Thursday, July 31, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Poe, Wishing Thread, How to Rate a Cat

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Poe, Wishing Thread, How to Rate a Cat: Reported by Rita   Poe: Birth of the Detective Story by Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Allan Poe is often cited as fathering the modern dete...

Please Help If You Can

 

It has been a brutal month money wise. Not just with the groceries that is hitting all of us. Been a bunch of car expense stuff as well as medical bills. Things are not good and I am not built to be an OnlyFans model.

So, if you like what we do at Kevin's Corner, please consider making a donation through the PayPal widget on the left side of the blog. We could really use the help.

Please and thank you.

https://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Dentist by Tim Sullivan

 Lesa's Book Critiques: The Dentist by Tim Sullivan

Gravetapping: Review: "Front Sight: Three Swagger Novellas" by Stephen Hunter

Gravetapping: Review: "Front Sight: Three Swagger Novellas" by S...:   Front Sight Three Swagger Novellas by Stephen Hunter Atria Books, 2024     I read Stephen Hunter’s first B...

The Hard Word: THE TRUTH IN MURDER: DENISE MINA'S THE GOOD LIAR

 The Hard Word: THE TRUTH IN MURDER: DENISE MINA'S THE GOOD LIAR

The Hard Word: TWO TOUGH GUY TALES: W.R. BURNETT'S THE LOOP/ MAN WITH A THOUSAND ENEMIES

 The Hard Word: TWO TOUGH GUY TALES: W.R. BURNETT'S THE LOOP/ MAN WITH A THOUSAND ENEMIES

Mystery Fanfare: Summer Camp Mysteries //Summer Camp Crime Fiction

Mystery Fanfare: Summer Camp Mysteries //Summer Camp Crime Fiction: I was not a big summer camp fan. I hated bugs and outdoorsy stuff -- the woods, the camp fire, the ghost stories, the mean girls.  When I wa...

The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers: 7-29-25

 The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers: 7-29-25

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "I Am Not Fluffy" by Liza Cody

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "I Am Not Fluffy" by Liza...: I have only read one novel by Liza Cody, Dupe , the first book in her Anna Lee detective series. I also read one of her short stories. In bo...

George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #235: MASTERS OF DARKNESS By Murray Leinster

 George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #235: MASTERS OF DARKNESS By Murray Leinster

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: WHITE ELEPHANT MANOR

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: WHITE ELEPHANT MANOR:  "White Elephant Manor" by Ross Russell (from Cash Gorman  #5, June 1941) First, a few words about Cash Gorman, a short-lived pulp...

Little Big Crimes: Fancy Car Lover, by Ed Teja

Little Big Crimes: Fancy Car Lover, by Ed Teja:   "Fancy Car Lover," by Ed Teja, in Crimeucopia: A Load of Balls , edited by John Connor, Murderous Ink Press, 2025. This is Ed Te...

Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday "The Heroine" Patricia Highsmith from TROUBLED DAUGHTERS, TWISTED WIVES, Sarah Weinman editor

Patricia Abbott: Short Story Wednesday "The Heroine" Patricia Highsmith from TROUBLED DAUGHTERS, TWISTED WIVES, Sarah Weinman editor

Short Story Wednesday: Three Strikes-You’re Dead! Edited by Donna Andrews, Barb Goffman, and Marcia Talley

 

After an interesting introduction by SJ Rozan that points out the parallels connecting sports and crime, it is on to the fourteen stories that make up the anthology, Three Strikes-You’re Dead! The entering anthology edited by Donna Andrews, Barb Goffman, and Marcia Talley was published in April 2024. While it has been in my massive TBR pile for months, that is only because I am way slower in everything I do these days.

 

One thing that has never changed is I read anthologies straight through from front to back. I have always believed that, even when I don’t necessarily see it, and editor or editor has a plan and thus the stories are set up in the sequence they want readers to read the book.

 

So, the stories I briefly cover below are my personal favorites in the order that they appear in the read. All the stories in the anthology are very good. These are just the ones that resonated with me the best.

 

P. J. “Bulldog” Johnson provided the heroics that propelled his team to victory and their shot in the World Series. He then went and died at the plate in “Murder At Home” by Alan Orloff. Now the Mets General Manager, George Willingham, wants to know what happened and has tasked Assistant Hitting Coach Rick Baines with the job of finding out.

 

Elspeth Mead knows what she knows about bounty hunting from watching some videos and extensive reading of the Stephanie Plum series of books by Janet Evanovich. (Editorial note---the early books are good and then the series got way too predictable and I dropped it.) She lives in Massachusetts and found her own bail bondsman to work for by the name of Antonio Raffagino. As the short story, “The Ultimate Bounty Hunter,” by Sherry Harris begins, she is doing better than her idol in one respect—no cars have blown up to this point in her career. But, she is freezing as she lies on the nearly frozen ground at 11:30 at night as she watches a house and waits for a sign of Culver Krantz.

 

Detective Paddy Doyle is grinding out his last few weeks on the job as carefully as he can so that he can get his pension. Kennedy and Johnson are now in office, things are looking good for the country, and his plan is to keep his head down and not rock the boat. Then the journeyman boxer walks into the precinct and finds his desk. Johnny “Tag” Rowley shows up and wants to get his name cleared. Considering what he did, that is nearly an impossible task.

 

Instead of trying to fix a reputation, getting even is the theme of “Runny Interference” by Kathryn Prater Bomey. Elena Martinez deserves her moment as the star of the band show. With that now in jeopardy, Kinsey Kennedy plans to even the scales of justice.

 

Though sports are involved, “Of Mice And (Murdered) Men” by Rosalie Spielman is a bit of a departure from what is expected. It is also highly entertaining. Zooey isn’t human. She is a member of a large group that calls themselves “Transfigurateurs” or “Tfigs.” Basically, she is a shape shifter, and has the power to shape shift into any creature. That ability means she can go places and see things while being ignored by people unless she does something really obvious. So, you know she is going to witness a murder, right?

 

Back in the day, Mitchell Street was a cop. These days he runs a dojo and also works as a private investigator. That means he knows how to work the case when his friend, Sister George, comes to him about a serious problem. She has known Rory Alvarado since he started coming to the local community center many years ago. In the here and now, he was about to be called up to the majors. But, he failed a drug test. Sister George is sure he isn’t using steroids and wants Street to prove it and clear his name in “Cui Bono” by F. J. Talley.

 

No doubt your favorites would and will be different from mine. Regardless of that simple fact, all the stories in the anthology are good ones. Three Strikes-You’re Dead! is a mighty good read and is sure to score with you.

 

What? You thought I would not make at least one sports related Dad joke? It had to be done. Put the whistle away.


 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3H9aQ5p

 

I bought this read in digital format many months ago using funds in my Amazon Associate Account.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2025

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: “The Bookstore Family” by Alice Hoffman

 Lesa's Book Critiques: “The Bookstore Family” by Alice Hoffman

SleuthSayers: Frittering

SleuthSayers: Frittering: There are too many hours in the day, and I sometimes fritter them away. When I haven’t enough to do, I do even less, often spending my avail...

Review: Fog and Fury: A Haven Thriller by Rachel Howzell Hall

 

Fog and Fury: A Haven Thriller by Rachel Howzell Hall is the first book in a new series where former LAPD Homicide Detective Alyson “Sonny” Rush has moved to Haven, California, to start fresh. She left Los Angeles and a host of problems behind to move to Haven and go to work for her godfather, Ivan Poole. He runs a one-man private investigator agency, Poole Investigations, and promises a change of scenery and career will do wonders for her.

 

He did not really warn her that there would be fog. A lot of fog. Fog that brings back a near death experience in Los Angeles and a weather phenomenon that she hates. Fog is bad, in so many ways.

 

That job trauma and others are with her daily and the various mental exercises don’t help that much. She has also brought her mom with her and that is its own stressor as mom’s grip on reality is slowly slipping. That battle to be present and not lost in a world of fractured memories is a daily struggle for both of them.

 

Truth be told, she doesn’t want to be in Haven. She still wants to be working the streets of Los Angeles and putting bad guys in jail. But, that life is dead to her now. This is her life now, whether she wants it or not.

 

While Ivan is going out to meet the dad of a young teen that was found dead earlier this morning, Sonny’s first case is the hunt for a missing dog. Mackenzie Sutton has come in with her mom, London Sutton, to report that her dog, Figgy, is missing. Not just missing, but in danger according to a picture they were sent.

 

Figgy is a goldendoodle and was given to Mackenzie six years ago by her dad, Cooper, when she had her appendix taken out. Mom and daughter had been looking for the dog on their own until they got a cryptic and threatening text accompanied by a picture of the dog being held over the edge of a bluff with churning sea water and the coastline below. Mackenzie has some ideas on the identity of the culprit so Sonny has something to go on.

 

She also has a lot of anger to fuel her hunt for the scumbag that took the dog and is now threating to kill it. Not just because of the theft and the threat. Things are intensely personal as Cooper and Sonny have been in what she thought was a very serious romantic relationship as she believed he was available. Not only did he seem to be a nice guy who was very much into her, he had shown her divorce papers that indicated he was very single. Furthermore, he always acted like he was single and gave her every indication that things were good and they had a fantastic future.

 

He lied.

 

He isn’t the only one lying to her in Fog and Fury: A Haven Thriller by Rachel Howzell Hall. But, he might be the only one not trying to kill her as this complicated and very atmospheric cozy style mystery moves forward.

 

The weather, especially the heavy fog which is a near daily occurrence, is almost a major character in its own right as Sonny hunts for the missing dog, gets drawn in to the murder case of the young teen, and deals with a host of problems, personally and professionally. She has her hands full constantly and is doing the best she can to hold it together, minute by minute, day by day. The only time she feels normal is when she is actively working and that action helps her a lot in this very enjoyable read.

 

The next book in the series, Mist and Malice, is currently scheduled to come out May 19, 2026, from the publisher, Thomas & Mercer.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4m974Ys

 

This read was recently picked up in digital format as a free read for Amazon Prime Members.

 

Kevin R. Tipple©2025

Monday, July 28, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: “The Bookstore Keepers” by Alice Hoffman

 Lesa's Book Critiques: “The Bookstore Keepers” by Alice Hoffman

Market Call--Guilty Crime Story Magazine

 

As seen on Twitter....


Guilty Crime Story Magazine
@GuiltyCrimeMag

Submissions for issue #15 are open!

Stories around 4k words have the best chance of meeting our needs this time around, must be set in summer or at least have a summery theme.

Flash subs for the website are also encouraged.

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 7/28/2025

 In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 7/28/2025

Mystery Fanfare: CHRISTMAS IN JULY: Mysteries set during the Holidays

Mystery Fanfare: CHRISTMAS IN JULY: Mysteries set during the Holidays: If you read this blog, you know I post lists of crime fiction with all the holiday settings from New Year's Day through New Year's E...

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 64 Calls for Submissions in August 2025 - Paying markets

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 64 Calls for Submissions in August 2025 - Paying m...: This August there are more than five dozen calls for submissions. All of these are paying markets, and none charge submission fees. As alway...

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in June 2025

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Books Read in June 2025:   I read six books in June, and all of them were from my 20 Books of Summer list . I liked all the books; four of them were upbeat and fun; ...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton's Review: Deadly Campaign by Alan Orloff

 

Deadly Campaign by Alan Orloff (Llewellyn Publications, 2012) was published 13 years  ago but the subject might have been ripped out of last week’s headlines. The second book in the Last Laff series, about Channing Hayes and Artie Worsham, co-owners of the Last Laff Comedy Club somewhere in central Fairfax County, Virginia, near Washington, DC, offers insight into the operations of a comedy club, the life of a stand-up comic, and the collusions of a local political campaign. I fear scheming politicos will always be with us.

Channing and Artie have been invited by Thomas Lee, owner of Lee’s Palace, a restaurant next door to Last Laff, to attend a political dinner celebrating Lee’s nephew’s win in the Democratic congressional primary. After a fabulous meal of Chinese cuisine, nominee Edward Wong launched into a polished speech. Shortly after it started, three masked goons dressed in black and carrying baseball bats broke into the room, crushed the video camera, threatened several people including Channing, and smashed the plates, platters, and glassware, then left. After police interviewed the stunned and frightened audience, Hao Wong, Edward’s father, convinced the detectives not to report the crime for fear of damaging Edward’s campaign. Hao was a highly influential member of the Chinese community, many of which were in the room, and he had no trouble pressuring those present to keep the attack to themselves.

The next day Thomas asks Channing to investigate the attack, even though Hao has told him through his wife, Thomas’s sister, to stay out of it. Channing has no real investigative experience but he begins with the obvious, by looking at Edward’s competition to see if the attack was politically motivated. Then he asked enough questions of Edward’s connections to attract the autocratic Hao Wong’s attention, who orders Channing to come to his office and tells him to stop, which of course only annoyed Channing and encouraged him to continue.

In between his bouts of amateur PI work, Channing manages with the daily details of running the comedy club and he develops new material for his own stand-up act which has hit a dry streak. He’s anxious to get his performance mojo back. 

Many threads add to the interest and the plot complexity. The multiple references to places and streets in northern Virginia, my home for 40 years, made the story especially appealing. The ending has a couple of nice twists.

Particularly for readers of political thrillers like Mike Lawson’s Joe DeMarco series and for readers familiar with northern Virginia and its environs, particularly Fairfax County.

Alan Orloff is an Anthony, Agatha, Derringer, and Thriller award winning author. He has published more than fifty short stories in numerous anthologies and periodicals, including Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, Mystery Weekly, Black Cat Mystery Magazine, and five volumes of the Best New England Crime Stories series. He has served on the editorial selection panel for several anthologies and writing awards, and he is a member of Mystery Writers of America (MWA), International Thriller Writers, and Sisters in Crime. 


·         Publisher: Midnight Ink

·         Publication date: January 8, 2012

·         Language: English

·         Print length: 36 pages

·         ISBN-10: 0738723185

·         ISBN-13: 978-0738723181

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4f8KPQm

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025

 

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

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Sunday Evening Humor Seen On Facebook

 


Kathleen Marple Kalb's Blog: So You Wrote the Book, Now What?: No Mercy Rule

 Kathleen Marple Kalb's Blog: So You Wrote the Book, Now What?: No Mercy Rule

Lesa's Book Critiques: Throwing Shade by Deborah Wilde

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Throwing Shade by Deborah Wilde

SleuthSayers: Guest Post: What Kind of Relationship Do You Have With Your Writing?

SleuthSayers: Guest Post: What Kind of Relationship Do You Have ...: This month, I'm turning my column over to a guest, Eric Beckstrom . I've been friends with Eric, a talented writer and photographe...

The Rap Sheet: Cosby Now Owns Double Raptors

 The Rap Sheet: Cosby Now Owns Double Raptors

Guest Post: Excerpt from Death at Rock Bottom: The Reluctant Psychic Mystery series by Kris Bock

 

Please welcome back talented author Kris Bock to the blog today. Back in April, her new series, The Reluctant Psychic Mystery series, launched on 4/28 with A Stone-Cold Murder. She provided an excerpt of the first chapter of that book here. Today she brings us a first chapter excerpt from the upcoming second book in the series, Death at Rock Bottom. Published by Thule Publishing, the read is available in digital format at Amazon and will release Wednesday.

 

In Reluctantly Psychic Mystery series, a quirky loner who can read the history of any object with her touch gets drawn into mysteries at the museum of oddities where she works.

 

Petra Cloch has the psychic ability of psychometry – she can glimpse the history of an object by touching it. Powerful emotions leave behind the strongest vibrations. If Petra touches a watch or ring someone has worn for years, she can sense the wearer’s personality and what they care about most. If she touches an object used as a murder weapon, she might sense the emotions of the killer and the killed – but that doesn’t mean she can identify the killer.

 

To save her sanity, Petra avoids close relationships except with her many pets. She studied geology, because rocks rarely speak to her. Her new job is supposed to focus on the rocks and minerals wing of a peculiar private museum in a small southwestern town. But she can’t avoid the echoes of violence all around her. If she doesn’t want killers to go free, she’ll have to prove there is something wrong by finding evidence beyond the psychic senses she hides.

 

Death at Rock Bottom

After solving the mystery of her predecessor’s death, geologist Petra Cloch wants to focus on her job as the rocks and minerals curator at a quirky, small town New Mexico museum. But her friend and colleague Liberty is suspicious of the supposedly accidental death of Frank Underwood, a retired petroleum engineer and rockhound who died while hiking. Frank acted odd in his last weeks, talking about something incredible he found in the desert and whispering about aliens. Was he showing the first signs of dementia, or were more sinister forces at work?

 

Petra wants to help Liberty uncover the truth, and before long their book club has somehow become a crime-fighting club. Petra uses her gift and her brains to fight through the confusing and contradictory clues along with her newfound family, but has someone gotten a taste for murder?

 

Death at Rock Bottom excerpt from Chapter 1

 

Every rock has a story, but most people don’t know how to read them.

I hear their stories even when I don’t want to.

Liberty, my friend and colleague at the Banditt Museum, unlocked a display case where a hundred or so arrow and spear tips were displayed. “I’ve tried to identify these based on styles, but a lot of them were collected decades ago by people who didn’t keep a record of where the items were found.”

A bigger museum would probably reject any donations without provenance, but the founder and owner of ours, Peyton Banditt, was like one of those Storage Wars dealers who’d buy the contents of a whole storage unit sight unseen hoping one box might hold something valuable. Only instead of then trying to sell the good stuff and dump the rest, Peyton crammed it all into the museum.

I looked at one of the larger spearheads, made of dark reddish-brown stone. The blade had rippled sides leading to a pointed tip. My bachelor’s in geology did not mean I could identify every rock and mineral by sight, but that was chert, common in the Southwest and often used in projectile points. I laid my fingers over the spearhead and settled into the image. I was up on a mesa, looking out over the landscape as I knapped the stone, flaking pieces off the edges to get it sharp and shaped properly for smooth flight.

I opened my eyes and cleared my throat. “Authentic.”

“Are you all right?” Liberty asked.

“It was a lovely scene. Peaceful.” The man working the spear tip knew who he was, how he fit in with his tribe, what the world meant. Must be nice.

On the other hand, I had running water and was much less likely to be killed by a wild animal or dysentery.

Liberty flipped the spearhead over, checked the catalog number, and made some notes as I thought about what I’d learned. My interest was less in the items in front of us and more in how I could read their stories safely. When I hold an object that spent time in human hands, I pick up emotional echoes of the past, residue left behind by the people who used or wore or loved the item.

That sounds cooler than it is. I spent my childhood pushed around by people who wanted to use my talent for their benefit, and most of my adulthood hiding the skill. But then I got a job at an odd little museum in a small New Mexico town, picked up a cluster of fluorite crystals while cleaning my new office, and discovered a murder weapon. Trying to figure out what to do about that led me to a conclusion: I might not always like my gift, but it’s better to know how to use it.

Now Liberty was helping me experiment. She was the only one at the museum who knew I could pick up echoes of the past through psychometry. I wasn’t in a hurry to tell anyone else.

Liberty straightened, turning her head slightly. “Someone’s coming.” The museum was a maze of rooms and hallways connecting in odd ways, so we couldn’t see past the dogleg turn in this hallway, but we could hear the tap tap of heels coming toward us.

I stepped back from the display case, instinctively distancing myself from objects I’d been reading. Liberty closed and locked the case.

A woman I didn’t know swung around the corner and jerked to a stop. She scowled at Liberty. “There you are.”

“Hello, Vanessa,” Liberty said. “You were looking for me?”

“Obviously.” She crossed her arms and tapped her toe on the floor. She was thirty-five or forty, with carefully styled auburn hair. She wore a black suit that managed to look businesslike and sexy at the same time, with its short skirt and the white blouse with the top three buttons undone. She looked like someone I’d expect to see on TV rather than in a small town in New Mexico, where most people wore shorts and T-shirts at this time of year.

Liberty glanced at me. “This is Petra, our newest curator. Petra, this is Vanessa Underwood.”

Vanessa flicked a glance my way and dismissed me as irrelevant. “I want to see the rock Frank gave you.”

I looked at Liberty to see if that made any sense to her.

She appeared equally baffled. “What rock?”

Vanessa’s chin jutted forward. “Frank said he brought the rock to the museum.”

Liberty shook her head. “If he donated a rock, I assume that would have gone to the rocks and minerals wing. That’s Petra’s area now, but she’s only been here two months.”

Vanessa kept staring at Liberty. “This would’ve been in the last few weeks. And he’d bring it to you.”

“Sorry, I can’t help you.” Liberty added dryly, “But I am sorry for your loss.”

Vanessa blinked a couple of times. “Yes. Thank you. It’s hard. Obviously.”

“Frank was a good man,” Liberty said.

Vanessa looked sideways and down. “He was—in his way. But he was acting awfully odd lately. You know how he was.”

Liberty made a noncommittal humming sound.

Vanessa looked straight at me for the first time. “My husband decided to believe in aliens.”

“Oh?” I didn’t know what else to say.

“He was really strange lately,” Vanessa went on. “He claimed he had to escape aliens during one of his rambles in the desert. The next day he barely remembered anything about it. But he kept going out looking, and—Liberty can tell you that part.” She gave Liberty another dirty look. “And he said he brought the rock here—the one the aliens wanted or something. I need to know …”

Liberty gave a little shrug. “I swear I don’t know anything about that rock. But you probably shouldn’t claim Frank was crazy for believing in aliens if you’re going to demand the thing that proved he was right.”

“He wasn’t—I think he was getting dementia or something. But I still want to see that rock. It was … important to him, so I want to make sure … It should be displayed in his memory.” She looked from Liberty to me. I had the feeling she was checking whether we bought her story. When we didn’t respond, she glared. “You better not try to keep it for yourself, or I’ll—I’ll sue.” Her voice rose on those last words. She swung away and strode off, the tap tap of her heels fading after she was out of sight.

Finally I said, “That was strange.”

Liberty let out a little huff of laughter. “Which part?”

“All of it, and I have a pretty high bar for strange. Who’s Frank?”

“He was a petroleum engineer before he retired. Then he got interested in alien life, but not like how Vanessa made it sound. He was involved with SETI—the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. It was started by NASA, and lots of scientists volunteer with it. They’re looking for evidence of intelligent life on other planets, but that means things like listening for signals in space. Frank didn’t believe in alien abductions, as far as I know.”

“So this rock …” I didn’t know how to finish that sentence.

Liberty spread her hands. “I have no idea. I certainly can’t imagine it had anything to do with an alleged alien abduction.”

“And Vanessa was Frank’s …”

“Wife. His second wife. They married about five years ago.”

I frowned over that. “I guess grief affects people in strange ways.”

“Yeah. If it is grief.”

“You don’t like Vanessa.” It didn’t take psychic powers to realize that.

“No. I’ve always thought she married Frank for his money.”

“How did he die?” I asked.

“About a week ago, Vanessa reported him missing. Search parties went out and eventually found him in the desert. He’d been dead for almost a day. The theory is that he got dehydrated and lost. Extreme dehydration can interfere with one’s ability to think clearly. It can happen even to young, healthy people. Frank was in his late sixties.”

“That’s tragic, regardless of how it happened.”

“It’s possible he had dementia, but I never saw any sign of it. It would’ve had to get bad fast to make him behave that oddly now.” She spoke slowly, as if figuring out her thoughts as she said them. “When I heard he’d died, I was shocked, and sad, because he was in great shape—he hiked all the time—and he should’ve had years left. It never occurred to me to wonder …”

“About aliens?” I asked cautiously.

She laughed. “No. I’m quite certain life exists elsewhere in the universe. There are two trillion galaxies, each with billions of stars. It’s egotistical to think we’re the only place with life. That doesn’t mean I think little green men kidnap people and probe them.

I nodded, relieved. I had to believe in paranormal powers, since I had one, but I placed alien abductions alongside folktales about werewolves and unicorns, in the category of highly unlikely.

“No,” Liberty said, “I’m wondering about foul play of the human variety.”

 


Learn more The Reluctant Psychic Mystery series or order copies. Available in ebook and print at all major retailers.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/44U5PFy

 


Kris Bock©2025

Kris Bock writes adult mystery, suspense, and romance novels, many with outdoor adventures and Southwestern landscapes as well as other books. Learn more at www.krisbock.com.

 

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: Writers and Liars by Carol Goodman

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Writers and Liars by Carol Goodman

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of July 27, 2025

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of July 27, 2025

KRL Update 7/26/2025

Up on KRL this week reviews and giveaways of 2 mysteries featuring pets-"Dogged Pursuit" by David Rosenfelt and "A Purrfect Date" by Alex Erickson https://kingsriverlife.com/07/26/a-pair-of-pet-mysteries-by-david-rosenfelt-alex-erickson/

And a review and giveaway of "Murder at the High School Reunion" by Lee Hollis https://kingsriverlife.com/07/26/murder-at-the-high-school-reunion-by-lee-hollis/

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Murder on U.S. Rte. 116" by DonnaRae Menard, along with an interesting interview with DonnaRae https://kingsriverlife.com/07/26/murder-on-u-s-rte-116-by-donnarae-menard/

 

We also have the latest Queer Mystery Coming Attractions from Matt Lubbers-Moore https://kingsriverlife.com/07/26/queer-mystery-coming-attractions-august-2025/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "A Wicket of Lies" by Victoria Tait https://www.krlnews.com/2025/07/a-wicket-of-lies-by-victoria-tait.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "A Plattering of Murder" by JC Eaton https://www.krlnews.com/2025/07/a-plattering-of-murder-by-j-c-eaton.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Someone Is Out There" by Kaye George https://www.krlnews.com/2025/07/someone-is-out-there-by-kaye-george.html

 

Happy reading,

Lorie 

Mystery Fanfare: CODE OF SILENCE: New British crime series

Mystery Fanfare: CODE OF SILENCE: New British crime series: Code of Silence is a British crime drama, now available on BritBox in the U.S. The series stars Rose Ayling-Ellis as Alison, a deaf police...

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: New Web Site by Caroline Clemmons

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Spell the Month in Books — July 2025

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Spell the Month in Books — July 2025: Spell the Month in Books is a monthly meme hosted by Jana at Reviews from the Stacks . The link up post is posted on the first Saturday of ...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkin...:   Reviewed by Jeanne Monique Grant is working for Vivant magazine, hoping to make a name for herself as a reporter when the incredible ...

Scott's Take: West Coast Avengers Vol. 1: The Gospel of Ultron by Gerry Duggan, Danny Kim (Artist), Arthur Hesli (Colorist), and others

 

West Coast Avengers Vol. 1: The Gospel of Ultron by Gerry Duggan, Danny Kim (Artist), Arthur Hesli (Colorist), and others, collects the first five issues of the series and comes out July 22nd. This series will only be two volumes. Unfortunately, before the trade is even released, they have cancelled this series citing low sales. Obviously it is not being given a second chance with readers with the trade since why would people buy the first volume of a killed series?

 

This series sees a new team of West Coast Avengers (basically California Avengers) attempting to reform villains. One of the biggest recruits to this program is Ultron. Ultron has spread himself into separate programs to prove which way is superior. There is a good Ultron who has joined the Avengers, an evangelistic one who has founded a church dedicated to turning humans into robots, and there are other Ultrons. Also, Hydra Cap is back….

 

The team consists of Spider-Woman, War Machine, Iron Man, Firestar, and Blue Bolt. Iron Man is his usual funny self and I enjoyed his presence. Firestar has one of the most compelling story arcs as her time as a double agent for the X-men has led to her have an alcohol problem and a severe hatred of all robots.

 

The rest of the characters get some moments, but they did not stick in my mind as I read this as it released through the Marvel Unlimited app. The art was above average and worked for this book.  The ending, which is a setup for the second volume is rather abrupt.

 

The second volume titled, War of Ultron, should release December 2025.  I liked this series, but I did not like Akerman’s Iron Man which had two relaunches in ten issues. It seems Iron Man is going to be reset with a new status quo which is another reason this series is being killed.


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4kBRBz0

 

I read this through the Marvel Unlimited app.

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2025

Friday, July 25, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: Something Whiskered by Miranda James

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Writer Beware: Contract Controversy (and Change) at Must Read Magazines

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Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 36 Writing Contests in August 2025 - No entry fees

Publishing ... and Other Forms of Insanity: 36 Writing Contests in August 2025 - No entry fees: This August there are three dozen free writing contests for short fiction, novels, poetry, CNF, nonfiction, and plays. Prizes range from $20...

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: A Flat Tyre in Fulham by Josephine Bell

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Patricia Abbott: FFB-INDIAN COUNTRY-Philip Caputo

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Paula Messina Reviews: Champagne for One by Paula Messina

 

Please welcome back Paula Messina to the blog today…

 

 

 

Champagne for One

 

by Paula Messina

 

 

When an acquaintance with a bad cold asks Archie Goodwin to take his place at an annual charity dinner for unwed mothers, the private detective agrees. After all, it might be fun. So begins Rex Stout’s Champagne for One.

Fans of Stout’s Nero Wolfe know the fun won’t last long. When Archie’s around, the Grim Reaper is tagging along.

Sure enough, Faith Usher collapses and dies after drinking a glass of champagne.

Everyone in attendance, even the butler, is one hundred and fifty percent positive that Faith committed suicide. Her habit of keeping a vial of cyanide in her purse was widely known, and Faith had frequently voiced her intention to ingest the poison. Besides, witnesses insist no one tampered with the champagne. Even Inspector Cramer is convinced Faith died at her own hand. Case closed.

Archie pipes up. Not so fast. Faith Usher didn’t kill herself. She was murdered.

His proof? His eyes. Shortly before Faith’s demise, one of the other honored guests, worried Faith would harm herself, warned Archie about the cyanide’s whereabouts. Archie kept an eye peeled on the purse in question while closely monitoring Faith’s every move. He knows what he saw and what he didn’t see—Faith never went near the purse and couldn’t have laced the champagne with cyanide. Ergo, Faith was murdered.

Before Nero Wolfe can ring for beer, Edwin Laidlaw, one of the gentlemen who attended the deadly dinner, arrives to plead that Wolfe uncover the murderer. Faith in Archie’s accurate memory and a hefty retainer convince Wolfe to take on the case. The game’s afoot.

Goodwin can assert in the affirmative that Faith was murdered, but he can also prove no one tampered with Faith’s last glass of champagne. Archie is frustrated. Wolfe is stumped. How did the murderer taint the bubbly?

Wolfe, genius that he is, gathers everyone who attended at the party in his office, and….  No spoiler alert here. I’m not telling. You’ll have to read Champagne for One to learn the killer’s identity.

Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin remain among the most popular figures in the pantheon of mystery fiction. The stories still feel fresh. Archie is always witty and Nero Wolfe perennially grouchy. Wolfe and Goodwin appear in several TV series, including one set in Rome and starring Francesco Pannofino as Wolfe and Pietro Sermonti as Archie.

In 2000, Nero Wolfe was a finalist for the Series of the Century Award at Bouchercon XXXI, and Rex Stout was a finalist for the Writer of the Century Award. To no one’s surprise, Agatha Christie snagged both awards. Well, she would have snagged them if she’d still been around. The Mystery Writers of America presented Stout with the Grand Master Awards in 1959. Rex Stout, who was as thin as Nero Wolfe was fat, was inducted into the Short Mystery Fiction Society Hall of Fame in 2024.


Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/46EiW05

 

Paula Messina ©2025

Paula Messina lives within spitting distance of the Atlantic. When she isn’t reading about Archie Goodwin’s adventures, she’s writing fiction, make that historical, contemporary, and humorous fiction.