Mystery Weekly Magazine: July 2020 issue opens with “A Hazard Of The Job” by Coy Hall. The psychiatric hospital has a problem and her name is Avery Sarfield. She has been a patient for five months and does not seem to really belong in the facility. But, she is in the place and seemingly able to go anywhere she pleases despite the best efforts of Olsen. She is going to get him fired and he as to figure out how she is doing it and why.
Next up is “Sir Oxnard” by Jeffery Hunt. He had been
a local problem before his family sent him away. The years passed and things
had been calm. Now Sir Oxnard is back and the upper crust of Cheshire County is
invited to come celebrate his return. The estate has had work done and a good
time for all is promised. While those invited are wary of a prank, as Sir
Oxnard is legendary for his pranks, they went to see the renovations and are
bound to attend thanks to the societal rules they live by each day.
Sometimes the cause of death, even though obvious, is
not enough. Sometimes one needs to know the why and that means you need to know
what was going through the mind of the person before the fatal event. Such is the case here in “Screen Shot” by
Teel James Glenn. Mr. Shadows of the Shadows Foundation is in Los Angeles and
working the case in this mystery tale that makes one nostalgic for all the old
space television shows.
Sometimes it takes time to catch the bad guy. In a
case that has gone on for quite some time, Donald Tucker Raffin did a horrible
thing thirty years ago. The time has come for justice in “Setting The Pick” by
April Kelly.
Working the target is also at work in “Tombstone
Dodge” by Vincent H. O’Neil. The job is undercover. The locations are two self-storage
sites. Unarmed but in uniform, he is supposed to walk each site for an hour and
alternate back and forth. Call the cops if there is trouble and otherwise mind
your business. Easy enough, but that is not the real reason he is here.
Brooklyn South Homicide Detective Bragg got the call
from Madeline and went over to investigate the package left on her doorstep. It
might be the work of a bomber that has been placing IED’S in various Brooklyn
neighborhoods. Five have gone off in the last fifteen days and six are dead as
a result. He works alone until his boss says otherwise in “Star Witness” by Joe
Giordano.
Hurricane Norma did a lot of damage in “Wipeout” by
Adam Meyer and Dominic is looking to get paid. A governmental program is a way
to financially recover what they lost and maybe a bit more. He has a plan, but
he is going to need help.
Waking up to “The Corpse At The Foot Of My Bed” is
certainly not the best way to start the day. In this tale by Gordon Linzer, the
apartment dweller has a body problem. He knows that calling the cops cannot be
avoided as much as he would prefer to as he does not need all the questions.
The “You-Solve-It” this issue is “Poisoned
Relationship” by Laird Long. Every Thursday afternoon, the five elderly ladies
gather together to drink tea, eat, and talk about all sorts of stuff. Somebody
had to die and does.
The solution to Gallery Thief by Peter DiChellis
from the June “You-Solve-It” brings the issue to a close.
Mystery Weekly Magazine
sets the mystery parameters wide and such remains the case here with the June issue.
As always, these tales are clean of graphic language/violence and often focus
on cases driven by personal relationships. The events in this issue, and in
general, are not driven by random chance, but instead due to a direct
relationship that is often not clear until the last few paragraphs. Mystery
Weekly Magazine: July 2020 is also yet another solidly good issue.
For quite some time now I have been gifted a subscription by the publisher with no expectation at all of a review.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2021
These stories all sound good, Kevin. I have been checking out short story collections on my Kindle and I have a lot of them I had forgotten about.
ReplyDeleteI hope that you and Scott are doing well.
I have got so much on there and lose track of everything.
ReplyDeleteDoing okay. Hiding at home. I am supposed to have a dentist deal next Thursday and have no idea whether or not to do it. I need to go, but the Covid risk seems super high.