As Halloween ends for another year our oldest, Karl, will be depressed. Halloween is his favorite time of the year. He absolutely just loves it. Like his misguided worship of the New York Yankees, we tolerate it secure in the knowledge that this too is just not our fault.
Love you, Karl.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: It's Halloween, so . . . .
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: It's Halloween, so . . . .: Amazon.com: Carnival of Death (Dead Man #9) eBook: Bill Crider, Lee Goldberg, William Rabkin: Kindle Store : Matt Cahill is working security...
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Free for Kindle for One Day Only
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Free for Kindle for One Day Only: Amazon.com: Roman Dalton - Werewolf PI eBook: Paul D. Brazill: Kindle Store : When a full moon fills the night sky, Private Investigator Rom...
Death by Killing: Out Now: Manifesto Destination by Alec Cizak
Death by Killing: Out Now: Manifesto Destination by Alec Cizak: Full Dark City Press has given a home to ADR founding editor Alec Cizak's wonderful novella, a strange blend of Philip K. Dick and Raym...
Halloween 2013
I am not a fan of Halloween at all. But, in the spirit of the day I will be posting comics I find funny that are Halloween related during the course of the day. First up today is this one....
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
At the Scene of the Crime: Devil
At the Scene of the Crime: Devil: Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit smoking. —Steve McCroskey, Airplane! After a particularly bad murder investigation (allude...
Back Home
Slight improvement on one deal so they are leaving everything alone. A week from Friday we do it again.
Blood Work
This hump day finds us heading down to Texas Oncology at Medical City Dallas for blood work on Sandi. As far as we know, she is doing okay. The blood work determines all. Hopefully the numbers will come up better than they did last week.
And just maybe her beloved Red Sox will win it all tonight.
And just maybe her beloved Red Sox will win it all tonight.
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Stupefying Stories: SHOWCASE #8 RELEASED!
Stupefying Stories: SHOWCASE #8 RELEASED!: For the latest news, latest download links, and best of all, FREE STORIES, check out our companion webzine, STUPEFYING STORIES SHOWCASE , re...
The Education of a Pulp Writer: The Little Boy Inside and Other Stories
The Education of a Pulp Writer: The Little Boy Inside and Other Stories: "The Little Boy Inside" was one of the premium short stories published at BEAT to a PULP. A toppermost of the pulpermost to slig...
The Education of a Pulp Writer: The Little Boy Inside and Other Stories
The Education of a Pulp Writer: The Little Boy Inside and Other Stories: "The Little Boy Inside" was one of the premium short stories published at BEAT to a PULP. A toppermost of the pulpermost to slig...
What Sells E-Books Today?
That is the question a lot of self published authors, including myself, are asking. We know the gold rush is over and now it is harder than ever to move our books. Dave Zeltserman has a few thoughts here in a piece well worth reading.
One thing really jumped out at me since I do so many reviews. He writes:
"Online book reviews: Web reviews seldom sell more than a couple of books--print or ebook the same."
While I don't think it is the responsibility of a reviewer to sell books (or stop somebody from buying a book either) it is rather depressing to have what amounts to be so little impact.
One thing really jumped out at me since I do so many reviews. He writes:
"Online book reviews: Web reviews seldom sell more than a couple of books--print or ebook the same."
While I don't think it is the responsibility of a reviewer to sell books (or stop somebody from buying a book either) it is rather depressing to have what amounts to be so little impact.
Dallas MWA-- Reminder - Get Prosecuted on Saturday, Nov 2
As received earlier today:
--
James E. Gaskin
http://www.gaskin.com
Writer / Consultant / Speaker
Latest book: Texas Hysterical Society
November 2 - Greg Miller, former Tarrant County Assistant District Attorney
Greg
Miller was an Assistant Criminal District Attorney for Tarrant County
from 1987 until 2013. At the time of his retirement, he was one of the
Deputy Chief Prosecutors for the Felony Division, a position he held
since 1997. In addition to supervising felony court teams, he also
supervised the Homicide-Gang Unit.
He
received his BBA from TCU in 1976; his Master’s Degree in Criminal
Justice from UTA in 1984; and his law degree from SMU in 1987. He has been Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization since 1993.
Prior
to joining the District Attorney’s Office, he was a Fort Worth Police
Officer. Among his assignments he was a Crime Scene Investigator and
Homicide Detective.
He
frequently lectures at Tarrant County Law Enforcement agencies on such
topics as arrest, search & seizure, confession law, and interviewing
techniques.
He is now on the staff of Behavioral Measures & Forensic Services as a Polygraph Examiner.
The
Dallas MWASW group meets the first Saturday of each month at Texas Land
& Cattle, 812 South Central Expressway, Richardson, TX 75080.
Meeting time is 9:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.There is a $5.00 door fee, cash only. All who attend are invited to remain for lunch. Contact info: james@gaskin.com
James E. Gaskin
http://www.gaskin.com
Writer / Consultant / Speaker
Latest book: Texas Hysterical Society
Write More? Maybe Not
A lot of self published authors these days make a case that one has to write several books a year to gain increasing sales. But, this idea of "write more" may be fatally flawed. Author Libby Fischer Hellman (one heck of an author you should be reading by the way) explains why that isn't the answer in her post here titled "New Rule: No more Binge Publishing."
Flat Out Funny
For the writers among us, I stumbled across this piece doing a critique on the Bible. You can read it here titled "God's Workshop" by Sam Apple. Funny stuff.
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Sandi Crafting Christmas Vests
CrimeFictionWriter: Guest post
CrimeFictionWriter: Guest post: Today I take John Floyd's spot at SleuthSayers, a group blog by and for mystery writers, when I write about how to "Market-First, W...
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Free for Kindle for a Limited Time
Nice to see this making the rounds elsewhere....
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Free for Kindle for a Limited Time: Amazon.com: RESCUE eBook: Earl Staggs: Kindle Store : A Mini Novel in 5 Chapters (9500 Words). Tall Chambers leads a secretive agency which ...
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Free for Kindle for a Limited Time: Amazon.com: RESCUE eBook: Earl Staggs: Kindle Store : A Mini Novel in 5 Chapters (9500 Words). Tall Chambers leads a secretive agency which ...
Possible Bad Food
Lots of places on the updated list regarding Reser's Fine Foods, Inc. as well as a lot more products. Go to the FDA webiste and check the list. Stay safe.
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm372345.htm?source=govdelivery&utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm372345.htm?source=govdelivery&utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery
Cowboys
Cowboys did it again up in Detroit. Makes their record 4-4 which is not getting the job done.
Somebody is going to have to take Dez Bryant to the side and explain to him how to act. Despicable behavior on the sidelines today. I have a feeling what happened today with Dez and his sideline temper tantrums will be a lingering issue.
Somebody is going to have to take Dez Bryant to the side and explain to him how to act. Despicable behavior on the sidelines today. I have a feeling what happened today with Dez and his sideline temper tantrums will be a lingering issue.
Sample Sunday: Excerpt from "Bowling With The Big Dogs" by Tim Matson
Back during the
summer I was asked to take a look at Tim Matson's Bowling With The Big Dogs and provide some editorial
guidance. Not that it really needed much input from me. I enjoyed the book
immensely. I
simply LOVED this book. It ranks up there in my top five of the year as I think
it is an incredible read. I offered to Tim that if he would like to submit
something for Sample Sunday I would be glad to run it. He agreed and sent the long
sample below which follows the Amazon Synopsis…..
By the way, the book is FREE through Tuesday at Amazon.
Drinker. Smoker. Detective. Smartass.
Psychic?
The often sarcastic Moon Mullen isn't your average overweight detective who drinks to forget the past. Not that Moon Mullen doesn't drink--- he does and is very good at it. But, instead of drinking to forget, Moon Mullen does it to control the voices in his head because he hears thoughts and emotions. Being psychic has advantages in the detective business, but Moon Mullen's gift can be a curse as it is anything but consistent. A warped sense of humor allows him to survive, and a drive to catch a serial killer threatening his small Minnesota town gives Moon a chance to bring justice to the people in his past.
The often sarcastic Moon Mullen isn't your average overweight detective who drinks to forget the past. Not that Moon Mullen doesn't drink--- he does and is very good at it. But, instead of drinking to forget, Moon Mullen does it to control the voices in his head because he hears thoughts and emotions. Being psychic has advantages in the detective business, but Moon Mullen's gift can be a curse as it is anything but consistent. A warped sense of humor allows him to survive, and a drive to catch a serial killer threatening his small Minnesota town gives Moon a chance to bring justice to the people in his past.
Chapter One
Now
The guy with the shaker was beginning
to make my teeth itch.
While I’m sure that his parents had been ecstatic when he showed some
interest in music as a child, they probably didn’t envision this in
their wildest nightmares. He was holding it in both of his hands, caressing it
and shaking it like he had a secret he was just dying to tell. From the looks
of him, I think I knew what it was, but wish I didn’t.
The bar had a typically
backwoods Minnesotan name: The Deer Head Bar. This was owing to the stuffed
Monster Buck head that was mounted on an age-darkened plaque that looked almost
petrified. The story that goes along with the taxidermist’s work was equally
old, and had magnified to epic proportions. Apparently the old guy that shot
the Monster Buck just grazed a slug along the deer’s head, stunning it, and he
was so afraid that it was going to get away that he ran across the fifty yards
that separated them, jumped on his back, and stabbed him with his hunting
knife, somehow finding the massive heart. The scar on the head of the buck was
still visible, so I guess it was worth talking about. When I first moved here,
I innocently asked, “Why didn’t he just load another slug in his shotgun and
blow his brains out?” Obviously I’m not the hunter type, because the sneers and
gasps from the crowd nearly blew my head off.
“His gun
must have jammed! And besides which, you asshole, he had to save
the fucking rack!”
Didn’t
make any sense to me, but I don’t get off on blowing woodland creatures away.
When I have a craving for meat, I’ll get it from the butcher, where I’m sure it
would have said “moo” a few times before it meets its demise. In any case, I
found out later that the story of Roger the Monster Buck was somewhat less than
true. What really happened was that the hunter was driving back home after a
heavy night of drinking, hit the deer with his rusted Ford Escort and somehow
managed to rope it on what was left of the car’s roof. He then hid it in his barn
for two days until Deer Opener, the holiest of holy days, and brought it out to
the accolades of his peers. Not as Tarzan-like as the first tale, but much more
believable.
The bar
itself was typical in its Midwestern style. Along with Roger the Monster Buck,
the place had the usual assortment of neon signs advertising beer and liquor, a
long bar with a brass rail on the bottom to rest your feet, and several
long-legged stools with stools around them so you could eat your greasy bar
food and wash it down with the beverage of your choice in comfort. The bar was
shaped like a boxcar, long and thin, with a flyspecked picture window in the
front overlooking the main street through town, and bathrooms in the back, each
marked, appropriately, Bucks and Does. I knew enough about animals that I
didn’t screw that up. I also didn’t ask how the monster buck got the name
Roger. Sometimes it’s best to leave well enough alone.
It was
well enough into the evening that the Twins were playing on the
nicotine-smeared television, Radke on the mound, and the sounds of the game
were interrupted by the reverberations of heavy feet clomping over the dirty
carpet. A herd of plus-sized women were stampeding in, followed by a short,
thin guy holding a shaker.
Oh yeah,
remember him?
The women
all crowded around the karaoke machine, flipping switches and creating feedback
from the microphone, getting giggles from all of them. As I listened, I figured
out they were all on vacation, tired of the streets and bars of Minneapolis,
wanting to go native out here in the sticks. All of them were wearing Doc
Martins, and all of them had plaid shirts and blue jeans on. All of them also
had multiple earrings, and most of them had earrings implanted in places that
would not be considered anywhere near an ear. The leader of the flock stood on
the small stage and began to sing My Guy with her tongue so far in her
cheek that she could tuck it in her back pocket. The unfortunate pocket was
sitting on an ass that was slightly smaller than the city of Duluth, without
the benefit of the lake breeze.
The music,
and I use the term loosely, all but drowned out the announcers of the ball
game, but I watched anyway, trying to figure out how many hits Radke would give
up in the first inning. A guy a few stools down from me was muttering, “He’s
the ace? Christ! He’s given up four hits and there’s only one out!”
I didn’t
know why I was putting up with these fingernails across a mental blackboard. I
just stopped up to buy lottery tickets for Saturday’s drawing. Twenty-eight
million bucks, and I don’t mean Rogers. Enough money that all of this crap
would be a distant memory. But when I asked for my tickets, the thirst for a
Seven and Seven came on me like a teenager finding out that it doesn’t grow
hair on your palms like Mom always warned. And now the little flashes were
growing inside my head, and that usually didn’t start until I’ve drank five or
six, not the two that had already found their way down my throat.
The bar
owner, Steve, walked by with a “Howza boy?”, but with the prices in this place
it should have been “Howza credit rating?” I don’t really begrudge him the
price of the drinks; everybody has to make a buck. He’s also a friend of mine,
and has carried tabs for me when I’m a little short. He’s also driven me home
when I’ve had a few too many more times than I can count; one perk of spending
a ton of money in the same bar. Steve is as big as I am, six foot and a bit and
about 230 pounds, but his waist has remained at about 33 while mine blossomed
to 40. He was a high school football star, but blew out his knee before his
senior year. He glossed over his regret by saying that it gave him more time to
chase women and drink beer. His sandy colored hair was chopped Marine Corp
style, and he has one of those Fu Manchu mustaches that went out of style about
twenty years ago. I smiled at him, and saluted the haircut. Semper Fi,
baby!
The sound
of a cat being skewered on top of the karaoke machine was beginning to
overpower the ballgame and my thoughts of how much money I was wasting in this
place, so I turned back to our lovely gender-bending star as she started on her
rendition of that timeless classic, You Are the Wind Beneath My Wings,
the rest of them acting like groupies, their eyes glistening. The guy with the
shaker was another groupie, and he had the amazing foresight to bring his own
instrument…yeah, right…to this musical slaughter. Copious amounts of
hair gel were slathered on his black locks; spiking it up, giving the
impression of an instrument of torture I remembered from a PBS special on the
Spanish Inquisition. But I don’t think those nasty Catholics bleached the tips
a platinum blonde. Long silver teardrop earrings with rhinestones glued to them
hung from both of his small, flat ears, and sparkled when he shook his head.
And while he didn’t quite keep the beat, he did manage to giggle convulsively
at the end of each song, and squeak out, “Wow! That was so good! You are
so cool!” His voice sounded like a cross between South Park’s
Eric Cartman and Truman Capote. The high, effeminate giggle was a good match
for the cold sore on the side of his mouth that stuck out like Mama Cass at a
Bulimics-R-Us convention.
Our
shining star started to sing Swing Low, Sweet Chariot in a style that
mimicked William Shatner…For God’s sake Scotty, beam me the fuck up!...and
the groupies, as if on cue, put their arms around each other and began rocking
back and forth. One even sparked her lighter, tears glowing in her eyes.
Oh
brother.
I didn’t
know there was a part for a shaker, but our friend had access to musical
information that others didn’t. “Swing low…shaakashaaka…sweet chariot…shaakashaakashake…comin’
for to carry…shakeshakerattleshake…me hoooooome…rattlerattleshake…”
Apparently
cats do have nine lives, because this one was being tortured again. Not
skewered this time. Maybe a blowtorch? And never a spear handy when you need
one. I started to laugh out loud; I couldn’t help myself. They were so…awful.
As I looked up, wiping the tears from my eyes, I noticed the glares from the
moo camp. It reminded me how out of place an overweight, white heterosexual
male laughing at a bar full of overweight butch women and a guy with what
looked like radiation poisoning on the side of his mouth can be. Not to mention
that poor cat that was being killed repeatedly in the persona of karaoke. If
looks could kill, like the man says, they would all be doing 25 to life.
I have
nothing against gay people or transgender, or whatever other acronym you happen
to be. It seems to me that the world is a harsh place, and finding someone you
can love is a rare and wonderful thing, and if it happens to be your nature,
then you have the right to be just as miserable as every straight person. Get
married. Find out what a thrill a minute that is. But bad talent filled
with pretension? That, my friends, opens you up to all sorts of justifiable
smart-ass comments and outright laughter, in my book.
My gaze
was drawn back to the television as my erstwhile bar mate hollered out that
Radke actually struck someone out.
“In the
first inning! Unfucking believable!”
A grin
spread across my face. Maybe it wouldn’t be such a bad night after all, and
considering how shitty my life was as of late, it would be a nice change. But,
as usual, it wasn’t to be.
The short
hairs on the back of my neck were beginning to stand up, and a wave of…gross…started
to bounce around the inside of my head. A movement caught my eye, and as I
looked over at the herpes-inflamed rhythm dork for my All-American Girl Band,
my already twisted brain didn’t quite comprehend what I saw.
He was
still sitting there, but something wasn’t right. The irritating shaker thing
was on the bar, not in his greasy hands, as it was before. And something else.
Oh. I see.
His head is gone.
The body
was still kind of slumped on the bar stool, the fingers in the right hand
twitching slightly, and the blood from where his head used to be was beginning
to spray across the bar, splattering bottles and glasses as his heart kept
pumping.
Now, mind
you, in the split second I saw I noticed this, I came up with the response that
usually pops in my head when I have been drinking: You’ve finally done it
and gone absolutely bat-shit crazy. Where’s Elvis? He’s around somewhere…
The next
glance confirmed two things: I wasn’t crazy and the vibes I was feeling weren’t
false.
But there
was a guy wearing, of all things, bib overalls and a long-sleeved flannel shirt
with red and black stripes. He had it buttoned to the top, with a black
turtleneck peeking up to his jaw line. The trouble was that it wasn’t his jaw
line.
It was
Richard Nixon’s.
And then
the screaming started.
Tim Matson ©2013
By the way, the book is FREE through Tuesday at Amazon.
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Lesa's latest Contest
As posted elsewhere.....
This week, I'm giving away a copy of Spencer Quinn's latest Chet and Bernie mystery, The Sound and the Furry, and The Cat Sitter's Cradle by Blaize & John Clement. Details available on my blog, http://www.lesasbookcritiques.blogspot.com. Entries from the U.S. only, please.
Lesa
This week, I'm giving away a copy of Spencer Quinn's latest Chet and Bernie mystery, The Sound and the Furry, and The Cat Sitter's Cradle by Blaize & John Clement. Details available on my blog, http://www.lesasbookcritiques.blogspot.com. Entries from the U.S. only, please.
Lesa
Lesa Holstine
FREE Book Alert--- "RESCUE" by Earl Staggs
I was privileged to see an early version of this and it is good. Get your copy for free while you can....
Moments (Tense, Passing, Ordinary...): New Review: The Devil's Bones by Kevin Tipple
Moments (Tense, Passing, Ordinary...): New Review: The Devil's Bones by Kevin Tipple: " Reminiscent in style and tone of his many westerns, The Devil’s Bones is a very complicated mystery that pulls the reader in quickly...
KRL This Week-- JoAnna Carl,Kylie Logan, Jessie Crocket, Christopher Rice, Halloween, short stories, giveaways & more in KRL this week
As posted elsewhere earlier today....
Happy reading,
Lorie Ham
--
Up this morning in Kings River Life a fun Halloween cat
short story by mystery author Elaine Faber
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/the-shopping-bag-a-halloween-cat-short-story/
Also up this morning we review & giveaway a fun group
of Penguin food mysteries-"Drizzled With Death" by Jessie Crockett,
"Chili Con Carnage": A Chili Cook-Off Mystery By Kylie Logan,
"Murder and Marinara": An Italian Kitchen Mystery By Rosie Genova,
and "The Chocolate Moose Motive" By JoAnna Carl http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/penguin-fall-food-mysteries/
Also up a review & giveaway of Christopher Rice's new
supernatural thriller "The Heavens Rise" along with an interview
with Christopher
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/the-heavens-rise-by-christopher-rice/
Halloween season seemed the perfect time to write something
about TV vampires including my favorites on "Buffy The Vampire Slayer"
all the way to the new "Dracula" TV show--and some of these vampires
are detectives http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/vampires-on-tv/
Also up this morning a Halloween mystery short story by
Kathy Kingston
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/this-i-know-a-halloween-mystery-short-story/
And a Halloween short story with sort of a mystery twist by
Gail Farrelly http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/lights-out-a-halloween-short-story/
Mystery author Eric Mayer shares a fun Halloween blog post
with Kings River Life Magazine this morning
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/too-old-to-trick-or-treat/
For those who enjoy mystery combined with the supernatural
we have a review and giveaway of Steve Bein's new novel "Year of the
Demon" http://kingsriverlife.com/10/26/year-of-the-demon-by-steve-bein/
Lastly, over in KRL Lite we have a review of the latest John
Rebus novel by Ian Rankin http://kingsriverlife.blogspot.com/2013/10/standing-in-another-mans-grave-by-ian.html
Lorie Ham
--
KRL is now selling advertising & we have special discounts for
mystery authors & bookstores! Ask me about it!
Mystery section in Kings River Life http://KingsRiverLife.com
Check out my own blog at http://mysteryratscloset.blogspot.com/ mystery authors & bookstores! Ask me about it!
Mystery section in Kings River Life http://KingsRiverLife.com
Review: The Devil’s Bones by Larry D. Sweazy
Late August of 2004 finds Deputy Jordan McManus in
the bed of a former girlfriend early one morning while drought grips Dukaine, Indiana.
Like the drought that grips the area, McManus is gripped by the past. A past
that includes the love of his life, Ginny, who has been married for quite some time
and has changed. Whatever they had once, years ago, has been tarnished by time
and the fact she has a child and is married to Ed Kirsch. Not known for being
mentally stable at the best of times, were he to discover what McManus and
Ginny have done the results could be disastrous.
Instead of spending time with Ginny, McManus is
supposed to be out patrolling the area. If he had been out doing his job, he
might have been out at Longer’s Pond with his boss, Marshal Holister Coggins a little
quicker. He might have had more time to secure the scene. He might have been
able to examine the small skeleton in the mud a little bit. Maybe if he had
been more focused on doing his job, he might have been able to prevent the shooting
that took down Holister and wounded him by somebody who laughed like a maniac
while doing it.
Moving back and forth from 1985 to late August of
2004, author Larry D. Sweazy weaves a complicated tale of pain, loss, racism,
regret, and redemption in The Devil’s Bones. The read shifts
in point of view throughout the book as the pieces slowly come together in
various mysteries. Each secret has had a damaging ripple effect over the years
and has caused numerous events --many of which Deputy Jordan McManus has little
knowledge of despite being on the edge of many of them. Relying on his brother
nicknamed “Spider,” a tenuous decision at the best of times, McManus works to
clear his name and end the current carnage. The shooting of Holister and
himself is just the start of a wave of violence that will also uncover the past
and answer questions that have haunted the small town for years.
Reminiscent in style and tone of his many westerns, The
Devil’s Bones is a very complicated mystery that pulls the reader in
quickly and never lets go. Rich in details, characters, and setting, nothing is
simple in this read where drought finally exposes all the secrets of the past.
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3UESOeM
ARC provided by the author way back in October 2011 for my use in an objective review.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2013
Friday, October 25, 2013
I'm A Voracious Reader : Friday Featured Spotlight ~ Untreed Reads & 4 Myst...
I'm A Voracious Reader : Friday Featured Spotlight ~ Untreed Reads & 4 Myst...: Founded in 2008, Untreed Reads is a digital-first publisher and ebook distributor with one of the largest distribution channels in ...
Another Day--Another Memory
The picture below posted to Facebook today by folks at Rocky Mountain Park is of the stunningly beautiful Emerald Lake. Another place Dad and I made it to a few times over the years.
Back Home
As this was a cancer doctor and blood work morning. Some of the blood work came back off so medications have been adjusted. We go back Wednesday in the hopes that the blood work will be better. If not, I don't know what happens next. Worry about that if we have to.
FFB Review: "The West End Horror" by Nicholas Meyer---Reviewed by Patrick Ohl
Friday
means Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Patti Abbott here. After recently reviewing The
Julius Caesar Murder Case by Wallace Irwin Patrick Ohl is back today with
his thoughts on THE WEST END HORROR by
Nicolas Meyer. Patrick also has the At
The Scene Of the Crime blog here
so go by there after you read the below review….
It is March 1895 in London and Sherlock Holmes receives a strange visitor at 221B Baker Street. It is a peculiar, arrogant Irishman named George Shaw and he comes to consult Holmes about the murder of theatre critic Jonathan McCarthy. Holmes and Watson accept the case and begin to dig around McCarthy’s personal life, discovering that the man was universally despised in the West End. During their investigations, they run across all sorts of potential suspects, including Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker, and Sir Arthur Sullivan.
But if only the case had ended there – when
another murder occurs, Holmes and Watson discover something absolutely
horrendous is at the centre of this case, a secret so black it could unravel
the very fabric of British society. In fact, that’s why Watson decided to
entitle this case The West End Horror.
After being lost to the world for years, it fell into the hands of Nicholas
Meyer, who had also edited Watson’s The
Seven-Per-Cent Solution. It is unfortunate, then, that this was such a
sub-par outing for both Holmes and Watson.
I highly enjoyed Meyer’s first contribution
to Sherlockiana, The Seven-Per-Cent
Solution, in which he drastically revised the Canon and played all sorts of
games with historical figures, especially Sigmund Freud. It was interesting, it
was something different, it was fresh. Unfortunately, the same adjectives
cannot be applied to The West End Horror:
it’s a conventional pastiche, and that’s that. It’s no better and no worse than
dozens of other pastiches of its kind. Actually, now that I think of it, it
might even be a bit on the worse side.
You see, it boils down to this: Holmes and
Watson are idiots. This was a weakness in The
Seven-Per-Cent Solution, but because of the book’s other delights as a
pastiche, I was able to ignore it. I have no idea if he’s doing it deliberately
or not, but it would seem that Nicholas Meyer is simply unable of springing a
surprise ending on the reader. Long before Holmes tumbles to the solution, it’s
screaming you in the face, especially after the mysterious actions of a police
coroner are brought into the plot. They’re really not all that mysterious, in
fact it’s rather obvious what the motivation behind these actions was. Not only
that, Holmes wastes a lot of time on really obvious red herrings. Simply put,
it’s remarkable how much time it took Holmes to figure it out. This case is
certainly not among his finest hours.
Although historical figures pop up in The West End Horror, their appearances
seem a lot more perfunctory this time around. Half the time we get heavy-handed
irony from the author about events that will occur in the near future, such as
Oscar Wilde’s infamous tiff with the law, or Sullivan’s death, or Bram Stoker’s
authorial efforts. It even steals words attributed to Winston Churchill at one
point, adding in a footnote that this dialogue has been “misattributed” to him
and it was really Holmes who spoke those words. It’s not as charming or as fun
as it all was with Freud, and it doesn’t really add anything new to the Canon.
Overall, I wish I could show more
enthusiasm for this book, but I just didn’t enjoy myself like I’d hoped. After
the high points of The Seven-Per-Cent
Solution, I was expecting something more inventive, more lively, and more
original than this book. At the end of the day this is a safe, conventional
pastiche that risks nothing and adds nothing notable to the Canon. I can with
clear conscience recommend skipping this one.
Patrick Ohl ©2013
The
nineteen-year-old Patrick Ohl continues to plot to take over the world when he
isn’t writing reviews of books he reads on his blog, At the Scene of the Crime.
In his spare time he conducts genetic experiments in his top-secret laboratory,
hoping to create a creature as terrifying as the Giant Rat of Sumatra in a bid
to take over the world. His hobbies include drinking tea and going outside to
do a barbecue in -10°C weather.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Hiking
Years ago when I was a kid, Dad and Mom would frequently pack up the car and trailer, and the four of us would hit the road. We went all over Texas as well as most of the western states seeing the parks and monuments. Almost every year we spent some time on the way to somewhere or on the way back home at Rocky Mountain National Park. Many an hour was spent with my brother as well as my Dad hiking to this lake or that one.
While I was always glad to go I didn't appreciate it anywhere near as much as I should have. The stupidity of youth more than anything as I thought that someday I would be doing the same things with my family. That never happened.
My Dad is gone now and my Mom is not well. I have not been there in years and certainly can't hike there anymore. Much of what I remember has been destroyed by time, floods, fires, and other things. Some places still remain such as Dream Lake. It still is there. The picture below of Dream Lake showcasing the difference over 15 days earlier this month posted to Facebook today by the staff of RMNP brought back strong memories.
Memories are all we have these days. Back here in the real world, Sandi has blood work and a doctor appointment tomorrow morning down at Texas Oncology. Hopefully the news will be as good as it can be these days.....
While I was always glad to go I didn't appreciate it anywhere near as much as I should have. The stupidity of youth more than anything as I thought that someday I would be doing the same things with my family. That never happened.
My Dad is gone now and my Mom is not well. I have not been there in years and certainly can't hike there anymore. Much of what I remember has been destroyed by time, floods, fires, and other things. Some places still remain such as Dream Lake. It still is there. The picture below of Dream Lake showcasing the difference over 15 days earlier this month posted to Facebook today by the staff of RMNP brought back strong memories.
Memories are all we have these days. Back here in the real world, Sandi has blood work and a doctor appointment tomorrow morning down at Texas Oncology. Hopefully the news will be as good as it can be these days.....
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Mind Slices
I have not plugged this in awhile as I absolutely hate flogging my stuff. I would rather just write---something I seriously need to be doing--- and have things sell themselves. The real world does not work that way. Marketing is not something I enjoy.
A collection of my short fiction some of the tales lean towards the science fiction side, some lean towards mystery, and almost all of them are suspenseful in some way. Most stories also contain more than one genre. You can get it at the below links:
A collection of my short fiction some of the tales lean towards the science fiction side, some lean towards mystery, and almost all of them are suspenseful in some way. Most stories also contain more than one genre. You can get it at the below links:
Smashwords http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/243655
Barnes and Noble’s NOOK http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/mind-slices-kevin-tipple/1113576100?ean=2940044983076
If you have not yet read the book, I
hope you take a chance on it.
Kevin
At the Scene of the Crime: Elementary, My Dear Holmes!
At the Scene of the Crime: Elementary, My Dear Holmes!: This article was originally written for and published in the e-zine Mysterical-E . Now that there is a new issue with a new article, I am re...
QueryTracker Blog: How To Score That Book Review
A lot of good information here.....
QueryTracker Blog: How To Score That Book Review: If you want people to read your books, you need the get the right individuals to review them. I don’t mean your friends and famil...
QueryTracker Blog: How To Score That Book Review: If you want people to read your books, you need the get the right individuals to review them. I don’t mean your friends and famil...
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Pimpage: An Occasional Feature in Which I call Att...
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Pimpage: An Occasional Feature in Which I call Att...: I wrote a chapter of this one, but it's highly recommended, anyway. Amazon.com: Wolf Creek: Night of the Assassins eBook: Ford Fargo,...
This Is It!!---Barry's Book Sale
The deadline to order from Barry before he donates his remaining stock is still Saturday, October 26, 2013. Go here to http://www.barryergangbooksforsale.yolasite.com/
and order while you can. To those outside the U.S.: remember the weight of a package must be
under 4 pounds because Barry doesn't want to fiddle with the customs paperwork. He will still sell you more than 4 pounds' worth of books and ship them in lighter packages days apart.
You may or may not know that Barry has been donating 20 percent of his sales to help us each month. On behalf of the family we very much thank Barry and those of you who have bought books from Barry.
Kevin
You may or may not know that Barry has been donating 20 percent of his sales to help us each month. On behalf of the family we very much thank Barry and those of you who have bought books from Barry.
Kevin
Monday, October 21, 2013
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: New Poem at The 5-2
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: New Poem at The 5-2: The 5-2 | Crime Poetry Weekly, Annual Ebooks - Gerald So, Editor : F.J. Bergmann UNFASTENING A HOOK STUD
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: BEAT to a PULP Rerun in Memory of David King
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: BEAT to a PULP Rerun in Memory of David King: BEAT to a PULP :: Collision :: David King
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Sample Sunday: Excerpt from "The Rules" by Mark Troy
This
week Texas author Mark Troy shares an excerpt from his new mystery The Rules. The synopsis below is
followed by an excerpt from the book:
Ava Rome is
a personal protection specialist. She follows three rules: First, a
professional never gets into a relationship with her principal; second, a
professional never leaves her principal; and, third, a professional never calls
attention to herself or her principal.
Ava takes on
the job of protecting Paul, the son of a wealthy and powerful man from a
country where murder and kidnapping are means of doing business. Paul convinces
her he is not like his father and has no wish to continue in the family
business.
Paul is a
few years younger than Ava and very attractive to women. How attractive becomes
apparent when another woman makes an advance on him. The incident draws
attention to Ava and Paul, violating her third rule. The incident also forces
Ava to recognize that she, herself, is attracted to him. In order not to
violate her first rule, she decides she must violate her second rule and leave
him. Paul, however, operates under a different set of rules and won't let her
leave.
The Rules
by
Mark Troy
Rule
Number Three
Paul
was not his real name. He could be Paolo or Pablo, or, more likely, something
entirely different. A person who wants to assimilate will anglicize his name,
but a person who wants to hide will change names completely.
Ava
Rome is my real name. I protect people who need to hide.
I
met Paul and his father in the house they rented in an exclusive area of
Honolulu.
"My
father is a wealthy and powerful man in our country, Miss Rome," Paul
said. "He has powerful enemies."
They
didn't name the country and I'd agreed not to ask. I guessed a South American
nation. They spoke either Spanish or Portuguese. Not being a linguist, I
wouldn't know which.
Paul
spoke good English, lightly accented. Later I learned he had spent most of his
life in exclusive private schools, insulated from his father's business.
He
sounded better than he looked and he looked incredible. Average height, wavy
dark hair, perfect teeth to go with his gorgeous features, and the lithe build
of a soccer player. A striker, maybe, a position requiring explosive speed. I
figured him about mid-twenties. He wore an open-neck sport shirt and chinos. He
rocked the chinos.
You
start thinking like that, you should leave.
But
I didn't. I was drawn to the gold cross below his throat, framed by the open collar
of his shirt. It was small and delicate such as a woman would wear. I wondered
if the cross had belonged to a woman in his life. His mother, perhaps. If so, I
liked him for it.
I
didn't like anything about his father.
"Who
are your enemies?" I asked.
Paul
translated the question into his own language for his father who dismissed it
curtly.
"My
father says that is not for you to know."
"If
I'm to protect you, I need to know the threats."
"If
there's a threat," Paul said.
"You
don't believe you're in danger?"
"My
father has become more than a little paranoid," Paul said. "Who
wouldn't, given the life he lives?" He shrugged and flashed me a sheepish
grin. "Between you and me, the danger is mostly in his imagination."
I
scanned the lanai. At the ocean end,
two men played cards at an umbrella table. A third man leaned against the bar
in the living room. A fourth man maintained a watch near the front door, out of
my sight. He'd been about to pat me down when Paul intervened. Four men, one
type. Dark slacks, white sport shirts, cheap hair cuts. They were bulked up,
but not muscled-up. Their handguns printed under their shirts. They'd do a good
job against a normal threat, but wouldn't last long against professionals.
They
wouldn't last long against me.
"These
aren't imaginary thugs," I said. "Paranoia often has a basis in
fact."
"The
laws in our country are weak and ineffective. To stay in business, my father
has to be strong. Murder, kidnapping, these are the means employed by his
competitors. My father does not wish it, but it is what one must do."
Mark Troy ©2013
Ava Rome returns in The Splintered Paddle, coming in June 2014
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Porch Time With Sandi
From earlier today...
She wasn't happy I was taking her picture again. The steroids continue to help her breathe and grow her hair back. They don't make her a happy camper.....
I'd tripped this morning over the hose from the machine and hit the floor hard (no doubt the neighbors loved that) so she decided she would use one of her cylinder tanks for travel out on the back porch today.
She wasn't happy I was taking her picture again. The steroids continue to help her breathe and grow her hair back. They don't make her a happy camper.....
I'd tripped this morning over the hose from the machine and hit the floor hard (no doubt the neighbors loved that) so she decided she would use one of her cylinder tanks for travel out on the back porch today.
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Once Again Texas Leads the Way
Been a long time since I was out by Gun Barrel City heading to one of my fishing spots.....
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Once Again Texas Leads the Way: Houston Chronicle : Authorities say a man from a Texas town called Gun Barrel City was caught with a loaded revolver in his carry-on bag at...
Bill Crider's Pop Culture Magazine: Once Again Texas Leads the Way: Houston Chronicle : Authorities say a man from a Texas town called Gun Barrel City was caught with a loaded revolver in his carry-on bag at...
Event: Dallas MWA Meeting - Saturday, November 2, 2012
From James Gaskin and with his permission.....
November 2 - Craig Miller, former Tarrant County Assistant District Attorney
Greg
Miller was an Assistant Criminal District Attorney for Tarrant County
from 1987 until 2013. At the time of his retirement, he was one of the
Deputy Chief Prosecutors for the Felony Division, a position he held
since 1997. In addition to supervising felony court teams, he also
supervised the Homicide-Gang Unit.
He
received his BBA from TCU in 1976; his Master’s Degree in Criminal
Justice from UTA in 1984; and his law degree from SMU in 1987. He has been Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization since 1993.
Prior
to joining the District Attorney’s Office, he was a Fort Worth Police
Officer. Among his assignments he was a Crime Scene Investigator and
Homicide Detective.
He
frequently lectures at Tarrant County Law Enforcement agencies on such
topics as arrest, search & seizure, confession law, and interviewing
techniques.
He is now on the staff of Behavioral Measures & Forensic Services as a Polygraph Examiner.
Location:
The
Dallas MWASW group meets the first Saturday of each month at Texas Land
& Cattle, 812 South Central Expressway, Richardson, TX 75080.
Meeting time is 9:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.There is a $5.00 door fee, cash only. All who attend are invited to remain for lunch. Contact info: james@gaskin.com
--
James E. Gaskin
http://www.gaskin.com
Writer / Consultant / Speaker
Latest book: Texas Hysterical Society
Review: "The Rules" by Mark Troy
In The Rules Ava Rome is a protection
specialist. She keeps her clients alive while doing whatever is necessary to
stop the threat. To protect her clients she has to know everything about them
up front. The fact that she knows her latest client, “Paul” is lying about his
name and possibly other things is not a good sign. The issue with the name could
be for good reason. According to the father, a wealthy and powerful businessman
most likely from somewhere in South America, the threat against his son is very
real and he is willing to pay top dollar for someone of Ava’s skills.
All Ava Rome has to do is attend classes and other functions
with Paul while he works on his master’s degree in renewable natural resources.
Paul only needs one semester in Hawaii and then he goes back home. Ava will be
paid very well for the job with half now and half at the end of the semester if
Paul is still alive. All she has to do is keep him alive and not break any of
her rules.
Much easier said than done.
Readers familiar with the work of Texas author Mark
Troy and specifically the excellent Pilikia Is My Business and other
books will recognize Ava Rome as very similar to Private Investigator Val Lyon.
Both women are very good at their jobs while dealing with the occasional personal
temptation as well as men who don’t take them seriously. While the former can
generate internal conflict, the answer to the latter is often a simple hands on
demonstration of reality. Ava Rome is not about to forget her gun in the cookie
jar at 3 AM and she certainly isn’t about to trust everything she is told.
Featuring plenty of action, interesting characters,
and a heroine readers will love, The Rules is a powerful mystery
packed into a short story. It also gives readers a glimpse of Ava Rome who will
be back next summer in the mystery novel The Splintered Paddle from Five Star
Publishing.
The Rules
Mark
Troy
http://www.marktroy.net/
Ilium Books
Ilium Books
September
2013
ISBN#
978-0-98480813-7
E-Book
50
Pages (estimated)
$0.99
Material
supplied by the author in exchange for my objective review. Tomorrow, here on
the blog, you will have the opportunity to read an excerpt from The
Rules as part of the Sunday Sample series.
Kevin
R. Tipple ©2013