Showing posts with label Midnight Ink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Midnight Ink. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Review: Outside the Wire: A Pacific Homicide Novel by Patricia Smiley


Pacific Homicide Detective Davie Richards is battling PTSD and for good reason. That is not nearly all as she also has a new case in Outside the Wire: A Pacific Homicide Novel. It is early one very warm morning when she and her partner, Detective Jason Vaughn, are called out to the second floor of a parking garage at LAX.

Members of airport police have already contaminated their crime scene of a car and the surrounding area. A dead man is lying next to the trunk of an Audi A6. The deceased appears to be in his early sixties and is very physically fit. No reason for the man to be dead other than the obvious bullet hole in the right side of his skull and the accompanying pool of blood. Based on that fact that a smaller hole is at the back of his head, she believes he was shot from the front at close range.

He is also wearing a single dog tag that is wrapped loosely in black electrical tape. There should have a second tag with the first with both wrapped in tape to mask the sounds they would make bumping against each other as the wearer moved. Somebody took one dog tag and that might be the killer. Thanks to information provided by one of the airport police officers who knows what the left behind dog tag means, she learns that the deceased person served in the army and that most likely he served in Vietnam. According to the remaining tag he is Zeke C. Woodrow.

In all likelihood, he was forced into retirement some time ago when he turned sixty. Why he was wearing his old tags now, why he was in the parking garage early that morning, and who killed him are just three of the many questions Detective Richard and her partner Detective Jason Vaught have to answer to solve the case.

A first case of several because the killer is not done. Not by a long shot. The killer has an agenda and a target list and Richard and Vaughn have a real mess on their hands.

Building off events in Pacific Homicide, this second novel by Patricia Smiley is an intense page turning read from start to finish. Some story arcs from the first book continue here in Outside the Wire: A Pacific Homicide Novel and serve as background to the rapidly increasing chaos of the new cases. Like the first book, this one as well is part mystery and part police procedural with plenty of the personal sprinkled throughout the read. The result is a good book in a good series and another read well worth your time. 


Outside the Wire: A Pacific Homicide Novel
Patricia Smiley
Midnight Ink
November 2017
ISBN# 978-0-7387-5235-8
Paperback (also available in eBook format)
$15.99
288 Pages


Material supplied by the good people of Dallas Public Library System. 


Kevin R. Tipple ©2019

Tuesday, March 05, 2019

Review: Pacific Homicide: A Mystery by Patricia Smiley


Detective Davie Richards has a nasty case to deal with as Pacific Homicide: A Mystery by Patricia Smiley begins. A women’s body has caused a shutdown at the Hyperion Sewage Treatment Plant. Naked and with no jewelry, Detective Davie Richards and her partner, Jason Vaughn, have to figure out who she was and how she got into the Los Angles sewer system to be caught in the workings of a rotating grinder. She could have gone into the system almost anywhere in the vast service area. With no clothing or any distinguishing features, other than the spider web tattoo on one arm which might mean something or it could be nothing, it seems almost impossible to identify her.

After some work, Detective Davie Richards learns that the woman’s name is Anya Nosova. She’s from Ukraine and her short life has ended before she will see twenty or go home again. What happened to her and why is just part of what Detective Richards needs to figure out.  That is assuming she is going to be allowed to continue to work on the more and more complicated case. Her ability to do her job, let alone be free and not locked up in prison, depends on if the ongoing use of force investigation into her recent shooting situation ever ends. Not only does Detective Richards know that everything she has done from the night of the shooting to now is again being scrutinized, her actions on this murder investigation which is her first as lead detective, mean the brass and others are watching more than ever.

Pacific Homicide: A Mystery is a fast paced read that is part mystery and part police procedural. Readers follow the point of view of Detective Richards and numerous others as things in the two cases escalate. Of course, crime does not happen in a vacuum so there are other police situations that interplay with the two primary storylines as does the personal. Some of that is a bit clichéd, though it does work well and fits into the overall tale seamlessly. Quite a bit is going on in Pacific Homicide: A Mystery” by Patricia Smiley and it is a very good ride.


Pacific Homicide: A Mystery
Patricia Smiley
Midnight Ink
November 2016
ISBN# 978-0-7387-5021-7
Paperback (also available in eBook format)
$15.99
312 Pages


Material supplied by the good people of Dallas Public Library System.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2019

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

The Rap Sheet: Say Good Night to Midnight

While there is nothing yet on their homepage, a number of sites are sharing the news that Midnight Ink is closing. With so many places saying the same thing and with some of the directly affected authors also now speaking out, I now feel comfortable with sharing the news here by way of The Rap Sheet. 

The Rap Sheet: Say Good Night to Midnight