Showing posts with label June 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label June 2019. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Short Story Wednesday Review: Down To The River Editor Tim O’Mara


From the massive archive….

 

Down to the River, edited by Tim O’Mara, is recently released anthology from Down & Out Books. The authors in this anthology donated their stories to raise funds for “American Rivers” which is a group that helps maintain and protect the nation’s rivers and waterways. As is made clear on the cover, each story is supposed to be a crime fiction.

 

After a short introduction by Hank Phillips Ryan and a foreword by Editor Tim O’Mara, it is time for the stories. Jessie Chandler leads things off with “A Rocky Road at Interstate Park.” It is autumn in the St. Croix River Valley in Minnesota and a small group of friends arrives at Interstate Park. The state park is busy and before long the group splits up with various members going their various ways. Eventually, one of the group is alone when she witnesses things getting very heated between a couple. Unfortunately for Shay, the male of the couple has been a problem for her before and is going to be again.

 

He is a long way from Montana and is the newest member of the Tree County Sheriff’s Department. A Sergeant in the Cape Harbor Marine Unit, and stationed on the Caloosahatchee River, he is new and a target of constant criticism by his partner, Deputy Sutphin. The cold couldn’t follow him to Fort Myers, Florida, but a murderer might have done so in “A Tale of Two Rivers” by John Keyse- Walker.

 

“Blue Song, Edged in Woe” by Patricia Smith and her husband, Bruce DeSilvia, comes next with more than a hint of the paranormal. The river has been around for a very long time and knows the girl is special. The river will do what it needs to in her time of need.

 

Readers move on from the Black Stone River to another famous river in the “Bronx River Elegey” by Scott Adlerberg. The river cuts through the zoo and a certain spot holds memories all these years later. What happens in your childhood carries far forward in time to when you are a parent. It is time for one final trip to a certain spot to say hello and goodbye.

 

When you are homeless and need a secluded place to stay, the shoreline of the Agnes P. Wotherwill estate in Connecticut makes for a great spot. One does have to be careful and share it with a few other people who have also found their way here. The “Grouchy Witch” is a person to be avoided if at all possible. He does so until he can’t in “Catch and Release” by Chris Knopf.

 

It is August 2014 in Gallagher, Virginia, as “Eel’s Blood” by Frankie Y. Bailey begins. Dr. Stuart has plenty to do and that was before Ashely Pollard brought a cold case to his attention. The case dates back to 1954 and the time factor is just one of many complications.

 

Chucky should have stuck to the deal. He didn’t because he got stupid and greedy. Now he is dead in “Fifty-Fifty” by Tim O’Mara and that creates a new problem for Turkey have to deal with at the end of an already long day in Jefferson City, Missouri.

 

Eric Beetner is up next with “Fish Belly White.” Denver’s capsized boat has washed ashore. Denver, legendary for his catfishing, is missing and has been for a week now. Not only is he missing, so is his stepdaughter.

 

As the only female officer in the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office Mountain Squad, Sheriff Deputy Haley Davidson has her hands full with a little 12-year-old girl who has suddenly become parentless. Her extra training on the Victim Response Team is not helping her as the little girl won’t leave her “Inheritance.” This tale by Eric Gardner packs quite a punch.

 

Charles Salzberg and “NO Good Deed” is up next and takes readers to the East River and Winter. Ralph needed a favor done and against his better judgement, the narrator agreed. Now he is out at ten at night in the freezing cold trying to pass on an envelope to somebody he has never met before at a place he has never been.

 

Next it is off to Runyon Lake in Southern Colorado by way of “Optimize Us” by Maria Kelson. Imagine a story of Fit Bit type deal on steroids and this is what you have here as technology seeks to improve relationships and remove obstacles. People can be a problem.

 

When they were kids, they hung out at the river in “Requiem for Dirty Water” by Clea Simon. You could do that back then before things got crazy. It all changed around Fenway and this is a story of the past and the way things were back then.  

 

“Tarentum Bridge” by Dana King features Ben “Doc” Dougherty eating lunch alone at a Long John Slivers and all was fine until the sirens started. He is going to have to go over and see if he can get the jumper off the bridge before he tries to take his own life.

 

You make choices in life and those choices have consequences. Those consequences often are outside our legal system. Justice can come in many forms as John B. Wren’s short story, “The Chair in The River” points out. Like the “Inheritance” did, this story also packs quite the punch in a far different way.

 

It is 1986 and the young people are on a trip to Washington, D.C., in “The Great Emancipator” by Mike Veve. They see a lot as they make a much-needed beer run.

 

The mines abuse the heck out of the Dog Paige River. Not that it is really much of a river most of the year. In “The Righter Side” by Reed Farrel Coleman, Peter William Frame does what he needs to in order to survive. Just like everyone else on both sides of the river.

 

Kyle and the narrator are about a half hour outside of Cincinnati in “The River Freezes” by M. Wallace Herron. They are there to do as TV interview with an elderly gentleman by the name of Lem Dixon. For the second time in the last sixty years, the Ohio River is about to freeze over. Lem was there before when it did that in 1917 and they want Lem to talk about how it was back then. That isn’t all he will talk about.

 

When they moved to Wichita, Kansas, they knew things would be way different. They did not know there was a serial killer at work and one that had killed at least eight times before the family moved to their new place. There was a serial killer at work and that fact and more is explained in “The Riverfest” by Julia McDermott.

 

Somebody tried to drown her in the river and, somehow, she is still alive. The water is cold and she is in real trouble in “Tonight Wasn’t Her Night to Die” by Marcie Rendon.

 

After the funeral, a walk with her friend Amy is what the narrator has in her mind. The deaths have come, one after another and each one has rocked her world. She feels so very lonely. That walk leads to a bar along the Hudson and more in “Waves” by Christina Chiu.

 

Carlos thought he had pulled it off in “Where Are the Boats?” by Puja Guha. Everything had gone to plan the last several days outside Arches National Park and no one was the wiser. Everything was fine. Then the rains set in as did the complications.

 

Elizabeth is back in Natchez on a case in “Wrath, Chapter 61” by Tom Lowe. The past haunts her as it does the current case. The Mississippi River has seen much history and will do so again.

 

Also included in the eBook version of the anthology are previews of other books from this publisher. The first two chapters of Silent Remains by Jerry Kennealy are followed by the first chapter of It’s Not My Cult! A. X. Kalinchuk and the first chapter of The Pyongyang Option by A. C. Frieden.

 

A mix of crime fiction and stories that I would classify as more literary type tales that are not crime fiction per se, Down to the River is an interesting anthology. All the stories share a common theme of the importance of a river in each tale. In some, a river or waterway, is a major character and has a distinct life of its own. In other tales, a river is more of a secondary character and is always present and in the background. In all cases, the tale is a good one and well worth your time.


 

I purchased the eBook version of this book by way of funds in my Amazon Associate account in order to read and review. 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2019, 2023

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Travelling Cat Chronicles by Hiro Arikawa

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Travelling Cat Chronicles by Hiro Arikawa: Reviewed by Jeanne Nana is a stray, nameless cat when he first notices the friendly young man who seems to (wisely) wish to ma...

Lesa's Book Critiques: Favorites of 2019

Lesa's Book Critiques: Favorites of 2019

Crime Review Update: New issue of Crime Review

We feature new 20 reviews in each issue of Crime Review (www.crimereview.co.uk), together with a top industry interview. This time it’s author Muhammad Khan in the Countdown hot seat:


We’re on Twitter at:

Crime Review: @CrimeReviewUK

Linda Wilson: @CrimeReviewer

Sharon Wheeler: @lartonmedia



This week’s reviews are:



PAST TENSE by Lee Child, reviewed by Sylvia Maughan

Jack Reacher happens upon the home town of his long-deceased father. Patty and Shorty’s car breaks down near an isolated motel in the same area. After a long, eventful time for all concerned they separately arrive at the same place – a dark, isolated forest.



THE BODY IN THE CASTLE WELL by Martin Walker, reviewed by Linda Wilson

When the body of a rich and well-connected American art student is found down a well in the grounds of a castle, Bruno, Chief of Police, must work out whether she fell or was pushed.



THE ELEPHANT OF SURPRISE by Joe R Lansdale, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Crime-fighters Hap and Leonard rescue a girl targeted by the Dixie Mafia and battle to protect her in the middle of one of the worst storms seen in East Texas for years.



THE LIBRARIAN OF AUSCHWITZ by Antonio Iturbe, reviewed by John Cleal

The part-fictionalised story of Czech-Jewish schoolgirl Dita Polachova who spent years in the horror of Auschwitz-Birkenau where she administered a small library of smuggled books in the world’s strangest school.



ELEVATION by Stephen King, reviewed by Madeleine Marsh

A man in the small town of Castle Rock is losing weight but not mass.



WOLF PACK by CJ Box, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Joe Pickett is re-installed as game warden for Wyoming’s Twelve Sleep County, and takes action against a drone operator, which brings him into conflict with the FBI and a team of killers known as the Wolf Pack.



THE SCANDAL by Mari Hannah, reviewed by Linda Wilson

A stabbing in Newcastle city centre comes as a shock to DS Frankie Oliver when the victim turns out to be someone she knows.



THE TRUTH WAITS by Susanna Beard, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

When Anna discovers the body of a young girl on a deserted beach in Lithuania, her perfect life begins to unravel.


MURDER IN BELGRAVIA by Lynn Britney, reviewed by John Cleal

A dissolute Irish aristocrat is stabbed in his own bedroom. His wife refuses to talk to a male officer. Chief Inspector Peter Beech and his specially-formed team must sift the criminal underworld of World War 1 London to find the truth.



TWISTED PREY by John Sandford, reviewed by Chris Roberts

When US Congressman Porter Smalls’ car is forced off the road, local law enforcement are not persuaded it was intentional. But Smalls knows Lucas Davenport, who he trusts to find the truth.



A GIRL CALLED JUSTICE by Elly Griffiths, reviewed by Linda Wilson

When Justice Jones arrives at her new boarding school, she fully expects to hate it, but then she discovers there’s a murder to get her teeth into, and suddenly things don’t seem quite so grim.



FOR THE MISSING by Lina Bengtsdotter, reviewed by Ewa Sherman

Detective Inspector Charlie Lager is sent from Stockholm to investigate the disappearance of teenager Annabelle in Gullspång. She dreads being back in her small home town, full of quiet despondence and ghosts from the dark past but must deal with the case and her own anxiety.



THE BLUE by Nancy Bilyeau, reviewed by John Cleal

Huguenot-descended Genevieve Planché longs to be an artist but is sent to become a porcelain decorator and becomes involved with industrial espionage that may aid England’s enemy.



THE RHYTHM SECTION by Mark Burnell, reviewed by Arnold Taylor

Stephanie Patrick loses almost all her family – father, mother, brother and sister – to a terrorist bomb on an aircraft. Her entire life disintegrates and she becomes a prostitute.  When she is presented with an opportunity to get her revenge on the bomber, she is quick to grasp it.



GOLDEN STATE by Ben H Winters, reviewed by John Barnbrook

In Golden State the most serious offence is to lie – punishable by exile. Specially-skilled Speculators are sensitive to lies and seek out liars. Such talents make it difficult for a Speculator who suspects that the State is lying.



RATHER TO BE PITIED by Jan Newton, reviewed by John Cleal

DS Julie Kite, settling into her new job in rural Wales, is faced with a murder mystery which will test her abilities to the full.



BETTY CHURCH AND THE SUFFOLK VAMPIRE (audiobook) by MRC Kasasian, reviewed
by Linda Wilson

Inspector Betty Church is not pleased to be posted to the sleepy backwater town in Suffolk where she grew up, but when a murder enlivens Sackwater, Betty is promptly in her element again.



AMONG THE RUINS by Ausma Zehenat Khan, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Canadian policeman Esa Khattak is on holiday in Iran when he receives an unofficial request to investigate the murder of a political filmmaker.



GIVE UP THE DEAD by CB Hanley, reviewed by John Cleal

Edwin Weaver joins the contingent of William de Warenne, earl of Surrey, as it marches for the Kent coast to prevent the reinforcement of Prince Louis’ invading French army. When a series of suspicious ‘accidents’ puts the earl’s life in danger, he soon realises the enemy is closer at hand.



THE COLOUR OF THE SUN by David Almond, reviewed by Linda Wilson

It’s not every day of the summer holidays that you get to see a dead body. And it’s not every day that you think you know the killer.



Best wishes



Sharon


Review: Miniature Moss Gardens: Create Your Own Japanese Container Gardens by Megumi Oshima and Hideshi Kimura


Moss isn’t just found deep in the mountains in some cool, damp place. It can appear on the side of a brick wall, the edges of pavement, and many other places. Miniature Moss Gardens: Create Your Own Japanese Container Gardens by Megumi Oshima and Hideshi Kimura gives the reader the necessary knowledge to recreate the outdoors inside by way of container gardening.

“Chapter 1: An Introduction to Moss” begins on page 10 and gives the basics of moss. Classified as “Musci” nearly all of the 20,000 species or varieties are perennial and evergreen. They need sunlight to survive and propagate by releasing spores on the wind. There are three types of Moss which are the Musci, Hepaticae and Anthocerotae. How the leaves and stems grow are the primary distinguishing aspects of each type.

“Chapter 2: Observation, Discovery, and Gathering” begins on page 17 and is all about tracking down moss. After getting permission from the property owners and ascertaining the living conditions of the moss you will be gathering, there are good ways to gather the moss living outside. How to do it and the gear you need is explained here.

You have identified the moss, gathered the moss (and maybe a rolling stone or two) and have brought green treasure home. In “Chapter 3: Care and Maintenance” you are taught what to do and just as importantly what not to do to maintain your moss. Along with some more information on how to select moss whether you are buying at a store or getting it from your yard, neighborhood, etc., maintenance is the major focus of this chapter. There are a lot of tips on the simple items you will need to maintain your moss as well as actual care of the moss regarding fertilizer, the proper way to water and or misting the moss, placement on your patio or inside the home, and diagnosing issues as they arise. Also included in this section is information on how to grow more moss by way of seeds, cuttings, and “stretching” it out on a soil bed.

You have your moss, it is thriving, and things are going well. Of course, you need to show of your moss.  Starting on page 41 with “Chapter 4: Making and Displaying Moss Creations” various ways of doing so after you work through a flowchart that helps you pick out the right type of moss for your personality and skill level. While the chart on pages 42-43 is interesting and helpful, it seems a bit late in the book to be presented here.

Though the location here does tie into the following pages. Each depicted moss fits one of 4 types in ranges from A to D. Once you know the type of moss that is right for your personality and skill level, then there are pages that reference that type of moss in a container as well as the other choices related to that particular type of moss. Also included here is an explanations of the necessary items needed for moss gardening, soil types, and more regarding what you do with various types of moss as well as more planting and care tips.

“Chapter 5: Finding Moss in Cities and Mountains” begins on page 85 and gives far more detail on the finding and harvesting of moss than what was covered at the beginning of the book. These pages are informative and helpful and would have been better suited closer to the front of the book. Much of the pictures in this section come from Japan and not only are close up pictures of moss, but also scenic shots of various types depicting manmade structures in their local natural environments. Cultural landmarks are referenced with details pictures and illustrating the moss found in the area.

“Chapter 6: Moss Identification Guide” begins on page 107 and details some of the moss types you may encounter outside in your local area. This is done over several pages and would also have better served readers if placed earlier in the book. The conditions that each moss type needs to thrive in the outdoors is also presented here as is info on how to recognize it and use in your home setting.  A “glossary of moss terms” on pages 116-117 follows as does afterword sections from each author and additional close up pictures of various staged moss settings.

As in any book from Tuttle Publishing, there are plenty of pictures and textual information. The pictures are always colorful and the textual information is clear and a lot of depth. There is a paragraph textual style immersed with small bullet points areas containing additional useful information.

While all the information is useful, the placement and flow of the book has issues as noted. The way things are organized in the chapters as well as the placement of the chapters themselves does not work to resent the information well for the reader. Miniature Moss Gardens: Create Your Own Japanese Container Gardens by Megumi Oshima and Hideshi Kimura is an interesting and informative book, it should have been laid out better for readers. This is especially true for the intended reader market of those new to the world of gardening with moss. 

Miniature Moss Gardens: Create Your Own Japanese Container Gardens
Megumi Oshima and Hideshi Kimura
Tuttle Publishing
April 2017
ISBN#978-4-8053-1435-7
Hardback (also available in digital format)
128 Pages
$19.95


Material supplied by the good folks of the Dallas Public Library System. My review copy came from the Kleberg-Rylie Branch.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2019

Friday, June 28, 2019

The Spelled it Wrong


Anthology Market Call Reminder

Sandra Ruttan's call for short story submissions for the anthology, ILLICIT, has a deadline of June 30th. 

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: DIANTHA BY ZINA ABBOTT

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: DIANTHA BY ZINA ABBOTT: My name is Robyn Echols. Zina Abbott is the pen I use for my historical novels. I’m a member of Women Writing the Wes...

Lesa's Book Critiques: Winners and Off to the City Mysteries

Lesa's Book Critiques: Winners and Off to the City Mysteries

Beneath the Stains of Time: Sorcerer's House (1956) by Gerald Verner

Beneath the Stains of Time: Sorcerer's House (1956) by Gerald Verner: In my previous post, I reviewed John R.S. Pringle's The Royal Flush Murders (1948), published as by " Gerald Verner ," whi...

Unlawful Acts: The Case by Leopold Borstinski

Unlawful Acts: The Case by Leopold Borstinski

Mystery Fanfare: SUMMERTIME MYSTERIES // SUMMER CRIME FICTION

Mystery Fanfare: SUMMERTIME MYSTERIES // SUMMER CRIME FICTION: Summertime , and the living is easy. Or is it? So many mysteries taking place during Summer are filled with murder and mayhem -- on the B...

FFB Review: THE CASE OF THE BAKER STREET IRREGULARS (1940) by Anthony Boucher Reviewed by Barry Ergang

Friday means Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Todd Mason on his Sweet Freedom blog. FFB today in these parts is Barry Ergang’s 2013 review of The Case of the Baker Street Irregulars by Anthony Boucher.

THE CASE OF THE BAKER STREET IRREGULARS (1940) by Anthony Boucher

Reviewed by Barry Ergang


Mystery lovers who haven't read it will probably find The Case of the Baker Street Irregulars by Anthony Boucher a lot of fun. It combines bizarre situations, action, humor, lively and intelligent prose, and the advancement of several plausible solutions before the actual one is revealed.


Stephen Worth, ex-private detective turned hardboiled mystery novelist and sometime screenwriter under contract to Metropolis Pictures, is supposed to write a screen adaptation of “The Adventure of the Speckled Band,” which will be produced by F.X. Weinberg. When word of this makes the newspapers, Weinberg starts receiving irate letters from the Baker Street Irregulars. The want the screenplay entrusted to someone who reveres the Canon as they do, not a “rat,” as they refer to Worth, who writes hardboiled fare. For his part, Worth contemptuously dismisses the BSI as a bunch of “deductionists.” The studio's publicity director, Maureen O'Breen, who has no liking for Worth, a heavy-drinking lecher and prankster, suggests that Weinberg simply take him off the film and assign another writer. When Weinberg tries to persuade Worth to work on a different project, Worth balks at the idea and points to a contractual clause that effectively prevents him from being replaced involuntarily. From his position between rock and hard place, Weinberg hits on a solution and sends letters to each of the five Irregulars who have written to him, inviting them to Hollywood at his expense to serve as advisors on the film. When they agree, the studio provides a house for them at 221B Romualdo Drive, complete with a housekeeper named Mrs. Hudson.


To help tout the film, Maureen plans a party for the press. On the afternoon of the party, Maureen, trying to coordinate the preparations at 221B, is besieged by mysterious callers, messages, and telephone calls. Once things are under way, Stephen Worth makes a drunken, belligerent appearance. When he tries to hit one of the Irregulars, his wild swing hits instead one of the guests, Lieutenant Jackson of the police department. Jackson knocks him cold and he and some others carry Worth to a room upstairs to sleep it off. That ends the party. Later on, Maureen goes upstairs and finds a still drunk and abusive Worth standing in the doorway of the room. Moments later she hears a shot, blood blossoms under the hand Worth claps to his heart, and he falls back into the darkened room. When she bends to help him, something strikes the back of her head, rendering her unconscious. One of the Sherlockians carries her downstairs. When she revives and reports what's happened, Lieutenant Jackson goes to investigate.


There's a lot of blood in the room. There are other significant things there, too. There just isn't any corpse. The next day, each of the Irregulars has a peculiar, sometimes frightening adventure. Each adventure has its roots in a Holmes story, and each elicits information about another Irregular which he'd prefer not be revealed. The police and the Sherlockians thus have their hands full trying to unravel codes and ciphers, interpret the meaning of the adventures, and discover the whereabouts of Worth's body and the means by which it was removed from the house. There's a cover blurb from the New York Times Book Review on the paperback edition I have which reads, “Delightful...offers a surprise on nearly every page.”


This brings me to the only complaint I have about the book—the edition. Mine was published by Carroll & Graf. I'm not sure about the number of pages containing surprises, but this particular book must have been proofread by someone whose idea of intellectual activity is dwarf-tossing. Even by C&G standards, which generally seem to be abysmal in the typographical error department, this one qualifies for the Guinness Book of World Records. By all means read the book. Just avoid the Carroll & Graf edition if you have options.



Barry Ergang © 2013, 2019

Among other works, Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang's own impossible crime novelette, The Play of Light and Shadow, is available at Amazon and Smashwords as is his recently released book of poetry, Farrago, and other entertaining reads. For more on Barry’s books as well as his editing services, check out Barry’s website.


Thursday, June 27, 2019

The Rap Sheet: Of Surveys, Series, and Circus Clowns

The Rap Sheet:  Of Surveys, Series, and Circus Clowns

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange for 6/27/19

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange for 6/27/19

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Monkey Justice and Other Stories: Patricia Abbott

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Monkey Justice and Other Stories: Patricia Abbott: This is another wonderful book of short stories by Patricia Abbott. The 23 stories in this book were published earlier under a similar ti...

Crime Watch: Review: RIPPLING RED

Crime Watch: Review: RIPPLING RED: RIPPLING RED by Brigid George (Potoroo Press, 2017) Reviewed by Karen Chisholm The third novel in this Australian murder mystery serie...

Review: Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2019


The intense and chilling short story “The Box” by Paul D. Marks begins the Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2019 issue and is referenced in the cover art. Brett is the focus of attention by Sergeant Lomax, Deputy District Attorney Alex Garza, and others who believe he murdered Julie Molina. He keeps telling them he didn’t do it and they keep saying he did while his entire life begins to fall apart.

“Sergeant Spinge and The Locked-Room Mystery” by Rob Nisbet is as advertised by the title with a touch of science fiction and humor thrown into the mix. Thanks to “Precog Flakes” which are a cereal with, all the usual stuff of no added salt and eighteen essential flakes, some stuff that helps the eater think better. After three robberies in as many days, the one man police force of the Witchmarsh Constabulary needs all the help he can get. Then the thief strikes again.

Jeffery Scott Sims’ “The Search For Doctor Vane” takes readers to an inhospitable and feared place known as Ironfang Island. The small group led by Professor Anton Vorchek is on a search for the good doctor because Vorchek claims that Doctor Wallis Vane had consulted him on a project that was looking into an aspect of local folklore and history. Vorchek says that Vane was vanished while on Ironfang Island and wants to find him and ascertain what happened. Locals know it is best to stay away from the place and yet a paying job is money so one local with a boat as agreed to act as a ferry and guide for Doctor Vane, his assistant, and two grad students.

Ervin Biggs can certainly dress well in “Evidence” by Dennis Palumbo. That is a good sign as the blackmailer knows that Erwin Briggs killed Larry Walker. One would think an attorney would have been better at concealing what he did. His mistake is going to mean Ervin Biggs is going to pay a lot of money to keep his secret.

“Gold, Jewels, Art, My Father” by David Rachels spins a tale where the Dad always tells the son, usually after a few drinks, a fantastical story about contents buried out in the background. He always warns the son not to ever go digging in the backyard. The son really should have listened.

Sergeant Hagen is working in the cybercrimes unit when he works to get the creeps that go after young girls.  In “Hi! I’m Heather” by Thomas Millstead, the cyber decoy is working very well. The latest suspect is becoming quite the problem very rapidly.

Jenna has a job to do in “Storey” by Eric Cline. She is to go purchase from private collectors any artwork by the legendary Storey. She is to do this on behalf of a certain buyer who wishes to remain anonymous for a good reason.

The case revolves around a stolen bottle of wine in “For The Love Of Wine” by Tatiana Claudy. Officer Vera Orloff and Officer Raymond Holland are supposed to investigate the theft of a bottle of very expensive rare wine from the wine collector, Gregory Rumden. They do so in this “You-Solve-It” mystery.”

As always, the issue concludes with the detailed solution to “You-Solve-It” from the preceding month. In this case, the answer to the April 2019 mystery, “Imperceptible” by Susan Sundwall.

From the very first issue, Mystery Weekly Magazine has featured mysteries covered the vast range of the mystery spectrum. Mysteries in this one may be cozy or hardboiled in style, may have a touch of adventure, a hint of the paranormal, a splash of futuristic science fiction, or something else that adds flavor and spice to the tale. This is not a narrowly focused niche magazine. Variety among several very good tales has always been the deal here and that continues with the Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2019 issue. It is another good one. 




Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2019
April 30, 2019
ASIN: B07RC8XS93
eBook (also available in print)
123 Pages
$2.99


For quite some time now I have been gifted a subscription by the publisher with no expectation at all of a review. I now read and review each issue as I can. To date, I have never submitted anything to this market and will not do so as long as I review the publication.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2019