Mystery
Weekly Magazine: November 2017 opens with “The Sugar Witch” by R.S. Morgan. Melissa wants Angelo
dead and wants his help. The 500K Angelo has stashed in the house is another inducement
beyond what Melissa has already given him.
Cilly had a plan and pulled it off in “Her
Father’s Killer” by Joseph D’Agnese. The blindfolded man strapped to the chair
at the end of the dock has no idea how much trouble he is in. Waylon is his
name and he will soon know how much trouble he is in as Miss Priscilla Mae Gregson
is going to settle some old scores and get answers in this tale set during WWII.
Betting on just about anything include
the Thanksgiving dinner is tradition in the family. A tradition that encourages
some folks to kill and others to take elaborate precautions in “Day After
Thanksgiving Soup” by Debra H. Goldstein.
Mrs. Box likes to play games with
people when she is out and about. She often does that with a spider in her
purse despite her husband warning her such activities are a bad idea. “In The
Last Evil” by David Vardeman, Mrs. Box has her target picked out on the train
and is looking so forward to his reaction at the final moment.
The concept of ghosts and a lot more is
at work in “A Passionate Belief In Ghosts” by Tom Tolnay. As the dinner conversation/
argument continues between George Putnam and Herbert Jarvis continues, dusk
settles across London the gas lamps light the streets below. Before long the argument
between the authors is interrupted by the arrival of the neighbor from downstairs,
Mrs. Edward Whitby, who has a problem and needs their help.
There is always that one kid in class.
In “Only We Know” by Stef Donati that one kid is quite the challenge for
the class clown.
Andrew and our narrator have a plan in
“Search For Bread” by Edward Palumbo. It starts with dinner and the waiter
named Doug. Doug has a secret and the narrator wants it.
The issue closes with the mysterious
meatball autopsy by Peter DiChellis. Two detectives have a murder on their
hands as the victim was shot in the back of the head in case that might have
been retaliation. The answer to the November You-Solve-It it can be found in
the December
issue of Mystery Weekly Magazine.
The issue concludes with the answers to
the October You-Solve-It puzzles.
Mystery Weekly Magazine: November 2017
is not one of those issues often seen during the holidays which would be all
about the given holiday. Only one story in the issue uses Thanksgiving as a
reference point. That story and all the others in the issue have plenty of surprises
as the complicated characters go about their business. Along the way they entertain readers in tales
that don’t easily fit the mold of predictability.
Mystery
Weekly Magazine: November 2017
ASIN: B0771PSNK4
eBook
(available in print format)
70
Pages
$2.99
For
quite some time now I have been gifted a subscription by the publisher with no
expectation at all of a review. From time to time I will be reviewing each
issue. To date, I have never submitted anything to this market and do not
intend to as long as I review the publication.
Kevin
R. Tipple ©2018
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