Friday, October 12, 2018

FFB Review: SINS FOR FATHER KNOX (1973) by Josef Skvorecky Reviewed by Barry Ergang

After recently reviewing the short story mystery collection, People Behaving Badly, Barry is back today with another all new review. After you check out his work below, head on over to Patti’s blog and see what else is recommended. Make sure you get your books now as winter is coming.


SINS FOR FATHER KNOX (1973) by Josef Skvorecky


Father Ronald A. Knox, aside from being a clergyman, was one of the early exponents of what has become the “Golden Age” mystery story: the formal, fairly-clued whodunit and—in some cases— howdunit. Among hardcore history-of-mystery buffs, Knox is probably best remembered for his Ten Commandments for writing a detective story. In 1973, Czechoslovakian author Josef Skvorecky wrote the novel Sins for Father Knox, a chapter of which (“chapter” here loosely defined because each is actually an individual short story with an occasional reference to one of its predecessors) violates one of Knox’s commandments. Chapter descriptions—no spoilers!—follow.

Lieutenant Boruvka has his doubts about the guilt of Eve Adam, who has been convicted of and imprisoned for the murder of film director Rudolf Weyr. Despite being married and a parent, Boruvka can’t help finding Eve attractive as he interviews her at the Czechoslovakian women’s prison, listening to her story and remembering vital testimonies from her trial. Apart from finally being able to solve the case and exonerate Eve, he finds that investigation, like film-making, can be “An Intimate Business.” 

Performing as a lounge singer at the Moulin Rouge in Sweden and sharing an apartment with a stripper named Zuzka, Eve while breakfasting one morning is approached by a large American who calls himself MacMac. He presumes to know who she is because each has a book with the word Thursday in the title. He assures her that her problem will be taken care of that day, and not to worry. Unnerved but fascinated, Eve doesn’t correct his “Mistake in Hitsungsee,” but instead plays along, thus getting herself caught up in a locked-room murder.

In “The Man Eve Didn’t Know from Adam,” Eve is in Rimini, Italy, performing, visiting, and picnicking with Czech girlfriend Lubomira, now known as Laura. The two observe, from a considerable distance, a young woman hitchhiker enter a raspberry-red sports car, and later discover that she’s been murdered. The police, led by the arrogant Hercule Potarot (yes, I spelled his surname correctly), have stopped five raspberry-red sports cars of different makes. Eve must help him determine, putting it charitably, which driver is the “sex-murderer” responsible.  

At the bar in the Majestic Hotel in Sweden, where she’s performing, Eve meets and shares a drink and a cigarette with the inebriated Mr. Jensen. He tells her “Order anything you want, as much as you want. I’m picking up the tab. Because tonight, I’m going to be murdered.” In a story complicated by time elements and multiple characters’ activities, Jensen is indeed murdered. Investigating is Detective Niels C. Kölln, whom Eve met in Hitsungsee, and who is now married to Zuzka. Amid some of the Köllns’ amusing domestic conflicts, Eve delves into “A Question of Alibis” to solve the case.  

Now performing at The Pink Jungle in New York City, Eve makes time with—and correctly identifies—McGrogan as a private detective. While they schmooze, the pair also observes the attractive—and married—Connie Starrett being attentive to a number of prospective lovers. When Connie and a man named Leary are murdered, as well as three private detectives—all Irish, McGrogan among them—Eve and a cop named O’Raglan spend a lot of time  trying to geometrically puzzle out the answer to “Why So Many Shamuses?” I personally tried to puzzle out why it’s such an overlong and tedious story.

In “Miscarriage of Justice,” Eve is visiting American relatives in a small town in upstate New York. They’re gathered at the airport to see Bob Cornhill off to Buffalo when, from the waiting room window, they see that a house in town is on fire. Cornhill’s daughter thinks it’s their house, and shortly thereafter, an announcer over the public address system confirms it, advising Cornhill to return home. When he does, police Sergeant O’Mackey tells him the fire wasn’t set, that someone planted a bomb, and that he suspects Ben Turpin, who has done work for Cornhill in the past, because Turpin is African-American and Cornhill once testified against an underground—and vengeful—black organization. What ensues eventually pits O’Mackey against Eve.

Now singing at a San Francisco bar called The Sailor’s Dream, and after chatting with him there but not learning his name, Eve is invited to the Berkeley home of Marcus Twisten, one of several of “The Mathematicians of Grizzly Drive.” As a result of their burgeoning relationship, she becomes involved in trying to solve the kidnapping of his niece in a 39-page story that was about 30 pages too long for yours truly. I was a disaster at math in school, have managed to reach the age of 71 without ever needing algebra, and was thus bored out of my socks as I skimmed 10 wearisome pages of what allegedly (you couldn’t prove it by me and I don’t care) explains the solution to the mystery. 

Eve is a passenger in tourist-class aboard a transatlantic liner bound from New York to Europe in “An Atlantic Romance.” Here she makes the acquaintance of several fellow passengers, some of whose recollections and personal histories go back to World War II, and one who has a dubious history when it comes to the amorous intentions he displays toward her. When one of the passengers is murdered, Eve has to grapple with matters of right, wrong, and a kind of nosiness, as well as the solution.

“Just Between Us Girls” has Eve’s girlfriend Zuzka recounting to two young men, Georgie and Brucie, an incident involving what amounts to a girls’ night out and the resultant murder of one of them. Why she was slain and by whom was—for this reader—another tedious tale that necessitated skimming just to reach its end even though it was mercifully briefer than some of its predecessors. Overloaded with characters that are only names on the page—as are many in other chapters—I didn’t care who the murderer was.

“The Third Tip of the Triangle” concludes where everything began: in Prague, and with the usually saturnine Lieutenant Boruvka feeling even gloomier upon learning his teenage daughter is pregnant. Complicating his professional life is a phone call summoning him to the scene of the death of electrical engineer Ludvik Arnold. His investigation includes a number of suspects, one of whom is his daughter’s age who happens to be the offspring of a friend. He is also reunited him with Eve Adam, who helps solve this, another case I couldn’t wait to reach the end of.

 Although I’ve known of it, and have seen his Ten Commandments previously, I’ve never read any of Father Knox’s fiction. In each chapter of Sins for Father Knox, and in homage to the mysteries posed in the early Ellery Queen novels, there is a challenge to the reader about solving the crime and identifying the commandment violated. I think its concept is clever, some of the violations neatly subtle, but the overall execution too often tedious and thus disappointing.


© 2018 Barry Ergang

Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s mystery novelette, “The Play of Light and Shadow,” is available at Amazon and Smashwords, along with some of his other work.

Thursday, October 11, 2018

Unlawful Acts Review: The Man Who Came Uptown by George Pelecanos

Unlawful Acts Review: The Man Who Came Uptown by George Pelecanos

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Wellness, Baby's Bones, Mary's Monster...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Wellness, Baby's Bones, Mary's Monster...: Reported by Kristin Natural Causes: An Epidemic of Wellness, the Certainty of Dying, and Killing Ourselves to Life Longer by Ba...

Do Some Damage: Approaches to Writing Violence

Do Some Damage: Approaches to Writing Violence: When the editor of one of your favorite crime fiction publishers reaches out to you saying he has some thoughts about writing violence and a...

Criminal Minds: Write like a Monkey on Steroids

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Ladies of Mystery: What Makes A Writer? Nature or Nurture? by Janis Patterson

Ladies of Mystery: What Makes A Writer? Nature or Nurture? by Janis Patterson

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

TerribleMinds: For World Mental Health Day: When Writer’s Block Is Actually Depression

I suspect this is my issue along with the sea of grief.....
TerribleMinds:  For World Mental Health Day: When Writer’s Block Is Actually Depression

Only days to win books and more from KRL

Only days left to win a copy of "Halloween Murder" by Leslie Meier and while there check out a fun Halloween guest post by Leslie
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/halloween-murder-by-leslie-meier/

And to win a copy of another Halloween mystery, "The Henderson House" by Kathi Daley
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/the-henderson-house-by-kathi-daley/

Also to win a copy of the novella "A Deadly Brew" by Lynn Cahoon
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/a-deadly-brew-a-novela-by-lynn-cahoon/

And to win a copy of "Tail of the Dragon" by Connie Di Marco and while there check out an interesting interview with Connie
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/tail-of-the-dragon-by-connie-di-marco/

And to win a copy of another Halloween mystery, "Designed for Haunting" by Sybil Johnson published by Henery Press
https://www.krlnews.com/2018/10/designed-for-haunting-by-sybil-johnson.html

And a copy of "Marigolds for Malice" by Bailey Cattrell
https://www.krlnews.com/2018/10/marigolds-for-malice-by-bailey-cattrell.html


Happy reading,
Lorie

Five Star Press: Big City vs. Small Town by Angela Crider Neary

Five Star Press: Big City vs. Small Town by Angela Crider Neary

Lesa's Book Critiques: A Knife in the Fog by Bradley Harper

Lesa's Book Critiques: A Knife in the Fog by Bradley Harper

Tuesday, October 09, 2018

Unlawful Acts: Incident Report No. 62

Unlawful Acts: Incident Report No. 62

Revelant History: Empress Theodora: Saint, Sinner, or Both?

Revelant History: Empress Theodora: Saint, Sinner, or Both?

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: No Time to Spare by Ursula K. Le Guin

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: No Time to Spare by Ursula K. Le Guin: Reviewed by Jeanne The news that Ursula K. Le Guin had passed away shook the literary world.   Although known primarily for her ...

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 10/8/18

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 10/8/18

Do Some Damage: What We Move Towards & What We Leave Behind

Do Some Damage: What We Move Towards & What We Leave Behind: You can't change a person's mind by force. I remember years ago, listening to a sermon. The speaker talked about a little boy who g...

Monday Markets and Jobs for Writer for 10/8/18

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Crime Watch: Review: THE KATHARINA CODE

Crime Watch: Review: THE KATHARINA CODE: THE KATHARINA CODE by Jørn Lier Horst, tr Anne Bruce (Penguin, 2018) Reviewed by Craig Sisterson Twenty-four years ago Katharina Hauge...

Guest Post: HISTORY'S RICH WITH MYSTERIES: BELLE STARR – Her Fabled Life, Her Unsolved Murder

It has been about two months since the last time our man in Fort Worth with hos post on Dorothy Kilgallen. Nice to have Earl back on the blog with another informative post.

HISTORY’S RICH WITH MYSTERIES

When I look at the past, I find stories about people which fascinate me, particularly those in which there is a curious mixture of fact, legend, and mysterious uncertainty. In this series of articles, I want to explore some of those stories. I think of them as mysteries swaddled in legend. While truth is always desired in most things, truth easily becomes staid and boring. Legend, on the other hand, forever holds a hint of romanticism and an aura of excitement borne of adventure, imagination and, of course, mystery.
  
BELLE STARR – Her Fabled Life, Her Unsolved Murder
by Earl Staggs

Belle Starr, according to legend, was a lovely lady who ruled outlaw gangs with her guns, her will and her personal favors. She has come down through history as an adventuress who rode with Jesse and Frank James, the Younger Brothers, and other famous outlaws of the day. According to the stories, she robbed from the rich and gave to the poor and cleaned out saloons and crooked poker games with six guns blazing.

 
Belle on Horseback
On February 3, 1889, two days before her forty-first birthday, she was gunned down on a dark country road near King Creek, Oklahoma. No one was ever convicted of her murder.

“Dime Novels” were popular at the time to appease the public’s appetite for exciting, hell-raising stories about hard-riding, fast-shooting outlaws and heroes of the old west. Writers and publishers were happy to supply them, even if they were imaginative exaggerations of the truth. In this manner, history gave legendary status to the likes of Wild Bill Hickok, Buffalo Bill Cody, Kit Carson, and others, including Belle Starr. Like the others, Belle’s exploits and adventures were more fiction than fact. The manufactured but fascinating and often fantastic stories became the myth and the legend. Hollywood bolstered her status as a genuine larger-than-life figure with movies starring beauties such as Gene Tierney and Elizabeth Montgomery as Belle.

Her legend began taking shape soon after her death. Most responsible was Richard Fox, publisher of National Police Gazette and a number of dime novels. His book, Belle Starr, the Bandit Queen, or the Female Jesse James: A Full and Authentic History of the Dashing Female Highwayman, published the year she was killed, was supposedly an official biography of her life. Another book called her the “Petticoat Terror of the Plains.”

In actual fact, there is no evidence that Belle was ever the leader of an outlaw band or robbed banks, trains, or stagecoaches. Even though she was fond of carrying a six-shooter (sometimes two), she was not known to have ever participated in any gunfights. She knew and spent time with the James boys and the Youngers, but her experiences outside the law were limited to a little rustling here and there, and providing a place for her outlaw friends to hole up from time to time.

Not that her life was dull and uneventful. Far from it. A year before her death, she told a reporter for the Fort Smith Elevator, “I regard myself as a woman who has seen much of life.”

She was born Myra Maybelle Shirley on her father's farm near Carthage, Missouri, on February 5, 1848. Her father did well as a farmer and in 1856, sold his farm and bought a livery stable. A blacksmith shop and an inn in the town square of Carthage. Belle graduated from Missouri's Carthage Female Academy, a private institution her father helped establish. 
Belle as a Young Girl

She was a bright student, with polite manners and enjoyed the life of a spoiled rich girl. She had a talent for playing piano and liked having an audience. She also loved the outdoors and spent a lot of time roaming the countryside with her older brother Bud, who taught her to ride a horse and handle guns.


Belle’s family and their lives changed drastically, however, when the Kansas-Missouri Border War, a bloody precursor to the Civil War, broke out in the late 1850’s. Belle’s brother Bud joined Quantrill’s Raiders and rose to the rank of captain, but was killed in 1864. The constant fighting and killing took its toll on local businesses and after Bud’s death, Belle’s father sold his interests in Carthage and the family moved to Scyene, Texas, a small settlement southeast of Dallas.


The James-Younger Gang robbed their first bank in Liberty, Missouri, in 1866 and fled to Texas where they stayed with Belle and her family. Belle had grown up with the James brothers and the Youngers back in Missouri. She also became reacquainted with Jim Reed, another family friend from Missouri. A romance blossomed, and they were married on November 1, 1866. Belle was then eighteen years old. They lived with Belle’s family in Scyene and Jim worked as a salesman in Dallas. In 1867, Belle and Jim moved to the Reed’s family farm in Missouri. The following year, Belle gave birth to her first child. They named her Rosie Lee but always called her “Pearl.”


There were rumors that Belle was seduced by Cole Younger during their time in Scyene and bore him an illegitimate child, but both Belle and Cole as well as historians denied it.


Jim Reed was not good at farming and eventually became a full-fledged outlaw with his own gang. He was wanted for allegedly killing a man in Arkansas, and he and Belle fled to California with their daughter Pearl. There, in 1871, Belle gave birth to a son she named Edward.


Jim fell in with the Starr gang, a Cherokee Indian family well-known for rustling and bootlegging. He was killed in August 1874 by a member of his own gang in Paris, Texas, where he and Belle had settled with their family. Belle left her children with her mother and traveled to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) and became involved with an Indian outlaw known as Blue Duck. 

Belle and Blue Duck

Belle married Sam Starr in 1880, and they settled in Indian Territory. She learned the ins and outs of fencing stolen goods for rustlers and bootleggers as well as the art of harboring her outlaw friends from the law. Her illegal activities proved to be quite lucrative for her. Belle always harbored a strong sense of style, which would become a part of her later legend. She was also a crack shot and enjoyed riding sidesaddle dressed in a black velvet riding habit and a plumed hat, and carrying two pistols with cartridge belts across her hips.

In 1883, Belle and Sam were arrested for horse theft and served nine months in the House of Corrections in Detroit, Michigan.

On December 17, 1886, Sam Starr was involved in a gunfight with a police officer and both men were killed. The happiest period of Belle’s life, as she called it, abruptly ended. To maintain her residence on Indian land, Belle married Jim July Starr, a relative of Sam’s, who was fifteen years younger.

Dime novels, scandal magazines, and gossip kept her name alive over the next couple years.

On February 3, 1889, two days shy of turning forty-one, she was ambushed and killed while riding home late at night.

Statue of Belle
In one version of the story, she had been attending a dance where a man asked her to dance. When Belle refused, he became enraged and followed her. When she stopped to give her horse a drink, he shot her.

There were other suspects, including both her children. One source suggested her son, Edward, may have been her killer because she beat him for mistreating her horse. Her daughter Pearl was considered a suspect because she never forgave her mother for refusing to let her marry the man she loved.

Edgar J. Watson, one of her sharecroppers, was another suspect. He was a wanted man in Florida with a price on his head, and he was afraid she was going to turn him in. Watson was tried for her murder but was acquitted.

Officially, there were no witnesses to how it actually happened, and no one was ever convicted of the crime. The murder of Belle Starr, the “Bandit Queen,” remains an unsolved mystery in the pages of history.

 Her grave site is near Eufair Lake, southeast of Porum, Oklahoma. A horse was engraved on her tombstone, along with these words:

Belle's Tombstone

Shed not for her the bitter tear,
Nor give the heart to vain regret
Tis but the casket that lies here,
The gem that filled it sparkles yet.


Earl Staggs ©2018

Earl Staggs is a three-time winner of the Derringer Award for Best Short Story of the Year and earned all Five Star reviews for his novels MEMORY OF A MURDER and JUSTIFIED ACTION. He served as Managing Editor of Futures Mysterious Anthology Magazine, as President of the Short Mystery Fiction Society, and is a frequent speaker at conferences and seminars. He invites any comments via email at earlstaggs@sbcglobal.net

He also invites you to visit his blog site at http://earlwstaggs.wordpress.com to learn more about his novels and stories.

Monday, October 08, 2018

TEXAS BOOK LOVER: Monday Roundup: Texas Literary Calendar October 8-...

TEXAS BOOK LOVER: Monday Roundup: Texas Literary Calendar October 8-...: Bookish goings-on in Texas for the week of October 8-14, 2018:  Special Events: Lone Star Storytelling Festival , Frisco, October 12-13 ...

Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: The Big Thaw by Donald Harstad


The Big Thaw by Donald Harstad (Doubleday, 2000) is the third in the Deputy Sheriff Carl Houseman series, six police procedurals set in rural Nation County, Iowa. It’s January with at least a foot of snow on the ground and the temperature has been below zero for so long everyone thinks their thermometers are broken. Carl is rousted out of bed to help chase a burglary suspect who slides off the icy road into a ditch. Once extracted from his wrecked car, the police recognize Fred Grothier who is known to be guilty of a range of minor crimes. Questioning reveals he and his cousins are the perpetrators of a string of recent break-ins, visiting the empty homes of residents who found a warmer place to spend the winter. Fred startles Carl and his colleagues when Fred tells them he was driving around looking for his cousins, who have disappeared. Fred dropped them off at a home whose owners were known to be out of town but the cousins were not there when he returned to pick them up with their loot.

Carl and a couple more from the sheriff’s office go to the house in question and search it from top to bottom. The frozen bodies of the cousins are found under a tarp in a tool shed, shot execution-style with Russian automatics. Russian weapons are not all that common in Nation County, where the U.S.-made shotgun and rifle are the usual guns of choice. The entire sheriff’s office is mulling over this strange turn of events when some of the state FBI agents show up. The simmering rivalry between the local boys and the FBI know-it-alls flares up, and a convoluted but fast-moving story unfolds.

Harstad was a deputy sheriff for more than 25 years and it shows in the precise and exhaustive description of crime scene investigations. Similar to the Jake Hines titles by Elizabeth Gunn and the Posadas County books by Steven Havill, this series balances the personal lives of the characters with authentic police work in a rural setting where there are never enough law enforcement personnel to go around. Highly recommended.



·         Hardcover: 368 pages
·         Publisher: Doubleday; 1st edition (August 15, 2000)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 0385495692
·         ISBN-13: 978-0385495691



Aubrey Hamilton © 2018

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

Sunday, October 07, 2018

Writer Beware: CONTEST CAUTION: WALDORF PUBLISHING'S MANUSCRIPT CONTEST

Writer Beware: CONTEST CAUTION: WALDORF PUBLISHING'S MANUSCRIPT CONTEST

The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers for 10/7/2018

The Rap Sheet: Revue of Reviewers for 10/7/2018

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: NEWSLETTER SIGNUP CASH GIVEAWAY!

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RTE Update: October 6 Issue of RTE

The October 6th issue of RTE is out and includes fifteen new reviews as well as a new interview:

http://www.reviewingtheevidence.com                   

Lou Berney in the 'Sixty Seconds with . . .' interview hot seat:

http://www.reviewingtheevidence.com/interviews.html?id=260               
                               
REVIEWS THIS WEEK:


NOVEMBER ROAD        Lou Berney    Reviewed by Yvonne Klein

DEATH OF A RAINMAKER        Laurie Loewenstein    Reviewed by Katie Voss   

THE VANISHING BOX        Elly Griffiths    Reviewed Jim Napier   
    
THE SECOND RIDER        Alex Beer    Reviewed by Yvonne Klein   

IDYLL HANDS        Stephanie Gayle    Reviewed by Phyllis Onstad

THE ICE SWIMMER         Kjell Ola Dahl    Reviewed by Anne Corey   

OPEN YOUR EYES        Paula Daly    Reviewed by Nicola Nixon   

SUNRISE HIGHWAY        Peter Blauner    Reviewed by Barbara Fister   

BLACK SWAN RISING        Lisa Brackmann    Reviewed by Keshena Hanson

THE MAN WHO CAME UPTOWN     George Pelecanos    Reviewed by Jim Napier

AND FIRE CAME DOWN    Emma Viskic    Reviewed by Barbara Fister

LAST CALL        Paula Matter     Reviewed by Phyllis Onstad

BURNING RIDGE    Margaret Mizushima     Reviewed by Caryn St Clair

THE DAMAGE DONE    P J Parrish    Reviewed by PJ Coldren


We post more than 900 new reviews a year -- all of them are archived on the site -- as well as a new interview with a top author every issue.

Yvonne Klein
Editor: ymk@reviewingtheevidence.com

Crimespree Magazine: MURDER AND MAYHEM IN MILWAUKEE CHARITY AUCTION

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Hope Never Dies by Andrew Shaffer

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ChrisChatTalks Creativity with…Mark Allan Gunnells

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The Rap Sheet: Worth Mentioning

The Rap Sheet: Worth Mentioning

Unlawful Acts: Reading and Diversity

Unlawful Acts: Reading and Diversity

Saturday, October 06, 2018

New Books AND Short Stories by MWA Members – October 2018

New Books AND Short Stories by MWA Members – October 2018

Recent Facebook Hack Highlights Risk of Using Social Networks to Login to Other Sites

Recent Facebook Hack Highlights Risk of Using Social Networks to Login to Other Sites: Following this latest hack, people’s digital security and privacy doesn’t seem assured, especially if you use the Single Sign-On tool.

KRL This Week Update for 10/6/18

Up this morning a review and giveaway of "Halloween Murder" by Leslie Meier along with a fun Halloween guest post by Leslie
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/halloween-murder-by-leslie-meier/



Also a review and giveaway of another Halloween mystery, "The Henderson House" by Kathi Daley
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/the-henderson-house-by-kathi-daley/



And we have another Halloween mystery, a review and giveaway of the novella "A Deadly Brew" by Lynn Cahoon
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/a-deadly-brew-a-novela-by-lynn-cahoon/



We also have a review and giveaway of "Tail of the Dragon" by Connie Di Marco along with an interesting interview with Connie
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/tail-of-the-dragon-by-connie-di-marco/



*And *a review of "Jack Irish" on Acorn TV
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/jack-irish-streaming-on-acorn-tv/



And a dark and twisted mystery short story by Kathleen Delaney, perfect for your Halloween reading
http://kingsriverlife.com/10/06/the-birthday-gift-a-short-story-for-halloween/



Up on KRL News & Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of another Halloween mystery, "Designed for Haunting" by Sybil Johnson
https://www.krlnews.com/2018/10/designed-for-haunting-by-sybil-johnson.html



And a review and giveaway of "Marigolds for Malice" by Bailey Cates Cattrell
https://www.krlnews.com/2018/10/marigolds-for-malice-by-bailey-cattrell.html



And if you also enjoy fantasy, perfect for Halloween month, a review and giveaway of "Wild Hunger" by Chloe Neill
https://www.krlnews.com/2018/10/wild-hunger-by-chloe-neill.html
Happy reading,
Lorie

Mystery Fanfare: MYSTERY BYTES: News, interviews, and other quirky ...

Mystery Fanfare: MYSTERY BYTES: News, interviews, and other quirky ...: Here's a Round-Up of some interesting and quirky mystery-related articles, interviews, and postings on the Internet recently. Just ...

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Antiquities Hunter by Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Antiquities Hunter by Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff

Six Questions For . . .: Six Questions for Rick Ollerman, Editor, Down And ...

Six Questions For . . .: Six Questions for Rick Ollerman, Editor, Down And ...: Down and Out: The Magazine publishes quality crime stories of 3,000 to 5,000 words, sometimes more. Read the complete guidelines here . S...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Nevermore: Lost Causes, Stella Bain, St. Maybe, P...

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Saturdays With Kaye: Downfall by J. A. Jance

Downfall by J. A. Jance


I was so happy to receive this Joanna Brady mystery for review. It’s been some time since I read one, not for lack of desire, but for lack of time. “Downfall” is fully as good as the last one I read.

It’s the last day of August in the Mule Mountains of SE Arizona. Sheriff Brady, an already busy county official, has a daughter heading to college for the first time, a five-year-old starting kindergarten, and baby girl due in early December. And now she gets word that her parents have been in a serious car wreck. Her stepfather is dead and her mother is in the hospital, victims of a kid with a rifle on the overpass. The kid soon crashed his 4x4 fleeing authorities and she finds herself kneeling next to him, comforting her parents’ shooter as he dies.

Then she’s on to the next crisis, two dead bodies at the base of a steep cliff called Geronimo by some, Black Knob by others, but officially Gold Hill. It’s a place local kids climbed as a rite of passage, situated in rugged terrain that has to be hiked to, making the investigation of the unknown women even more complicated.

When Joanna’s mother dies of her injuries, she mourns their relationship. It was never good, but Joanna felt they were moving toward improvement and now will never get to achieve that.

Who the seemingly unrelated women were and why they are both dead in the same spot is the basis for the mystery that Joanna must untangle against the backdrop of her complicated family life.

A truly satisfying read.



Reviewed by Kaye George, author of Death on the Trek, for Suspense Magazine

Friday, October 05, 2018

TEXAS BOOK LOVER: Excerpt & Giveaway: OLD BUILDINGS IN NORTH TEXAS b...

TEXAS BOOK LOVER: Excerpt & Giveaway: OLD BUILDINGS IN NORTH TEXAS b...: OLD BUILDINGS IN NORTH TEXAS by JEN WALDO   Sub-genre: Literary Fiction / Dramedy Publisher: Arcadia Books Da...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: How to Walk Away by Katherine Center

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: How to Walk Away by Katherine Center: Reviewed by Ambrea Margaret Jacobsen is looking forward to the future.  She just landed her dream job, she’s certain her longt...

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: BLESSING RELEASED TODAY AND GIVEAWAY!

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The Poisoned Pen Bookstore: Lou Berney, In the Hot Seat

The Poisoned Pen Bookstore: Lou Berney, In the Hot Seat

Lesa's Book Critiques: Death of a Rainmaker by Laurie Loewenstein

Lesa's Book Critiques: Death of a Rainmaker by Laurie Loewenstein

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange for 10/4/18

In Reference To Murder: Mystery Melange for 10/4/18

The Rap Sheet: Bullet Points: Chasing Down Leads Edition

The Rap Sheet: Bullet Points: Chasing Down Leads Edition

Unlawful Acts: Incident Report No. 61

Unlawful Acts: Incident Report No. 61

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 10/1/18

In Reference To Murder: Media Murder for Monday 10/1/18

FFB Review: Live Bait by Ted Wood

This first Friday in October is rather special around here as it is Scott’s birthday. Also a bit bittersweet as well as his mother, and my everything, Sandi, is not here to celebrate with us. So, today is one of those days that are a bit difficult as we try to deal with it all. Make sure you check out the full list of books over at Todd Mason's blog.

As Live Bait by Ted Wood begins, the summer tourist rush in Murphy’s Harbour is over and Chief Bennett is on vacation.  Bennet is a bit bored. Not much is going on for him other than he has to figure out what to with the surplus of tomatoes from his garden. That is until Fullwell pulls up and gets out of his cal.

Fullwell works for Bonded Security and did not making the 200 mile drive up from Toronto on a social call. The company he works for has had some incidents at some of their construction sites during the night hours. The latest incident included a security guard badly beaten who wound up in the hospital. He is going to be okay, but has a long road of healing in front of him.

Something has to be done. Fullwell would have done the normal thing and would have contacted the Toronto Police, but the new VP of Marketing shut that down hard. The VP of Marketing is all worried about the publicity angle. He is the golden child to those in power, so if Fullwell ignored him and went to the police anyway, Fullwell would lose his job in a heartbeat. Since that is not an option, he has convinced the VP they could use Bennett as bait to see if the goons come by and try the same thing again. Fullwell is sure that Bennett with his skills, ex-military after doing a stint with the Marines in Vietnam and ex Toronto Police officer, can more than hold his own against a couple of thugs.

Bennett is bored and is intrigued. The money would also be pretty good as the amount he would make for a night or two of work down in Toronto is the same as a full week of work back in Murphy’s Harbor. Not to mention the fact he can see his sister and her family while he is in Toronto

He agrees and goes undercover on the job site of the most recent attack. At first, things work exactly as plan. Until they don’t. Once they start heading in the wrong direction, things quickly go downhill. Bennett in danger is one thing and he signed on for that. But, things get very personal as Bennett’s sister and her family is suddenly at risk in a case that involves organized crime from Canada and Asia, enemies on the Toronto Police force, and numerous other characters many of which pose a significant threat.

Third in the series behind Dead in the Water and Murder on Ice, Live Bait is primarily an action-oriented mystery read. There is some further character development regarding Bennett’s past in Vietnam and memories that still haunt him. But, the main focus is on action as he careens from violent incident to violent incident as he attempts to put the pieces together.

This read also comes across as bit dated in spots as “the triads” are explained as if they are new phenomena. Of course, back in the early 80’s they were new to the mainstream audience, though the concept and practices had gone on for centuries.  All in all, Live Bait is another very good read in a very good series. While one could read this one without losing very much of the previous two books, it is recommended to read them in order.



Live Bait
Ted Wood
Charles Scribner’s Sons
1985
ISBN# 0-684-18330-7
Hardback (also available in paperback and digital formats)
212 Pages


Material supplied by the good folks of the Dallas Public Library.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2018

Tuesday, October 02, 2018

Review: Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2018


Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2018 opens with “Siren’s Song” by Troy Seate. Set in 1950, Detective Sam O’ Donnell is haunted by the memories. Those memories, especially what happened at a certain pier a few years ago are a major reason why he drinks. He will need to be sober for what is going to happen this time there.

Our main character is on a mission. The guy and the guy known to all as “The Sicilian” is just one small piece of the mission. He works for Don Calabresi and everyone knows that if they live anywhere near Chicago. Our narrator just needs a little more info from The Sicilian. Promises are always kept in “Line of Doodee” by Jazz Lawless.

The following story, “The Zombie Dongle” by Cecily Winter is a science fiction style story set in the near future. Artificial intelligence controls cars (think Knight Rider) and those AIs can be very valuable and thus sought after. A bounty hunter is only as good as her car.  Fortunately, Dixie, the car, is really good. She will need to be to help fulfill their latest contract.

Sean never thought he would be a house husband, but he is in “Jump Cut” by Craig Terlson. His partner, Debbie, is the one who brings home the bucks. He does the worrying for both of them as he has a very active imagination as to how things would go wrong. Considering her line of work, there is plenty to worry about.

Waking up in the classic position of naked in a bath tub full of ice is bad. At least he still has his kidney. He is missing a hand. According to the young guy hanging out in the bathroom, he owed money to some guy by the name of Beaver Jones. He can’t remember any debt or much of anything else in “A Helping Hand” by Jody Wenner.

She was a lonely mom missing her son lost in the war. He was drifter who looked so much like her son. Invited to her home for a meal, they begin an elaborate relationship in “Armistice” by Edward Musto.

The “You-Solve-It” this month is by Laird Long titled “Kidnopped.” Justice Tate’s daughter, Julie, has been taken for ransom and he needs Turner’s help to get her back.  Since Turner is a private investigator and knows bad people doing bad things Justus Tate is sure he can get her back.

The answer to the April “You-Solve-It” puzzle, “Cash Out” also by Laird Long closes out this issue. (April issue reviewed here.)

As always, this issue of Mystery Weekly Magazine is an interesting and enjoyable blend of mystery stories. With tales set in the past, present, and the future, stories in the Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2018 all feature characters caught in the web of trying to survive. Some characters just appear to be heaving an easier go of it than others. As any seasoned reader knows, appearances are always deceiving.  



Mystery Weekly Magazine: May 2018
April 28, 2018
ASIN: B07CR46PC6
eBook (also available in print)
78 Pages
$3.99


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 ©2018

Monday, October 01, 2018

Monday Markets and Jobs for Writers for 10/1/18

Monday Markets and Jobs for Writers for 10/1/18

Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: Stone Coffin by Kjell Eriksson (Minotaur, 2016)


Stone Coffin by Kjell Eriksson (Minotaur, 2016) is the third police procedural mystery featuring Ann Lindell and Ola Haver, detectives in the Violent Crime Division in Uppsala, Sweden. Originally published in Sweden in 2001, this entry in the series was translated by Ebba Segerberg nearly 15 years later.

Josefin Cederen and her daughter Emily are walking along a road near their home when they are struck and killed by a car whose driver speeds away without stopping. Sven-Erik Cederen, Josefin’s husband and Emily’s father, can’t be located. He is not at his company, MedForsk, a burgeoning pharmaceuticals company that he co-founded, and his coworkers do not know where he is. An all-points bulletin for him is released as Inspector Ann Lindell organizes the initial phases of the murder investigation. An examination of the Cederen home reveals Josefin’s diary, which shows she is afraid her marriage is disintegrating. The financial expert in the Uppsala police department reviews the family’s bank accounts and finds that Sven-Erik recently purchased property in the Caribbean using money from MedForsk, not his own, essentially embezzling it. The staff at MedForsk are less than forthcoming and Inspector Lindell and her colleagues can’t quite figure out what they are unwilling to reveal.

In the meantime Ann Lindell’s personal life is up in the air. She re-establishes a relationship she broke off six months earlier and is determined to find a way to remove the geographical distance between her and her lover. This story is as much about this turning point in her personal life as it is the investigation into the Cederen family deaths.

Kjell Eriksson has won multiple awards for the books in this series. His is not one of the most well-known names in Scandinavian fiction here in the U.S., but enjoys wide name recognition in Europe. His prose is thoughtful and precise, although the translator must share the credit to some extent, while his plotting is inventive.

This series was not translated into English and published in the U.S. in the same order it was written and published in Europe. The first two books haven’t been translated or released in this country at all. Since the characters’ personal lives appear to be a big part of each book, this out-of-sequence publishing affected my understanding of events.

Not to be overlooked by fans of Nordic crime fiction and police procedurals. Do be skeptical of references to “fourth in series” and similar statements; all of Amazon’s are based on the U.S. publication date which has no bearing on the original issuance date and are therefore wrong.


·         Hardcover: 304 pages
·         Publisher: Minotaur Books (November 22, 2016)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 1250025516
·         ISBN-13: 978-1250025517


Aubrey Hamilton © 2018

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