Showing posts with label February 2023. Show all posts
Showing posts with label February 2023. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 07, 2023

Review: Philanthropists: Inspector Mislan and the Executioners by Rozlan Mohd Noor

 

While I reviewed this last month thanks to an ARC from NetGalley, I am running my review again today as it is publication day. If you have not already been reading this series, you really should. 


Philanthropists: Inspector Mislan and the Executioners by Rozlan Mohd Noor begins in early 2020 as Covid is just beginning to become a worldwide threat. In these early days just before lockdowns and societal disruptions, Inspector Mislan Abdul Latif of the Office of Special Investigations (D9) biggest issue is trying to deal with the fact that his young son is living with his ex-wife and he is still haunted by being shot a few months ago. While he would never admit it, he is lonely and the job is pretty much all he has in his life outside of the occasional call to his son. He thinks he has everything under control and nobody sees his loneliness. He thinks that nobody notices how there is a second or two of hesitation when he enters a crime scene and smells the spilled blood.

He would be wrong.

His assistant, Detective Sergeant Johan Kamaruddin certainly notices and did once again at their latest call out. Summoned to the scene of a double murder by Inspector Shahira Adanan, they arrived at just after 2:30 in the morning at a two-story house located across the city from their office. The last house on a dead-end road in a quiet neighborhood. At least, the neighborhood was quiet, until flooded by a horde of police vehicles with their flashing lights and chattering radios.

The home is sparsely furnished which leads Inspector Mislan Latif to believe that it is a rental. In the master bedroom there are two dead men lying on their side in bed facing each other. Each man has been shot twice. Once in the back and once in the back of the head. Both are shirtless.

While their wallets and other identification is missing, they were found with several different packages of various drugs stacked on the bed between them.  No sign of their phones, electronic devices, mail or paperwork of any kind, or anything else that would identify them. All investigators have at this point are two very dead bodies and a pile of drugs.

Who they are is the first of many questions Inspector Mislan Latif and his team have to answer in the Philanthropists: Inspector Mislan and the Executioners. Things get complicated quickly as getting answers gets more and more difficult due to whom the victims were and the rapidly escalating threat of Covid.

A significant portion of the read is devoted to Inspector Mislan’s recollections of events in the various previous books. Especially the events of the last book, Soulless: Inspector Mislanand the Faceless Girl, which led to his being critically injured. If you have not read the proceeding books, it would be best to read them in order starting with 21 Immortals: Inspector Mislan and the Yee Sang Murders before you embark on this very good read.


 

My reading copy was a digital arc via NetGalley. Publication date is currently scheduled for March 7th. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2023

Thursday, March 02, 2023

Review: Storm Watch: A Joe Pickett Novel by C. J. Box


While I reviewed this book late last month, it came out this past Tuesday, so I am running my review again. 

 

The worsening weather this day in late March for Wyoming Game Warden Joe Pickett means that he is on the clock. A major snowstorm is coming down from the Bighorn Mountains. He is on foot and on the hunt for an injured elk after a collision between the elk and a car earlier that morning. The elk had left the scene on three good legs according to a state trooper, so now Game Warden Pickett has to find that elk and end its suffering before the storm hits.

 

Snow is heavy on the ground as it is thanks to a winter of relentless and constant storms. More snow and high winds are going to make a bad situation way worse. Time is of the essence. He calls and gets permission from the foreman of the Double Diamond Ranch known to all as “The Double D” to cross their land in pursuit of the badly injured elk. With one eye on the darkening sky rolling down from the mountains, he sets out following the trail.

 

After being on the trail of the elk for a few minutes, he finds a vehicle hidden in the trees off of an old small two track road. He investigates and nobody is in the SUV. Thanks to the fact that it is unlocked, he also finds that the interior is fairly warm. Among other things inside is a topographical map with four locations marked by x’s in a black marker. The person or persons from the car are not lost. They meant to be here in this isolated spot though they may not have counted on the powerful storm closing in on the area by the minute.

 

As Pickett begins to look around the immediate area, he realizes he is hearing a mechanical scream coming from somewhere nearby, He gets up on a ridge and starts looking for the missing person or persons as well as the source for the noise. As the snow begins to build in intensity, he can see tracks from the SUV to a nearby small metal building of some type. The longer he looks at the structure, he realizes that a dark form is hanging out of the steel louvers on one side of the building

 

The dark form is a person and not moving.  

 

What follows is a complicated read that touches on espionage, the growing Sovereign Citizen movement, domestic terrorism, and a host of other issues driving our nation’s politics at this time. The MAGA crowd comes in for their fair share of criticism as do other groups on the far right.  Various characters depict those positions and their behavior and statements may offend readers who believe in their cause.

 

While there is a mystery here as to what is going on, this is a politics heavy thriller more than anything. It shows the ongoing shift of the last few books from the solidly good mysteries that began the series to more of thrillers populated with cardboard cutouts as secondary characters.

 

It is my hope that Mr. Box returns to his roots that made this series so good in future installments in this series.


 

My reading copy came by way of the publisher through NetGalley.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2023

Tuesday, February 28, 2023

To the Max: February Crime with Maxim Jakubowski

 To the Max: February Crime with Maxim Jakubowski

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Spy Fiction Authors

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Spy Fiction Authors:   Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl . This week's topic is a Genre Freebie (pick any genre and build a l...

The First Two Pages: “The Adventure of the Castle Thief” by Art Taylor

 The First Two Pages: “The Adventure of the Castle Thief” by Art Taylor

Jeanne Reviews: Vinyl Resting Place by Olivia Blacke


Juniper Jessup left her Texas hometown to work in the tech industry in Oregon, but when the business folds she finds herself at loose ends.  With no specific plans, she jumps at the idea of partnering with her two older sisters and Uncle Calvin to open a vinyl record store/coffee shop in their hometown.  It’s coming full circle in more ways than one:  the family had owned a record store in that same location years before and the sisters had helped out in their youth.  The sisters are hosting an open house to get the word out about the store, and the turn-out is gratifying—until a body turns up in a storage closet.

Things only get worse when the police pick up Uncle Calvin. The sisters put up the store to make his bail—only to have Uncle Calvin promptly vanish.  Can Juni and her sisters solve the case and save both Uncle Calvin and the store?

This is a first in series book, so there is a good deal of set-up.  Juni and her sisters are appealing characters and there’s a good dynamic between the three of them.  Naturally, Juni is reconnecting with some people from her past as well, including the semi-requisite boyfriend who broke her heart. Being in Texas, it’s no surprise there are some larger than life characters, including Uncle Calvin who loves a good (or bad) practical joke.  One subtle clue I picked up on quickly and admired it, but I won’t divulge it here. I do like a good clue.

Overall, this is a promising start to a new series.  Music fans will enjoy all the references and as someone who grew up with vinyl, it does my heart good to have people talk about liner notes and covers as well as music.  I have reservations about one of Juni’s potential love interests (yes, as with most cozies there are at least two suitors in the picture) but will wait to see how it plays out.  There is indeed a cat as promised on the cover. The second in the series, A Fatal Groove, is due out in July, 2023.

Monday, February 27, 2023

The Hard Word: NOT SO INNOCENT: A REVIEW OF JONATHAN CRAIG'S SO YOUNG, SO WICKED

 The Hard Word: NOT SO INNOCENT: A REVIEW OF JONATHAN CRAIG'S SO YOUNG, SO WICKED

Lesa's Book Critiques: THESE NAMES MAKE CLUES BY E.C.R. LORAC

 Lesa's Book Critiques: THESE NAMES MAKE CLUES BY E.C.R. LORAC

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: How to Kill Your Family by Bella Mackie

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: How to Kill Your Family by Bella Mackie:   Reviewed by Kristin *Please note that this is not an instruction manual. Grace Bernard’s father is a real jerk. He’s married, but no...

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 2/27/2023

 In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 2/27/2023

Markets and Jobs for Writers for 2/27/2023

 Markets and Jobs for Writers for 2/27/2023

Little Big Crimes Review: Crime and Convenience by Steve Shrott

Little Big Crimes: Crime and Convenience, by Steve Shrott:  "Crime and Convenience," by Steve Shrott, in Hook, Line, and Sinker: The Seventh Guppie Anthology, edited by Emily P.W. Murphy, W...

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: The Hunted by Roz Nay


Roz Nay is a Canadian author based in British Columbia. Her first novel was shortlisted for the Arthur Ellis Best First Novel Award and her second novel was nominated for the Crime Writers of Canada Best Thriller of 2020. Her third book The Hunted was nominated for CWC’s Best Crime Novel 2022. 

The Hunted (S&S Canada Adult, 2022) is about Stevie Erickson, who decided after the loss of her grandmother to leave the small Maine town she grew up in and go with her boyfriend Jacob to a small island off the coast of Tanzania where he found a job as a diver for an ecotourist camp. The change was disorienting for them both. Neither of them were used to travel of any kind, much less international tourism, so they naturally gravitated to Leo and Tamsin when they met them, a charming cosmopolitan couple accustomed to globetrotting. Alliances among the four shift and shift again, setting off a chain reaction of events.

Stevie became convinced that someone was watching her. She was locked into a hostel bathroom in the middle of the night when ostensibly no one else was around. The key to their room on the resort where they stayed before going to the ecotourism camp disappeared. But Jacob tried to convince her she was reacting to her grief and the multiple drastic changes in time zone and location. The evidence of a stalker was clear.

Well written. The book is narrated in the alternating voices of Stevie and Leo, not one but two unreliable narrators; their interpretations of the same event vary wildly and provide a clear window into their own confused mental processes. The reader is left wondering what really did happen. Vivid description of the island and student hostel settings. While the story is suspenseful and there’s a nice twist at the end, I was left feeling that tension could have ratcheted higher here and there to make the impact of the ending stronger. For fans of psychological thrillers.


 

·         Publisher: S&S Canada Adult; Export edition (July 5, 2022)

·         Language: English

·         Paperback: 288 pages

·         ISBN-10: 1982198036

·         ISBN-13: 978-1982198039

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023

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

Sunday, February 26, 2023

Sunday Evening Humor

 


Lesa's Book Critiques: DO I KNOW YOU? BY EMILY WIBBERLEY & AUSTIN SIEGEMUND-BROKA

Lesa's Book Critiques: DO I KNOW YOU? BY EMILY WIBBERLEY & AUSTIN SIEGEMUND-BROKA

Dru's Book Musings New Releases: Coming Week of February 26, 2023

 Dru's Book Musings New Releases: Coming Week of February 26, 2023 

The Rap Sheet: Hark! There’s Audiobooks News

 The Rap Sheet: Hark! There’s Audiobooks News

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Bullet Train: Kotaro Isaka

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Bullet Train: Kotaro Isaka:   Summary: When the story opens, all we know is that Yuichi Kimura is boarding the Bullet train at Tokyo station to seek revenge on a person...

Saturday, February 25, 2023

KRL This Week Update for 2/25/2023

Up on KRL this morning reviews and giveaways of some St. Patrick's Day mysteries to get you ready for March-"Irish Coffee Murder": A collection of three short stories all based on St. Patrick’s Day by Leslie Meier, Lee Hollis, and Barbara Ross, and "Four Leaf Cleaver": A Country Store Mystery by Maddie Day https://kingsriverlife.com/02/25/pair-of-st-patricks-day-mysteries/ 

And a review and giveaway of "The Alchemy Fire Murder" by Susan Rowland along with a Behind the Book interview with Susan https://kingsriverlife.com/02/25/the-alchemy-fire-murder-by-susan-rowland/

 

We also have the latest mystery Coming Attractions from Sunny Frazier https://kingsriverlife.com/02/25/march-coming-attractions-windy-edition/

 

And the latest video game news from Jayce Ham which includes some mystery video games this month https://kingsriverlife.com/02/25/jays-video-game-news-february-2023/

 

Up on KRL during the week we posted another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Harriet Tyce where she talks about mysteries set in Edinburgh including her latest "It Ends At Midnight" https://kingsriverlife.com/02/22/mysteries-set-in-edinburgh/

 

And another special midweek guest post, this one by mystery author Rick Bleiweiss where he talks about the things his main character has in common with Holmes and Poirot (like setting) and the ways they are different. His new book is called "Murder in Haxford" https://kingsriverlife.com/02/22/hercule-poirot-sherlock-holmes-and-pignon-scorbion/

 

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "Death of a Traitor" by M. C. Beaton with R.W. Green https://www.krlnews.com/2023/02/death-of-traitor-by-mc-beaton-with-rw.html

 

And a review and ebook giveaway of "Six Old Women and Other Stories" by mystery author Sharon L. Dean https://www.krlnews.com/2023/02/six-old-women-other-stories-by-sharon-l.html


Happy reading,
Lorie