Saturday, May 31, 2025

DriveThru Fiction: Benefit for St. Louis Tornado Recovery (MO Authors) [BUNDLE] From Misti Media


News from Sandra Murphy:

"I showed Jay video clips of the aftermath of the tornado that caused over a billion dollars in damages in St Louis and suggested we help. With Matt from DriveThruFiction, we've created a bundle of titles from St Louis writers. Please help us promote. So far, this is for the month of June only. There are three collections and one anthology in the bundle.

This benefit is exclusive to DriveThruFiction. All editor and publisher proceeds will be donated to the ongoing recovery efforts. We'll be running this through the entire month of June. Anything you are able to do to help boost this would be much appreciated.

Titles included are Dark Hearts and Tattletales (Jane Gwaltney), From Hay to Eternity (mine), Harrigan's Price (Chris Bauer), and Yeet Me in St Louis (anthology of all St Louis authors).

https://www.drivethrufiction.com/product/524515/
 
Sandy in St Louis (I'm fine, my house is fine, but I did get caught on the edge of it, in the car - pretty darn scary)"





Lesa's Book Critiques: The Spirit Moves by Carol J. Perry

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Spirit Moves by Carol J. Perry

KRL Update 5/31/2025

Up on KRL this week reviews and giveaways of 3 more mysteries for your summer tbr-"Death by Chocolate Pumpkin Muffin" by Sarah Graves, "Booked for Revenge" A Tea and Tomes Mystery by Karen Rose Smith, and "The Potting Shed Murder" by Paula Sutton https://kingsriverlife.com/05/31/muffins-tea-english-village-mysteries/

And a review and giveaway of "Detective Aunty" by Uzma Jalaluddin along with an interesting interview with Uzma https://kingsriverlife.com/05/31/detective-aunty-by-uzma-jalaluddin/

 

And a review and giveaway of "Hidden Smoke" by Lee Goldberg https://kingsriverlife.com/05/31/hidden-in-smoke-by-lee-goldberg/

 

And mystery short story by Christopher Deliso https://kingsriverlife.com/05/31/mystery-short-story-the-mexico-job/

 

Up during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author D.S. Lang about the historical setting in her books and about her new book "The Doomed Doctor" https://kingsriverlife.com/05/28/time-and-place/

 

And another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Lyndy Ryan about her new book "Another Fine Mess" and how her grandmother influenced her love of mysteries https://kingsriverlife.com/05/28/mayhem-and-butterscotch-murder-mysteries-with-my-great-grandmother/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "An Auction of Secrets" by Victoria Tait https://www.krlnews.com/2025/05/an-auction-of-secrets-by-victoria-tait.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "A Superior Way to Die" by Linda W. Fitzgerald https://www.krlnews.com/2025/05/a-superior-way-to-die-by-linda-w.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Kaua'i Storm" by Tori Eldridge https://www.krlnews.com/2025/05/kauai-storm-by-tori-eldridge.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of June 1, 2025

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of June 1, 2025 

Beneath the Stains of Time: Boundary Reached: Q.E.D. vol. 50 by Motohiro Katou

Beneath the Stains of Time: Boundary Reached: Q.E.D. vol. 50 by Motohiro Katou: I started reading Motohiro Katou's Q.E.D. in 2018 and over the years, despite some prolonged hiatuses and ill-fated restarts, it not on...

SleuthSayers: Where Everybody Knows Your Name

SleuthSayers: Where Everybody Knows Your Name:    I'm not a huge fan of network television. Except for the nightly news, our TV's always off unless I'm watching a DVD or strea...

Judy Penz Sehluk: Midnight Schemers: Checking Out at the Live Free or Die Motel by Debra Bliss Saenger

 Judy Penz Sehluk: Midnight Schemers: Checking Out at the Live Free or Die Motel by Debra Bliss Saenger

The Rap Sheet: Women on Top Down Under

 The Rap Sheet: Women on Top Down Under

The Rap Sheet: The Cream of Canada’s Crop

 The Rap Sheet: The Cream of Canada’s Crop

Guest Post: Excerpt: Sex and Death on the Beach: A Florida Beach Mystery by Elaine Viets

  

Please welcome author Elaine Viets back to the blog today as she shares the first chapter excerpt from her new book, Sex and Death on the Beach: A Florida Beach Mystery. This first book in the series, published by Severn House, is scheduled to be released on June 3rd. It is available from Amazon and other vendors.

 

Sex and Death on the Beach: A Florida Beach Mystery

 

Chapter 1

 

          My name is Norah McCarthy, and I own the most exclusive apartment building in Peerless Point, Florida. The Florodora is more than a hundred years old, the first apartment building in this south Florida beach town between Fort Lauderdale and Miami.

          You don’t need money or social status to rent an apartment at the Florodora. You must be a member of a more exclusive group. You have to be a genuine Florida Man or Woman. You’ve seen the headlines: “Florida Man Busted with Meth, Guns and Baby Gator in Truck.” Or: “Florida Woman Bathes in Mountain Dew in Attempt to Erase DNA after Committing Murder.”

Yes, those are real headlines.

Florida Men and Women stories often involve alcohol and alligators, although the Florida Man who tossed a live alligator the size of a Labrador through the drive-up window of a burger joint was probably sober.

Seems this Florida Man found a gator by the road and dumped it in the back of his pickup (pickups are Florida Man’s favorite vehicle). Then he got out of the truck and chucked the gator through the burger joint drive-up window. After he paid for his soft drink.

Unbelievable?

That’s the standard reaction to Florida Man. Are there any limits on his (or her) so-called pranks?

Nope. And many of them aren’t funny. Including the Miami Cannibal, a naked marauder who attacked an innocent man, chewed off the poor guy’s face and left him blind. The cops shot that Florida Man dead.

A slang dictionary says Florida Man “commits bizarre or idiotic crimes, popularly associated with – and often reported in – Florida.”

Florida Man, known as the “world’s worst superhero,” became nationally famous in 2013 when he was given his own Twitter account. He’s inspired a play, two TV series, songs, and more.

          Like many Floridians, my feelings about Florida Man and Woman are somewhere between appalled and perversely proud. I’m descended from an early Florida Woman, my grandmother, Eleanor Harriman.

          Grandma always had a soft spot for scapegraces, since she was one herself. She was a Florodora Girl, a superstar chorus girl a century ago. Grandma was in the 1920 Broadway production of Florodora, before she eloped with handsome Johnny Harriman, a millionaire, back when a million was real money. She was married at sixteen and madly in love.

          When I was old enough, Grandma told me about poor Johnny’s accidental death, which involved a champagne bottle and a chandelier.

          “I loved that man,” Grandma said. “I’m glad he died happy.”

          Johnny’s death made Grandma a rich widow at seventeen. She moved to Peerless Point and built this apartment building right on the ocean in 1923, on a narrow barrier island.

          The building was as quirky as Grandma, with grand rooms, odd hideaways and at least one secret staircase. To her bedroom.

          Grandma never married again, but she never lacked for male companionship. In 1941, Grandma left the apartment with a caretaker and went north to New York for six months. She returned in mid-December with a newborn baby girl, Dot, my mother. Grandma said she’d adopted an unmarried cousin’s baby.

Was Dot Grandma’s real daughter? No one knows for sure.

I moved in with Grandma when I was four, after my parents were killed by a drunken driver in 1988. The residents became my family, an eccentric collection of honorary uncles and aunts. When Grandma died at age ninety-eight some twenty years ago, she left me the Florodora.

          I miss her. Every day. I’m reminded of her constantly. Her life-size portrait dominates the apartment building’s office on the first floor. Florodora Girls had to be either brunettes or redheads, weigh no more than 130 pounds and stand five-feet-four inches tall. Grandma insisted that was “tall for the time.” I inherited her thick dark hair and hope mine will turn the same shade of white as Grandma’s hair when I get older. I’m five-feet-ten. I got my height from my father.

          The Florodora is a prime example of high-style Spanish Colonial, a white stucco structure with a red barrel-tile roof. The windows in front have elaborate plaster Churrigueresque, which make the windows look like they’re framed in cake frosting.

If you drive past the Florodora on South Ocean Drive, you’ll see the old white apartment building looks much the same as it did during the roaring Twenties. It’s shaded by palm trees and surrounded by a coral rock wall with purple bougainvillea spilling over the top. The Florodora is set back from the sidewalk by a courtyard cooled with a jungle of tropical plants.

The courtyard’s centerpiece is a swimming pool with a flirty Twenties’ bathing beauty in mosaic on the bottom. Most days you’ll find the apartment’s carefully curated collection of misfits sunning themselves by the pool.

Not today. The plumbers, Liam and Lester Sykes, were digging up the courtyard. Once again, the antique plumbing was a problem.

The Florodora needs constant maintenance. That may be why it’s almost the only old Florida building left on Ocean Drive. On either side of the building, and marching relentlessly down to Miami, are high-rise condos. Most look like shoeboxes standing on end.

Developers offered Grandma fabulous sums for the Florodora and its five-acre lot, but she stubbornly refused to sell.

Grandma made me promise not to sell the building or the property. I gladly keep that promise. I love the Florodora almost as much as I loved Grandma. Besides, there’s no reason to sell it. I have plenty of money. I’m forty-one and love beach life.

What you can’t see from the road is the beachfront. The Florodora sits on the edge of the Beachwalk, a wide strip of boardwalk teeming with tourists and vendors selling everything from ice cream and rum-filled pineapples to T-shirts and beach umbrellas. The sea air smells of salt and suntan lotion and the breeze is soft on the hottest days.

I longed to be out there now, but I couldn’t lounge on the beach. After I got the bad news from the plumber, I went back inside to finish my work. I needed to find a new resident for the empty apartment.

I kept my grandmother’s tradition of renting to Florida Men and Women, using my gut feeling. After years of living with Grandma’s choices, I thought I could recognize the more benign versions of the breed.

There was no way I could advertise for the resident I wanted. I needed a referral from someone I trusted. Ben the beach cop had found two possible renters. The third one just showed up.

The four-story Florodora has eight apartments. Each floor has only two suites, and they’re two thousand square feet. That’s huge by beach standards. People will kill for a big, affordable apartment with ocean views.

The special Floridians at the Florodora Apartments have never been in the news – not yet, anyway. Not even Billie, who held up a convenience store with a banana and stole three overdone dogs from its hot dog roller grill.

The empty apartment is on the first floor. Next to it lives Mickey, our artistic saboteur. Kind, gentle Mickey lives alone and works as a freelance artist, but she’s been known to vandalize for a good cause.

My favorite prank was what Mickey did in the local gas station bathroom. In the restroom was a wall-mounted infant diaper changing station that pulled down into a changing bed. Mickey put a sign on the plastic baby bed that said, “Place sacrifice here.”

Right above Mickey, on the second floor, lives Lennox, a Shakespearean actor and my grandmother’s last tenant. Somewhere in his seventies, I’m not sure if Lennox is a real Florida Man. Maybe forty-five years ago, when Grandma rented to a flamboyantly gay actor, that was a qualification.

Next to Lennox on the second floor is a real Florida Woman, Willow. Five years ago, Willow was a successful Manhattan model known as Gorgeous Gwen. Max Devine, a big deal designer, caught her eating a cheeseburger and fries in a diner.

“Stop that, darling.” He tried to take the cheeseburger out of her hand. “Fast food will make you fat.”

“Not as fat as your head,” she said, and broke the plate over his head.

Fortunately, Gwen (now Willow) had saved enough money to retire to Florida, where she cultivates pot and studies Eastern philosophy.

Willow loves bright flowers and good weed. I can smell what Willow is doing. She’s smoking her latest cannabis crop on her back balcony, where she gardens. Willow has long blonde hair and wears loose, floaty clothes.

Billie the banana bandit lives on the third floor. Since he couldn’t hang by the pool today, he retreated to his living room to watch old movies. Rocky, by the sound of it. Billie writes retrospectives about movies. His first book was a New York Times bestseller.

I live on the top floor, in Grandma’s old apartment. Dean the diver lives next door to me. That’s convenient, since Dean and I are sometime lovers. I’m sure the whole building knows that. Dean is forty-two, with blond hair and hazel eyes. Smart and funny. A certified hunk. Grandma would have said he was the bee’s knees.

I went with a different gut feeling when I saw Dean. I felt the Florodora could use some eye candy. I admired Billie the banana bandit’s fine mind, but Billie could turn a person into a pillar of salt when he talked about his latest movie obsession.

I’m the only one who knows Dean is an ex-cop who went in to Witness Protection after he testified against fifteen mobsters who ran online prostitution rings, selling underage girls. The mob put out a contract on Dean while he spent two stressful years testifying against the cyber-pimps. Dean’s testimony put fourteen mobsters in prison. Another hanged himself.

A visit to a plastic surgeon changed Dean’s looks. Now he lives at the beach, drinking, fishing and diving. It’s lobster season, and today he’s diving for spiny lobsters.

I like our current residents, though not in the same way as Dean. I was relieved when the live-in staff agreed to stay on after Grandma died. Calypso, the housekeeper, is Bahamian, what the islanders call a “big-panty woman.” She is proud of her callipygous posterior. Calypso keeps the Florodora shining and cleans the residents’ rooms, as she sings spirituals in a pure, clear contralto, a preview of the heavenly choir.

          Rafael, a dark, stocky man who knows inventive ways to repair ancient machinery, handles maintenance and takes care of the grounds. He keeps the building one step ahead of the city inspectors, who are determined to shut us down. I figure the inspectors are in the pay of the developers, and will get a hefty bonus if they successfully condemn the Florodora.

Rafael has a bachelor apartment above the garage. Calypso lives rent-free in my parents’ old apartment. Calypso is quirky, but too hard-working to be a Florida Woman. The same goes for Rafael. He’s definitely not Florida Man material.

So that’s the Florodora line-up: a Shakespearean actor my grandmother found, and my four picks: Billie the banana bandit; Mickey the artistic saboteur; Willow, the pot-smoking ex-model; and Dean the diver.

I did well picking those four, so you’d think I’d know exactly who’d fit in, but I couldn’t find the right person. I sat behind the reception desk, reading through my application files.

One applicant was an accountant. I asked him what was the craziest thing he’d ever done. He confessed to skinny dipping “but it was dark and I was alone. No one saw me.”

He definitely wasn’t a Florida Man. Especially since he wanted “peace and quiet.”

I could hear Calypso vacuuming the upstairs hall and singing “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” while the Sykes brothers tore up the courtyard with a mini-excavator. Rafael was trimming the bougainvillea with something that sounded like a dental drill. Drunken college students were playing beach volleyball to cheers and loud Eighties music.

No way that accountant would be happy at the Florodora. Sorry, sir, I thought. No peace and quiet here. Application denied. For your own good.

A woman wanted an apartment for herself and her sixteen “very clean cats.” The craziest thing this woman ever did was make a kitty litter cake for a party. The cake looked like a dirty litter box, using melted Tootsie Rolls. It was served in a real litter box.

Yuck. No thank you.

I still had the three applications from Sammie Lant. Ugh. That woman ignited such a red rage in me, I forgot manners and customer service. About six months ago, she applied for the empty apartment. I told her no. She was the worst kind of Florida Woman.

Sammie was locally famous – make that notorious – for having sex on the beach with a college quarterback during spring break. The beach cop threw a blanket over the copulating couple and hauled them off to jail for indecent exposure. The judge fined them both, but Sammie’s partner lost his college scholarship for lascivious behavior.

Sammie thought it was funny that she’d destroyed a young man’s promising career.

          She was back the next week, offering me double the rent. I still said no. The third time Sammie caught me when I was outside, watering the courtyard plants. Calypso was sweeping. Sammie was dressed formally for Florida, in a red blouse, black pleather skirt, and red heels with rhinestone butterflies. Her blonde hair hung loose and her bulging breasts were nearly falling out of her top. A rhinestone butterfly rested in her décolleté.

This Sammie attempted a hoity-toity accent. “The Lants are an old Lancaster family,” she said. “That’s Lancaster in England. Your building has nothing but nobodies.” She looked pointedly at Calypso and said, “And mutts.”

          That’s when I lost my temper. “Old families are like potatoes,” I said. “The best part is underground. And that’s where I’d like to put you. If you ever come back and insult me or my residents again, you’ll regret it. I will never, ever rent that apartment to you. I will rent it over my dead body. Or better yet, yours.”

          We must have been arguing pretty loud, because someone called 911. Jordan DeMille, a Peerless Point cop, showed up. I wasn’t sure how much he’d heard.

          Sammie cried crocodile tears and said, “Did you hear that, Officer? She threatened my life.”

          “Yeah, yeah, Sammie,” Jordan DeMille said. Like most of the local force, he was sick of Sammie’s shenanigans. DeMille marched Sammie out of there, to the cheers of the Florodora residents.

“If that woman moved in here, I would have given notice,” Calypso said. All the other residents had quietly told me the same thing. Sammie was universally hated at the Florodora.

          I checked the stack again, but there were no more applicants. I listened to the clock tick and the familiar blend of Florodora noise, when suddenly I heard loud screams. So loud, Calypso switched off her vacuum and pounded outside. I followed her. We were hit by a horrible sight.

          A muddy Liam the plumber was pointing into the hole excavated for the pipes and shouting, “Dead. Real dead.” Lester was throwing up in a potted palm.

          I looked over the side of the excavation. Even though the body was reduced to a pile of cartilage, bones and scraps of skin that looked like dirty clothing, I knew who it was.

          Sammie Lant. She’d been strangled with a gold bikini top.

I felt like I’d been socked in the stomach. Was one of the Florodora’s residents a killer?

 

                                      ***

 



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

 

 

Elaine Viets ©2025

 

Elaine Viets has written 34 mysteries in four series, including the Josie Marcus, Dead-End Job, and Angela Richman, Death Investigator mysteries. With Sex and  Death on the Beach, Elaine Viets returns to her adopted home, South Florida. Her first Florida Beach mystery will be published June 3rd. Elaine’s award-winning short stories are collected in Deal with the Devil and 13 Short Stories. She’s won the Agatha, Anthony and Lefty Awards and was honored with Malice’s Lifetime Achievement Award.

Friday, May 30, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: Mrs. Pargeter’s Pound of Flesh by Simon Brett

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Mrs. Pargeter’s Pound of Flesh by Simon Brett

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Remainders of the Day: A Bookshop Diary by Shaun Bythell

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Remainders of the Day: A Bookshop Diary by Shaun ...:   Reviewed by Jeanne When the local distillery closed, the small Scottish town of Wigtown found itself without a major industry to emplo...

In Reference To Murder: Canadian Awards of Excellence Winners

 In Reference To Murder: Canadian Awards of Excellence Winners

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange

 In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange

The Rap Sheet: Hits with Brits: 2025 Dagger Nominees

 The Rap Sheet: Hits with Brits: 2025 Dagger Nominees

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Go Down, Death by Sue Brown Hays

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: Go Down, Death by Sue Brown Hays

In Reference To Murder: Friday's "Forgotten: Books - The Midnight Plumber

 In Reference To Murder: Friday's "Forgotten: Books - The Midnight Plumber

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK : ALPHA CENTAURI OR DIE!

Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK : ALPHA CENTAURI OR DIE!:   Alpha Centauri or Die!  by Leigh Bracket (fix-up novel of "The Ark of Mars C [ Planet Stories , September 1953] and "Teleportres...

Patricia Abbott: FFB: ORDINARY GRACE, William Kent Krueger

 Patricia Abbott: FFB: ORDINARY GRACE, William Kent Krueger

Guest Post: Copperman/Dumas: An Analysis by E.J. Copperman

 

Please welcome E. J. Copperman, Jeff Cohen’s alter ego, to the blog today. His new book, Switcheroo: A Fran and Ken Stein Mystery, releases Tuesday, June 3rd. Published by Severn House, the read is the third book in this mystery series. Available at Amazon and other vendors.

 

 

Copperman/Dumas: An Analysis by E.J. Copperman

I’ve never been aware of a direct influence on my writing. That is to say, I haven’t caught myself writing like anybody else, except on very rare occasions when I was trying to do so. Which has happened maybe twice.

Lately, however, I’ve been reading the works of an author and finding similarities to my own style. Now, I know that I wasn’t trying to sound like him, because I’d never actually read his work before. And I know he wasn’t trying to sound like me, because he died in 1870. So it’s pure coincidence, obviously.

Still, I seem to write, in some cases, like Alexandre Dumas.

Let me start by saying I’m not comparing myself to the author of The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo (which is the book of his I’m reading now, and it’ll take me a while: it’s more than 1,200 pages long). I’m suggesting that some of the things Dumas did in his book are like some of the things I do in my own, like Switcheroo, the new Fran and Ken Stein mystery novel being published June 3.

Are my characters swordsmen, swashbucklers and people of rank in 1700s France? No, they are not. Fran and Ken Stein are, if you read their names carefully, people unlike others who have some special abilities of their own. They weren’t so much born as created, and they are bigger and stronger than, let’s say, everybody else.

But I’m finding on my reading of Dumas (my previous experience had been an audiobook of The Three Musketeers, heard mostly while I was driving back and forth to Philadelphia, so my full attention might have been elsewhere), that his style might be counter to what I would have expected from an author of some of the most famous adventure novels ever written.

For one thing, Alex (we’re buddies now) writes dialogue. A lot of dialogue. For a guy who’s best remembered for swordfights and galloping horses, he has his characters deliver plot through conversation quite a bit. And, to be honest, so do I, which is also slightly unexpected. I came originally from a screenwriting background (don’t bother checking IMDb because I’m not there), so “show don’t tell” should be my ironclad credo. But I love to write dialogue and I do it a great deal of the time. I think character is often revealed in dialogue and you can have some fun reading it if it’s done right.

Alex also tends to build to a chapter ending with at least a tiny cliffhanger in it. This might have something to do with the fact that much of his work was first published in segments, serialized. This might also have something to do with that 1,200-page length, because like Dickens, he was likely paid by the word when he was starting out.

I am not paid by the word but I do strive to give the reader a reason to keep going, particularly at the end of each chapter, when they could easily say, “Well, that’s enough,” and put the book on the nightstand. So I follow Alex’s lead, without knowing until recently that I was doing so.

He also tends to write about groups of people trying to accomplish a goal. There are, in truth, four musketeers, and otherwise his characters often take sides in clusters. I like to build “teams” rather than have a solitary protagonist who never needs help and takes all the risks alone.

So Alex and I have some things in common. We also have many, many things that we do very differently. I’m not sure I’ve ever had a character ride a horse. He never had one drive in a 1997 Saturn. I have not, to date, written a swordfight. He didn’t have a character scale the side of an apartment building in Queens. In Switcheroo, Fran Stein confronts some unsavory characters in the New York City subway system. Dumas didn’t get to that one, either, because again, the subway opened in 1904, almost 30 years after he died. He also tends to have his characters address each other as monsieur quite a bit, even in translation. Ken Stein uses words like “nimrod,” “nitwit,” and “bozo,” none of which Alex ever employed.

But if I suggest that some aspects of my writing are at least comparable in usage if not quality to Alexandre Dumas, am I being presumptuous? Or are Fran and Ken part of a fiction tradition that goes back hundreds of years?  

After all, Alex didn’t invent all that stuff himself, either.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/43H77o5

 

E. J. Copperman  ©2025 

E.J. Copperman is not a normal person, but a figment of Jeff Cohen’s imagination. Ken and Fran Stein, characters in Switcheroo and two other mystery novels, are not “normal” people either. But that’s the fun of it, no? E.J. has also been responsible for the Haunted Guesthouse, Asperger’s Mystery, Jersey Girl Legal Mystery and other series. Later this year, the first Haunted Paint Store mystery will appear – magically! – in bookstores and libraries hopefully near you.

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Dark City Underground: Review: "Ceylon Sapphires" by Mailan Doquang

 Dark City Underground: Review: "Ceylon Sapphires" by Mailan Doquang

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

Jerry's House of Everything: THE WHISTLER: RETRIBUTION (MAY 16, 1942)

Jerry's House of Everything: THE WHISTLER: RETRIBUTION (MAY 16, 1942): "I..am the Whistler, and I know many things, fir I walk by night.  I know many strange tales, many secrets hidden in the hearts of men ...

Review: A Fondness for Truth: A Polizei Bern Novel by Kim Hays

 

Following Pesticide and Sons and Brothers, A Fondness for Truth: A Polizei Bern Novel by Kim Hays is the third read in the Linder and Doratelli Mystery series set in Bern, Switzerland. While billed as mysteries, and they are, these are also police procedurals with plenty of family and other off the job elements. They are also very good reads.

 

As the novel begins, Andi Eberhart is headed home on a cold and icy March night. It is late and she is on her bicycle as that is how she gets around town. Her helmet has vanished and she has no idea what happened to it. Not that it probably matters when she is deliberately hit by a car and sent flying to an impact that killed her.

 

Initially Homicide Detective Giuliana Linder, though marginally aware of the case, is not assigned to it. But, as things happen, because she is in the station while the lead detective is out in the field, she is the first point of contact for Nisha Pragasam, Andi’s partner. Her family are refugees from Sri Lanka and the civil war decades ago and Nishi is a member of the Swiss Tamils community. This means there are issues of societal caste, assimilation, and more in the background of the case. Then there is the fact that her and Andi were not legally married, even though the two women were partners, lived together, and were raising a baby. Nisha is devastated by what has happened. She is also sure that the crash was no accident.

 

For several years now, Andi has been receiving horrible hate mail. The homophobic screeds have gotten worse since their baby girl was born a few weeks ago. Andi was also recently promoted Skip on her curling team and at least one teammate was vehemently and very publicly upset and causing issues over the promotion and being passed over. Then there is the fact that she was an advocate on social issues and did so as well in her job as an advisor to people drafted into Switzerland’s civil service. Andi was a strong-willed woman with a clear sense of right and wrong and rubbed some folks the wrong way.

 

She had a lot going on in her job and elsewhere so there are many suspects. Friends, family, coworkers, and others all must be investigated and ruled out as the police have little to go on. The only clue is the fact it was a red car that did it and fled the scene.

 

The case is being handled by others, for now, so Giuliana can focus on her current assignment. She is to meet with Manfred Kissling in prison where he awaits trial and get some sort of confession that would explain the horrible act he did a two months ago. Others have tried with no success and now the powers that be want Giuliana to have a crack at him.

 

On a Sunday in January, he picked up his daughters, Mia and Lea, three and five years old, for visitation. He drove over an hour from their house where they lived with their mother who had primary custody, and took them to an outing at a cliff in the Jura mountains. He parked at an overlook, took them to the edge of the cliff, and threw them to their deaths fifteen-hundred-foot below. He then got back in his car and went to where he lived. He was still there when the coops came to arrest him days later.

 

The prosecution easily prove he did it. The evidence is not disputable. He did it. But, nobody, including his ex-wife, knows why he did it, Manfred Kissling has refused all requests to explain. The prosecution does not want to get sandbagged with a surprise at trial so they want Giuliana to go to the prison and interview him. The hope is that she can get him to talk. To do so, she has to make the hour-long plus trip each way and deeply immerse herself in the case so that she can, hopefully, get him to open up and explain to her why he did what he did.

 

As she works that case, it isn’t long before she is drawn into the murder of Andi Eberhart. She, Detective Renzo Donatelli, and others work the increasingly complicated murder case. Along the way they learn quite a lot about the people who have moved here from Sri Lanka, how they are seen back home as well in and outside of the community in Switzerland, racism, assimilation, and more.

 

This goes on while both Giuliana Linder and Detective Renzo Donatelli deal with a lot of stuff going on in their respective families. There are marital strains, a health crisis, and a lot of life stuff going on as both juggle home and their work. Both struggle trying to do it all.

                                  

A Fondness for Truth: A Polizei Bern Novel by Kim Hays is a very complicated mystery/police procedural read. The main characters as well as many of the secondary characters at home and work continue to evolve as life happens. The concept of family, and the many different forms it can take, has always been present in this series and even more so in this read.

 

A series that absolutely should be read in order, A Fondness for Truth: A Polizei Bern Novel is a mighty good read. Strongly recommended.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3Z68F8B

 

 

For more reading about this author and the book, go to Sunday Spotlight—Kim Hays at Lesa’s Book Critiques.

 

My review of Pesticide can be found here. Aubrey reviewed Pesticide here (which got me reading the series) and Sons and Brothers here on the blog. I thought I had also reviewed it, but I can’t find it now and I don’t seem to have a record of it.

 

 

Publicist Wiley Saichek sent me a copy of this book, with no expectation of a review, over a year ago.

 

Kevin R. Tipple©2025

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

The Hard Word: COVERING A LOT OF RANGE: BILL PRONZINI'S THE HANGING MAN & OTHER WESTERN STORIES

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As made clear on the cover with the phrase, Short Stories, Half Crime by Rusty Barnes is a collection of short stories. These reads are crime fiction tales, often noir in style, and not ones to read if you want to feel good about people. The nine tales in the read feature characters living on the edge, in more ways than one. Often pushed to the brink, they react.

 

Some stories that resonated with this reader are:

 

Crate Lang ticked off Robbie Moore who is now making his anger publicly known as “Bad Old Boy” begins. Crate does not want to fight. He just wants Robbie to take the money they already agreed to though Robbie does not seem amenable to that at the point. For Crate, the fight is the easiest time he will have in the days to come.

 

In “The Keeper” all he had to do was get the weed to Fuzzy Zemanek at the Tioga County Fair. Fuzzy has a gig there and John, Fuzzy’s supplier and the narrator’s boss, is insisting he make delivery to him at the fair. The lunch sack contains a lot of baggies stuffed with weed. That delivery would normally go to Fuzzy’s house, but John insists it goes to him at the Fair. Obviously, this seems like a bad idea to take it to the Fair. It was, before long, things are going worse and worse and not just because of the zebras.

 

“Big Daddy” is set in the Pocono Mountains in 1995. Stacy Rich was supposed to do just one little thing to make a little money. Instead, she keeps getting squeezed to do more and more and her options are running out.

 

Ray introduced Sissy to him and that snake on her back is captivating. Jared’s woman took the kids and split, so Ray figures Sissy would be good for him. Whether she is or not slowly becomes clear in “Ampersand.”

 

Kelly had an intense romantic relationship in the past, before Brigid, and she knows about it now. The relationship was with a man so she is very confused as to why and who Kelly really is, beyond the father of their kids. Angel, that man, is who Kelly wants to take the family and visit while also making a final clean break. That visit is just one aspect of the very complicated, “In The Blood.”

 

While those particular tales resonated in me, the nine short stories in Half Crime by Rusty Barnes are all good ones. Published by Redneck Press, each short story tends towards the dark side of life as these are not cozy mysteries with ladies, tea, and cats. These are tales with blood, sweat, fear, and huge heaping tablespoons of desperation.

 

These tales, even for characters seemingly in charge, feature people doing the best they can with their own circumstances. Often those circumstances, as well as their own huma nature and the human nature of others, work against them from start to finish. An entertaining read and strongly recommended if you like dark complicated tales.

 


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/43x7sZo 

 

 

My reading copy was either a free book pickup OR the author sent it to me with no expectation of a review. I have no idea now how I obtained it as either one happens a lot with me.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2025