Lesa's Book Critiques: THE POSTSCRIPT MURDERS BY ELLY GRIFFITHS
Sunday, February 28, 2021
Crime Watch Review: MURDER SEES THE LIGHT by Howard Engel
Saturday, February 27, 2021
Crime Watch Review: THE GETAWAY by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen, narrated by Kate Mara
Jungle Red Writers: Remembering Margaret Maron
KRL This Week Update for 2/27/2021
Up in KRL this morning reviews and giveaways of another fun group of mysteries-"A Catered Book Club Murder": A Mystery with Recipes by Isis Crawford, "A Lady Compromised": A Rosalind Thorne Mystery by Darcie Wilde, "Wine Tastings Are Murder": A Poppy McAllister Mystery by Libby Klein, and "Murder With a View": A House-Flipper Mystery by Diane Kelly https://kingsriverlife.com/02/27/end-of-february-mystery-catchup/
And a review and giveaway of "Valentino Will Die" by Donis Casey along with a fun interview with Donis https://kingsriverlife.com/02/27/valentino-will-die-by-donis-casey/
We also have the latest mystery Coming Attractions from Sunny Frazier, along with a giveaway of "Shucked Apart" by Barbara Ross https://kingsriverlife.com/02/27/coming-attractions-faith-and-begorra-edition/
And a mystery short story by Guy Belleranti https://kingsriverlife.com/02/27/mystery-short-story-body-of-evidence/
For those who prefer to listen to Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast directly on KRL you can find the player here for the new episode featuring the mystery short story "Still Life" written by Lori Rader-Day, and read by local actor Cha Yang https://kingsriverlife.com/02/27/mysteryrats-maze-podcast-still-life-by-lori-rader-day/
Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Kaye George about friends and sidekicks. You can also enter to win an ebook copy of her new book coming out next month "Into the Sweet Hereafter"
https://kingsriverlife.com/02/24/friends-and-sidekicks/
And Ellen Byron about a bracelet and a character in her new book "Long Island Iced Tina" as Maria DiRico. You can also enter to win a copy of the book
https://kingsriverlife.com/02/24/a-jewel-of-a-rainbow/
Up on KRL News and Reviews this week a review and ebook giveaway of "Kiss 'N Tell" by Kathi Daley https://www.krlnews.com/2021/02/kiss-n-tell-by-kathi-daley.html
And a review and giveaway of "Closely Harbored Secrets" by Bree Baker https://www.krlnews.com/2021/02/closely-harbored-secrets-by-bree-baker.html
Happy reading,
Lorie
SHOTSMAG CONFIDENTIAL: THEAKSTON OLD PECULIER CRIME WRITING FESTIVAL RETURNS FOR 2021
Crime Watch Review: HOLLYWOOD HOMICIDE by Kellye Garrett, narrated by Bahni Turpin
Scott's Take: Uncanny Avengers: The Red Shadow (Volume 1) by Rick Remender and Artist John Cassaday
Uncanny Avengers: The
Red Shadow (Volume 1) by Rick Remender and Artist John
Cassaday is an Avengers and X-Men team title
spinning out of the AvX event where those two teams went to war against each
other. After the death of Charles Xavier and the imprisonment of Cyclops for
his crimes, tensions between the Avengers and the X-Men have never been higher.
Mutants are feared even more than they were.
Captain America has realized that the Avengers have
not done enough to help mutants so he is putting together a team. A team of representatives
from both the Avengers and the X-men who are now trying to work together for a
better world. As he is already team
leader for the Avengers, he puts Havoc in as team leader, Havoc is Cyclops’s
younger brother and wants to somehow atone for his brother’s sins. Scarlet
Witch, Thor who is the God of Thunder as well as Wolverine and Rogue from the
X-Men.
Wolverine and Rogue are not dealing with the death
of Charles. Wolverine is also trying to come to terms with the fact that he
killed his own son to save many other lives. Wolverine’s estranged son was
going to murder every single one of Wolverine’s students and Wolverine had to
stop him one way or another.
A team in not much more than name only has to face a
major threat. The Red Skull has grafted parts of Charles Xavier’s brain into
his own brain giving the Nazi telepathic powers. He now, among other things,
can even bend heroes to his will. He wishes to use Charles’s Xavier’s gifts to
help him turn the American population against the mutant community and create a
new Nazi regime. A united team would have a hard time stopping him and this
team is anything but united.
Full of action, plenty of character development, and
incredible artwork are present in Uncanny Avengers: The Red Shadow
(Volume 1) by Rick Remender and Artist John Cassaday. These characters
flourish as written by Rick Remender. He clearly has a love of minor details
that only super fans of the Marvel Universe would know such as Thor having an
addiction to lattes. Despite being written in 2013, a lot of the plot points
brought up are still very relevant now. I recommend this book to anyone who
loves either the X-Men or the Avengers.
Uncanny
Avengers: The Red Shadow (Volume 1)
Rick Remender
Artist John
Cassaday
http://albertmoy.com/ArtistGalleryTitles.asp?ArtistId=506
Panini Books
(Marvel)
https://www.marvel.com/comics/collection/46613/uncanny_avengers_vol_1_the_red_shadow_hardcover
March 2013
ISBN# 978-1-7851-6844-7
Hardback (eBook format available)
My reading copy came from the North Oak Cliff Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Scott A. Tipple ©2021
Friday, February 26, 2021
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Great Mortality: An Intimate History of the Black Death, the Most Devastating Plague of All Time by John Kelly
Beneath the Stains of Time: The Darkest Fathoms: "Caribbean Crisis" (1962) by Desmond Reid
Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 58 Calls for Submissions in March 2021 - Paying markets
Bitter Tea and Mystery: The Dancer at the Gai-Moulin by Georges Simenon
FFB Review: The Blade Itself: A Novel by Marcus Sakey
After you read my reminder review today, make sure you check out the reading suggestions from Patti Abbott and Aubrey Hamilton.
This is a case where the basic premise has been done
to death. Two young men living a life of crime when one is caught and serves
jail time. He comes back home and expects things to resume where they left off.
The other has been scared straight, as it were, and isn't interested in going
back. Such is the case here. Yet, the execution of the story is how it works
for the reader.
The years have passed and Danny has tried to forget
the past which is never far away. Once Danny, Evan and Patrick among others
were part of a gang of young toughs who considered themselves invincible. With
instincts honed by working the streets, they moved from score to score taking
what they wanted and not worrying about the consequences. Danny usually worked
with Evan as he did that fateful night.
That one night cost Danny in ways he won't talk
about and cost Evan a long term sentence in Statesville maximum security. While
Danny still hangs around Patrick, Danny has become what they referred to as a
"civilian." He has changed his ways and isn't about to go back and
risk losing it all including the love of his life, Karen. Then, Evan returns
and is looking for pay back and gratitude for Evans not talking to the cops.
Danny's house of cards perfect life begins to teeter and Evan plans to bring it
all down.
In what is billed as a debut novel and certainly
does not read like one, author Marcus Sakey skillfully weaves a complex tale. A
tale that is on first glance, stereotypical in the idea of the con coming back
home and looking to be rewarded. And yet through back story, flashbacks, etc.
The novel quickly becomes much more. Evan is portrayed as evil initially and
yet overtime is seen to have an element, not exactly of goodness, but of
something more positive. Danny, a flawed hero, is carried forward not only by
the love of a good woman but by memories of what he caused as well as the life
his father led.
If has become clichéd to believe and live up to the
standards that our parents raised us to. That is exactly what happens in this
novel. Forces set into motion in childhood rippled forward through their lives
and ended in a violent climax in a Chicago construction yard. The past is never
really past and everything influences our actions each and every day.
The result is a complex read that touches on social
issues while at the same time providing a heck of a good tale, at a fast pace
with deep characters. This is a good stuff and well worth your time.
The Blade
Itself: A Novel
Marcus Sakey
St. Martin's
Minotaur
ISBN
#0-312-36031-2
Hardback (also available in eBook and paperback formats)
307 Pages
Kevin R. Tipple © 2007, 2012, 2021
Thursday, February 25, 2021
Crime Watch Review: THE CUT by Chris Brookmyre
Crime Watch Review: POLICE AT THE STATION AND THEY DON'T LOOK FRIENDLY by Adrian McKinty
The Rap Sheet: Bullet Points: Wonders Never Cease Edition for 2/25/2021
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Appalachia, Covid, Our Malady, Doctors Blackwell, Kevin Wilson, Darynda Jones
Crime Watch Review: BLACK CLOUD by Sandi Wallace
Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 53 Writing Contests in March 2021 - No entry fees
Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: "MIS' ELDERKIN'S PITCHER"
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Uncommon Type by Tom Hanks
Short Story Wednesday Review: Never Kill A Cat And Other Stories by Miles Archer
Today I remind you of Never Kill A Cat And Other Stories by Miles Archer.
This short story collection by Miles Archer opens
with the signature story “Never Kill A Cat.” Dolores Sorrento is elderly, very
lonely, and spends much of her time reading mystery books. When she isn’t
reading, she is talking to her many feline companions. That is when she is not
dealing with Tommy Cooper and his parents who live across the street. Tommy
Cooper is the terror of the neighborhood. Now, he has gone too far and has to
pay for this crime.
Renn is supposed to be focused on the live fire
exercise at the training grounds. That is a bit difficult since he and Becky
had a major fight in the hours preceding. In “Murder In Uniform” Renn does what
he needs to do to get through the day.
It is October of 1973 in San Francisco in “Nobody
Gets Outa Here Alive.” Freddy Jones has a job he despises, but at least he has
one. A routine trip for smokes on his way home turns into the most intense
experience of his life. It changes the whole way he considers the world.
Fortunately, his job has the tools needs to take the first steps along his new
path.
Brian Donovan has lost yet another job as “Eternal
Love” begins. He is a good worker, but annoys his coworkers with his attitude.
His day is going to get way worse when he gets home.
The next several stories feature Doug Mc Cool over
the years. As time passes, Doug McCool gets more and more into the private
investigator line of work. That process
starts with “For What It’s Worth” where it is 1972 and McCool has returned from
Vietnam. He is in San Francisco spending a lot of time in the VA rehab. While
there he spends a lot of time with a guy Johnny White. The same Johnny White
who, after discharge from rehab, became heavily involved with the Black
Panthers and changed his name to Karim Africanus.
After about a year or so, McCool got a call from an
attorney representing Johnny/Karim. There had been an FBI raid and Jonny/Karim
was under arrest for the murder of an informer named Perkins. The attorney
thinks that maybe McCool could help as some of those involved in the case might
be more willing to talk to a white guy instead of the African American lawyer.
Move forward in time a few years and McCool’s latest
client is Mrs. Washington in “Hell Hath No Fury.” Her daughter, Noorleen, has
been arrested for murder. A criminal defense attorney McCool knows by the name
of Peter Tallent told Mrs. Washington to hire McCool to do some leg work,
create a report, and he might take the case pro bono. Mr. Tallent is one of the
good guys and the case in interesting enough that McCool agrees to do a little
digging. It quickly is clear that Norleen is in a bind because of
circumstantial evidence. Once they had their suspect in the local jail they
quit working the case.
His next client is also in a bind, but not with the
cops. In fact, it is because of the San
Francisco cops, specifically one by the name of inspector Harry Stanton, that
Mr. Mori is in McCool’s office looking for help. Mr. Mori owns a waste hauling
company known as “South Metro Waste.” It operates in the south side of San
Francisco in the area formerly known as “Butchertown.” The meat packers the area is known for are no
longer around, but South Metro Waste that was started in 1901 is going strong.
So strong that the mob is trying to take over his
business unless he sells out to an outfit known as “United Haulers” based out
of Cleveland, bad things will start happening to his family. McCool likes the
guy and agrees to poke a little and see if he can figure out a way to get Mori
and his family clear of the problem in “The Art of War.”
The beautiful Monica Grant appears in his office
doorway in “Il Beso Di Morta.” Married to an investment banker of some type,
her husband is apparently in some sort of business deal with a guy known as
Dominic Abbruzio. Good old Dominic is deep in the mob and is known by his
nickname “Razor.” Mrs. Grant wants McCool to get her husband out of the mess he
has gotten himself in to and to do it with our husband having a clue about
it. Good thing she can pay as that hat
will be easier said than done.
Author Miles Archer shifts narrator gender with his
next story titled “The Miller’s Wife’s Tale.”
Told from the perspective of Barbara Brown, McCool’s everything; she has
been left behind to hold the fort while McCool cavorts in Mexico with a certain
lady. She is not happy as her hair needs
a touch up, she has a headache and feels bloated, and is about to have her time
of the month as well as deal with clients.
One of those clients is Tammy Wingate who wants them
to investigate the string of prostitute murders in the city thanks to a serial
killer. She is the executive director of COYOTE, a prostitute support
organization. She also has connections to the important people in the city of
San Francisco. The cops aren’t getting anywhere in their case so Inspector Dave Toshi sent her their way.
The good Inspector had no idea McCool was in Mexico,
but considering Barbara is the real brains of the outfit it should not be a
problem. It is one of two cases that she will handle in this story.
The final McCool tale is one of pain titled “The
Black Hole.” McCool now lives in a trailer contemplating suicide by bottle or
gun. It has been months since he had a client and is not in the shape for one.
But, a woman by the name of Susan Sharpe is nothing if not persistent.
She is divorced and very glad to be rid of her
ex-husband. While packing up some stuff across she came across a computer disk.
Her ex works for a petroleum company and apparently didn’t take it with him.
Somebody is making threats over the disk, Susan is scared, and needs McCool’s
help. The first thing to do, after he learns what is on it, is return the damn
disk. How to do that is a problem not easily solved.
The nine tales that make up Never Kill A Cat And Other Stories are all highly atmospheric and very complicated tales featuring fully developed characters. The McCool tales make up two thirds of the book while providing some very good reading. Those stories frequently play with the classic private detective stereotypes while going off in unconventional tangents. The result is a read recently published by Untreed Reads that is highly entertaining and well worth your time.
Never Kill A Cat And Other Stories
Miles Archer
Untreed Reads
November 2015
ASIN: B017QGLDGU
E-book
181 Pages
$2.99
Material supplied by the publisher in exchange for my objective review.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2015, 2021
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Beneath the Stains of Time: Stratagems in the Snow: "The Spy and the Snowman" (1980) by Edward D. Hoch
Crime Watch Review: SHIVER by Allie Reynolds
Crime Watch Review: THE DEATH HOUSE by Sarah Pinborough
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Mimi Lee Gets a Clue: A Sassy Cat Mystery by Jennifer Chow
Crime Watch Review: THE DEVILS YOU KNOW by Ben Sanders
Monday, February 22, 2021
Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 16 Great Writing Conferences in March 2021
SleuthSayers: Your Tax Dollars at Work by Robert Lopresti
Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: Splintered Silence by Susan Furlong
Susan Furlong
is a contemporary American mystery writer. She has written two books as Lucy
Arlington in the Novel Idea mysteries. Under her own name she published three
books in the Georgia Peach series and three books in the Bone Gap Travellers
series. The Bone Gap Travellers stories are set in Appalachian Tennessee, where
some of the descendants of the nomadic Irish Travellers who immigrated to the
United States during the potato famine settled. The Irish Travellers are
another of the sects in the American melting pot that, like the Amish, live
apart from the greater culture. Furlong describes how she came to meet members
of the group in the Author’s Note in the first title in the series, Splintered
Silence (Kensington, 2017).
Splintered
Silence
introduces Brynn Callahan and her dog Wilco. Brynn is a former Marine who
served three tours of duty in the Middle East. Wilco was her working dog who
served as her partner in searching for dead and injured service members. They
were both severely injured when an IED exploded and were invalided out. Brynn
has returned to the only home she has ever known in Bone Gap, Tennessee, to
help her grandmother as her grandfather’s health fails. Brynn’s mother left her
with her grandparents when she was young and she never knew who her father was.
Brynn found a home and a career in the military and is at loose ends now that
it has ended.
Wilco’s
training kicks in on their first day back home and he finds a body in the woods
behind Brynn’s grandmother’s house. She meets the local law enforcement
representatives this way and runs headlong into the local prejudices against
her clan. Her clan members and even her family are suspicious of her, seeing
her as part of the outside world. On the other hand, the sheriff urges her to
support the homicide investigation in ways that she thinks would betray her family,
to whom she feels deep loyalty. These contradictory pulls on her set up an
ongoing conflict that Brynn is hard-pressed to resolve.
Brynn veers
first one way, then the other as she uses her investigative skills to keep a
clan member from being unjustly accused of the murder. Any loud noise sets off
her PTSD, and she struggles to keep her attacks hidden from those around her,
ashamed of the substantial scarring the IED blast left. A subplot addresses how
she interacts with the people she grew up with, contrasting their lives as
teenagers and the adults they grew to be.
Other mystery series have made effective use of the culture clash as a source of conflict for their main characters, as Furlong does here. Consider Linda Castillo’s Kate Burkholder, Aimee and David Thurlo’s Ella Clah, and Marilyn Meredith’s Tempe Crabtree for example. A well-plotted mystery and a thoughtful examination of cultural diversity and the ways it is often misunderstood.
·
Publisher: Kensington (December 26, 2017)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 272 pages
·
ISBN-10: 1496711661
·
ISBN-13: 978-1496711663
Aubrey Hamilton ©2021
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Beneath the Stains of Time: Premedicated Murder (1975) by Douglas Clark
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Weather Update
The power and the water continues to flow here at Casa Tipple and Home Eatery Library located in NE Dallas. We have been very lucky to have everything stay on and we both are very glad for that. This has been an incredibly stressful event and this old house has made a lot of noises I have not heard since coming back here in the summer of 2017. I have not been sleeping much, not that I do anymore since Sandi passed, but it was been way worse than normal. The noises do not help. More than once each night I have been up with a flashlight checking to make sure we were not leaking water from somewhere after seeing another round of horror stories on the news. Like Covid news when that started, it is easy to watch too much coverage and do a real mental number on yourself. At least, it is that way for me.
While my front porch is in the shade and still icy and slick as it is shade and faces north, the back porch onto the deck melted almost completely with much of it dry by midafternoon. That meant I could get outside with my cane and carefully wander around the house and eyeball things. We seem to have dodged the roof damage some of the neighbors clearly have on top of dealing with burst pipes.
At this point, it looks like the only casualty is the old car battery in Sandi's car. I will deal with that later as folks with far more urgent issues are flooding the stores and car repair places.
The great melting started today as we soared to 60 here at the house Far cry from this and this as the pictures from the front porch taken midafternoon show below.
There is talk that we may hit 70 on Tuesday and Wednesday. If true, I will be outside reading out there both days.
YouTube: We Will Rock You || The Mandalorian(s)
Tip of the cap to Bev Vincent who shared this on FB where I saw it:
KRL This Week Update for 2/20/2021
Up in KRL this morning a review and giveaway of "Ink and Shadows" by Ellery Adams https://kingsriverlife.com/02/20/ink-and-shadows-by-ellery-adams/
And a review and giveaway of "18 1/2 Disguises" by Larissa Reinhart along with a fun interview with Larissa https://kingsriverlife.com/02/20/18-1-2-disguises-by-larissa-reinhart/
Also a review and giveaway of a signed copy of "Death by Intermission" by Alexis Morgan, along with a fun guest post about a night at the movies by Alexis https://kingsriverlife.com/02/20/death-by-intermission-by-alexis-morgan/
And a review and ebook giveaway of the latest Crispin Guest book, "Spiteful Bones" by Jeri Westerson https://kingsriverlife.com/02/20/spiteful-bones-by-jeri-westerson/
We also have a review and giveaway of "A Stranger in Town" by Kelley Armstrong https://kingsriverlife.com/02/20/a-stranger-in-town-by-kelley-armstrong/
And an article sharing about some fun things going on with KRL and Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast, including a chance to get some fun stuff while helping to support what we do https://kingsriverlife.com/02/20/krl-mysteryrats-maze-podcast/
Up during the week we had another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery writer Penny Grubb about how real life weaves its way into her books. You can also enter to win a copy of "Falling Into Crime" by Penny, which comprises the first three novels in the Annie Raymond mystery series https://kingsriverlife.com/02/17/how-real-life-weaves-its-way-into-crime-fiction/
And another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author CeeCee James about the journey of her characters and her own journey https://kingsriverlife.com/02/17/a-journey-explored-through-writing/
Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Mind-Bending Murder" by Leslie Langtry https://www.krlnews.com/2021/02/mind-bending-murder-by-leslie-langtry.html
And a review and ebook giveaway of "Death by Magic" by Abigail Keam https://www.krlnews.com/2021/02/death-by-magic-by-abigail-keam.html
Happy reading,
Lorie
SleuthSayers: As You Wish by John M. Floyd
SHOTSMAG CONFIDENTIAL: Lynda La Plante - Listening to the Dead and The Judas Horse
Do Some Damage: The Great Texas Freeze-Out of 2021
Scott's Take: The Firmament Of Flame (The Universe After Book 3) by Drew Williams
The Firmament of Flame
by Drew Williams is the third book in The Universe After Series.
I previously reviewed the first book, The
Stars Now Unclaimed and the second book, A
Chain Across The Dawn. This third book in the series continues the
adventures of Jane, Esa, and others as they attempt to figure out the goal of the
Cyn. To do this, the Justified operatives of various teams have launched a
joint operation to backtrack the route of the Cyn to try and figure out where
he came from. Obviously, there are those that will try to stop that. Hopefully
find out where he came from will lead to answers. His fellow Cyn and their
followers are going to do everything they can to prevent that. This is a
journey of discovery type novel and one difficult to talk about without causing
spoilers.
This book features a larger cast of characters since
Esa and Jane are accompanied by more allies than usual. Everyone has their own
personalities and abilities and their own needed skill set. The book is still
told from Jane and Esa’s perspectives, however, they have clearly changed a lot
over the series.
Everything a reader loves about the first two books
is present here. Plenty of action, mystery, humor. There is a ton of world
building, lore expansion, and set-up. This is a novel that is meant to shake
things up and send the series off into a new direction. This book setting up a
fourth and, as of yet, untitled and unannounced book. What was originally
intended as a trilogy has been expanded beyond what the author originally
intended. This series is no longer being marketed as a trilogy.
I highly recommend this series in general and this
book. The Firmament of Flame by Drew Williams ties into both
books heavily and there are numerous plot points from the previous books
relevant here. This series should be read in order.
The Firmament Of Time (The Universe After Book 3)
Drew Williams
Tom Doherty Associates (Tor)
https://www.tor-forge.com
2020
ISBN# 978-1-250-18619-5
Hardback (also available in audio and eBook formats)
380 Pages
My reading copy came from the Mountain Creek Branch
of the Dallas Public Library System.
Scott Tipple ©2021
Friday, February 19, 2021
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Mrs. McGinty's Dead by Agatha Christie
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Ghost Map: The Story of London’s Most Terrifying Epidemic and How it Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World by Steven Johnson
FFB Review: GRIFTER’S GAME, a.k.a. MONA (1961) by Lawrence Block Reviewed by Barry Ergang
Friday means Friday’s Forgotten books and more suggested reading. Today is a repeat of Barry Ergang’s 2015 review of GRIFTER’S GAME, a.k.a. MONA (1961) by Lawrence Block. After you read his review and mosey around here, make sure you head over to Patti Abbott’s blog as well as Aubrey Nye Hamilton’s blog and see what they suggest today.
GRIFTER’S GAME, a.k.a. MONA (1961) by Lawrence Block
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
It’s a short novel, so I want to give very little away lest I spoil a fast, entertaining nibble of noirishment by an always-reliable author. It’s narrated by a grifter named Joe Marlin who, when the story opens, has to get out of Philadelphia because the con he tried to pull off fell through and he hasn’t enough money to pay his expensive hotel bill. Thus he takes the train to Atlantic City and steals some monogrammed luggage from the railway station there so he can check into a respectable hotel.
Shortly thereafter, he meets and spends time on the beach with a beautiful young blonde named Mona, who admits she is married to a much older businessman whom she finds “fat and he’s ugly. Also stupid. Also revolting.” When Marlin asks her why she married him, she says he’s “Very very very rich.”
After Marlin returns to his hotel room, he unpacks the suitcases he stole and makes a stunning discovery, one that could be either remunerative or lethal. When he and Mona reconnect (to put it euphemistically) on the beach, both seem to realize that mutual lust has turned into something mutually deeper—even after Marlin realizes who the monogram belongs to and what it could potentially mean for him—and apart from the fact that both agree the monogram’s owner must be eliminated.
The e-book edition of Grifter’s Game which I read features a new afterword by Lawrence Block, the opening paragraph of which says, “This turned out to be the first book published under my own name, although I assumed it would be pseudonymous soft-core porn when I started it. A couple of chapters in I decided that this book might be a cut above what I’d been writing, so I wrote it as a crime novel with the hope it might work for Gold Medal Books. They were the first house to see it, and Knox Burger bought it.”
Thus the
beginning of the deservedly multi-award-winning career of an outstanding
writer. See my opening sentence for a recommendation of this particular work.
Or ignore it and just read the book.
Barry Ergang ©20016,
2021
Some of
Derringer Award-winning author’s Barry Ergang’s work is available at Smashwords
and Amazon.
Thursday, February 18, 2021
Crime Watch: Viking romances and Otago stargazing: an interview with RWR McDonald
SHOTSMAG CONFIDENTIAL: Y Gwyll – The Dusk by James Oswald
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Weather Update
We have kept power and water on and have no idea how we have been so lucky. Millions of Texans, including neighbors on the street, have not been so fortunate. An additional couple of inches of sleet and snow rolled through last night into early this morning. The pictures below are of my street this morning looking left and then right from my front porch.