Beneath the Stains of Time: Murder in Retrospect: The Best and Worst of 2024

Beneath the Stains of Time: Murder in Retrospect: The Best and Worst of 2024:   Last year, I started " Murder in Retrospect: The Best and Worst of 2024 " with remembering Rupert Heath, of Dean Street Press , ...

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY CHRISTMAS WEDNESDAY: THE OTHER WISE MAN

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Short Story Wednesday: Treacherous: Grifters, Ruffians, and Killers by Gary Phillips


Treacherous: Grifters, Ruffians, and Killers by Gary Phillips is an interesting short story collection. Beyond the various crimes, the backdrop is often deals with issues of race, privilege, class, and economic standing. The book is broken into four categories with each section containing 4 to 7 previously published stories. The result is 21 crime fictions tales. While they are all good ones, a few that I very much liked are below.

 

The book opens with the first section “Grifters.” A highlight is the opening short story, “The Performer.” An aging lounge singer is making small talk with a woman after a set. One thing leads to another, and soon he is, apparently, in the middle of a mess.

 

Another highlight is “Rodger Crumbler Considered His Shave.”  50 years old Rodger Crumber is pleased with things, but is pretty sure it could be way better. He has a plan to make things even better and that plan is underway.

 

The “Bad Juju” section comes next. These stories are all about messing with people and things that should not be messed with at all.

 

“The Snow Birds” sees folks play polo by using bikes. It is street polo where grudges are settled and crimes are plotted.

 

Glen Murry, aka Junie, is a teen and he does some things for the gamblers in “Sportin’ Men.” He makes drinks and food and works on his plan. He isn’t the only one with a plan.

 

“Both of Shadows and Substance” comes next as the third section.

 

A truck driver by the name of Roosevelt Hopkins stops for a meal on the way to the port. A waitress, a legendary car, and more are at work in “Can’t Be Satisfied.”

 

Maybe you are in the mood for zombies? In “Disco Zombies,” taking the drugs and more seems to have worked out. Then the damn zombies showed up looking to take it all back.

 

The plan was to rip off the aging rock star in “House of Tears.” The plan isn’t going as well as they had thought it would in the first story of section 4, “Hell Bent.”

 

Racists and other scumbags, are hard at work in “Masai Back in Town.” Swanmoor put one down and got intel from the other. He soon learns that the one he left alive is also now dead as there are multiple agendas in play.

 

The 21 tales that make up Treacherous: Grifters, Ruffians, and Killers are all good ones. These short stories are graphic crime fiction. That means they are graphic in use of language and also frequently depict in detail violence and sexual situations between various characters.

 

Along the way, the tales consider race, class, economic status, and a lot more. These tales are not light hearted. Regardless of time period, these feature characters doing their best to survive. As we all are, every single day, in a world often stacked to benefit the wealthy and powerful.


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/41KuVa4

 

My ARC digital reading copy came from the publisher, Level Short (Level Best Books), through NetGalley with no expectation of a review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2024

Mystery Fanfare: Chanukah Mysteries // Hanukkah Crime Fiction

Mystery Fanfare: Chanukah Mysteries // Hanukkah Crime Fiction: Chanukah ( no matter how you spell it - Hanukah, Hanukka h ) starts on Christmas this year! Because the holiday lasts eight days, you will ...

SleuthSayers: Making Fictional Fodder from Emotional Wounds

SleuthSayers: Making Fictional Fodder from Emotional Wounds: What better thing to think about on the day after Festivus, in the hours before Hanukkah begins, and on Christmas Eve Day–all holidays that...

Monday, December 23, 2024

SleuthSayers: Writing Advice from 1908, Part 2

SleuthSayers: Writing Advice from 1908, Part 2: Last Wednesday I offered you some words of wisdom from Writing the Short-Story by J. Berg Esenwein.  Published in 1908, it was one of the f...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Mom Meets Her Maker: James Yaffe

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Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Fields Where They Lay by Timothy Hallinan


Timothy Hallinan has given the mystery reading world three distinctly different and very good series. The first is about Simeon Grist, a private investigator in Los Angeles, the second is set in Bangkok where Hallinan lives part time, and the third returns to Los Angeles, home of Junior Bender, a professional thief and occasional private investigator.

Fields Where They Lay (Soho, 2016), Junior’s sixth adventure, finds him in thrall to a member of the Los Angeles underworld, as he is so often. A Russian mobster with the unlikely name of Tip Poindexter is the sole owner of a rundown shopping mall in suburban Los Angeles. He decides it takes a thief to catch a thief so he strongarms Junior into determining who is responsible for the rampant shoplifting in his mall. The monthly loss reports are staggering but the store owners have not identified a single bandit or a group of thieves.

When Junior discusses security measures with each shop owner, he learns that most of them do not expect to stay open after the holiday rush. Several storefronts are already vacant and Junior is struck by how worn the facility appears, despite the throng of shoppers intent on spending their money. Among the vacancies is the only major department store that closed at the end of the previous holiday season. The loss of the anchor tenant pushed the mall even closer to the brink of failure.

While Junior is looking for mall exits that are not under surveillance of the security cameras, which is how he assumes the loot is leaving, he examines the dark upper floors of the shuttered department store and stumbles on the body of one of the shop owners. He has no alternative but to call the police, the last thing Poindexter or Junior wants. In no time Junior’s assignment expands to finding the killer.

The fading of the shopping mall phenomenon is captured perfectly here, as is the hollow desperation of the holiday commercial frenzy. The operational side of a mall is explored, similar to Silvermeadow by Barry Maitland (Orion Publishing, 2000), the reader is taken behind the scenes to regions not usually thought of by bargain hunters. Junior’s cynicism is always front and center but never quite overwhelms his essential humanity, which is the nicest thing about him. Junior’s ex-wife and only child occupy a lot of his focus in every book; this time Junior has also acquired a girlfriend. It’s easy to forget about the mystery while Junior’s personal life and his trenchant observations about the season’s consumerism are so entertaining but Junior gets to the bottom of both the murder and the shoplifting in a thoroughly unexpected manner.

Starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, Booklist, and Library Journal. A Kirkus Best Book of 2016 and a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2016.

 


 

·         Publisher: Soho Crime; First Edition (October 25, 2016)

·         Language: English

·         Hardcover: 384 pages

·         ISBN-10: 1616957468

·         ISBN-13: 978-1616957469

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4gnc09X

  

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024 

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

Mystery Fanfare: CHRISTMAS MYSTERIES: Short Story Anthologies and Novellas

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Little Big Crimes: Eight Very Bad Nights, by Tod Goldberg

Little Big Crimes: Eight Very Bad Nights, by Tod Goldberg: " Eight Very Bad Nights, by Tod Goldberg ,   in E ight Very Bad Nights: A Collection of Hanukkah Noir,  edited by Tod Goldberg, Soho Cr...

Sample Sunday: Excerpt: First Contact in Santa Rage: A Killer Claus Compendium


Normally, I would have been on top of this, but I’m not doing too well. Earlier this month, the anthology, Santa Rage: A Killer Claus Compendium. Edited by Jay Hartman, published by White City Press, it includes my short story, First Contact. It is available at the publisher in both digital and paperback versions and at other platforms.

 

 

First Contact

 

It was 2 A.M. and the blood was still warm because the old AC in the Waffle House was barely working. It had been 112 just hours ago for the official high at the big airport and it was still 97 there this hour. My little part of NE Dallas always ran hotter year-round than DFW Airport, so I was pretty sure we might still be over 100. Summer in Texas, record heat and drought, sucks, and it was doing nothing to help my ever-present insomnia.

 

I’d always had it. But, after the kids moved out, and then a few months later my wife passed, it got way worse. I didn’t want pills as they did not work and made things worse. Years earlier, I had an intense love affair with alcohol and it had helped some, but it also damn near destroyed my marriage. I was not a happy drunk. An ultimatum was laid down and thank god I had the good sense to stop. I also had the good sense that without her, if I started drinking again, I might never to stop.

 

So, on the nights it was really bad when I could not sleep and felt like I was coming out of my own skin, I got in my car and drove around a little while before going to the nearby Waffle House. I’d hang out awhile, eat, and surf on the iPad or bring a print book. This was one of those bad nights. I was a semi regular late-night denizen so my presence did not stir up the regulars or the two employees. Being the middle of the week meant it was also far safer than the Friday and Saturday night crowd, dominated by drunks, and folks who want to fight for no reason at all.

 

Jesse was on the grill, as usual, and had brought me a burger with everything on it and fries earlier which has vanished pretty fast. He was back trying to pick up Shelly, despite the fact that I was pretty sure she played for the other team. It wasn’t ever going to happen. He was in the friend zone and would never get out.

 


The two regulars finished their meals and headed out into the night. A DPD car rolled through the nearby intersection with its flashers going and then they went dark. Anything to not stop for the red light that went far longer than it should. A typical Texas summertime night.

 

I shifted a little more in my usual back booth as the paltry AC wheezed above me spewing what it could to ease the temp downwards. I’d had enough of social media and got off in order to read the latest Terry Shames book. Texas author Bill Crider had Sheriff Dan Rhodes. Shames had Sheriff Samuel Craddock. Both had gotten me through many a dark period. Craddock was out talking a case over with his cows. As usual, they seemed far more interested in eating than helping. It came to mind that maybe I needed some cows to talk to when things were working me over. I doubted that my northeast Dallas neighbors would be too happy with that idea.

 

As I always did, I was sitting facing the door when he walked into the place. Dressed all in black, the man had black sunglasses on over his eyes too. Dressed in a black t-shirt, black pants, and black boots was one thing, but the accompanying black jacket seemed totally ridiculous in this heat. I could barely stand the heat and humidity and I was in a t-shirt and jeans.  

 

Not that I had much time to think about any of it as this guy, who looked like something out of Hollywood casting for a tough guy in a direct to digital release movie, came straight at me. At a little after 2 A.M. in the morning, with the searing drought in full effect and that had meant 70 something plus days in a row with no rain at all, he looked like he was here to rob the place.

 

Or kill me.


 

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

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2024 

Multiple term past President of the Short Mystery Fiction Society, Kevin R. Tipple reviews books and short stories, watches way too much television, and offers unsolicited opinions on anything. His short fiction has appeared in magazines such as Lynx Eye, Starblade, Show and Tell, and The Writer’s Post Journal, among others. Mystery Weekly Magazine published his story, The Damn Rodents Are Everywhere, in May of 2021 and soon had to change their name to Mystery Magazine. His short story, The Beetle’s Last Fifty Grand, appears in the 2022 anthology, Back Road Bobby and His Friends, and everyone involved seems to have survived the experience unscathed. His short story, Visions of Reality, appears in Crimeucopia-Say It Again. Earlier this year, the Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries Volume III anthology was released and includes his short story, Whatever Happened To…? Also released earlier this year is the anthology, Larceny & Last Chances: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense, which includes his crime fiction short story, The Hospital Boomerang. Fully trained before marriage, Kevin can work all major appliances and, despite a love of nearly all sports, is able to clean up after himself.

SleuthSayers: Here It Comes, Ready or Not

SleuthSayers: Here It Comes, Ready or Not:   I have often been asked, over the years, for advice on how to submit short stories to publications--mostly magazines. I don't know how...

KRL Update 12/21/2024

Since KRL will be taking a vacation and not posting a new issue next weekend, up this weekend we have our end of December Mystery Catchup with reviews and giveaways of "A Slay Ride Together With You" Year-Round Christmas Mystery Series by Vicki Delany, "All’s Fair in Love and Treachery" by Celeste Connally, "The Night Woods" by Paula Munier, and "Murder on the Page" by Daryl Wood Gerber https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/end-of-december-mystery-catchup/

And a review and giveaway of "Ghosts of Waikiki" by Jennifer K. Morita along with an interesting interview with Jennifer https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/ghosts-of-waikiki-by-jennifer-k-morita/

And a review and giveaway of "Silent Are the Dead" by D.M. Rowell https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/silent-are-the-dead-by-d-m-rowell/

We also have the latest Queer Mystery Coming Attractions from Matt Lubbers-Moore, and this month also includes a short interview with author Rob Osler https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/queer-mystery-coming-attractions-january-2025/

And reviews of the 3rd season of "Whitstable Pearl" and "The Chelsea Detective Christmas Special" both on Acorn TV https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/whitstable-pearl-season-3-the-chelsea-detective-christmas-special-on-acorntv/

For those who prefer to listen to Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast directly on KRL, you can find the player here for the latest episode which features the Christmas short story "Some Things Don't Change at Christmas" written by KM Rockwood and read by local actor Parker Forrest Lewis https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/new-mysteryrats-maze-podcast-featuring-some-things-dont-change-at-christmas/

We also have another local true crime story by Sarah Peterson-Camacho https://kingsriverlife.com/12/21/the-shellshock-murders-from-wwii-hero-to-unlikely-serial-killer-part-1/

And up during the week we posted a mystery short story by Richie Narvaez https://kingsriverlife.com/12/18/internal-monologue-of-a-creative-writing-professor-mystery-short-story/

And another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Linda Kay Hardie about the anthology "The Perp Wore Pumpkin", which is not only a fun anthology, but purchasing this book can also help people in need https://kingsriverlife.com/12/18/in-pumpkin-pie-season-spice-up-your-dessert-recipe-with-chiles-seriously/

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week, we have a review and ebook giveaway of "Killer Under Contract" by Catherine Bruns https://www.krlnews.com/2024/12/killer-under-contract-by-catherine.html

And a review and giveaway of "Mystery in Marseille" by Nupur Tustin https://www.krlnews.com/2024/12/mystery-in-marseille-bite-sized-art.html

And a review and giveaway of "The Arizona Triangle" by Sydney Graves https://www.krlnews.com/2024/12/the-arizona-triangle-by-sydney-graves.html

Happy Holidays!
Lorie

Scott's Take: Batman – Santa Claus: Silent Knight by Jeff Parker Illustrator Michele Bandini


Batman – Santa Claus: Silent Knight by Jeff Parker, illustrated by Michele Bandini, is a very fast read that I did through the DC Infinite app. It has Batman, Santa, Superman, Zatanna, Green Arrow, Robin and more facing off against Nordic vampires during the holiday season.

 

This is a fast paced four issue read designed to be fun and light hearted. Full of cameos by various heroes, the action moves fast. The art is pleasant and works for this story.

 

There is a sequel which is still in the process of coming out this holiday season called Batman- Santa Claus: Silent Knight Returns by Jeff Parker and a new artist Lukas Ketner which features Robin teaming up with Santa to rescue their fellow heroes from a new villain.

 


 

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

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2024

Mystery Fanfare: WINTER SOLSTICE CRIME FICTION // WINTER SOLSTICE MYSTERIES

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Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: HELLBOY: THE LOST ARMY

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FFB Review: Faithless in Death: In Death Series by J.D. Robb

 

The paperwork after the events in Shadows in Death is incredible and never ending in Faithless in Death by J.D. Robb. It is the spring of 2061 and Lieutenant Eve Dallas of the NYPSD came in early to work the numbers. Minutes after she has finished and submitted the reams of paperwork accounting for everything, she is contacted by dispatch regarding a possible homicide.

When her and her partner, Detective Delia Peabody, arrive on scene, it does not take long for the pair to determine that there it is most definitely a homicide.

Ariel Byrd, an artist who sculpted, is very much dead. The back of her head is caved in. Probably by way of the mallet of some sort, on the floor next to her, with visible blood and gray matter on it. She died in her studio in the West Village.

What is weird is that the 911 call reporting the scene came from a home in the Upper East Side. Gwendolyne Huffman, known to many as Felicity, called it in. She has an explanation for how and why she knew that Bryd was dead. But, is her story believable?

What follows is a complicated case that uncovers a horrific situation regarding a cult, sex trafficking, and a lot more. While the year is 2061, a lot of what is going on in this read published a few years ago very much resonates in the here and now of 2024.

While the usual caveats apply regarding the character head hopping, that soon falls away as the police procedural read grabs and does not let go. Faithless in Death by J.D. Robb is another entertaining and good read. Make sure you read Lesa Holstine's review


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

 

My Large Print hardback came from the Vickery Park Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.

 

Kevin R. Tipple © 2024

Jungle Red Writers: Matching Pipe to Psychopath

Jungle Red Writers: Matching Pipe to Psychopath: HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: One of my favorite things in the world to say is: Reds and readers, here is Tracy Clark ! Tracy, as you well know, is a...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: We Have Always Lived in the Castle: Shirley Jackson

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SleuthSayers: Writing Advice From 1908

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Beneath the Stains of Time: Alias Simon Hawkes (2002) by Philip J. Carraher

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Five Tuesdays in Winter by Lily King

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Five Tuesdays in Winter by ...: Lily King is a new author for me. She has written several novels, but she came to my attention when I read about her short story book, Five ...

Short Story Wednesday: Tooth and Claw: A Longmire Story by Craig Johnson


Tooth and Claw: A Longmire Story by Craig Johnson takes readers to late December 1970 and the North Slope of Alaska. Long before Walt Longmire became Sheriff in Wyoming, he was head of security at an oil rig. Henry Standing Bear has come up from the lower 48 to see him and finds Walt drinking heavily and isolating himself. Vietnam took a toll and Walt is coping by drinking and staying away from the woman he loves, Martha.

 

The isolation and the cold makes some people snap. The latest causality of a breakdown was George Frazier. Frazier works for Walt and was supposed to be on the security detail for a U.S. Geological Survey team doing core testing out on the ice the next day. The day before the Winter Solstice and it will have just 3 hours and 42 minutes of daylight.

 

With Fraizer out, that means Walt Longmire has to go on what should be a relatively easy run. Relatively easy for the artic weather conditions. Henry Standing Bear tags along as he had been complaining about not doing anything, but playing chess in Longmire’s cramped quarters. Good thing he goes too because what should have been a relatively easy same day excursion turns into fight for survival against a massive polar bear that, seemingly, can’t be killed. Throw in a ghost ship, bad weather, and members of the excursion party being killed left and right, and the result is one heck of a pulp adventure read.

 

Tooth and Claw: A Longmire Story by Craig Johnson is one heck of a good read. A fast-moving novella, it comes down to the most primitive battle there is --- man vs nature. The getting there is very much well worth it.

 

Make sure you read Scott Montgomery’s far more detailed review here at his The Hard Word site as well as the author’s recent appearance at The Poisoned Pen and shared by Lesa Holstine here. 



Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/41xy5Oo

 

While I had hoped to read this months ago via NetGalley, the publisher, Penguin Group Viking, denied me as they often do, so I had to wait for Dallas Public Library to get it. They finally did. My reading copy was a digital one through the Libby/OverDrive app and read in one day. 

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2024 

Monday, December 16, 2024

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Shock and Paw by Cate Conte

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Shock and Paw by Cate Conte:   Shock and Paw by Cate Conte Reviewed by Jeanne It’s Christmas time on Daybreak Island, Massachusetts,   and things are getting festive...

Beneath the Stains of Time: Memory Reboot: Case Closed, vol. 92 by Gosho Aoyama

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in November 2024

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Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Dangerous Women by Mark de Castrique


Mystery writer Mark de Castrique is a veteran of the broadcast and film production business. In Washington DC, he directed news and public affairs programs and received an Emmy Award for his documentary film work.

He’s written a number of thrillers and mysteries including the Blackman Agency Investigations series, the Buryin’ Barry series, and some stand-alone novels. In Secret Lives (Poisoned Pen Press, 2022) he introduced Ethel Fiona Crestwater, a seventy-five-year-old retired FBI agent who now rents rooms in her Arlington, Virginia, house to FBI and Secret Service agents, and Crestwater’s double first cousin twice removed Jesse.

Crestwater returns in Dangerous Women (Poisoned Pen Press, 2023) when one of her boarders is injured in what appears to be a mugging gone wrong. Her companion is killed and his backpack with laptop and papers from their office is taken, but a wallet full of cash remained. Both were law clerks to Supreme Court justices; a high-visibility case with far-reaching environmental and energy impacts is under consideration by the jurists. The decision is expected imminently; the outcome is being watched by Native Americans, ranchers, mineral rights groups, fossil fuels special interest groups, and dozens of associated factions. It wasn’t hard to reach the conclusion that someone tried to find out how the decision might be trending and went too far.

The attack took place in the District of Columbia but it involved the Supreme Court, which has its own police force. The question of jurisdiction was being debated when Crestwater alerted the Director of the FBI, who used to be one of her roomers, and he decided that the FBI would lead the investigation, since the crime appeared to affect Federal executives and cross state lines. Crestwater as usual ignored them all and dove headfirst into the deep political waters roiling around the investigation.

This is a dynamic, tightly plotted political thriller. The issues under consideration are timely and relevant. The combination of Crestwater and her much younger cousin is positively inspired. He provides enthusiasm and energy, and she has decades of investigative experience and knowledge of the government to draw on. Propulsive action and crisp writing raise the caliber of this book to above the ordinary, as does the insider knowledge on display. Natives to DC and Arlington will appreciate the references to the streets and the landmarks of the region. Fans of the Joe DeMarco series by Mike Lawson should definitely take a look at this book. Starred review from Publishers Weekly.

The third book in the series is scheduled for release in fall 2025.


·         Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press (October 24, 2023)

·         Language: English

·         Paperback: 320 pages

·         ISBN-10: 1728258332

·         ISBN-13: 978-1728258331 

 

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

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024

 

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

Little Big Crimes: Johnny Christmas, by Ivy Pochoda

Little Big Crimes: Johnny Christmas, by Ivy Pochoda:  "Johnny Christmas," by Ivy Pochoda, in E ight Very Bad Nights: A Collection og Hanukkah Noir, edited by Tod Goldberg, Soho Crime,...

KRL Update 12/14/2024

Up on KRL this week reviews and giveaways of 3 more Christmas mysteries-"Death of a Gingerbread Man" A Hayley Powell Food & Cocktails Mystery by Lee Hollis, "Murder at a Scottish Christmas" by Traci Hall, and "The Christmas Jigsaw Murders" by Alexandra Benedict https://kingsriverlife.com/12/14/christmas-mysteries-for-your-holiday-tbr-part-2/

And a review and giveaway of another Christmas mystery, "Murder at a Scottish Christmas" by Lucy Connelly, along with a fun interview with Lucy https://kingsriverlife.com/12/14/death-at-a-scottish-christmas-by-lucy-connelly/

And a review and giveaway of another Christmas mystery, "I'll Be Home for Mischief" by Jacqueline Frost https://kingsriverlife.com/12/14/ill-be-home-for-mischief-jaqueline-frost/

We also have a review and giveaway of another holiday mystery, "Sleep in Heavenly Pizza" by Mindy Quigley, together with some fun holiday recipes from Mindy! https://kingsriverlife.com/12/14/sleep-in-heavenly-pizza-by-mindy-quigley/

Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Patricia Crisafulli about her latest book "The Secrets of Still Waters Chasm" https://kingsriverlife.com/12/11/in-the-garden-of-still-waters-chasm/

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of yet another Christmas mystery-"Home for the Homicides" by Rosalie Spielman https://www.krlnews.com/2024/12/home-for-homicides-by-rosalie-spielman.html

And a review and giveaway of "Hot Chocolate and A Festive Fatality" by VictoriaTait https://www.krlnews.com/2024/12/hot-chocolate-and-festive-fatality-by.html

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Mistletoe, Mutts, and Murder" by SA Kazlo https://www.krlnews.com/2024/12/mistletoe-mutts-and-murder-by-sa-kazlo.html

Happy Holidays!
Lorie