside and outside the family, is a long one and complicated. Some neutral observers, if they knew what had happened decades ago, might put the good Sheriff on that suspect list too.

 

As Walt Longmire spins up outside resources to assist his investigation, another problem is dumped into his lap by the newly appointed Wyoming Attorney General, his own daughter. Maxim Sidorov wants to relocate to Durant. With no parole officer in the area, that would mean that Sheriff Longmire would have to be his parole officer despite the fact that the man tried to kill him awhile back. Maxim Sidorov lost an eye in that attempt. He also gained a lot of respect for him and is trying to help him find a great aunt, Ruth One Heart.

 

Maxim Sidorov is soon in town, living in the jail, and advising Walt on what has turned out to be the definite murder of Pepper McKay. He is instrumental to the investigation which also manages to bug the heck out of Longmire. He also briefly annoyed this reader who had an out loud “Duh” moment when Sidorov pointed things out.

 

The Brothers McKay: A Longmire Mystery by Craig Johnson is a highly entertaining read that keeps the reader turning pages. Part murder mystery, part survivalist action read, it also sets up what will clearly be the focus of the next book in the series. Unless the author has juked and head faked this reader on this too.  

  

Recommended.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4e6xQ3e

 

My digital ARC came by way of Viking Penguin, through NetGalley, and with no expectation of a positive review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Out Law: A Dresden File Novella by Jim Butcher

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Out Law: A Dresden File Novella by Jim Butcher

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of May 24, 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of May 24, 2026

ButtonDown.Com: Two Dead by Van Jensen and Nate Powell - review

 ButtonDown.Com: Two Dead by Van Jensen and Nate Powell - review

Dru's Book Musings: Coming Soon ~ June 2026

 Dru's Book Musings: Coming Soon ~ June 2026

KRL Update

Up on KRL this week a review and giveaway of "Gimme Shelter" by Libby Klein https://kingsriverlife.com/05/23/gimme-shelter-by-libby-klein/

And a review and giveaway of "In the Spirit of French Murder" by Colleen Cambridge https://kingsriverlife.com/05/23/in-the-spirit-of-french-murder-by-colleen-cambridge/

And a review and giveaway of "The Barn Identity" by Diane Kelly https://kingsriverlife.com/05/23/the-barn-identity-by-diane-kelly/

We also have a review and giveaway of "Echoes of the Lost" by Cindy Brown, and we also have an interesting interview with Cindy https://kingsriverlife.com/05/23/echoes-of-the-lost-by-cindy-brown/

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week, we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Life is But a Scream" by Heather Weidner https://www.krlnews.com/2026/05/life-is-but-scream-by-heather-weidner.html

For those who enjoy cozy fantasy, we have a review and giveaway of "Stay for a Spell" by Amy Coombe https://www.krlnews.com/2026/05/stay-for-spell-by-amy-coombe.html

Happy reading!
Lorie

Mystery Fanfare: Memorial Day Mysteries // Memorial Day Crime Fiction

Mystery Fanfare: Memorial Day Mysteries // Memorial Day Crime Fiction: Memorial Day aka Decoration Day is a day of remembrance of those men and women who died protecting us, for those who didn't retur...

Writer Beware: Has the Anthropic Settlement Changed Everything?

 Writer Beware: Has the Anthropic Settlement Changed Everything?

Scott's Take: Marvel: What If...Kitty Pryde Stole the Phoenix Force? (An X-Men and America Chavez Story) by Rebecca Podos


Marvel: What If...Kitty Pryde Stole the Phoenix Force? (An X-Men and America Chavez Story) by Rebecca Podos is the fourth book in the What If… series, but you could read this one on its own. This one is a complicated time travel book with multiple timelines and flashbacks throughout.

 

Billed as an X-Men and America Chavez story, the main character is actually Kitty Pryde. Kitty Pryde is experiencing flashes of another life. One where she had way different friends and is not a servant of the Hellfire Club (mutant led organization that uses its powers for their own ends) under Emma Frost. These flashes promise a better life.

 

Soon, a stranger, Betsy Braddock, finds her and tells her that she has a psychic trail. A trail that leads into the past. With her help, she can get back the life she should have led. She also needs Pryde’s help to fix her own timeline as she too has a life she should have led.

 

They are not the only ones seeking a way to go back into the past and fix the timelines. America Chavez is as well.

 

They are trying to go back in the past to where the X-Men have lost Jean Grey due to her murder by Dr. Doom and his multiversal counterpart, The Whisper. They want to steal the Phoenix Force and Jean Grey’s status as a Nexus Being. The Whisper knows that if they do that, they will kill everyone who will ever live in this reality. The Whisper does not care. The fact that there are two timelines, one of which were the X-Men are all dead, means the heroes failed to save their teammate. Can the heroes from the broken timelines save Jean Grey and reality?

 

This is a book with extensive connections to X-Men history and is an action-packed adventure with strong character development and romance. I think this book would be hard to follow for people not very familiar with the X-Men as this read takes place over many eras of X-Men history. This is a really good book if you are a fan of Kitty Pryde or the X-Men.

 

It ends on a bit of cliffhanger since there is setup for the last book, Marvel: What If...The Multiverse Was Doomed? by DaVaun Sanders, which comes out in August. Do not read the synopsis for the fifth book before finishing this one.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/48Pq2zc

 


My hardback reading copy came from the Central Branch, aka Downtown, of the Dallas Public Library System. 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Review: Seldom Seen Road: Burnt River Mysteries by John Degen

 

These days, there are few books that just grab me and don’t let go. Seldom Seen Road: Burnt River Mysteries by John Degen is one of those books. Maybe because I identified so closely to the central character, Mark Roth. His grief and his isolation very much hit home for this reader.

 

Life often happens in unplanned and devesting ways. Living in the isolated cabin on the north shore of Lake Huron was planned, in a way. After all, they had bought the cabin and planned to live there a lot once Mark retired. The two of them aging day by day together. He never contemplated the unthinkable. Mark never planned on being a widower.  

 

But, he is.

 

Sara is gone and he spends a lot of his waking time at the cabin  drinking in isolation. His life has closed down to visits with a police cousin who patrols the area, fishing, baseball games, an occasional phone call or visit with their academic daughter, and all the booze one man alone can drink. Their daughter, Stephanie, is a criminalist and college professor living many hours away in Thunder Bay. He is a lonely man living at a very isolated cabin deep in the woods and locked in a world of grief and loss.

 

As the book opens, Mark Roth is out in his boat and fishing as the night begins to overtake Lake Huron. By way of his hearing aids, a Bluetooth connection, and his cellphone, he is listening to the visiting Toronto Blue Jays take on the Cleveland Indians at the stadium several hundred miles to the south. It is a nice night and he is deeply focused on the game and the images he sees of it by way of the audio byplay.

 

It is only when he can no longer see his bobber floating in the darkness, and can easily see the lights of a large tanker coming far too close for his very small craft, that he decides it is time to go back to the shore. He reels his last cast in, fires up the boat motor and running lights, and swivels in his seat to look at the nearby shoreline and the lights of the very small town.

 

It is only then that he sees the strobing lights of at least eleven emergency vehicles lined up around the mouth of the river as well as numerous more flying down the Trans-Canada Highway at high speed. Something very bad has happened and he realizes he can also hear sirens like crazy. The small town of Burnt River is hopping tonight.

 

He heads back in to the marina where he rented the boat earlier and finds the owner, Madeline Colby. She says somebody was found in the water, tangled up in the roots of a tree on her shoreline. A kid at the local diner saw the man and freaked out. Soon, Mark’s cousin, Constable Jeremy Roth, was first on the scene and jumped into the cold waters to rescue the guy.

 

Not that he actually needed to do that as the man had been long dead by the time Jeremy got to him. And it wasn’t just a few minutes dead either. Snagged in the limbs of a fallen tree, the dead man had very live lamprey eels feeding off his face. From the way the body appears, somebody murdered the man, and then came here to dump the body. The killer or killers most likely expected the body to drift out into the cold deep waters of Lake Huron to never be seen again. So much for that.

 

Who is this man and why was he murdered?

 

Identifying the dead is the easy part. Why it happened and who did it is a puzzler. Mark Roth has considerable interest as his cousin, Jeremy, is involved thanks to his actions. Constable Jeremy Roth may be on the outside of the case looking in, for a variety of reasons, but he does have some access, and Mark wants all the details.

 

If Stephanie had her way, her dad would abandon the isolated cabin and move to her in Thunder Bay or in a home somewhere where he wasn’t alone. She worries. She always did, but it is way worse with her mom gone and how her dad is in the aftermath. She is very aware that her dad is doing little more than marking time. The last thing she wants is for him to start poking around at the fringes of a murder.

 

Yet, that case seems to be the one thing that gets her retired dad going a bit. His life was in music, not police work. But, he is very interested and wants to bounce case ideas off of her despite the fact that she is an academic and not an actual investigator. A part of her, whether she truly wants to admit it, interests her as well. A murder like this just does not happen in Burnt River.

 

Yet, it did.

 

That murder is just the start of things in this complicated and highly atmospheric mystery read. Shifting in point of view to follow Mark, Jeremy, Stephanie, and others, the case gets bigger and bigger. Quite a lot is going on in these characters lives and even more is going on outside them. The woods may be lovely, dark, and deep. But they hold a lot of menace and violence as well.

 

Billed as the first book in the Burnt River Mysteries series, the foundation is well laid in Seldom Seen Road. The read is strongly recommended.

 

Make sure you read the author’s guest post on setting, Is that a real place?, at Kings River Life Magazine.

 


 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4wY3xCO

 

 

John Degan’s website: https://www.jkdegen.com/

  

 

My digital ARC reading copy came from the publisher, Latitude 46 Publishing, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026