Beneath the Stains of Time: The Hit List: Top 10 Favorite Reprints from Rue Morgue Press

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Hit List: Top 10 Favorite Reprints from Rue Mo...:   This year marks the tenth anniversary of the permanent shuttering of our beloved, dearly departed Rue Morgue Press following a string of ...

Mystery Fanfare: FATHER'S DAY MYSTERIES // FATHER'S DAY CRIME FICTION

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: The Ivy Tree: Mary Stewart

Bitter Tea and Mystery: The Ivy Tree: Mary Stewart: This story is about a young woman, Mary Grey, who bears a strong resemblance to the heiress to a fortune, Annabel Winslow, who disappeared s...

Jerry's House of Everything: MYSTERY IN THE AIR: THE BLACK CAT (SEPTEMBER 18, 1947)

Jerry's House of Everything: MYSTERY IN THE AIR: THE BLACK CAT (SEPTEMBER 18...: Mystery in the Air  was a summer replacement program for the Abbott and Costello Show   beginning in 1945.  Rather than yucks, this show wen...

Thursday Treats: June 6/18/2026

 Some reading opportunities of interest this week….

 

Fellow SMFS list member Mike McHone announced last week that his short story, The Suicide Disease, was published online at Cold Caller. Mr. McHone stated that this is his 50th story published. Read the tale for free here. 


 Fellow SMFS list member Abe Margel announced that his short story, Redside Ride, was published online at Academy of the Heart and Mind. The story is free to read here.

 

Mr. Margel is also in the new issue of the online publication, Yellow Mama #116. Along with Abe Margel (Exit Through the Back Door) are SMFS list members Elizabeth Dearborn (Who Knew?), Joan Leotta (My Child's New Friends: Poem), J. R. Lindermuth (The Choice),  Joan Leotta (My Child's New Friends: Poem”), and Ed Teja (Clever is for Horses), among other works. As always, you can read the issue for free at the website.

 

Also now out is the latest issue of Black Cat Weekly. SMFS list member Steve Liskow announced the publication of his short story, Pictures at an Execution, appears in Black Cat Weekly #250. His story is also the latest in a long line of SMFS list members being featured on the cover. You can pick up the latest issue here

 

Also now out is Thriller Magazine: June 2026. The latest issue features five crime fiction tales. Available at various vendors, you can also pick it up at Amazon. This magazine is also part of their Kindle Unlimited program. During the current ninety-day trial program, as an Amazon Prime member, you can read for free.

 

Speaking of the Kindle Unlimited program, while poking at the offerings, I discovered that the anthology, Streets of Your Town: PI Stories, is coming out on June 27th. Per the Amazon author listing, Frank Zafiro, Phillip Thompson, Meagan Lucas, Gary Phillips, Craig McDonald, Douglas Corleone, Chris Bauer, Jo Ayker, Mark Newman, and Sean O'Leary, all have stories in read. It will be part of the program at release or you can preorder it at Amazon now for $6.99.

 

By the way, and this is a pet peeve, when something claims to be freaking UNLIMITED, it really should mean UNLIMITED. The Kindle Unlimited program limits you to twenty titles at a time in your “library.” When you are sharing your deal with an adult son who is really into fantasy reads, you hit 20 titles very fast. You then discover that you are very limited at Kindle Unlimited.

 

Back in early April in a previous edition of this column, I told you that author Beau Johnson announced on Threads that his books, out of print due to the demise last year of the previous publisher, were coming back into print. Shotgun Honey released, A Better Kind of Hate: Stories, in both eBook and print format the day after that column ran. The Big Machine Eats: Stories, part of the Bishop Rider series, in both eBook and print formats is now available at the publisher and Amazon.

 

Rock and a Hard Place Press has announced they are publishing Curtis Ippolito’s new crime fiction read, Waves of Burden. Learn more at the publisher with vendor links to pick it up in either print or eBook formats, or go to Amazon for the eBook only. It releases on June 24rth. It is my current read via an ARC at the time I am writing this post. Look for the review here soon.

 

Speaking of upcoming reviews, months ago through NetGalley I was able to read and review the soon to be released anthology, Birds of Prey: New Crime Stories. Edited by Harlan Coben and C.J. Box, the book features eleven short stories. Published by The Mysterious Press, the book comes on  June 23rd in a variety of formats. I will have a publication day review of it here on the blog next week. The read is up on Amazon and other vendors to preorder as well.

 

By the way, if you like what we do here, please consider spreading the word of these posts. Also, if you can, please consider making a donation through the PayPal widget on the left side of the blog. I try not to talk about it, or beg, but the desperation is very real. The hits keep coming here and things are really bad.

 

Until next time….

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: SLAY RIDE TO ETERNITY

Jerry's House of Everything: SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: SLAY RIDE TO ETERNITY:  "Slay Ride to Eternity" by Tedd Thomey  (first published in the Australian edition of Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine , May 1957; th...

Little Big Crimes: A Regular Guy, by Chris L. Robinson

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Short Story Wednesday Review: "Deliverables" by Frank Diamond (Thriller Magazine: February 2026)


“Deliverables” by Frank Diamond in Thriller Magazine: February 2026 opens in an industrial park. February, cold, windy, and the new guy just completed his ninety-day probationary period. Every new person that gets through that ninety-day probationary period can get something to celebrate the milestone.

 

Most don’t ask for anything. A few ask for an extra day off. Max Reynolds has asked to accompany Charlie Cobb on the visit to Conti’s Repair Center. Conti’s is where Boyle Communications outsources their van repair and maintenance needs. Drivers tend to abuse the vans on their delivery routes. Conti’s has worked out well as it was too expensive to keep doing the repair and maintenance work inhouse.

 

About a decade back, Charlie Cobb made a good deal with Rich Conti. Both have benefited. The deal is the deal and honoring it matters.

 

A nice piece of crime fiction with some surprises. It’s a good read.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4owW0XR

 

 

My digital reading copy came by way of my ninety-day free Kindle Unlimited trial.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026

The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers: 6-15-26

 The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers: 6-15-26


COOL NOTE: Aubrey's recent review of Every Lie I Told by Hilary Davidson made the list as did Lesa's recent review of Rescue Me by Andrew Welsh-Huggins.


In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday

In Reference to Murder: Media Murder for Monday: It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news: THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES Maggie Gyll...

Review: Shades of the Job: A Stanley Melvin P.I. Story by Frank Zafiro


Shades of the Job: A Stanley Melvin P.I. Story by Frank Zafiro is the second book in the series that started with Hallmarks of the Job: A Stanley Melvin P.I. Story. I have yet to read that first book, so Shades of the Job was my intro into the world of private investigator Stanley Martin. This character reminds me a lot of the DS George Cross character and that is a very good thing.

 

Stanley Melvin lives in an upstairs apartment in a building that was converted from a house to apartments. He is climbing the stairs late one day with a grocery bag in hand when Violet Szade and her very young daughter, Lettie, come out of their ground floor apartment and get his attention.

 

The long and the short of it as Violet makes clear, is that she would like to hire him. Two weeks ago, her apartment was broken into and searched. Nothing was taken, but clearly, somebody went through looking at everything. She contacted the police and they came out, dusted for prints, filed a report, but have no clues as to who did it or why.

 

Then, yesterday, her ex-boyfriend, Geoff Grey, contacted her by text to say he wanted to meet Lettie and that he had changed. The same guy who, as soon as he realized he was going to be a dad, left her before the baby was born, now wants back into their lives. He has not done a thing to help as he had completely vanished. Now, he wants to see them.

 

If he really has changed, that is one thing. If he has not, that is a far different thing. And she is bothered a lot by the timing of events. She thinks the coincidence of the break in and his sudden contact is way too strange and suspicious. They agree that Stanley will investigate to ascertain what he has been up to while he has been gone from their lives, other background information, and to make sure that he is safe to be around Lettie.

 

A very detail orientated man who has strong routines and practices to control his anxiety, he begins an investigation that soon turns violent. In the course of his investigation, readers learn a lot about Grey, Melvin, and the other people who populate the building and the neighborhood.

 

A fast-moving read published by Code 4 Press, Shades of the Job: A Stanley Melvin P.I. Story, is a highly entertaining novella. Rich in character detail and atmosphere with flashes of humor, this is a solidly good read, and one well worth your time.

 

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

 

 

My digital ARC came direct from the author with no expectation of a review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026 

Monday, June 15, 2026

Our Anniversary


41 years ago today Sandi and I were married in the same church her parents had been married in many years earlier. She was, and always will be, my everything. 

The grief sea is storm tossed with towering waves, as it has been all weekend. I am not fit to be around, so I will do the usual thing, and isolate myself. 


Sunday, June 14, 2026

Lesa's Book Critiques: Halfway Through The Bookseller

 Personal Note--- Please keep a good thought for Lesa. She is sick with something and having a hard time of it. 

Lesa's Book Critiques: Halfway Through The Bookseller

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Architecture of Murder (2026) by James Scott Byrnside

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Architecture of Murder (2026) by James Scott B...: Last year, James Scott Byrnside published It's About Impossible Crime (2025), a collection of original short stories, in which he paid...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Midnight Patriots: An Einstein-Chaplin Thriller by Paul Levine

  

Paul Levine is a former trial lawyer and the author of two best-selling legal thriller series that have won the John D. MacDonald Fiction Award and have been shortlisted for the Edgar, Macavity, International Thriller, Shamus, and James Thurber prizes. He took an entirely different direction with his writing in 2025 with a book set in the late 1930s about real-life friends Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein who united their considerable forces to oppose the creeping fascism threatening to overtake the world. Combining fact with well-considered fiction, it was named Best Thriller of the Year from Best Thrillers.com.

The dynamic if unlikely duo of Chaplin and Einstein is back in Midnight Patriots (Nittany Valley Productions, June 2026). This time Charlie is in deep trouble. William Randolph Hearst has put out a contract on Charlie because of his ongoing dalliance with Hearst’s mistress Marion Davies. (The much older Hearst was notoriously jealous of Chaplin and possessive of Davies. A Peter Bogdanovich film called The Cat’s Meow (2001) uses it to explain the death of cinema producer Thomas H. Ince. Wonderful movie.) In addition, a German sharpshooter has been sent to assassinate Chaplin for his satirical portrayal of Hitler in his new movie The Great Dictator. Chaplin made Hitler look a fool and Hitler wasn’t standing for it.

Einstein isn’t much better off. An aging German spy named Fritz Duquesne is determined to show his bosses that he has not lost his touch. He plans to kidnap Einstein and return him to the Nazi Germany Einstein fled years earlier. At the same time, and fortunately for both Chaplin and Einstein, a pair of FBI agents is watching Einstein at J. Edgar Hoover’s orders to obtain evidence of subversive behavior. Major Leslie Groves is trying to enlist Einstein to monitor the research into an atomic device underway at multiple universities.

While under multiple threats, Chaplin tries to convert prospective presidential candidate Charles Lindbergh from his isolationist views. Mobster Mickey Cohen acts as bodyguard to Chaplin and Einstein. And Lena Horne gets her big career break when she meets Cohen who offers her a performing contract at a popular nightclub of which he is part owner.

Most of the major players were real people. A summary at the end of the book explains which is which and what happened to the nonfictional ones. Somehow the idea that Einstein and Chaplin could be friends is startling but they were both well-known world citizens and they held similar views. Likewise, Lindbergh’s status as an aviation hero clouds public knowledge of his conservative politics and strong belief in eugenics. It is easy to draw parallels between people and events in the book, set in the late 1930s, and the present time.

Much of the action takes place on the cross-country train known as the Super Chief, as Einstein and Chaplin return to Los Angeles after a trip to New York and a stop in Chicago on their way west. Insight into the workings of the long-gone passenger railway is always fascinating. Readers who like mysteries set on trains will want to read this book, as will those interested in the mindset of the United States as it waffled on entering the war against Germany.

The parts here about how the pro-war factions in the U.S. worked around the insular Congress reminds me of one of my favorite books of 2024. The Wealth of Shadows by Graham Moore (Random House, 2024), which was a fictionalized account of real-life happenings during the early days of World War II, described how President Roosevelt tasked the Treasury Department with finding a way to undermine the German economy, intending to force a financial stop to the fighting while staying officially within the isolationist policies in place.

A fascinating piece of fictionalized history. Recommended!

 

·                     ISBN-13: ‎979-8994263013

·                     Publisher: ‎Nittany Valley Productions, Inc.

·                     Publication date: ‎June 16, 2026

·                     Language: ‎English

·                     Print length: ‎390 pages

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link:  https://amzn.to/4xr9ici

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

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

KRL Update

As we continue to celebrate Pride on KRL, this week we have reviews and giveaways of 2 LGBTQ+ cozies-"Murder, Local Style" an Orchid Isle Mystery by Leslie Karst, and "Dragged to Death" A Domestic Partners in Crime Mystery by Frank Anthony Polito https://kingsriverlife.com/06/13/pair-of-lgbtq-cozy-mysteries-from-leslie-karst-frank-anthony-polito/

We also have a review and ebook giveaway of yet another LGBTQ+ mystery, this one by Marshall Thornton, and we also have an interesting interview with Marshall https://kingsriverlife.com/06/13/the-pink-by-marshall-thornton/

 

And a review and giveaway of "This Weekend Doesn't End Well for Anyone" by Catherine Mack https://kingsriverlife.com/06/13/this-weekend-doesnt-end-well-for-anyone-by-catherine-mack/

 

And a review of the latest season of one of my favorite mystery TV shows “The Brokenwood Mysteries” on Acorn TV https://kingsriverlife.com/06/13/acorn-tv-brokenwood-mysteries-season-12/

 

Up on KRL during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Gerald Elias about his journey to find a publisher for his latest mystery "Murder on Vacation" that eventually led him to Misti Media https://kingsriverlife.com/06/10/when-at-first-you-dont-succeed/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and ebook giveaway of the latest Smiling Dog Cafe book from mystery author Neil Plakcy https://www.krlnews.com/2026/06/drift-and-return-by-neil-plakcy.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "You Can't Keep a Good Cat Down" by Maggie Pill https://www.krlnews.com/2026/06/you-cant-keep-good-cat-down-by-maggie.html

 

And a review and giveaway of "Murder Most Delicious" by Danielle Postel-Vinay https://www.krlnews.com/2026/06/murder-most-delicious-by-danielle.html

 

Happy reading and Happy Pride,

Lorie 

Mystery Fanfare: SUMMER CAMP MYSTERIES

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Seasons of Glass & Iron: Stories by Amal El-Mohtar

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Scott's Take: Captain America Vol 1: Our Secret Wars by Chip Zdarsky, Valerio Schiti (Illustrator), and Ben Harvey (Cover Art)


Captain America Vol 1: Our Secret Wars by Chip Zdarsky,  Valerio Schiti (Illustrator), and Ben Harvey (Cover Art) is a prequel story set shortly after Captain America has just woken up from the ice. Captain America, who feels lost and alone in this new country, has been reactivated by the U.S. Army to join a rescue mission to save hostages in Latveria. The country has recently been taken over by the dictator, Dr. Doom. Alongside a new version of the Howling Commandoes and another new Captain America that had not been referenced before, they and the reactivated Captain America are to link up with the resistance. Then get the hostages. Then get out.

 

At least, that was the mission that Steve was told. Of course, the real mission is not that. Not even close to that.  The government knew that Steve is too honorable for the real mission.

 

This is an action-packed thriller with plenty of violence and character development. The physical volume won’t be out until late er this month, as of right now, you can read the whole volume plus more on the Marvel Unlimited app.

 

There will be a second volume set in the present time of the Marvel Universe and that has not been titled yet. It will tie into the One World Under Doom and Armageddon events. According to various interview on Marvel.Com, as since Doctor Doom has left this reality, Latveria has fallen to pieces as various factions seek to control what Doom has left behind. Red Hulk and the U.S. Army will clash with the Avengers and Steve over what remains. Doom has left nukes and even worse things behind. Not much is known about this Armageddon event other than it is going to have massive ramifications and see a new Avengers team assembled to save the world again as the Jed Mackay team has been disbanded.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/42HD9Pm

 

 

As noted, I read this enjoyable book as the individual issues appeared on Marvel Unlimited.

 

 

Scott A. Tipple ©2026

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Shroud of Canvas

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Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: GLORY IN DEATH

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SleuthSayers: Awards, Competitions, Prizes and Honors

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In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: Foreword Reviews announced the winners of its INDIES Book of the Year Awards, celebrating outstanding books published in 2025 by small, ind...

Paula Messina Reviews: The Secret Hangman by Peter Lovesey

 

Please welcome author Paula Messina back to the blog today…

 

  

The Secret Hangman

by Paula Messina

 

The Secret Hangman by Peter Lovesey begins with Inspector Peter Diamond receiving a letter from a secret admirer. Far from mysterydom’s cuddliest detective, Diamond is surprised any woman is interested in meeting him. Nevertheless, the woman who has the hots for Diamond optimistically suggests they meet at the Saracen’s Hotel on Thursday evening.

Diamond wouldn’t be Diamond if he wrote the date down in his calendar. It’s fair to guess Diamond doesn’t own a calendar of any sort. Besides, he put the secret admirer out of mind as he quickly moved on to search for a missing mother, Delia Williamson.

The next day, a woman is found hanging from a swing’s crossbar in Bath’s Sydney Gardens. You don’t need to be an avid mystery fan to know with absolute certainty that the dangling woman is Delia Williamson.

Her death is obviously a suicide. At least that’s what Diamond and everyone else believe until the pathologist points out “two sets of ligature marks.”

Murder it is.

Diamond returns to his office to find a chocolate cake in wait. The secret admirer strikes again. After Diamond and crew polish off the cake, they attempt to trace Williamson’s final hours. She worked her shift as a waitress at Tosi’s. Did she leave with the waiter Luigi or with the last diner, Dalton Monnington, a Jacuzzi salesman? Or was the murderer closer to home? Say her live-in lover, the rather cool Ashley Corcoran? Or is it possible that Danny Geaves, Williamson’s former partner and the father of her children, had it in for her?


Diamond wants to speak to Geaves, only he’s vanished without that proverbial trace.

Until he is found hanging from a bridge.

Meanwhile, Diamond, his larder empty, goes grocery shopping and manages to drive over another customer’s bags. After Diamond pays to replace her destroyed food, the owner invites him for a drink that night, which is how Diamond meets Paloma Kean and her son Jerry, a devote Christian who volunteers at hospitals in the area.

Another woman is found hanged, and days later, her missing husband is found suffering from a similar fate. When a third woman is found at the end of a noose, it’s obvious a serial killer is on the loose. Diamond begins a frantic search to find the third missing husband before it’s too late.

Hangman takes lots of twists, and Diamond runs through his list of suspects before finally solving the who and why of the mystery. The only remaining question is the fate of his relationship with Paloma Kean.

It shouldn’t come as a surprise that we have a master plotter at work. Among the many honors bestowed on Peter Lovesey (1936-2025) are the MWA Grandmaster Award for Lifetime Achievement, the CWA Gold and Silver Daggers, and the Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement.

Lovesey’s also great at spinning characters with real depth and personality. Peter Diamond is a wonderful character worth revisiting in the other books in the series. He’s irascible but vulnerable, not quite the curmudgeon he presents to the world, and he has a sense of humor. Diamond’s still reeling from the murder of his wife Steph three years before Hangman begins, and the scenes with Paloma are touching and tender. It’s impossible not to root for Paloma to appear in the next mystery.

The series also boasts an admirable cast of supporting characters. There’s the well endowed Georgina, Diamond’s boss whom he frequently locks horns with, and his underlings, the delightful Ingeborg, the insufferable John Leaman, and the long-suffering Keith Halliwell.

Readers enjoy visiting locations mentioned in their favorite books. Arthur Conan Doyle died in 1930, taking Sherlock Holmes and John Watson with him to the grave—at least in theory. Nearly one hundred years later, fans still flock to the non-existent 221B Baker Street, perhaps expecting Mrs. Hudson to open the door and invite them to wait upstairs for Holmes’ return. So it’s not surprising that another well developed character in the Diamond series is Bath itself. Diamond climbs hills and descends into Bath’s many caves. The places mentioned are real, not figments of Lovesey’s imagination.

While reading Hangman, I had the sense I could visit the places described and pop in for a pint at the Old Crown, maybe even chat up Diamond himself, or perhaps spy on Paloma and Diamond when they meet up at the Saracen’s Hotel for a little tipple. It turns out Lovesey used to conduct tours of Bath.

I was convinced that I had figured out early the connection between the three ill-fated couples and the murderer. I resisted the temptation to jump ahead and confirm whether I was correct. Of course, I’m not spilling the beans. You’ll have to read The Secret Hangman to find out whodunnit. I can tell you this: Peter Diamond and crew are well worth your time.

  

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4fFP6Nw

  

Paula Messina ©2026 

Paula Messina writes the Donatello Laguardia stories, which are set in Boston’s North End during the 1940s. They appeared in the Best New England Crime Stories 2024 and 2025 and another Donatello Laguardia short story is scheduled to appear in Black Cat Weekly. She lives near America’s first public beach.

Thursday Treats: June 6/11/2026

The latest reading opportunities…


Back in mid-March, I told you about the Kickstarter for the anthology, Detectives, Sleuths, & Nosy Neighbors III. Published by Inkd Publishing, the book has a publication date of May 20th at Amazon. It includes short stories by  SMFS list members, N. M. CedeƱo (The Assassination Game), Shari Held (The Mansion on the Hill), Kathleen Marple Kalb (Spring Death Cleaning), Aime Kluck (Peril in Provincetown), Veronica Leigh (Hoosier Sweetheart), Bev Myers (Three Fingers of Fate), Karen Oden (Murder at Angelique), and SB Watson (The Silent Herd), and others. You can pick it up at a variety of vendors and at Amazon.

 

Fellow SMFS list member Wil A. Emerson announced that his short story, Norms and Values, appears in the 3rd edition of The Writers Monk. His piece appears on page 98 of this free to read flip magazine. You can read it here.

 

Fellow SMFS list member Leslie Elman, announced that her short story, When I Go, was published online at Guilty Flash (part of Guilty Crime Magazine). The story is free to read here.


 


Fellow SMFS list member David H. Hendrickson has been busy. He announced that his short story, Apt Pupil, was published in the latest issue of Thrill Ride Magazine. This is their 14 issue and is titled Thrill Ride Magazine: Assassins and Vigilantes. Learn more at the publisher listing or go to Amazon to get it.


 

Mr. Hendrickson also announced that his short story, The Mona Pizza and The Johnny Pesky Wannabe, appears in the recently released anthology, Romance for All Seasons: Sunkissed Summer. Mr. Hendrickson co-edits the anthology series with SMFS list member Annie Reed who also has the short story, Getting Away From It All. It is available at Amazon and other vendors.

 

Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine: July August 2026 issue is now out. Fellow SMFS list member S. B. Watson made the cover with the short story, Tricks on the Table. Also included in this issue are short stories by fellow SMFS list members O’Neil De Noux (Charming Charlie Lovely Eyes” and Dave Zeltserman (Alfred & Hitchcock). Mike Ciaraldi of the list also reported that he received another Honorable Mention in the “Mysterious Photograph Contest.” Learn more at the publisher.

 
Of course, if the AHMM new issue is out, so too is the new EQMM. That new issue, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine: July/August 2026, also features short stories by fellow SMFS list members O’Neil De Noux (Le Rouge, 2B), Tom Larsen (
El Yerno), and Dave Zeltserman (A Lost Dream). Also included in this issue is the short story, Hunters, by SMFS President Joseph S. Walker. Kearn more at the publisher.

 


SMFS President Joseph S. Walker also has the featured cover story, It’s Flag Day on Fairview, in the latest issue of Black Cat Weekly. As always, the issue os packed with short stories and novels and bursting with variety. You can pick up Black Cat Weekly #249
here.

 


Finally, a reminder that the anthology, Crimeucopia - New Kids In Da 'Hood, is now out. Editor John Connor of Murderous Ink Press 16 crime fiction short story tales in the read. That includes a short story by fellow SMFS list member Thomas F. Gorham III (Classless Reunion). It can be picked up at Amazon


By the way, if you like what we do here, please consider spreading the word of these posts. Also, if you can, please consider making a donation through the PayPal widget on the left side of the blog. I try not to talk about it, or beg, but the desperation is very real. The hits keep coming here and things are really bad. 


Until next time….

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2026