Beneath the Stains of Time: A Study in Scarlet: Case Closed, vol. 85 by Gosho Aoyama

Beneath the Stains of Time: A Study in Scarlet: Case Closed, vol. 85 by Gosho ...: This is likely going to be a very short review and not because of a lack of quality, but volume 85 of Gosho Aoyama 's Case Closed , orig...

SleuthSayers: Don't Ever Get Old by R. T. Lawton

SleuthSayers: Don't Ever Get Old:   As Ben Johnson's character says to another old timer in a John Wayne western just before the big gun fight scene, "Don't ever...

Guest Post: Where I’m From by Neil S. Plakcy

 

Please welcome back prolific author Neil S. Plakcy today. His new book, Dog of Thieves, comes out Tuesday from Samwise Books. This is the 16th book in his Golden Retriever Mysteries which began with In Dog We Trust.

 

 

          Where I’m From by Neil S. Plakcy

 

Here’s an easy way to confuse people who ask where you’re from. Tell them, as I do, that you grew up in the suburbs of Trenton, New Jersey-- but in Pennsylvania.

Huh? Unless you come from the Northeast, you probably don’t realize how close Pennsylvania and New Jersey really are. But my parents and I crossed the Delaware for family visits, Sunday and Hebrew School, even grocery shopping, and most of the kids I knew were going back and forth across the Calhoun Street Bridge, too.

I was born in St. Francis Hospital in the Chambersburg section of Trenton-- the same neighborhood where Janet Evanovich has set her Stephanie Plum books. My mother’s aunts lived on either side of Trenton High, and we continued to patronize the same stores she did when she was growing up in the city. I know the back streets of Trenton as well as I know those of the small town where my parents and I lived.

Before the riots came in 1967, there was a vibrant life in the inner city, and it was exciting to a little kid from the suburbs. We bought Hungarian style stuffed cabbage from a grocery across from the War Memorial and ate in the park surrounding that obelisk. We went to the planetarium at the state capitol complex, to the New Jersey State Museum, and shopping along State Street.

In Pennsylvania, alcohol was only sold in the State Stores, with a limited selection, so my parents traveled to La Casa Liquors in Chambersburg (owned by the father of a classmate, who was also my great-uncle’s best friend) whenever we had to stock up for an event. When I was a teenager, the drinking age was eighteen in New Jersey and twenty-one in Pennsylvania, and all those bars in Trenton were awfully easy to reach for a kid with a driver’s license with a plan to party.

I left Trenton, and its suburbs, when I went to college, and haven’t lived there since. But when I wanted to set my golden retriever mysteries in a small town where my hero was likely to run into old friends and classmates, I went back myself to Bucks County. My protagonist, Steve Levitan, has the same relationship to Trenton and to New Jersey that I had growing up.

Steve has been across the river many times in the series—tracking down suspects, connecting with family traditions, and so on. He’s been to the flea market in Lambertville where my parents used to take me every Sunday, and to the site of the synagogue where he and I both celebrated a bar mitzvah. It’s now a Baptist church.

My father used Belgian blocks (brought over in colonial-era ships as ballast) to build a retaining wall along our lakefront. There was a crumbling block wall alongside an empty lot on the way to my grandmother’s house, and I can remember my dad pulling up and hustling over to the wall to pick out loose blocks to bring home with us. There’s a convenience store there now, with no sign of that original wall.

That memory has already been written into a previous book, so I couldn’t use it in Dog of Thieves, the 16th book in the series, which debuts May 2. But I’m sure the Garden State has more to offer me in the future. After all, when there’s a whole state full of potential plots and murder victims right across the river, how can a detective (or a mystery novelist) resist?


 

Neil S. Plakcy ©2023

Neil S. Plakcy is the author of over fifty mystery and romance novels, including the best-selling golden retriever mysteries and the highly acclaimed Mahu series, a four-time finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards. A Lefty winner, his stories have been featured in the Bouchercon anthology Florida Happens, Malice Domestic’s Murder Most Conventional and the 2022 MWA anthology Crime Hits Home and others. His website is www.mahubooks.com.

KRL This Week Update for 4/29/2023

Up on KRL this morning a review and giveaway of "Hammocks, Handguns, & Hearsay" by Tonya Kappes https://kingsriverlife.com/04/29/hammocks-handguns-hearsay-by-tonya-kappes/ 

And a review of "The Dead End Tour" by Jen Pitts and a chance to win a copy of either this book or the first book in the series (your choice). We also have a fun interview with Jen https://kingsriverlife.com/04/29/the-dead-end-tour-by-jen-pitts/

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "With a Twist" by Cathi Stoler https://kingsriverlife.com/04/29/with-a-twist-by-cathi-stoler/

 

We also have the latest mystery Coming Attractions from Sunny Frazier along with an ebook giveaway of "The Dying Five" by Jennifer Wright-Berryman https://kingsriverlife.com/04/29/may-coming-attraction-bring-on-those-flowers-edition/

 

And a review of the mystery TV show Will Trent based on the books by Karin Slaughter https://kingsriverlife.com/04/29/will-trent-mystery-tv-review/

 

Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by romantic suspense author Karen Randau. This one is a bit different and is from the perspective of her main character in her latest book "From Chaos" https://kingsriverlife.com/04/26/from-chaos/

 

And another special midweek guest post this one by local author David Ajluni about how he went from writing for film to writing horror novels https://kingsriverlife.com/04/26/how-i-failed-my-way-into-writing-books/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week a review and ebook giveaway of "Brackish Water" by Neil Plakcy https://www.krlnews.com/2023/04/brackish-water-angus-green-novel-by.html


And a review and ebook giveaway of "Marked for Murder" by Leslie Langtry https://www.krlnews.com/2023/04/marked-for-murder-by-leslie-langtry.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Irene Deep in Texas Trouble" by Judy Alter https://www.krlnews.com/2023/04/irene-deep-in-texas-trouble-irene-in.html

Happy reading,
Lorie

SleuthSayers: Simultaneous Submissions by John Floyd

SleuthSayers: Simultaneous Submissions:    When I was teaching courses on writing and selling short fiction (my final classes were five years ago this month), there were three ques...

Scott's Take: Daredevil and Elektra Vol 1: The Red Fist Saga by Chip Zdarsky


Daredevil and Elektra Vol 1: The Red Fist Saga by Chip Zdarsky is the second in this Daredevil series. In this book, Daredevil has agreed to co-lead with Electra the group known as “The Fist” in the battle against “The Hand.” This means its ninjas vs ninjas in a war for the world. The new leader of The Hand is the Punisher. That tale is being told in the Punisher series by Jason Aaron and is also quite good. In this book, Daredevil and Elektra Vol 1: The Red Fist Saga, Daredevil is preparing to leave New York so he can take the fight to The Hand but a new villain has some revelations for him first.


Daredevil spends a good portion of this first volume recruiting for his new version of The Fist. There are also some pretty cool action sequences which I can’t get into without spoilers. The art is really good. I also highly enjoyed how Daredevil and Spider-man, who is a guest star, are written and depicted.


I am highly looking forward to Daredevil and Elektra Vol 2: The Red Fist Saga Part 2. I also recommend reading the aforementioned Punisher series so you have the other half of the story. Each series is connected, but could be read on their own, but I think you should read both.

 

 

My reading copy came from the Preston Royal Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2023

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: DOWN THE MYSTERLY RIVER

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: DOWN THE MYSTERLY RIVER:   Down the Mysterly River  by Bill Willingham  (2011) Max the Wolf found himself walking through a great forest with no memory of where he w...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Jeanne's Favorite Series: Hillerman, Christie, Peters, and so many more!

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Review: Everybody Knows: A Novel by Jordan Harper

 

Mae Pruett lives in Los Angeles and does “black-bag” publicity jobs for a crisis management firm in Everybody Knows: A Novel by Jordan Harper. Her job is to keep bad news out of the press at all costs or, at the very least, spin the event or incident into more positive news coverage. Her firm shapes the news we see for celebrities. The real facts of the situations, the dirt and what Hollywood does to all involved, especially the kid stars, stays hidden from view.

That is until her boss at Mitnick & Associates is killed in the street in front of the Beverly Hills Hotel. Mae Pruett was supposed to be meeting him for a drink and to talk. Lucky for her, she was running a few minutes late. So, she missed the shooting in what is now being billed as an attempted carjacking gone wrong. Mae can read between the lines and knows the media story being pushed hard is utter nonsense. She knows because what to look for and who is reporting the stuff. She also knows because Dan was being weird just before he was killed and had some sort of plan to make him and her rich.

She owed Dan for bringing her into the biggest PR firm in the city. She wonders why the machine is working so hard to spin the story. She wonders what he was planning that got him killed. What was he planning? What did he know? She has a couple of ideas and begins to dig. What she finds is the kind of stuff that gives one a waking nightmare if they are not murdered first.

A lot of people will be as Mae uncovers secrets and desperately tries to stay alive.

Everybody Knows is a darkly cynical read and a commentary on pop culture and the entertainment industry. It is a complex and noir style mystery tale where evil almost always wins out in the end simply because so many are employed to make sure that happens. It is also one of those books that one wonders how many names have been changed to protect the scumbags among us?

It is also one heck of a complicated read that is well worth your time. Everybody Knows: A Novel easily makes my top five book list of reads so far this year. It packs quite a punch from from beginning to end. It might also make you think twice the next time you see a story on a celebrity.


 

My reading copy came from the Central or Downtown Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2023

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: ''Citadel" by Stephen Hunter

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: ''Citadel" by Stephen Hunter:    Almost exactly two years ago I did a Short Story Wednesday post on The Big Book of Espionage , edited by Otto Penzler. I read two storie...

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: WOODROW WILSON'S NECKTIE

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Short Story Wednesday Review: Dark Yonder: Issue 1


Dark Yonder: Issue 1 opens with two introductions. The first is by Editor Eryk Pruitt in which he pays homage to Thuglit. The second is by Editor Katy Munger where she expresses her love for short stories, the idea of “neo noir,” and how it relates to what they are going to publish. Then, after a drink recipe, it is on to the stories.

Mike McHone starts things off with “Perforation Of A Moment.” Birch Run, Michigan, is not a favorite place for Josh Howard. He went back there to either finish his novel or commit suicide. Which it will be is a tossup. It is late October and the 49-year-old man is going through some things. He has not seen nothing yet.

In “The Twenty-One Foot Rule” by Mick Mamatas, one is reminded that bringing a gun to a knife fight is an interesting choice. Tracy and Robin are twins. They are in a constant battle for supremacy, one way or another.

“Dorothy” by Anna Elin Kristiansen is a tale of what happens after the slap. Her husband never should have slapped her. He did. Things had not been that great lately, but even he knows he should not have done that. Now he wants it all to blow over and to be easily forgotten.

Beni is being forced to be a child soldier in “Beni” by Greg Williard. His fate is grim, even if he survives the training. That same training might give the skills he needs to deal with those who killed his parents and changed his life forever.

Todd Pierce is working the bar as “Verna Maxwell” by Dana King begins. She came into the bar, started a tab, and likes Vodka Collins. Her walking into his bar is going to start a string of events that will ultimately lead to violence. The only question is what will happen and how bad it will be.

Reni knew somebody was in the house, but Teddy refused to get up and look. She used to be a cop, still has her K9 partner though he is up in years, and has the 1911 cold Teddy’s father used in WWII. She also has home field advantage in “Home Game” by Craig Faustus Buck.

After a string of short stories firmly grounded in noir style crime fiction, the next several stories are more science fiction or fantasy general tales. While enjoyable reads, they may not fit how you see the noir word, neo or otherwise.

“The Worst Game Of Baseball Ever Played” by Adam Breckenridge features a world gone mad. The unrest starts in the stands of a baseball stadium and soon spills over into the surrounding neighborhood. Extreme violence with no sign of law enforcement. Is our hero going mad? Is the world ending? Neither? Both? The answer is in the mind of the reader as this one is very much open to interpretation.

An incident at school means he is suspended and going home. Mom’s a bit worried about why he did what he did in “A Harvest Of Malice” by Matt McHugh. The story within the story is an ancient and powerful message-- if he listens.

It is 1965 and King Booker has a plan in “The Entitled Life And Untimely Death Of King Booker” by P. M. Raymond. New Orleans. Voodoo. Need I say more?

The final story returns the reader to a more crime fiction noir style bent and without the paranormal in Johnny Shaw’s “Or Not To Be.” A poker game in a bar goes wrong. At least it did for the guy who got invited to the game, won big, and now has one heck of a problem staying alive and keeping his winnings.

Dark Yonder: Issue 1 is an interesting mixture of stories. All the tales are solidly good. Some are more clearly crime fiction rooted noir type tales than others. Science fiction and fantasy elements are present in three tales. More than anything or any label, these are dark tales and not ones that make you feel very good about anyone involved. As was the legendary Thuglit, this is not a read that makes you feel all warm and gooey about humanity. The overall result here is an interesting and enjoyable read as well as a new market to keep an eye on going forward.


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3uuKmFn

 

My eBook reading copy was a gift from a friend.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2023

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 44 Writing Contests in May 2023 - No entry fees

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 44 Writing Contests in May 2023 - No entry fees: This May there are more than three dozen free writing contests for short fiction, novels, poetry, CNF, nonfiction, and plays. Prizes range f...

SleuthSayers: It's Malice time! by Barb Goffman

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Publication Day for Crimeucopia: Strictly Off The Record

  

Today is the publication day for the new anthology, Crimeucopia: Strictly Off The Record. The new book includes my short story, Sweet Dreams Are Made of This. Published by Murderous Ink Press, the read is available in digital and print formats at Amazon and other vendors.

Hope you pick up a copy. Big time thank you to editor and publisher John Connor for including my short story in the new book.


Publisher Description:

Strictly Off The Record

On the QT, and Very Hush Hush

Of course there are going to be those who will happily point out that we’ve taken our subtitle this time around from James Elroy, and his rightly famous L. A. Confidential. However, like most Hollywood gossip columnists, “that’s not strictly true.”

Some of the earliest references come from the 1870s/Victorian England, and it is believed that the ‘QT’ in question is shorthand for QuieT. Not that any of the authors contained within these pages are particularly bothered, one way or the other – or quiet for that matter.

And with 16 vibrant authors, a wraparound cover, and pages full of crime fiction in some of its many guises, what’s not to like?

So if you enjoy tales spun by

Anthony Diesso, Brandon Barrows, E. James Wilson, James Roth, Jesse Aaron, Jim Guigli, John M. Floyd, Kevin R. Tipple, Maddi Davidson, Michael Grimala, Robert Petyo, Shannon Hollinger, Tom Sheehan, Wil A. Emerson, Peter Trelay, and Philip Pak - then you'd better get Crimeucopia - Strictly Off The Record by the sound of it!

In the spirit of the Murderous Ink Press motto:

You never know what you like until you read it.

Paperback ISBN: 9781909498464  -  eBook ISBN: 978190949847

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Outback by Patricia Wolf


Patricia Wolf is a journalist, a regular contributor to The Guardian, the Financial Times, The Independent, The Telegraph, and other newspapers. She grew up in a mining town called Mount Isa in far north-west Queensland and left Australia after university to travel. She now lives in Berlin, Germany, but she calls the outback home. Her debut novel introduces DI Lucas Walker of the organized crime unit of the Australian Federal Police in Canberra.

In Outback (Embla Book, 2022) Walker is on compassionate leave to visit his dying grandmother in his home town of Caloodie in remote Queensland. His grandmother raised him and her approaching death is hitting him hard. He’s grateful for the distraction when his supervisor calls and asks him to help the local police in their search for a pair of tourists from Germany who have disappeared. Rita Guerra and Berndt Meyer were backpacking through Asia and Australia, taking short-term jobs as they went. The owner of a tiny ranch near Caloodie reported them missing when they did not show up to work as scheduled.

Careful not to step on sensitive toes, Walker represents himself to the town constable as a liaison for the Foreign Service and the families in Germany. They both know that tourists often underestimate the heat in central Australia during the summer and the distances between towns. They assume the two had car trouble and begin tracing their driving routes. When that doesn’t pan out, Walker begins searching for them in earnest.

Rita Guerra’s older sister Barbara is a Detective Sergeant in the Berlin State Criminal Police Office or Landeskriminalamt (LKA). She telephones Walker a few times and recognizes the platitudes she herself has used in talking to worried families. After a few days she flies to Australia to help with the search, which becomes unexpectedly complicated when Walker learns a major drug dealer is hiding in the region.

This is an outstanding read with a strong setting. The often-used theme of the illicit drug trade gets a fresh spin here. Walker and Guerra are rounded characters and the supporting cast are also realistic. The local innkeepers and the naĂ¯ve tourists are especially good. Wolfe conveys the beauty and the danger of Queensland clearly and convincingly. The next book in the series is scheduled for publication in May 2023 and I am looking forward to it. Recommended.

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3BaN1qJ


 

·         Publisher: Embla Books (November 8, 2022)

·         Language: English

·         Paperback: 320 pages

·         ISBN-10: 1471411702

·         ISBN-13: 978-1471411700

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

The Reading Room: The Case of the Absent Heirs (WISE Enquiries Agency #6) by Cathy Ace: Reading Room Review

The Reading Room: The Case of the Absent Heirs (WISE Enquiries Agenc...:   There’s something so exciting about a book set at Christmastime when it’s a book in a favorite mystery series.   You get to see the char...

KRL this Week for 4/22/2023

Up on KRL this morning a review and giveaway of "Fiddling with Fate" by Diane Kelly along with a fun guest post from Diane about the music connection in her books https://kingsriverlife.com/04/22/fiddling-with-fate-by-diane-kelly/ 

And a review and giveaway of "Mystery at Windswept Farm" by Wendy Sand Eckel along with an interesting interview with Wendy. This seemed the perfect fit for Earth Day since it does have an environmental aspect to the story https://kingsriverlife.com/04/22/mystery-at-windswept-farm-by-wendy-san-eckel/

 

We also have a review and giveaway of "A Flicker of a Doubt" by Daryl Wood Gerber. A mystery with fairy gardens seemed like another perfect fit for Earth Day! https://kingsriverlife.com/04/22/a-flicker-of-a-doubt-by-daryl-wood-gerber/

 

And the latest Queer Mystery Coming Attractions from Matt Lubbers-Moore https://kingsriverlife.com/04/22/queer-mystery-coming-attractions-may-2023/

 

We also take a look back at 25 years of "Midsomer Murders" on Acorn TV https://kingsriverlife.com/04/22/acorntv-original-25-years-of-midsomer-murders/

 

For those who prefer to listen to Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast directly on KRL, here is the player for our latest episode which features the prologue and first chapter of "With a Twist" by Cathi Stoler read by local actors Ariel Linn and Sean Hopper https://kingsriverlife.com/04/22/mysteryrats-maze-podcast-featuring-with-a-twist/

 

Up on KRL during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Lynn Emery about setting her books in Louisiana and about her latest book "Blood Bayou" https://kingsriverlife.com/04/19/moonlight-magic-myths-of-louisiana/

 

Andanother special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Joe Cosentino about his latest Nicky and Noah mystery"Drama Merry" https://kingsriverlife.com/04/19/drama-merry-the-16th-nicky-and-noah-mystery-novel-by-joe-cosentino/

 

In honor of Earth Day all of the giveaways over on KRL News and Reviews this week are ebooks. This week we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Champagne, Sunrise, and Dead Guys" by Jennifer Fischetto
https://www.krlnews.com/2023/04/champagne-sunrise-dead-guys-by-jennifer.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of the novella "That Dog Won't Hunt" by Aimee Gilchrist https://www.krlnews.com/2023/04/limited-edition-that-dog-wont-hunt.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Red Market" by Dharma Kelleher https://www.krlnews.com/2023/04/red-market-by-dharma-kelleher.html


Happy reading,
Lorie

Beneath the Stains of Time: Suspects—Nine (1939) by E.R. Punshon

Beneath the Stains of Time: Suspects—Nine (1939) by E.R. Punshon: Last month, I compiled a little best-of list, " The Hit List: Top 10 Favorite Reprints from Dean Street Press ," which shined a sp...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Must Read Well by Ellen Pall

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Must Read Well by Ellen Pall: Reviewed by Kristin Liz Miller is a rather typical PhD student—smart, striving, and poor. She is focusing on the feminist works of mid-c...

SleuthSayers: How It's Done and Over Mastication by O'Neil De Noux

SleuthSayers: How It's Done and Over Mastication: Inspired by recent posts from Michael Bracken and John Floyd, I wrote the following. In his SleuthSayer's posting of 4/11/23, Michael Br...

Scott's Take: Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty Vol 1: Revolution by Collin Kelly, Jackson Lanzing, and Tochi Onyebuchi


Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty Vol 1: Revolution by Collin Kelly, Jackson Lanzing, and Tochi Onyebuchi is a Captain America that features Steve Rodgers. Steve has moved back to his childhood home in attempt to connect with regular people. He is hanging out and using a ham radio to talk to several of his old buddies. Late one night a number station starts reciting a new number. Which leads him to information on a new terrorist attack and a new conspiracy involving secrets from his past. Secrets unaware of at all. He also has to face secrets that Bucky and others have kept from him. If that enough, Peggy Carter is back to mess with him and not in a good reader. As readers know from the last run, she has been alive this whole time while he thought she was dead.

 

While playing with elements that have been used many times by other authors, this Captain America title is a fun read. You have Steve trying to reconnect with regular people, you have secrets being kept by his friends, and secrets from his past. Bucky and Peggy playing their spy games with Steve in the middle trying to figure out what is going on. The rich and powerful elite manipulating the country for their own ends. I enjoyed this read.

 

A flaw I have with the read is that no one is pointing out that while Steve is wanting to make regular friends is understandable, him living in his old apartment is painting a target on that block for the rest of the people living there. Everyone knows he is Captain America so someone is going to take a shot at him and people could get hurt. Trying to have a more “normal life” is understandable, but his life is not normal. He should embrace that fact. Instead, he is putting others in danger. Not very Steve like, but this is probably going to be a plot point later in this series.

 

The action and art are really good. The writer clearly gets Steve. The events from issues 5 and 6 should have major ramifications for this title and leave Steve in an interesting place.  One that should find him in an emotionally painful place if what has been foreshadowed comes to pass. The next volume is currently untitled and does not have a release date. 

 

 

My reading copy came from then Pleasant Grove Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Scott A. Tipple © 2023

Happiness Is A Book: FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOK: MY FOE OUTSTRETCH’D BENEATH THE TREE BY V. C. CLINTON-BADDELEY

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Noir at the Bar Dallas Sunday Evening

The event has been cancelled today and will be rescheduled. Forecasted weather for Sunday evening as well as the fact that several of the scheduled readers are dealing with serious medical issues and will be unable to participate caused the cancellation.

Beneath the Stains of Time: Inspector De Klerck and a Fatal Compromise (2023) by P. Dieudonné

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Improbable Magic for Cynical Witches by Kate Scelsa

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Jeanne Reviews: The Fool Dies Last by Carol Miller


Sisters Hope and Summer run a shop in Asheville, NC, where they specialize in New Age items.  Summer is known for her teas and tinctures, while Hope reads palms and, until last February, Tarot cards.  Their day is interrupted by a man who claims that Summer’s potions are dangerous and accuses her of trying to kill his patient.

It turns out that the doctor is one Dylan Henshaw, the son of their grandmother’s beau, Morris.  Their day only goes downhill from there, with a shocking surprise for Summer, and the sudden death of an elderly lady who appears to have been poisoned. To make matters worse, the woman has a Tarot card—the Fool.

With their reputations at stake, the sisters have to try to solve the murder.

This is the first in the Fortune Telling Mysteries by Miller.  I had enjoyed her previous series, The Moonshine Mysteries, and had high hopes for this one.  I’m afraid I was underwhelmed with the characters and actively dislikes Dylan, who is being proposed as the love interest of one of the sisters despite being condescending and arrogant.  There was a kernel of a good idea in the mystery but I wasn’t quite sold on the solution.

The upside is that there is some interesting information on the Tarot and—even better—a very promising plot thread about the shop itself. The latter didn’t appear until near the end, but it did much toward redeeming the story for me.

This is a first in series book, so allowances must be made.  There’s a lot to do in setting up characters, relationships, and setting, so I’ll reserve judgment until I’ve read at least one more.

The books to date are:

The Fool Dies Last’

Death Rides a Pony 

The Moonshine Mysteries are:

Murder and Moonshine

A Nip of Murder

An Old Fashioned Murder


MAKE MINE MYSTERY: How To Drive Yourself Absolutely Mad by Janis Patterson

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SleuthSayers: A Fine Trip to the Dump by Robert Lopresti

SleuthSayers: A Fine Trip to the Dump:  Do you know Thomas Perry?  He writes mostly  thrillers, and one critic described his work as "competence porn," meaning that we f...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Reverse the Charges (1943) by Brian Flynn

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Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: HAVE A NICE DEATH

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Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Mystery Fanfare: UNFORGOTTEN NEWS: Series 5 and 6

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Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Black Nab: Text M for Murder by Ely North


Detective Chief Inspector Frank Finnegan features in three books (so far) by Ely North, set in Whitby, a town in Yorkshire on the northeast coast of England. The first title is Black Nab: Text M for Murder (Red Handed Print, 2022). Normally the seaside town doesn’t have much of a crime rate. But in February an ordinary middle-aged woman was killed on her way home from the pub one night and six months later Finnegan still has not been able to identify a suspect or a motive of any kind. Her husband has grieved into a shadow of himself and Finnegan is deeply frustrated that he has not been able to close the case.

Now in August a pair of hoodlums decide to rob all of the isolated petrol stations in the region. Finnegan notes that the counties on the coast to the north of Yorkshire have been reporting similar crimes. He assumes that the duo is working their way across the country. While there have been no injuries so far, one of the thugs waves a gun around during each robbery and Finnegan knows it could go off any time. Then a frantic mother calls: her 13-year-old daughter and her friend are missing. Lost children take precedence and the entire county mobilizes to search for them.

This is a good interpretation of the classic contemporary British detective story. A realistic mix of cases and a convincing spin on local law enforcement staffing, with a few truly dedicated coppers and a few just putting their time in. Finnegan is the typical boss stuck in his ways. Finnegan’s wife is pressuring him to retire, as his health is taking a hit from the sustained stress. The addition of Detective Sergeant Prisha Kumar to his roster is a nice way to diversify his personnel and she challenges him and makes him think. In particular the newcomer Prisha loves the beauty of the region that Finnegan stopped seeing a long time ago.

The one drawback to this book, and it’s a big one, is the story lines are not all wrapped up at the end. Like most readers, I have strong feelings about cliffhangers and this one is significant. Prospective readers, beware.

 

 

·         Publisher: Red Handed Print (August 5, 2022)

·         Language: English

·         Paperback: 342 pages

·         ISBN-10: 0645290475

·         ISBN-13: 978-0645290479 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023 

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.