Showing posts with label chris grabenstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chris grabenstein. Show all posts

Friday, April 02, 2021

FFB Review: Tilt A Whirl: The John Ceepak Mysteries Book 1 by Chris Grabenstein

Sea Haven, New Jersey is an eighteen mile long barrier island consisting of motels, beach houses, bait shops, etc. For twenty-four year old Danny Boyle it is home and he works part time as an unarmed summer cop who helps with the influx of tourists in the muggy summer months. He just never expected to work a murder scene.

 

But, that is exactly what quickly happens because Danny also serves as the driver for John Ceepak. Ceepak used to be a military policeman, spent time in Iraq, and has been forced to deal with some really bad guys on more than one occasion. War is hell and Ceepak has lived it and has the memories. Ceepak is the man you want to follow into battle and is the man you want on your side. He lives by “The Code” that few these days can understand let alone follow.

 

The blonde girl, about thirteen years old, wearing a blood soaked dress and screaming as she comes up an avenue towards The Pancake Palace early one morning is a reminder that few live by Ceepak’s code. She is Ashley Hart, the daughter of Reginald and Betty Hall Heart. Betty Hall used to be on the local TV as the bubbly weather person. Reginald Hart was a businessman and real estate developer who did some rather unorthodox things and was very wealthy. Now, he is very dead having been gunned down on the Tilt-A-Whirl ride while sitting next to his daughter. The fact that the ride at the Sunnyside Play Land wasn’t even open yet this Saturday morning isn’t going to matter to the media or scared tourists. The fact that a crazed killer is wandering around the area is a chamber of commerce disaster and Chief Cosgrove wants it solved fast. He puts Ceepak and by extension his driver, Boyle, on the case. Murder is just the start of a twisting tale that ultimately leads to a horrifying conclusion.

 

Told at a fast pace, this is a read that quickly pulls the reader into the quirks of location and character. Both elements quickly come to life for the reader as back story is skillfully woven into dialogue and the occasional flashback. In a departure from most mysteries, the story is told in the first person from the Danny Boyle’s perspective while the real protagonist is Ceepak. This allows readers to get deeper into the Ceepak character because he is being observed while also getting a good idea of Danny’s character. It also works with the other characters that are never cardboard cutouts and instead are usually realistic and sometimes a bit quirky.

 

As some have noted, the cover does not remotely do justice to the book. Hot pink in background the cover prominently features a rollercoaster and not the ride depicted in the book. Though, there is a rollercoaster ride at the mythical Sunnyside Play Land so there is a vague link. While the design created by Michael Fusco seems very wrong, it does bring glances and inquires from folks when the book is out in public. More than one neighbor came over to see what I was working on now because they had spotted the cover as I sat reading on my apartment porch. Sometimes they came over at the most inopportune times.

 

The bottom line here is this is a book that fires on all cylinders and takes the reader on a very good ride. Sometimes funny, sometimes dark, this is a novel that quickly becomes riveting and one of the best I have read in a very long time. Start of a series, this is a very good one and a book you simply have to read.


 

Book provided by the author in exchange for my objective review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple © 2009, 2016, 2021

Friday, February 21, 2020

FFB Review: Tilt A Whirl: The John Ceepak Mysteries Book 1 by Chris Grabenstein


I first told you about this book back long ago in 2009. I told you again about  Tilt A Whirl: The John Ceepak Mysteries Book 1 by Chris Grabenstein in 2016. Earlier this week, Aubrey Hamilton told everyone her perspective about one of my favorite series. It seemed like that was a sign that I should mention again this read where mystery,  humor, and more are at work. For the rest of the reading suggestions for this date, check out Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom blog.

Sea Haven, New Jersey is an eighteen mile long barrier island consisting of motels, beach houses, bait shops, etc. For twenty-four year old Danny Boyle it is home and he works part time as an unarmed summer cop who helps with the influx of tourists in the muggy summer months. He just never expected to work a murder scene.

But, that is exactly what quickly happens because Danny also serves as the driver for John Ceepak. Ceepak used to be a military policeman, spent time in Iraq, and has been forced to deal with some really bad guys on more than one occasion. War is hell and Ceepak has lived it and has the memories. Ceepak is the man you want to follow into battle and is the man you want on your side. He lives by “The Code” that few these days can understand let alone follow.

The blonde girl, about thirteen years old, wearing a blood soaked dress and screaming as she comes up an avenue towards The Pancake Palace early one morning is a reminder that few live by Ceepak’s code. She is Ashley Hart, the daughter of Reginald and Betty Hall Heart. Betty Hall used to be on the local TV as the bubbly weather person. Reginald Hart was a businessman and real estate developer who did some rather unorthodox things and was very wealthy. Now, he is very dead having been gunned down on the Tilt-A-Whirl ride while sitting next to his daughter. The fact that the ride at the Sunnyside Play Land wasn’t even open yet this Saturday morning isn’t going to matter to the media or scared tourists. The fact that a crazed killer is wandering around the area is a chamber of commerce disaster and Chief Cosgrove wants it solved fast. He puts Ceepak and by extension his driver, Boyle, on the case. Murder is just the start of a twisting tale that ultimately leads to a horrifying conclusion.

Told at a fast pace, this is a read that quickly pulls the reader into the quirks of location and character. Both elements quickly come to life for the reader as back story is skillfully woven into dialogue and the occasional flashback. In a departure from most mysteries, the story is told in the first person from the Danny Boyle’s perspective while the real protagonist is Ceepak. This allows readers to get deeper into the Ceepak character because he is being observed while also getting a good idea of Danny’s character. It also works with the other characters that are never cardboard cutouts and instead are usually realistic and sometimes a bit quirky.

As some have noted, the cover does not remotely do justice to the book. Hot pink in background the cover prominently features a rollercoaster and not the ride depicted in the book. Though, there is a rollercoaster ride at the mythical Sunnyside Play Land so there is a vague link. While the design created by Michael Fusco seems very wrong, it does bring glances and inquires from folks when the book is out in public. More than one neighbor came over to see what I was working on now because they had spotted the cover as I sat reading on my apartment porch. Sometimes they came over at the most inopportune times.

The bottom line here is this is a book that fires on all cylinders and takes the reader on a very good ride. Sometimes funny, sometimes dark, this is a novel that quickly becomes riveting and one of the best I have read in a very long time. Start of a series, this is a very good one and a book you simply have to read.



Book provided by the author in exchange for my objective review.


Kevin R. Tipple © 2009, 2016, 2020

Monday, February 17, 2020

Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: Tilt-a-Whirl by Chris Grabenstein


Chris Grabenstein is a wildly talented guy. After attending the University of Tennessee, he moved to New York City where he performed with improvisational comedy ensembles for several years. His next career move was to write advertising copy for James Patterson. After that he began publishing fiction in earnest. He’s published more than 40 children’s books. He has won many awards, including the 2006 Anthony Award for Best First Novel for his debut mystery featuring Iraqi war veteran John Ceepak. It’s been seven years since the latest and quite possibly last title in this eight-book series was published, and it may be time for those who overlooked it to give these books another look.

In Tilt-a-Whirl (Carroll & Graf, 2005) we meet former MP John Ceepak, just back from a horrific tour of duty in the Middle East. He joins the Sea Haven police force for the summer to give himself a break. Sea Haven, New Jersey, is on a barrier island swarming with tourists and vacationers during the summer. What ordinarily is a small quiet town is overrun by sun-seeking humanity then. Ceepak is an Eagle Scout and committed to upright behavior. He will not lie, cheat or steal, nor tolerate anyone who does. He makes a profound impression upon Danny Boyle, the 24-year-old naïve narrator of the book, who joins the police force to augment the staff needed to handle the summer crowds.

Ceepak and Boyle are leaving a breakfast diner early one morning when a 12-year-old girl covered with blood comes running down the street. She tells them her father has been killed in the nearby amusement park. Ceepak rushes to the scene, while Boyle takes the girl to an unopened store to question her and get her out of the potential view of the shooter. Ceepak discovers the body of the local land development czar, whose business tactics left something to be desired. His enemies were legion, so the cast of suspects is substantial. Instead of taking a break from violence, Ceepak’s police experience make him a natural lead investigator of the homicide that is followed by a kidnapping.

Fresh characters, original setting, complex plot. Recommended to mystery readers who overlooked this series earlier or who are looking for something new to read. Booklist starred review.


·         Hardcover: 304 pages
·         Publisher: Carroll & Graf; 1st edition (August 31, 2005)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 0786715847
·         ISBN-13: 978-0786715848


Aubrey Hamilton ©2020

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

Friday, April 01, 2016

FFB Review: "Tilt A Whirl: The John Ceepak Mysteries Book 1" by Chris Grabenstein

Back in July 2009 in the dark ages of this blog I first told you about Tilt A Whirl: The John Ceepak Mysteries Book 1 by Chris Grabenstein. Mystery, humor, and more are at work in this book and series. For Friday’s Forgotten Books today hosted by Patti Abbott I remind you of this very good read and very good series.

Sea Haven, New Jersey is an eighteen mile long barrier island consisting of motels, beach houses, bait shops, etc. For twenty-four year old Danny Boyle it is home and he works part time as an unarmed summer cop who helps with the influx of tourists in the muggy summer months. He just never expected to work a murder scene.

But, that is exactly what quickly happens because Danny also serves as the driver for John Ceepak. Ceepak used to be a military policeman, spent time in Iraq, and has been forced to deal with some really bad guys on more than one occasion. War is hell and Ceepak has lived it and has the memories. Ceepak is the man you want to follow into battle and is the man you want on your side. He lives by “The Code” that few these days can understand let alone follow.

The blonde girl, about thirteen years old, wearing a blood soaked dress and screaming as she comes up an avenue towards The Pancake Palace early one morning is a reminder that few live by Ceepak’s code. She is Ashley Hart, the daughter of Reginald and Betty Hall Heart. Betty Hall used to be on the local TV as the bubbly weather person. Reginald Hart was a businessman and real estate developer who did some rather unorthodox things and was very wealthy. Now, he is very dead having been gunned down on the Tilt-A-Whirl ride while sitting next to his daughter. The fact that the ride at the Sunnyside Play Land wasn’t even open yet this Saturday morning isn’t going to matter to the media or scared tourists. The fact that a crazed killer is wandering around the area is a chamber of commerce disaster and Chief Cosgrove wants it solved fast. He puts Ceepak and by extension his driver, Boyle, on the case. Murder is just the start of a twisting tale that ultimately leads to a horrifying conclusion.

Told at a fast pace, this is a read that quickly pulls the reader into the quirks of location and character. Both elements quickly come to life for the reader as back story is skillfully woven into dialogue and the occasional flashback. In a departure from most mysteries, the story is told in the first person from the Danny Boyle’s perspective while the real protagonist is Ceepak. This allows readers to get deeper into the Ceepak character because he is being observed while also getting a good idea of Danny’s character. It also works with the other characters that are never cardboard cutouts and instead are usually realistic and sometimes a bit quirky.

As some have noted, the cover does not remotely do justice to the book. Hot pink in background the cover prominently features a rollercoaster and not the ride depicted in the book. Though, there is a rollercoaster ride at the mythical Sunnyside Play Land so there is a vague link. While the design created by Michael Fusco seems very wrong, it does bring glances and inquires from folks when the book is out in public. More than one neighbor came over to see what I was working on now because they had spotted the cover as I sat reading on my apartment porch. Sometimes they came over at the most inopportune times.

The bottom line here is this is a book that fires on all cylinders and takes the reader on a very good ride. Sometimes funny, sometimes dark, this is a novel that quickly becomes riveting and one of the best I have read in a very long time. Start of a series, this is a very good one and a book you simply have to read.

Book provided by the author in exchange for my objective review.



Kevin R. Tipple © 2009, 2016

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Review: "FREE FALL: A JOHN CEEPAK MYSTERY" by Chris Grabenstein


Scheduled to be released this May Free Fall: A John Ceepak Mystery takes readers back to “sunny, funderdull” Sea Heaven. Like the rest of the coastline nearby, the eighteen mile long barrier island that holds Sea Heaven, New Jersey, was seriously damaged by Hurricane Sandy last fall. The residents survived, rebuilt, and are more than ready to put the past behind them. It is June and that means the start of the tourists and the start of the summer season. It also means the past is never gone especially when the living remind Officer Danny Boyle of it.

Christine Lemonopolous easily reminds Danny of the past and it comes with pain. Back in the day she was good friends with Katie who was Danny’s love of his life until she was killed. Like a lot of the people Danny knew when he and Katie were together, he lost track of Christine.  Instead of being a nurse in a local hospital, these days Christine works as a home health care nurse for the elderly, disabled, and those who need her help. She struggles to make ends meet and relies on several jobs with living arrangements to barely get by.

She also is now going to rely on Danny and by extension John Ceepak to save her from an escalating legal situation. There is no question she was fighting the wealthy Shona Oppenheimer when police arrived on scene. The facts behind the situation and whether it truly was an assault are in question. It doesn’t help that Christine has a less than stellar mental health reputation these days; some of her patients have died in the past, and other issues.

This latest in the series is another fun read featuring Danny Boyle, John Ceepak, and others that readers know and love. As always multiple story lines are present here and include references to families and politics with much familial angst present. It wouldn’t be one of these mysteries without references to Ceepak’s rules, Bruce Springsteen, and a few other things. Free Fall: A John Ceepak Mystery is another fun read, on and off the boardwalk, and an excellent way to start the summer.

Reviewer Note:  Sharp eyed readers may note the brief mention of a very minor character by the name of “Kevin Tipple.” I had the honor of having my name selected by the author for his use as he saw fit in the book.  While the character and I share a name, we share nothing else in common and that very brief use did not impact this review.



FREE FALL: A JOHN CEEPAK MYSTERY
Chris Grabenstein
Pegasus Crime
Scheduled release May 2013
ISBN# 978-1-60598-475-9
Hardback
320 Pages
$25.00


ARC sent to me by the author in exchange for my objective review.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2013

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Review: "FUN HOUSE: A JOHN CEEPAK MYSTERY" by Chris Grabenstein


The last thing police officers Danny Boyle and his partner wanted to be were some kind of celebrity jokes. However, thanks to the alcoholic fueled antics of contestants in a The Jersey Shore type reality show that is what they have become. Thanks to a recent widely publicized incident Ceepak and Boyle have not only been on television, but now also have the T-shirts to prove it.

It has also brought them to the attention of the show’s producer Marty Mandrake. Seeking to make his version of good TV while keeping his stars out of trouble, he wants Ceepak and Boyle to head up the security detail. Not only are the contestants clearly a danger to themselves and others as the court charges that will be filed after the show is over make clear, they are also in danger from an outside threat. At least one of the contestants apparently is taking anabolic steroids and is getting them from a very bad guy nicknamed “Skeletor.”

For roughly the last two years Ceepak and the Sea Haven Police Department, as well as a joint federal and state task force have been trying to capture Skeletor. So far he has proved elusive as well almost killing Ceepak and Boyle last summer. Skeletor is a much bigger deal than some punks on a stupid television show so Ceepak and Boyle agree to do what the TV producer Mandrake wants. That also keeps the Mayor and others happy. Ratings will soar, tourism will increase, and dollars will flow into city coffers.

Nobody expected that a couple of murders would happen too.

This is the seventh novel in a good series that is stylistically a bit different from the earlier books.  Officer Danny Boyle is older now and the books, told from his point of view, reflect that older adult viewpoint. Boyle has lost loved ones, seen others die, and isn’t the happy part time summer cop that he was when the series started. As a result, there is far less humor in this book though there are some very funny parts regarding the reality TV show industry and those involved.

Unlike earlier books in the series, foul and very graphic language is highly prevalent here. Not just among the reality show contestants but also with numerous other characters. Just like some folks in real life, many characters in FUN HOUSE seem to have no ability to say anything without graphic and coarse language. The use of the language really stands out in this novel as it hasn’t reached anywhere close to this level before.

Despite the issue with the language FUN HOUSE: A JOHN CEEPAK MYSTERY is another solidly good read.  It deals with some strong themes in both the main storyline and the secondary one and deals with them well. While the young fun loving Danny Boyle of the series is long gone, this Danny Boyle is still pretty good though not quite nearly as laugh out loud fun. You can’t undo the march of time as Danny Boyle knows very well.


FUN HOUSE: A JOHN CEEPAK MYSTERY
Chris Grabenstein
Pegasus Crime
May 2012
ISBN# 978-1-60598-336-3
Hardback
296 Pages
$25.00


Material supplied by the good folks of the Plano Texas Public Library System. Again this year the summer reading challenge for adults and kids is now underway. For more information go to


Kevin R. Tipple ©2012

Sunday, May 13, 2012

New Arrivals

this came from my local library .....





          .....and this came yesterday via the mail by way of Editor Dave Truesdale of Tangent Online.


This is my first BULL SPEC MAGAZINE and I am looking forward to the read. I would like to do more science fiction and fantasy reading/reviewing but the deadlines at Tangent Online are very short and my own problems here often interfere. This must take reading priority now that it is here and the review will soon appear there. If you are not familiar with Tangent Online then check it out at http://www.tangentonline.com/index.php  Lots of good stuff there including a few of my reviews.


Kevin

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Interesting Reading Elsewhere--PJ Nunn interviews Chris Grabenstein

As I said the other day Publicist PJ Nunn, owner of BreakThrough Promotions, always has things of interest on her blog at http://bookbrowsing.wordpress.com/  I am very late in mentioning she updated it recently with an interview with Chris Grabenstein. I am a huge fan of his "John Ceepak series. In fact, his latest in that titled Fun House came from the library today.

If you don't know about Grabenstein's works, or even if you do, the interview is well worth your time.



Kevin