Friday, January 11, 2019

ER Visit

For those who are not on Facebook and did not know about it... Scott woke up yesterday morning with severe pain behind his navel. No fever, no throwing up, no nausea...just this really bad pain he had never felt before. After I did some internet poking around, it became very clear that something bad could be happening. Got him in to our doc who said it might be appendicitis and to go to ER. We did and it took the day to do blood work, ultrasound, and then a CT with contrast. After they pushed on it big time he hurt for the next couple of hours way worse and then it stopped hurting. They prescribed a pain killer to deal with any lingering pain issues.  Everything came back as being fine so they do not really know what happened.

They don't think his appendix is an issue. Though, if it is going bad and very early in the process, they say a CT would not catch it. Because the pain moved up above the belly button and to the right, they seem to think it could have been his gallbladder, though that looks fine near as they can tell. They really don't know. So, they sent us home with lots of instructions about following up and what to do if the pain comes back depending on where it is.

Very glad he seems to be okay, but worried as to what the hell happened.

Glad to get out of there....the hospital is full of patients so folks are stacked the  Presbyterian  Hospital  waiting  room and many of them have the flu or something with little ones throwing up. God knows what we got exposed to during the day there yesterday.

Today I spent considerable time with followup people from the hospital as well as the doctor's office who called to see how he was and if we needed anything. The doctor's nurse was new to me and wonderful. The pain killer is safe for him to take while on her other meds so she reassured me on that and some other things regarding what had gone on yesterday. While talking to her the topic of Sandi came up and I broke down. She spent extra time with me talking about Sandi and my loss and all. She is going to check back with me in a week or so once Scott's school needs are figured out as the only way he can get there is with me driving. Once we know what he is looking at beyond the assigned class days when he has to be there, the nurse and I are going to see about me getting into some sort of grief counseling. After a year of trying to deal with missing her and working hard to stay sober, things just are not getting better and after the stress of trying to cope yesterday it is clear that I have to get some help. 

What form that will take I don't know. I am not one who is into sitting in some sort of group and talking about things. Which is why, among other reasons, AA never worked for me. What would work now, I don't know. But, things have to change. 

FFB Review: THE MYSTERY OF THE INVISIBLE THIEF (1950) by Enid Blyton Reviewed by Barry Ergang

Make sure you check out the full list of reading suggestions on Patti Abbott’s blog.

THE MYSTERY OF THE INVISIBLE THIEF (1950) by Enid Blyton

Reviewed by Barry Ergang


I first learned of this title and the series of which it’s a part from a post on TomCat’s excellent “Beneath the Stains of Time” blog. Between the ages of 7 and 10 or 11, I had read my share of books from the Hardy Boys’ series before graduating to adult authors including Arthur Conan Doyle, Agatha Christie, and Erle Stanley Gardner, but had yet to encounter an impossible crime mystery, let alone one fairly-clued and aimed at juvenile readers. TomCat’s post rendered it an imperative that I check out this one, and I was fortunate to find an epub version to download. (More about that later.)

This entry in the phenomenally prolific British author Enid Blyton’s series starring the so-called “Five Find-Outers” opens when the children so named are depicted as yearning for a mystery to solve during their summer vacation from school, having solved several in their English village of Peterswood during previous school holidays with, I inferred from references to their prior cases and a Wikipedia entry, the approval of the district’s Inspector Jenks as well as the disapproval of local constable Mr. Goon, the latter being one whom the children frequently embarrass by outwitting. (<--I’d like to think Henry James and William Faulkner would approve of that sentence.)

Inspector Jenks is in the neighborhood because his goddaughter Hilary is participating in in gymkhana at local Petters Field. When it turns out that Hilary’s home has been robbed, the Five are frustrated because they aren’t immediately invited by Jenks to investigate. They eventually do so uninvited, of course, and learn that although the housekeeper was present during the theft and in a position to see whence the thief departed, she saw nothing of the sort.

Two more thefts ensue before the Five, whose names I’m not going to list here—see the Wikipedia entry if you’re curious about them—will solve the case and its seeming impossibilities to the satisfaction of local authorities.

I have little doubt experienced mystery readers will solve the whodunit and howdunit elements as easily as I did. Ms. Blyton did not engage in the kind of brilliant misdirection you find in John Dickson Carr, Agatha Christie, and other Golden Age giants. I thought the book got off to a slow start, but once the children began their investigations, it moved along nicely and proved to be a pleasant, if not exactly dazzling (for an adult), entertainment.

The downside to the epub version is that whoever converted the book to the digital format decided that original publication information is unnecessary: no title or copyright pages, only a cover and then the story itself. The same person also decided that except for periods, commas, and question marks, other punctuation is unnecessary: e.g., there are no quotation marks around dialogues, and no apostrophes in contractions. I saw an Amazon review complaining about the same problems in the Kindle edition, so it’s a reasonable to assume that the digital version was created by the same person in multiple formats. This was all very annoying, as you can imagine, but I had relatively little difficulty getting through the book in spite of it. But if you prefer actual books and are a mystery-reading kid at heart, search out the hardback or paperback edition.



© 2019 Barry Ergang

As regular readers of this blog know, some of Derringer-winner Barry Ergang’s work is available at Amazon and Smashwords. His free e-book Criminalities includes the essay “Impossible Pleasures,” about impossible crime fiction.


Thursday, January 10, 2019

Review: Trail Of Echoes: A Detective Elouise Norton Novel by Rachel Howzell Hall


Trail of Echoes is third in the series that began with Land of Shadows and opens in the middle of March as the rains repeatedly pound the Los Angeles area. Free from her marriage to Greg by court decree and yet not free from his allure or many other ghosts physical and otherwise, Detective Norton’s plans for a normal lunch crash and burn. Such is the life when you are homicide detective for the LAPD and a body has been found.

Thirteen year old Chanita Lords has been found in a bag in Bonner Park. A beautiful park surrounded by homes owned by wealthy African Americans, it also is the site for the body of Chanita Lords. A teen that came from the same housing project that Detective Norton called home all those years ago. The young teen is one of several in the local area that have gone missing in recent weeks Who killed her, why, and is her case linked to the other recent missing  girls are just some of many questions to be answered in Trail of Echoes.

As in the previous books in this series, the personal plays a major role in this police procedural. That is true whether one considers Detective Norton’s relationship with her Mom, her relationships with female friends, her relationships with her police family, and others. Each novel builds on those relationships as they evolve and change over time while also giving Detective Norton a major case to solve. The result is a very complicated police procedural in each installment and an overall very complicated series that must be read in order.

Like the earlier books in the series Trail Of Echoes is very good and well worth your time. 

The series, in order, and my reviews:
Land of Shadows (November 8, 2018)
Skies of Ash (November 20, 2018)
Trail of Echoes (You are here)
City of Saviors (currently reading)



Trail Of Echoes: A Detective Elouise Norton Novel
Rachel Howzell Hall
http://www.rachelhowzell.com
Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
http://www.tor-forge.com
May 2016
ISBN# 978-0-7653-8117-0
Hardback (also available in paperback and digital formats)
320 Pages
$25.99

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


Kevin R.  Tipple © 2019

Wednesday, January 09, 2019

Only days left to win books from KRL


Only days left to win a signed copy of "NC-17" Maizie Albright Star Detective #3 by Larissa Reinhart

And to win a copy of "A Scandal in Scarlet" A Sherlock Holmes Bookshop Mystery by Vicki Delany, and while there check out a fun tea related guest post by Vicki

Also to win a copy of "Killalot" by Cindy Brown published by Henery Press

And to win a copy of "The Skeleton Makes a Friend" by Leigh Perry

On KRL News and Reviews, only days left to win a copy of "Messenger Bags and Murder" by Dorothy Howell

And to win a copy of "The Last Note" by Zaida Alfaro

Happy reading,
Lorie

Lesa's Book Critiques: Book Love by Debbie Tung

Lesa's Book Critiques: Book Love by Debbie Tung

Review: That Old Scoundrel Death: A Dan Rhodes Mystery by Bill Crider

This is a case where reading the book and writing the review is more than a bit difficult. I considered Bill Crider a good friend though we never met. Years ago when my world rocked with news of Sandi’s cancer diagnosis, Bill was one of several people who reached out to me to provide support. His wife, Judy, was fighting the same fight against one of the two types of non hodgkins lymphoma Sandi had. 
As the months passed we traded tips, advice, and more as our spouses fought with everything they had. Sandi and I cried at the news Judy passed. Then, more than a few months later, Sandi left. Bill kept telling me afterwards one could survive the worst thing possible. He had and served as an inspiration. Especially in those darkest early days when everything was blur and tears. It wasn’t long after Sandi passed that Bill passed after his own fight against prostate cancer. 
My hope is that somewhere Bill and Judy are hanging out with Sandi talking about books and how odd Sandi’s husband is. I also hope that Angela Crider can find a way to pick up this series and keep it going. I have quietly suggested a couple of ideas to her so who knows? I remain very good at suggesting ideas for others to pursue in a book…


It isn’t a good thing to come across a man with a gun. Especially when the man with the gun is tweaking on meth. It is a hot August day in Blacklin County, Texas and while Rhodes is sweating because of the heat and having a gun pointed at him; the meth head is sweating and shaking because of the meth.

Some sort of road rage incident just happened before Rhodes came by in his patrol car. When all was said and done, the meth head decided to put a real scare in the other driver to teach him one heck of a lesson. Then Sheriff Rhodes went and showed up making things very complicated in the mind of the meth head known to one and all as Kenny Lambert. He has a history with local law enforcement going back a few years so Rhodes knows the man is not terribly bright on a good day. This is not a good day.

Rhodes also knows he screwed up by not figuring out what was going on fast enough and getting backup headed to them. He is on his own and things do not look good. That is until Kenny Lambert gets distracted by the victim. His action allows Sheriff Rhodes to get the gun and arrest Kenny.

All things considered, the victim is relatively okay and introduces himself as Carl Stinson.  He plans on going home and cleaning himself up. He promises to come by the jail later and do the paperwork to bring charges against Kenny. Charges that Kenny will get along with the ones Sheriff Rhodes plans to bring because of having a gun pointed at him.

While it is not exactly normal procedure to let a victim go home and change before coming by the jail later to do the paperwork, Carl Stinson did promise to come by and should be in town for a while as he said he had plans to go look at the old school building nearby in Thurston. Some of the locals are pushing hard to finally bring the old building down before it comes down and maybe kills somebody in the process. The place is not very safe. Stinson says he is in town to see it as his grandmother went to school there. With another promise to appear at the jail, Sheriff Rhodes agrees and Cal Stinson drives off.

Sheriff Rhodes will come to regret that decision.

He is never seen alive again. Instead, he is soon found very much dead in the old school building. His name was not Cal Stinson either. Who he was and why he was shot in the back of the head are just two of the questions that Sheriff Dan Rhodes must answer in that That Old Scoundrel Death: A Dan Rhodes Mystery.

As one would expect, this is billed as the final installment of the great series. The book features all the usual characters that readers have enjoyed for so long. At work, as has been the case for many years now, is a primary mystery, a couple of secondary ones, a dash of humor, plenty of Texas wisdom and scenery, and the occasional Dr Pepper with the real sugar reference. Stir all that together under the able touch of author Bill Crider and you have another very good read. If That Old Scoundrel Death: A Dan Rhodes Mystery is to be the final installment of the series, it ends well and in a very good place. One can’t ask for more than that. 




That Old Scoundrel Death: A Dan Rhodes Mystery
Bill Crider
http://www.billcrider.com
Minotaur Books (Thomas Dunne Books)
http://www.thomasdunnebooks.com/
February 19, 2019
ISBN #978-1250165633
Hardback
288 Pages
$27.99


My very special thanks to Angela Crider Neary who provided an ARC of her Dad’s final book.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2019

Tuesday, January 08, 2019

The Grief Sea

The Grief Sea remains very dark, very deep, and very wide. The last several days I have been deeply adrift out in it somewhere. I was barely able to get out of bed. Today I forced myself to get out of bed and spent the day working. Now my pain levels are off the charts tonight as I overdid and sat up way too much. The fall this afternoon did not help either.

But, in the good news front, things were done for SMFS and there will be reviews tomorrow and Thursday from me. Barry has FFB covered. So, the blog rocks on.

Relevant History: The Great Northern Railway, Blackfeet, and German Artists of Glacier National Park

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15 Writing Resolutions for the New Year 2019

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Beneath the Stains of Time: Murder On-Line (1996) by Seimaru Amagi

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Monday, January 07, 2019

Lesa's Book Critiques: Bones Behind the Wheel by E.J. Copperman

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: How to Live in Space: Everything You Need to Know ...

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Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: Death and the Icebox by Linda Berry


Downsizing the book collection has made me look at books I haven’t read or considered for years. This series by Linda Berry is one. Death and the Icebox (Five Star, 2004) is the third Trudy Roundtree cozy mystery. Set in the small town of Ogeechee, Georgia, where Trudy grew up and her family has lived for generations, everyone knows everyone else and their cousins too.

Trudy is taking a bit of a break from her job patrolling the town and showing police presence, part of Chief Henry Huckabee’s community policing campaign, and visiting her best friend Stacy as they watch excavations for a new house near Stacy’s mother-in-law’s home. An old refrigerator is unearthed and falls open when it hits the hard ground, displaying the body of a long-dead woman.

The ensuing cold case investigation reveals cracks in some of the facades presented by prominent names in the town and worries some of her friends, who fear their family members know more about the death than they are telling anyone.

I always liked this series, which combines standard components of cozy mysteries in a new way. The small Southern town setting automatically provides strong family and friend relationships and the investigator’s best helper, a long-time resident who knows everyone and most of their secrets. Putting the main character on the police force allows the incorporation of police procedural elements and does away with one of the hardest parts of an amateur detective series, explaining why the character is becoming involved in police business. The family tie between Trudy and the chief of police who is her boss as well as her cousin adds a great source of dialog and behavioral motivation. Anytime Trudy can’t get what she wants from him, she can go to his mother, her aunt. Typical in a small town, not at all permissible in a city. The inevitable love interest is the son of the local newspaper owner, not an attractive FBI agent or state police detective, another nice difference.

There are six titles in this series that ran from 1998 to 2009 and were released later in paperback. WorldCat indicates many libraries still hold copies.



·         Hardcover: 248 pages
·         Publisher: Five Star Publishing; 1st edition (April 2003)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 0786252332
·         ISBN-13: 9780786252336


Aubrey Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.


Sunday, January 06, 2019

Lesa's Book Critiques: The Alchemist's Illusion by Gigi Pandian

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Saturday, January 05, 2019

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KRL This Week Update for 1/5/19


Up in KRL this morning a review and giveaway of a signed copy of "NC-17" Maizie Albright Star Detective #3 by Larissa Reinhart



Also a review and giveaway of "A Scandal in Scarlet" A Sherlock Holmes Bookshop Mystery by Vicki Delany, along with a fun tea related guest post by Vicki



And a review and giveaway of "Killalot" by Cindy Brown published by Henery Press



Also reviews of the latest seasons of some favorite mysteries on Acorn TV: “Agatha Raisin”, “Murdoch Mysteries”, and “Brokenwood”



We also have a review and giveaway of "The Skeleton Makes a Friend" by Leigh Perry



And a review of "Virtual Sabotage" a thriller with a scifi twist by Julie Hyzy, and a giveaway of an audio CD copy of "Grace Interrupted", the second in Julie’s Manor House series



And a mystery short story by Michael Guillebeau



Up on KRL News and Reviews we have a review and giveaway of "Messenger Bags and Murder" by Dorothy Howell



And a review and ebook giveaway of "The Last Note" by Zaida Alfaro https://www.krlnews.com/2019/01/the-last-note-by-zaida-alfaro.html



And for those who like fantasy with their mystery, we have a review and giveaway of "The Way of the Shield" by Marshall Ryan Maresca


Happy new year

Lorie

Mystery Fanfare: Mystery Bytes: Quirky & Interesting Book-Related L...

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Friday, January 04, 2019

FFB Review: THE CROSSWORD MURDER (1999) by Nero Blanc Reviewed by Barry Ergang

Barry is back today to get your 2019 started off right. Make sure you head over to Patti Abbott’s blog for the full list of FFB suggestions today. GO COWBOYS!

THE CROSSWORD MURDER (1999) by Nero Blanc

Reviewed by Barry Ergang


As I’ve pointed out in at least one or two other book reviews, the late, great Johnny Carson frequently said about comedy routines and sketches, “If you buy the premise, you’ll buy the bit.” Published under the pseudonym Nero Blanc by the husband-and-wife team of Steve Zettler and Cordelia Frances Biddle, The Crossword Murder is the first in their series of “crossword” mysteries and, though not really a comedy, nevertheless fits into Carson’s general definition.

The very wealthy Thompson Briephs doesn’t need a regular workingman’s salary. A man who lives a kinky lifestyle, he is the crossword puzzle editor of the Newcastle Herald. He lives in a custom-designed house on an island called Windword, the house a modern replication of the royal home of the Minoan civilization, right down to Daedalus’s labyrinth, and loaded with valuable antiquities. Blackmailed and eventually murdered, his remaining crossword puzzles eventually prove essential to the murderer’s identification.

Yet despite the fact that, according to local newspapers, the demise of this nephew of federal Senator Hal Crane has been attributed to heart failure, Brieph’s mother, Sara Crane Briephs, has hired former Newcastle police detective Rosco Polycrates, now a private investigator, to investigate the death of her son, who has had “no history of coronary disease”—this in opposition to the objections of the senator’s right-hand man, one John “Bulldog” Roth.

Rosco’s investigation inevitably leads him to Annabella Graham (a.k.a. Belle), the deviled-egg loving and pretty-but-married crossword editor of the Evening Crier. Belle is immediately and enthusiastically determined to help Rosco, especially as Briephs’ puzzles surface and she solves them, certain that the decedent left vital clues to his slayer. The fact that she and Rosco are attracted to one another adds to the story’s complications and subplots.

Rosco has a number of suspects to consider, and the reader is supplied with the four crucial crosswords, as well as a bonus puzzle, to solve if he or she wants to. I correctly guessed, rather than deduced from the crosswords I solved, who the murderer was, but that didn’t spoil my enjoyment.   

I remember seeing paperback editions of this and other titles in this series years ago, but despite being a long-time crossword fan, I never bought any. When I discovered they’re now available as e-books, I decided to try one, expecting—as I had previously, and thus didn’t buy—an utter lightweight populated with cardboard characters and pedestrian prose. I admit to pleasant surprise at finding a novel populated with individualized characters and situations rendered in intelligent, colorful prose. I further admit I’ll probably read some of the other titles in this series, though I seriously have to wonder how many murder mystery solutions can plausibly relate to—and/or solve—crossword puzzles. There’s a poser for you who are reading this!   



© 2019 Barry Ergang

Some of Derringer-winner’s Barry Ergang’s work can be found at Amazon and Smashwords.com.

Thursday, January 03, 2019

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Review: Field Of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense by J. A. Jance


The plan had been to win the election and then start maternity leave about three weeks later as Butch would be back from his short but intense book tour then. That had been the plan for Sheriff Joanna Brady. But, whether it happened due to the stress of election night, the campaign, recent events, or a million other things, Eleanor Sage decided to arrive much earlier. In fact, she decided to make her appearance early on election night before all the votes were tallied. Winning the election was grand and all that, but having a healthy baby was far more important.

At nearly the same time and unknown to all, a young teenager and his friends recently found a human skull. One that is later found by the teen’s mother, June Carver, when she was cleaning out her son’s closet so that it could be painted. With Sheriff Brady out on her maternity leave, June Carver and her son, Jack Carver, come in to see Acting Sheriff Tom Haddock about the skull. There is no doubt that the skull is human and it appears to one and all that a bullet was fired through it at some point. That is not all Jack Carver and his friends saw in the desert out in the San Bernardino Valley.

It is a very good thing the killer did not see them.

One thing leads to another, and soon a multi-jurisdictional investigation is underway with Sheriff Brady supervising and Acting Sheriff Tom Haddock supervising folks out in the field and doing the legwork. They are on the hunt for a serial killer and it is all hands on deck at home and as much help as they can round up from others. They are chasing a serial killer who just might have some victims still alive if they can find him and them. Time is against law enforcement as once the media knows and the small town grapevine gets going, not to mention social media, it will be all over for those they hope to save.

Shifting in point of view between the captives, the captor, and the numerous investigators, the book rolls along at a steady pace. A significant portion of Field Of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense is in the point of view of the main victim who learns what has been going on to others for months. How she copes with the trauma of her imprisonment and degradation is a major part of the read. As a result, some of those sections are not easy reading as they are a bit graphic at times. As those sections are in essence nothing more than the classic naked woman chained in the basement with nothing to eat but dog food kibble as she is repeatedly raped over the course of weeks, one could easily skip those sections and lose nothing at all in reading the tale.

Overall, despite the usual --drop into the mind of the nutjob as he is a smart crazy dude at it quite a while—sections that all such books seem to have these days, the overall read is an average one. The book flows fairly well and numerous secondary characters long known to readers are again given attention in this read. Much is at work here in a personal as well as professional way for Sheriff Joanna Brady and that results in a ton of backstory in many different ways. Despite being billed as a novel of suspense, there really is not much suspenseful about the book at all.

Field Of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense plows along and gets the job done. It certainly is not J. A Jance at her best, nor is it her at her worst. Instead, this is an average read that occasionally scores political points that will no doubt offend some readers who will swear to never read another book by her ever again while also managing to do the classic smug nutjob serial killer shtick. Yes, it gets complicated in a paint by numbers sort of way. Despite its noted flaws, Field Of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense holds reader interest and continues the saga of Sheriff Joanna Brady.

Related Item of Interest:

CrimeReads spoiler filled interview with J. A. Jance from last September:  http://crimespreemag.com/interview-with-j-a-jance/



Field Of Bones: A Brady Novel of Suspense
J. A. Jance
Harper Luxe (imprint of Harper Collins Publishers)
September 2018
ISBN# 978-0-06-285949-5
LARGE PRINT (also available in hardback, audio, and digital formats)
496 Pages
$27.99


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


Kevin R. Tipple ©2019

Tuesday, January 01, 2019

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Happy New Year!

Scott and I wish you an Happy New Year and all the best possible in 2019!