Monday, September 16, 2024

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley:   Reviewed by Kristin In a near future London, a young woman accepts a civil service job without having a complete picture of what that ...

Debra Goldstein: It’s Not Always a Mystery…Even When It Is by Judy Penz Sheluk

 Debra Goldstein: It’s Not Always a Mystery…Even When It Is by Judy Penz Sheluk

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 9/16/2024

 In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 9/16/2024

Markets and Jobs for Writers 9/16/2024

 Markets and Jobs for Writers 9/16/2024

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: The Drowned by William John Banville


William John Banville is an Irish novelist, short story writer, and screenwriter. He’s published around a dozen novels to international acclaim, winning a range of prizes. Under the name Benjamin Black he wrote a historical crime fiction series about an Irish pathologist named Quirke in 1950s Dublin, releasing seven books between 2006 and 2015. The series resumed in 2021 under Banville’s name.

The Drowned (Hanover Square Press, 1 October 2024) is the ninth book featuring Quirke. Detective Inspector Strafford with whom he has an uneasy relationship is also involved. A recluse near the coastal town of Wicklow discovered an abandoned Mercedes in a field, with the key still in the ignition and the engine still running. As he lingers in indecision another man wanders up to say that his wife has disappeared and he is looking for her. He fears she has jumped from one of the nearby cliffs into the sea. The recluse draws him to the nearest house for help, where the residents call the local Garda, who in turn quickly call in reinforcements from Dublin.

The writing is possibly the most beautiful I have ever seen: melodic, flowing, and cogent. About a third into the book is a poignant multi-page meditation on grief. It describes the feeling with the clarity and understanding that only someone who has experienced deep sorrow can have.

On the other hand, the characters conveyed by this exquisitely beautiful writing are among the most unhappy I have ever seen stroll across the pages of a book. They are caught up in sordid situations, some of their own making, and it speaks volumes for the quality of the writing and the intricacies of the plot that I continued to read about these deeply unpleasant people.

The resolution is neatly imagined and completely unexpected, another plus for this complicated book.

Starred review from Kirkus: "Banville remains a master of suspense; it’s not easy to stop turning the pages until the novel’s genuinely surprising end. This is yet another fine thriller from an author at the top of his game. Excellent writing and a clever plot make this one stand out."

 


·       Publisher: Hanover Square Press; Original edition (October 1, 2024)

·       Language: English

·       Hardcover: 336 pages

·       ISBN-10: 1335000593

·       ISBN-13: 978-1335000590

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3Tu1cx7

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024

 

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

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Kathleen Marple Kalb's Blog: So You Wrote the Book, Now What?: It's on You

 Kathleen Marple Kalb's Blog: So You Wrote the Book, Now What?: It's on You

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex: Tom Sharp: the Man and the Legend by Charlie Steel

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex: Tom Sharp: the Man and the Legend by Charlie Steel

Little Big Crimes: The Bride Case, by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Little Big Crimes: The Bride Case, by Kristine Kathryn Rusch:   "The Bride Case," by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, September/October 2024. This is the ni...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Gray Tones: The Case of the Elevator Slaying (2017) by R.L. Akers

Beneath the Stains of Time: Gray Tones: The Case of the Elevator Slaying (2017...: R.L. Akers is a self-styled, self-published storyteller who authored several science-fiction novels and short story collections blending sci...

Sample Sunday: Excerpt: Package of Pain in Crimeucopia - Let Me Tell You About...


Normally, I would have been on top of this, but between being sick a lot these past months and the new issue with my foot, this got on top of me before I knew it was happening. Last Tuesday was publication day for the new anthology, Crimeucopia - Let Me Tell You About.... Published by Published by Murderous Ink Press, edited by John Connor, the read is available in both print and digital formats at Amazon and other vendors. It also contains my short story, “Package of Pain.”

Written in 2001, my short story is a crime fiction tale featuring a suspended Fort Worth detective. It is an adult orientated story and not designed for kids. A far tamer version of the story appeared a few years later on the long ago discontinued Mouth Full of Bullets website. This full version of the story is also included in my MindSlices short story collection.

 

PACKAGE OF PAIN

Mike Thornstein sat in his truck in front of his own house as a light drizzle coated the windshield.  The package was there again, even though it wasn’t supposed to be.  He had been promised by everyone that it was all over.  The investigation was supposed to have ended months ago.  He had been cleared, publicly exonerated, but nothing changed.

It sat there wrapped in plain brown paper on his stoop.  When they first started showing up every Friday like clockwork, his colleagues had searched for the sender.  Each one had been mailed from a mailbox in Fort Worth.  Television had “Walker,” but all Mike had were bureaucratic bosses who decided the packages weren’t a threat.  When the sender wasn’t identified after a few weeks, manpower and resources were delegated elsewhere.  Mike was still on suspension while awaiting assignment, albeit very unofficially, and the packages were still coming.  Something had to be done to end it.

The windshield wipers slapped across clearing the glass.  Visible again, the package sat there waiting for him.  He turned the engine off and listened to it tick as it cooled.  The glass slowly misted over as the drizzle continued.  The package dissolved from view into globs of water on the glass. Sitting there, watching the mist fall, wasn’t going to solve the problem.

Mike heaved himself out of his old truck and crossed the leaf-strewn yard.  Rain and wind had stripped most of the leaves off the trees, leaving just a few to decorate the leaden sky.  Everything dripped water and matched his mood perfectly.

The package was small and light, just like all the others.  Wrapped in brown paper and twine, it bore the Fort Worth postmark from the downtown office. Beyond that, it was like all the others and would offer up no clues as to the sender.  Mike shook it softly as he looked in vain for a return address.  Nothing rattled, and it fit in the crook of his arm as he fumbled with the door lock.

Mike got the door open, stepped in and back-kicked the door shut.  He wandered into the den and placed the package on the coffee table.  His coat went onto the couch as he headed to the kitchen.

The refrigerator beckoned, and he grabbed a beer made from some river out in the Rockies.  All beer tasted the same, but this one had been on sale.  His only preference was for long-necked bottles.  Beer wasn’t supposed to come any other way.  The top went flying into the sink with a clatter, and Mike chugged the beer down in several large swallows.  One soldier down and into the trash.  A second one was pulled out and popped open.  He took a long swallow and contemplated the job ahead.  Fortified, he headed back for the den.

The bottle went onto a small table next to the recliner.  Mike switched on the reading lamp and used a car key to slit the package open.  Just like the others, there was purple tissue paper inside.  He reached inside past the folds, and there was the expected videotape.  It was labeled “Continued” in block letters.  He popped it into the VCR and, as it began to play, he hit the stop button.  The tabs were snapped out so it couldn’t be recorded over, and he wasn’t ready to watch.  The tapes were a recent addition to the packages and made even less sense than the weird letters.

He sat in the recliner with the package in his lap.  He swallowed some more beer while he contemplated the box.  The bottle went back to the table, making another wet ring to join its companion.  Mike reached deeper into the box and found what he was looking for.  Black lace brushed against his fingers as he pushed the tissue paper back.  Nestled on the panties was one small bullet with a lipstick mark at the tip.  It sounded like some stupid detective novel from the forties, but it was all too real.  It was nice to know that this wasn’t a threat, according to the bigshots downtown.  He wasn’t reassured.

Mike twirled the panties on his finger, whipping them through the air.  Now he had almost half of a month’s worth of panties and they were still coming.  This was the sixth bullet, all sealed with a kiss.  He knew what he was going to see on the tape; it had been a variation on a theme.  He didn’t want to watch, but he had too.  He tossed the empty box and punched the remote.



For the rest of the story, pick up a copy of Crimeucopia - Let Me Tell You About....


Kevin R. Tipple ©2024

In addition to having been the multiple term president of the Short Mystery Fiction Society, Kevin R. Tipple’s short fiction has appeared in numerous places online and in magazines such as LynxEyeStarblade, Show and TellThe Writer's Post JournalMystery Magazine, and others. His short stories have appeared in the anthologies, Back Road Bobby and His FriendsCrimeucopia-Strictly Off The Record, and Crimeucopia-Say It Again, Larceny & Last Chances: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense, Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries III, among others. His award-winning blog of reviews, guest posts, and more is at: https://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Foot Update: Still Annoyed Edition


Saw the food doc back on Tuesday morning. As you can see, I have graduated to the wrap thingy. I see him in a month to assess how things are then.

In the meantime, I have to do physical therapy. I hate the idea as, with me, every time I have done it for one thing or the other, it has always made things worse. But, I am told, firmly, that I have to do it. Waiting on insurance to approve this deal.

At least, for now, surgery is off the table and things are a little better than they were when this deal started.

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of September 15, 2024

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of September 15, 2024 

KRL This Week 9/14/2024

Up on KRL this week we have reviews and giveaways of 4 more fun mysteries for your September reading-"A Very Woodsy Murder" by Ellen Byron, "Murder at an English Séance" by Jessica Ellicott, Come "Shell or High Water" by Molly MacRae, and "Trouble is Brewing" by Vicki Delany https://kingsriverlife.com/09/14/september-mystery-catchup/ 

And a review and giveaway of "The Jig is Up" by Lisa Q. Mathews along with a fun interview with Lisa https://kingsriverlife.com/09/14/the-jig-is-up-by-lisa-q-mathews/

 

We also have a review and ebook giveaway of "Buried on a Sundae" by Lena Gregory along with a fun fall cookie recipe from Lena https://kingsriverlife.com/09/14/buried-on-a-sundae-by-lena-gregory/

 

Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author M.E. Proctor about their main character and their new book "Love You Till Tuesday" https://kingsriverlife.com/09/11/declan-shaw-was-born-on-labor-day-in-a-manner-of-speaking/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "The Case of the Secretive Secretary" by Cathy Ace https://www.krlnews.com/2024/09/the-case-of-secretive-secretary-by.html

 

And a review and giveaway of" The House on Graveyard Lane" by Martin Edwards https://www.krlnews.com/2024/09/the-house-on-graveyard-lane-by-martin.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie_,_._,_

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – The Mojito Coast by Richard Helms

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – The Mojito Coast by Richard Helms

The Rap Sheet: The Book You Have to Read: “The Digger’s Game,” by George V. Higgins

 The Rap Sheet: The Book You Have to Read: “The Digger’s Game,” by George V. Higgins

Scott's Take: Birds Of Prey Vol 1: Megadeath by Kelly Thompson, illustrator Leonardo Romero, and illustrator Arist Deyn


Birds Of Prey Vol 1: Megadeath by Kelly Thompson, illustrator Leonardo Romero, and illustrator Arist Deyn has Black Canary assembling a team to rescue her sister Sin from the Amazons. To do this she will need a squad of really exceptional women to get it done. She recruits Batgirl (Cassandra), Big Barda, and Zealot so that they have three of the best female warriors on the planet. Now they need their x-factor --something the Amazons could not be ready for. Enter Harley Quinn.  Hopefully, their plan to distract Wonder Woman will keep her away from the island while they do what they need to do to rescue Sin. Get in, grab the girl, and get out without anyone getting hurt. Simple. Of course, it’s not going to be that simple.

 

Kelly Thompson is my favorite female writer in comics. She brings a sense of humor to her work that I really like. I really enjoyed her versions of Harley, Black Canary, and Batgirl. I liked Zealot and Big Barda, but I am less familiar with those two. Wonder Woman and Green Arrow also are in this action packed book. The art is really good and looks incredible in the action scenes. Harley has a great entrance plan into the island that would have looked far less cool with a less talented artist. 

 

Volume 2, which has no title yet but has a release date of Jan 7th, 2025, has Black Canary forming another team as only Cassandra sticks around for the next mission. The new mission is to stop someone from the future from killing Batgirl (Barbara Gordon). Two of her best friends are not going to allow someone from the future to kill their bestie so time to form another team.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/46FA4Ri

 

My reading copy came from Hoopla through the Dallas Public Library System.  

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2024

Friday, September 13, 2024

Writer Beware: Facing Author Lawsuits, Shawline Publishing Re-Brands as New Found Books

 Writer Beware: Facing Author Lawsuits, Shawline Publishing Re-Brands as New Found Books

Lesa's Book Critiques: Winners and Foreign Mysteries

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Winners and Foreign Mysteries

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Shadowy Third by Marco Page

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Shadowy Third by Marco Page

In Reference To Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Murder at the Villa Rose

 In Reference To Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Murder at the Villa Rose

Patricia Abbott: FFB: DUE OR DIE, Frank Kane

 Patricia Abbott: FFB: DUE OR DIE, Frank Kane

FFB Review: Some Like It Hot Buttered: A Comedy Tonight Mystery by Jeffrey Cohen


From the massive archive…

 

Having a patron die in your theater isn't a good thing. Especially if all you show are comedy films. It isn't like the movie scared the patron to death. Having a patron die because the popcorn was poisoned is worse. For Mr. Elliot Freed, the death of Mr. Vincent Ansella is a shock. After all, Mr. Ansella, who had occupied seat 18 of row S, is his first dead customer. He isn't quite sure how to react.

 

A fairly common malady in his life. Thanks to a novel that did okay and was successfully butchered into something that doesn't remotely resemble his book by Hollywood, Eliot Freed has a bit of money, and no desire to ever write anything again. He has no marriage either though he does have a somewhat civil relationship with his ex, Sharon. They have lunch once a week. Then there are the monthly alimony checks he gets from her as well as the way he still feels when he looks at her.

 

While he doesn't have a car and instead rides a bike, he does have a struggling theater that has few customers. Freed owns the former "Rialto" with all its problems and has renamed it "Comedy Tonight." He shows a comedy double feature consisting of a one current film and an older title. Despite the efforts of "Young Frankenstein" and "Count Bubba, Down-Home Vampire," Mr. Ansella died and that isn't going to help ticket sales.

 

Neither is the fact that the local police have to close his theater because it is now a crime scene. Getting it back open on a steady basis isn't going to be helped by the fact that the police soon discover that he has a pirating operation going on out of the basement. It would be easy to blame his suddenly missing employee for everything that has happened and something the local police seem perfectly willing to do. Freed is sure that the employee, a film major at Rutgers, had nothing to do with any of it and sets out to prove his innocence and save his theater. Bumming a car when he needs one, Freed begins digging into the case despite being warned off by everyone involved.

 

It would be easy to compare this novel to the Aaron Tucker series and find it wanting. The humor of the parental dynamic as well as Tucker's often strange adventures drives that series and that sort of thing isn't present at all. Freed has no kids and doesn't have a dog. While Tucker gets involved in strange stuff or things go differently than expected, Freed is more of an everyday guy that just had something happen to him that has to be dealt as best as he can. Tucker is a writer and as such for those of us in the business, at whatever level, there is a resonance in his amusing tales of the world of publishing. Freed has walked away from writing and only briefly relates what happened to his novel and why he has given up writing. Not to mention the fact that the Aaron Tucker series often relies on the madcap in terms of humor and that certainly isn't the case here.

 

But, this book isn't an Aaron Tucker series novel and therefore should not be judged on that standard. This book has to be judged on its own merits as will the series to come. Comedically, while it does not have the explosive laughter moments for this reader, it does have a number of amusing chuckle type moments as Freed references cultural and movie items. Those that have a strong grounding in comedy films will get considerably more out of the novel than those who do not.

 

While the book is somewhat predictable with a large part of the resolution foreshadowed early on, there are enough twists and a couple of nice surprises to keep readers highly entertained. The book moves at a pretty good pace though it does stop occasionally for Freed to summarize in depth what has gone on and that seemed a bit redundant and excessive. Still, that is a minor quibble and did not really have a negative impact on the book as it falls under more of a personal preference category. Overall, the book is a pleasant read and a nice start to an interesting character and new series. Next up in the series is It Happened One Knife and that is currently scheduled to be released in July.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3XlTvu7

 

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple © 2008, 2017, 2024

Thursday, September 12, 2024

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange 9/12/2024

 In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange 9/12/2024

Review: Den of Iniquity: A J.P. Beaumont Novel by J.A. Jance

 

It is Valentine’s Day, 2020, as Den of Iniquity: A J.P. Beaumont Novel by J.A. Jance begins. Bellingham, Washington, is clear and cold this morning. The news of Covid dominates, though the impacts have yet to be felt here. J. P. Beaumont plans on taking his wife, Mel, to a nearby restaurant for the evening. That is until J.P. and Sarah (their dog) return from a walk and find grandson, Kyle, parked in the drive.

 

It takes some time to drag out of Kyle why he made the nine-hour drive and arrived with no warning. There is a mess at home. Kyle left and brought with him his stuff and his troubles. He had a very good reason to show up as his family (J. P.’s daughter, her husband, and Kye’s sister) has, basically, imploded. While Mel and J.P. try to come to grips with what has happened and the sudden addition of a teenager to their house, Ben Weston reaches out to Beaumont.

 

Back when Beaumont was a Seattle Homicide Detective, he first met Ben as a five-year-old kid. There had been a violent home invasion leaving Ben the only survivor. Ben is now a Seattle Homicide Detective as is Scotty, J.P. Beaumont’s son, and they have desks close to each other. Ben needs a favor.

 

After Ben’s parents died, a woman at church, Matilda Jackson, always looked out for Ben. She had been good friends with Ben’s mom. Mrs. Jackson’s grandson is dead. He died of a drug overdose back in November of 2018. The police followed the medical examiners ruling of accidental death due to fentanyl overdose and closed the case. Mrs. Jackson is sure that he was sober and things were going right. She is absolutely sure it was murder.

 

 

As he talks to Mrs. Jackson, J. P. is not hearing anything that is very convincing, but Ben wanted him to look into it, because he can’t. For the cops, it is a closed case and that means Ben can do nothing. J. P. agrees, talks to her some more, and starts investigating. It isn’t long before he is sure Matilda Jackson is right. Her son was murdered.

 

He wasn’t the only one.

 

What follows is a fast moving read that switches back and forth between Kyle’s family issues, and there are many, and the Jackson case J.P. is working. Investigative skills come in handy for family and others. J.P. has a lot going on in Den of Iniquity: A J.P. Beaumont Novel by J.A. Jance.

 

While those that have read the series to this point will get more out of the book, one could start here as there is enough background material to get new readers comfortable in the read. This reviewer, a long-time reader of the series, enjoyed it a lot.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3z5nG0F

 

My ARC digital reading copy came from the publisher, William Morrow, by way of NetGalley.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2024 

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Beneath the Stains of Time: Golden Age Whodunits (2024) edited by Otto Penzler

Beneath the Stains of Time: Golden Age Whodunits (2024) edited by Otto Penzler: Golden Age Whodunits (2024), edited by Otto Penzler, is the fourth anthology in the American Mystery Classics series and previously review...

SleuthSayers: Bouchercon Briefing

SleuthSayers: Bouchercon Briefing: Last week I returned home from Bouchercon, the world mystery convention, having walked a million miles while there — not hy perbole, I assur...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: In the Lives of Puppets, Secret Appalachian Highlands, Paws of Firefighters

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: In the Lives of Puppets, Secret Appala...: Reported by Rita   In the Lives of   Puppets by TJ Klune When an unwitting act of betrayal leads to the capture of his android Gio, who o...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Stories from Fire Watch by Connie Willis

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Stories from Fire Watch by ...:   Back in August 2022, I read the novelette, "Fire Watch," by Connie Willis. It was published in a collection with the same title...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #192: THE NINTH GALAXY READER Edited by Frederik Pohl

 George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #192: THE NINTH GALAXY READER Edited by Frederik Pohl

Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: "The Ballad of Timothy Touchett" from TABLE FOR TWO, Amor Towles

 Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday: "The Ballad of Timothy Touchett" from TABLE FOR TWO, Amor Towles

Lesa's Book Critiques: Recap – Amanda Jones at Bexley Public Library

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Recap – Amanda Jones at Bexley Public Library

Short Story Wednesday Review: Barb Goffman Presents: Restoration by Art Taylor


From the massively magnificent archive here at Casa Tipple and Home Eatery Library in my little part of NE Dallas….

 

Barb Goffman Presents: Restoration by Art Taylor imagines a world where, for a fee, a loved one can be duplicated as a sort of insurance against the worst. By buying a policy, one could ensure that in the case of an unexpected death due to a car accident, plane crash, or some other unpredicted traumatic event, a clone of sorts would be created to take the place of the recently departed loved one. The slick brochure calls it “victim replacement”” and the husband is proving to be a hard sell though the wife seems to be interested.

 

So begins the tale which originally was published in Crime Syndicate Magazine: Issue 1 comes to life here as part of the Barb Goffman Presents series published by Wildside books. The tale was a good one back when it first appeared and is still a good one now five years later.



Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3AIqtx0 

 

 

While I picked this up a few weeks ago when it was offered for free at Wildside Press, it does not come up there anymore and seems to only be available at Amazon. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2020, 2024

Monday, September 09, 2024

Lesa's Book Critiques: Sick to Death by Andrew Welsh-Huggins

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Sick to Death by Andrew Welsh-Huggins

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Most Human: Reconciling with My Father, Leonard Nimoy

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Most Human: Reconciling with My Father, Leonar...:   Reviewed by Jeanne While the title sounds a bit like a celebrity tell-all, this is no Mommy Dearest .   While Adam Nimoy does blame so...

The Rap Sheet: Three and You’re Out

 The Rap Sheet: Three and You’re Out

Markets and Jobs for Writers 9/9/2024

 Markets and Jobs for Writers 9/9/2024

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Dangerous Play by Elise Hart Kipness


After reading the second rip-roaring mystery about sports reporter Kate Green, I would have known without being told that author Elise Hart Kipness was a former sports reporter herself. The book is overflowing with the authentic detail available only to the subject matter expert. Some of the very best parts describe the pressure of live reporting from a dynamic scene while simultaneously coordinating with producers and technical staff back at the broadcasting station. These sections will give readers a new appreciation for live action reporters, who make what they are doing look easy.

The book tells two stories, one about Kate Green the budding soccer star who helped bring an Olympic gold medal home years ago, and the second about an older Kate Green who moved on from the game and turned her experience into a live network sports reporting career. The first thread describes the grueling training Olympic hopefuls and their families endure, and the cutthroat competition among the players for a few coveted places on the final team.

The second thread takes place in the present during the Olympics summer games being hosted in New York, where Kate gets the on-air reporting assignment because the coach of the U.S. soccer team is one of her former Olympics team mates and Kate’s management assumes she will be able to capitalize on the relationship to gain access to the team and exclusive material.

One of the U.S. soccer players is displaying shockingly poor sportsmanship and creating a disruptive locker room, and the media’s focus is on her antics until the body of a former Olympic hopeful from Kate’s playing days is found in the medical treatment area underneath Madison Square Gardens. Both Kate and the U.S. soccer team coach knew the victim well at one point in their lives, and naturally the police assume they had something to do with the death. Not unnaturally Kate decides to investigate on her own.

Kate’s father, who had chosen his law enforcement career over his marriage when Kate’s mother gave him an ultimatum, is active in the investigation and he is Kate’s source for forensic information. So often in amateur sleuth mysteries the nonprofessional relies on a police boyfriend, a device that has been overused, so supplying a parent as an inside source is a refreshing change.

Another good bit is the incident involving the release of false information. While it was pulled within the hour, the release was so deliberately sensational that it spread like wildfire across the Internet and did some damage. Some pointed comments about the media’s responsibility in stopping misinformation instead of chasing ratings were completely on target.

I realized about two-thirds through what the motive for the killing was, which pointed at an obvious culprit but other readers may well not be as jaded as I am. Even so, the strength of this very good mystery is in the portrayal of the cutthroat world of Olympic sports and the similarly vicious ecosphere of network media.

 


·       Publisher: Thomas & Mercer (September 17, 2024)

·       Language: English

·       Paperback: 285 pages

·       ISBN-10: 1662512686

·       ISBN-13: 978-1662512681 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3X7JUqK 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024 

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

Sunday, September 08, 2024

Lesa's Book Critiques: Sunday Spotlight – Laura Jensen Walker

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Sunday Spotlight – Laura Jensen Walker

Kathleen Marple Kalb's Blog: So You Wrote the Book, Now What?: Keep it in the Box

 Kathleen Marple Kalb's Blog: So You Wrote the Book, Now What?: Keep it in the Box

Little Big Crimes: Midnight Movie, by James Van Pelt

Little Big Crimes: Midnight Movie, by James Van Pelt:  "Midnight Movie," by James Van Pelt, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, September/October 2024. A topic that comes up a...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Two Novels by Raymond Chandler

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Two Novels by Raymond Chandler:   Raymond Chandler is a very well-known and highly regarded author of hard-boiled mysteries featuring Philip Marlowe. He was also a major in...

Saturday, September 07, 2024

Foot Update-- Grumpy Patient Edition


Since it has almost been two weeks since I last wrote about this damn thing, I thought an update was in order.

 

I hate the boot. I hate it with the fiery passion of a thousand suns.

 

It is heavy as all get out and pulls hard on my leg. That causes the knee to hurt and the hip. My back, which always hurts, is doing something on a totally new level of pain. Walking is very problematic as I hook the bottom of it on the front door frame and other things around here. It causes the leg to swell over the course of the day which is not something anyone wants. Especially this cardiac patient.

 

I hate the damn thing.

 

I see the foot doc Tuesday morning. I want it off. I don’t want physical therapy as, no matter the situation, physical therapy always makes everything worse. I just want to wear my regular shoes, get back home, and be done with all this crap.

 

I hate the boot.

Lesa's Book Critiques: Furever After by Sofie Kelly

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Furever After by Sofie Kelly

Dru's Book Musings New Releases ~ Week of September 8, 2024

 Dru's Book Musings New Releases ~ Week of September 8, 2024 

KRL This Week 9/7/2024

Up on KRL this week a review and giveaway of "Murder at Vinland" by Alyssa Maxwell https://kingsriverlife.com/09/07/murder-at-vinland-by-alyssa-maxwell/ 

And a review and giveaway of "A Cup of Flour, A Pinch of Death" by Valerie Burns https://kingsriverlife.com/09/07/a-cup-of-flour-a-pinch-of-death-by-valerie-burns/

 

And a review and giveaway of "Unbalanced" by DP Lyle https://kingsriverlife.com/09/07/unbalanced-by-d-p-lyle/

 

Our special midweek guest post up on KRL this week is a little different. I had the pleasure of being interviewed by the wonderful Mallory Moad about my writing and my Tower District Mysteries! You can also find info about my Reedley and Sanger book talks next week, and my Halloween themed event coming up at Bookish in the Tower on the 28th. And you can enter to win an ebook copy of "One of You" https://kingsriverlife.com/09/04/lorie-lewis-ham-writing-mysteries-set-in-the-tower-district-of-fresno-ca/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "Resurrection of the Roses" by Michele Drier https://www.krlnews.com/2024/09/resurrection-of-roses-by-michele-drier.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie

Judy Penz Sheluk: Introducing You To Frank Zafiro, author

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SleuthSayers: The Second (or Third?) Time Around

SleuthSayers: The Second (or Third?) Time Around:   Last Saturday I posted a column here at SleuthSayers about a story of mine that was reprinted several times, in different magazines, book...

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Case of the Constant Suicides (1941) by John Dickson Carr

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The Rap Sheet: Oops, Missed One

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Scott's Take: Batman and Robin Vol 1: Father and Son by Joshua Williamson and illustrator Simone Meo


Batman and Robin Vol 1: Father and Son by Joshua Williamson and illustrator Simone Meo is a team up series between Batman (Bruce Wayne) and Robin (Damian Wayne). They have not had a team up series in a long time as they have been estranged for several years. This series does tie in a little bit to the Chip Zdarsky run on Batman, but not enough to make it required reading. I am a big fan of Chip Zdarsky’s prior work on Daredevil, but his Batman run has been mediocre. I can’t really recommend it. It has some good moments, but it is too cliched and used too many of same themes as previous writer to recommend.

 

So back to this book, Batman is now living in a brownstone in Gotham since he is rich broke. He still has a lot of money but not I can buy the whole block money. He has far less wealth than he had, but is doing okay. He invites Damian Wayne aka Robin who has been hanging out with fellow former assassins on an island to live with him. Batman wants him to have a normal life besides dressing up as Robin and fighting crime. So, he enrolls him in a public school and wants him to make normal friends. Obviously, the irony of Bruce wanting Damian to have normal friends when most of his friends are superheroes themselves is lost on Bruce.

 

While they attempt to deal with their family issues, a new villain called Shush attempts to take them both down. In the final issue, Batman and Robin go on a camping trip outside of Gotham. Several people have gone missing in the spot they have chosen over the last few months. So, things get violent quickly. The final issue is kind of separate from the previous ones.

 

Joshua Williamson continues to write a good Batman and Robin story even if Bruce has to learn the same lessons he has learned before. Joshua has a good understanding of the characters as he has written both plenty of times before. Simone has a pretty realistic art style that works really well for this tale. There is action, humor, and character relationship drama. Somehow no one notices that Robin is back at the same time as Damian returns to Gotham.

 

The second volume will come out in February of next year and does not have a title yet. It will pick up with Flatline coming to Gotham to see Robin. Flatline is a love interest of Damian’s from his previous solo series. She has not just come by because she misses him.

 

After that volume, I do not know what will happen regarding the series. The All In initiative is going to affect this book but I do not know how.


 

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

 

 

My reading copy came from by way of Hoopla and the Dallas Public Library System. 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2024