Catching Up #1: Thrillers and Out of US Friday, Sep 30 2016 

Auntie M is still trying to catch up on reviews of books she’s read while recuperating from extensive back surgery. She’s finally been given the go-ahead to sit at her laptop for longer periods of time, and boy are there a LOT of books to tell you about! So she’s going to break these longer review days into several postings to catch you–and her–up.

These reads are perfect for that swing time when you’re getting used to the change in seasons, if it ever comes. Or for those nights when there’s nothing on television that sparks your interest. Or waiting for an appointment. Or–well, for Auntie M, reading is something she does in all of these places. And then some. She usually has two books in progress at all times and brings at least one with her wherever she goes. WHEREVER she goes. Think about it . . .

She’s grouped these into general categories. Here are Thrillers and Out of the US:

First up are thrillers:

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Glen Erik Hamilton’s Past Crimes won the Anthony for Best First Novel the other night at the New Orleans Bouchercon Mystery Convention. His follow up, Hard Cold Winter, shows why he’s an award winner you’ll be hearing more and more of as his Van Shaw series, featuring the former Army Sergeant Ranger, remains gritty and powerful.

The vigilante expects to find a missing girl in the Olympic Mountains when he searches the woods as the behest of an old friend of his grandfather’s. Instead he stumbles across a ghastly murder scene, and this one has a victim whose family is one of Seattle’s rich and famous.

He will encounter an old friend, Leo, who brings his own trouble, as Van tries to contain his own PTSD and figure out his relationship with his girlfriend, Luce. Then a bomb goes off at his house, and when more people are murdered, the detectives are eyeing Van. When betrayal comes in an unexpected form, all bets are off.

For Jack Reacher fans, this is fast-paced action with an unexpected ending.

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And a second Anthony winner, this time for Best Novel, beating out the likes of Louise Penny, Catriona McPherson, Hank Phillippi Ryan and Matt Coyle, is Chris Holm’s The Killing Kind.

Following up on that debut, Special Agent Charlie Thompson’s newest case starts off on an eerie note in Red Right Hand. Tourist video has captured a terrorist attack on the Golden Gate Bridge, but that’s not all the video reveals. It also shows the image of Frank Segreti, who was thought to have been blown up after turning against the organized crime mob known as the Council after giving away their secrets.

But Charlie’s racing against another element as he deals with both the terrorist attack and the idea of Segreti: a hit man on his way to San Francisco to join in the action.

Unrelenting and hard hitting, easily gulped down, and with a cinematic feel as it all unfolds.

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Booklist called Brian Thiem’s debut Red Line “a top-notch new series” with good reason. His followup, Thrill Kill
continues the promise of the Matt Sinclair series.

The Oakland homicide detective’s newest case starts when a woman murdered in a particularly horrific way is found hanging from a tree–and Sinclair recognizes her. He’d arrested her as a teen runaway a decade before.

Dawn Gustafson died a particularly awful death, and the fact that she was a prostitute doesn’t matter to Sinclair or his partner, Cathy Braddock. They’re sworn to find justice for Dawn, no matter where it leads them. Most of Dawn’s clients don’t want their names to be known,making their investigation more difficult.

They will both be surprised where that is before it’s over. Once the killer makes himself known, Sinclair must find out Dawn’s secrets even as he confronts his own.

An accomplished and intricate police procedural.
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Gina Wahlsdorf’s Security brings a new dimension to thrillers with a strong debut that close readers will find pays a nod to many literary influences, including Stephen King, Poe and Auntie M’s own fave, Daphne Du Maurier.

Manderley is the most of everything a hotel can be in Santa Barbara: most luxurious, most exclusive, and most security conscious. It’s a few days until their grand opening, and readers have the dizzying effect of watching the action on multiple floors, from the rose garden to the ballroom’s champagne fountain, from the hotel manager covering every detail to the murderer in room 717.

Yes, there’s been a murder and the gore is only starting. The twists are scary and come at the reader in a fast and furious matter that rivals the best of Hitchcock with its omniscient narrator. Original and creative.

We turn now to several set outside the US and we head to Chile first.

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Lance Hawvermale’s Face Blind is set in Chile’s Atacama desert, a bland, lifeless place that’s made more bland by his protagonist’s inability to distinguish people by their looks due to prosopagnosia.

Astronomer Gabriel Traylin sees a murder happen right before his eyes when he steps out to have a cigarette. He races inside and has colleagues call the police, but by the time they arrive, the dead body has been moved, leaving only a few blood drops behind. Due to his condition, he’s viewed as a nutcase, unable to even give a description of the dead man.

Gabe has taught himself to focus on people’s voices and their clothing and shoes to recognize them again. He will need these skills when a series of mutilations in the area make him the police’s prime suspect.

He must also trust in strangers whose faces he can’t recall, including a lovely young woman, her twin brother with Down’s syndrome, and a novelist they seek. How these disparate threads come together in a wholly satisfying way is part of what makes this thriller so readable.

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To Italy, with Antonio Manzini, riding on the success of Black Run. He returns with Deputy Police Chief Rocco Schiavone in Adam’s Rib
, with Rocco still banished from Rome to the small town of Aosta.

Rocco is a strange but endearing character, full of negatives, hearing the voice of his dead wife, trying to move on in a relationship–and despite the help of one officer and one inspector he trusts, he’s decided the rest of his police squad are simply idiots. He’s also corrupt himself, but don’t let that deter you.

The case opens when a cleaning woman finds her employer hanging from a chandelier. Despite the original assessment of suicide, the messed up kitchen and missing items from the house leave Rocco convinced Esther Baudo was murdered.

That’s when the highly unconventional detective swings into action. An ending twist will surprise readers, as will the actions of this police chief whose methods are so unusual that the satire shines through with a hint of Italian noir.

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In 1938 Berlin, Noel Macrae and his wife, Primrose, arrive to take his new posting at the British Embassy in Berlin. Prime Minister Chamberlain is intent on placating Nazi Germany, but Macrae is less certain this is the path to take.

Convinced Hitler can only be stopped by means other than appeasement, Macrae finds his is not the only dissenting voice in the Embassy. Several senior officers in the German military are prepared to turn against the Fuhrer. But can they be trusted?

To gather intelligence, Macrae is drawn to a Nazi bordello and its enigmatic Jewish hostess Sara Sternschein, who has a treasure-trove of knowledge about the Nazi hierarchy in a city of lies, spies and secrets.
But does Sara hold the key to actually thwarting Hitler and his plans? Or is Macrae being manipulated, even as his wife romantically pursues his most important German military contact for her own information?

Well-drawn and atmospheric of these days, with the added spy element.

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Winner of Minotaur/MWA’s Firsts Crime Novel Award, John Keyse-Walker’s Sun, Sand, Murder
takes readers to the remote British Virgin Island of Anegada. Auntie M visited here during a sailing vacation with Doc and it’s tough to imagine a less “rural” island unless it’s one that’s uninhabited.

Off the beaten track for many tourists, it’s police presence is all down to Teddy Creque, who hasn’t really had much to do in the way of real crime. The last murder was in 1681 . . .

That all changes when he’s called to the body of a biologist he knows lying on the beach, shot in the head. Paul Kelleher visited every winter to study the iguanas, but seems to be an unknown person elsewhere, as Teddy finds out when he tries to notify his next of kin about the murder. He can’t find any trace that the man exists.

Against the “real” police wishes, and despite his complicated family life and three jobs, Teddy investigates this murder, finally having real police work to do–if he survives it.

A fascinating look at island mores and life, with a charming protagonist. The story is told from his point of view and this island springs to life.

Bruce Robert Coffin: Among the Shadows Wednesday, Sep 28 2016 

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When you’re a retired law enforcement officer and your last name is Coffin, it would seem only natural that the next step would be to write a police procedural, and Bruce Robert Coffin has done just that with Among the Shadows. Auntie M couldn’t help but be reminded of Gwendolyn Butler’s John Coffin Mysteries, but these couldn’t be farther from the handsome English detective surrounded by theater friends.

This Coffin has created a very different detective, even as he gets his Portland, Maine setting down just right. He captures the rhythm and politics of the detective force and its team, too. Then the veteran homicide detective gives readers an intriguing main character in Detective Sergeant John Byron, a man who has the true detective’s dedication to the Job, despite the costs.

The son of a detective who committed suicide, Byron’s at a crossroads in his life. His marriage has disintegrated and he sunk into drinking too much. Coffin avoids veering into cliche’ by having Bryon acknowledge this and actually do something about it, a refreshing character change that makes Byron all the more interesting with this determined inner strength when he’s caught up in the current case.

It starts with the deaths of two former Portland PD members, and at first it’s only Byron who sees a connection when a photo surfaces that contains an old team of law enforcement officers who formed a Special Reaction Team–and Coffin’s father was one of that team.

With a loyal team assisting him who each have their own area of expertise, Byron will fight his superiors to connect the deaths. He insists the team members are being killed off for their connection to an old case where robbers got away with over a million dollars with the money never being recovered. One of the four robbers disappeared, while the other three were shot on scene, as was a member of the police team. It’s long been thought that the missing robber has the proceeds.

Coffin will have to fight some of his superiors every day, despite his lieutenant trying to give him the autonomy he needs to set his team where they need to be headed. He’s thwarted in particular by the Chief and Assistant Chief, and as the case heats up, trailed everywhere by a young investigative reporter out to build a name for himself who manages to get in his way.

The pace is kept taut, and the closer the team gets to resolving these cases, the more danger the team find themselves in. Before it’s over, there will be surprises that will keep readers wanting to figure out this twisted case as much as John Byron himself.

An intriguing debut from a storyteller to watch, Coffin has already made a name for himself as an artist. He paints everything from portraits to landscapes, but the piece Auntie M was most intrigued to read about is a work titled “Fidelity, Bravery, and Integrity.” The commissioned portrait commemorates the one hundredth anniversary of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and depicts Special Agent Edwin C. Shanahan, the first agent ever killed in the line of duty. The portrait is currently on display in the Boston field office of the FBI.

Coffin is a talented writer to watch~

Sarah Ward: A Deadly Thaw Sunday, Sep 25 2016 

DeadlyThaw

Sarah Ward’s debut In Bitter Chill brought her to reader’s attention quickly last year. After years of reviewing crime fiction, including acting as a judge for the Scandinavian translated crime novels’ Petrona Award, she has turned her hand to writing her own series, causing Booklist to call her “. . . a writer to watch.”

She returns with a second entry in the Derbyshire series, A Deadly Thaw, and fans of her first will be happy to know it’s every bit as well-written and suspenseful as her first. She brings back the compelling Bampton team of DI Francis Sadler and DC Connie Childs, plus other members who will have an impact on the story to investigate this unusual case.

The setup is creative and pulls the reader in immediately. Lena Grey has just been released from prison after serving fourteen years for smothering her husband, Andrew Fisher, in their bed. But then Andrew’s recently killed body is found in an old morgue.

Once the identification is complete, the questions become overwhelming: Who was the man in Lena’s bed all those years ago, and why would she lie about his identity and spend all of the time in prison? Sadler’s team must uncover why this deception could have been pulled off, while Childs is convinced it took more than a bad marriage and a lover for Lena Grey to take prison time. But Lena vanishes, leaving questions unanswered and the investigation to flounder.

The team will be led to Lena’s sister Kat, a therapist living in their childhood home, who can’t explain her sister’s actions then or now. Then Kat starts receiving packages from a young man, and based on their contents, he must know where Lena is hiding. She starts searching through their lives, looking for answers in her family’s secrets, conducting her own investigation.

Those secrets hold the key to the mystery and it will be up to Sadler’s team to put the pieces together. Distractions from personal issues within the team threaten to disturb their cohesiveness and ability to figure out the truth, but add layers of complexity to the story.

Ward’s plot is complex and well-executed, with twists and turns that make red herrings fall like so much litter as one reality becomes another. This is gripping, with an edge that makes for compulsive reading. Highly recommended.

Louise Penny: A Great Reckoning Wednesday, Sep 21 2016 

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Louise Penny’s twelfth Inspector Gamache/Three Pines Mystery, A Great Reckoning, is responsible for making Auntie M cry–twice.

That’s how movingly she writes and entwines readers with the characters they’ve come to know and love in the series, most especially Gamache and his extended family. And yet if a reader were to pick up this book and not know any of the history, they would still be impressed by the scope of its plot and the depth of the feeling she manages to wring out without any hint of melodramatic tricks–and to bring them to tears.

Gamache and his beloved Reine-Maire have retired to the little village of Three Pines, where both have accepted that retiring doesn’t mean eating croissants and sitting around the Bistro all day, but that they will find new work that interests them. For Reine-Marie, the former librarian at the National Archives Library becomes involved the historical society, organizing its papers and artifacts. For Gamache, after mulling over many offers, being courted for some and rejecting many, he’s accepted the role of Commander of the Surete Academy, the three year schooling for new police cadets. His goal is to clean the house of the former regime which sent out cruel and corrupt police.

To the surprise of everyone, including his wife, he invites an old friend who’s been living in exile to take a role as a professor, teaching the cadets how easily it is to be corrupted as he was. It’s an interesting concept, and one that will have personal and professional ramifications for the new Commander. At one time the two men were as close as brothers, until they took divided paths in their careers.

Gamache also deliberately leaves in place one corrupt instructor, believing him to be the mastermind behind a large financial swindle on top of corruption of the cadets. But he lacks enough concrete evidence to arrest him, nor does he have the name of the man’s accomplice. Serge Leduc had waited to be fired as so many of his colleagues were. Gamache openly explains his reasons to the man: he intends to find out the depth of his betrayal and to find his accomplice.

Then a professor is murdered, and four cadets who have been especially close to the man are the prime suspects. Gamache sends them to Three Pines to board there and gives them an unlikely assignment: find out the significance of an orienteering map found in the wall of the bistro that he’s been given as a gift, showing the tiny village along with other oddities. Is this work to keep the four occupied so he can observe them and find which one is a killer? Or is he trying to protect them from the killer? And is there more at hand, as a copy of that same map of Three Pines has been found in the professor’s effects.

Suddenly the list of possible suspects widens, and Gamache finds himself being scrutinized as a murder suspect. And what of his relationship with the tattooed and pierced cadet Amelia Choquet? Why is the angry and obstinate cadet being carefully groomed by the Commander? How does the map fit in, and what does it have to do with a stained glass window in Three Pines tiny chapel?

This is Penny at her complex plotting best, bringing all of the quilted threads of the story together in a satisfying and chilling climax. There is family time and high points, and many lows that Ganache must navigate. But now he has his son-in-law nearby, and a person he respects as Chief of Homicide of the Surety, his old job, in Isabelle Lacoste. But will he figure out the devious machinations of the killer before he strikes again–or worse, is arrested for the murder himself? Highly recommended.

A note to readers: Please take the time to read the Acknowledgements at the end of the book. For any author, and Auntie M knows this from experience, this is the time to express a personal and public thank you to readers and to the many people who help an author move his or her book from an idea to a reality to the one you hold in your hands or listen to or read on your Kindle. It this case, it is also clearly a love letter to Penny’s ill husband, Michael, and deserves to be read, both to honor him and his life, and to honor Penny and the wonderful and rich writing she continues to give her readers.

Christine Hale: A Piece of Sky, A Grain of Rice: A Memoir in Four Mediations Sunday, Sep 18 2016 

From time to time, Auntie M veers away from crime to feature something different in terms of genre. Today it’s novelist Christine Hale who has taken a turn to memoir and tells us about her unusual approach.

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A Piece of Sky, A Grain of Rice: A Memoir in Four Meditations
by Christine Hale
(Apprentice House Press, 2016)

People often ask why I wrote a memoir (since my first book Basil’s Dream, was a novel). The next thing they want to know is why I wrote the book in “collage” or kaleidoscope form instead of telling a story straight through from beginning to end.

I’ve come up with a lot of long-winded answers in the past but today, writing this note to readers who enjoy mysteries and crime stories, it dawned on me that there’s a very short, very true answer: my parents were mysteries to me.

Married for over 60 years, they were hard-working, God-fearing, honest and frugal country people, and they passed those qualities on down to their daughters. But my mother also did and said some shockingly mean things to me, my sisters, and our father. And he, it would turn out, was secretly physically abusive to her for most of their marriage. My sisters and I never knew that until he got caught in the act soon after they moved to assisted living in their late eighties. We were summoned to a meeting with the facility manager and the police, because my father was about to be thrown out for his behavior. We were dumbfounded–that he was in that kind of trouble at his age, and that we’d been blind to it for so long. My oldest sister said, while we wrung our hands in the waiting room, “Somebody should write about this.”

Some of you may remember something Flannery O’Connor says in Mystery and Manners. She attributes the remark to a neighbor with whom she’d shared her early work. The stories, the woman said, “just showed how some folks would do.” That phrase captures exactly the way I feel about my parents’ struggles and mistakes (and my own): people will do the most surprising, confounding things, and it’s an unsolvable mystery to ever really know why.

Well, I’m a writer, and I process what confounds me by writing about it. The result, after a number of years and many drafts, was a memoir in collage form. Layered and overlapping memories–a patchwork quilt–from many different points in time, about my parents, my children, my husbands, and other people and events that instructed me, bruised me, transformed me. My intent in structuring my memoir as a collage was to mimic the way we remember and strive to make sense of memories. In her blog Backporchervations, LuAnn Braley described the book’s effect this way: “When we meditate, or think over our lives…we pick and choose certain memories from certain points that do not arrive in neat chronological order. Then, our subconscious wants to join the fun and grabs memories we forget we have along the theme of what our active mind is considering.”

It’s been tremendous fun to hear readers’ take on my book. So many people have contacted me to say it caused them to remember things they’d forgotten, and that without quite knowing why–another mystery–recovering and re-inhabiting old memories helped them feel better about their lives.

Chris Hale Finals (Web-Res)-9

You can learn more about me and my work at:
www.christinehalebooks.com. Or, if you’re in the neighborhood, I’ll be reading from A Piece of Sky, A Grain of Rice: A Memoir in Four Meditations at McIntryre’s Fine Books in Pittsboro, NC, on October 22 at 11 am. The book will be available for purchase there. You can also buy it through independent booksellers anywhere, and online at IndieBound, Amazon, and Walmart.

Alex Dolan: The Empress of Tempera Tuesday, Sep 13 2016 

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The protagonist of Alex Dolan’s thriller The Empress of Tempera is a young art student studying in New York, renaming herself and reinventing herself from the criminal Maine family she left behind, currently involved in a relationship with artist Derek Rosewood, whose exhibit is being hung at The Fern Gallery.

Paire Anjou heads there to meet up with Derek Rosewood, and as she approaches, she’s struck by the elderly gentleman staring at the painting hanging in the window. As she gets closer, the man moans, and suddenly stabs himself in the heart, dropping to the ground at her feet. Despite Paire’s efforts to resuscitate him, the man dies and she finds herself covered in his blood. It’s only then she finds her eyes drawn to the display window and the painting that mesmerized this man.

The Empress is an almost life-size portrait of a woman in a bright red embroidered Asian dress, sitting in a provocative pose, and she engenders powerful emotions in people who view her. Gallery visitors faint; some write her love letters; others try to steal her.

This is Paire’s introduction to the power art can exert, and in researching the painting, she finds it by a Chinese artist known as Qi, whose body of work has vanished. Qi had lived in the US and returned to China at some point and has died.

Paire also finds one of the wealthiest families in New York has wanted to possess the Empress, and a forty-year feud between them and Qi had been waged. And it’s still going on.

It’s an eye opener for Paire, who starts to work at the Fern Gallery and is exposed to the controversy. Meanwhile, her relationship with Rosewood leads her to escapes that speak to her genetic makeup, with unexpected results.

Dolan, the son of two artists, immerses the reader in the world of art and its effects on people’s natures as well as our culture. He’s also concocted an unusual thriller with unexpected twists and turns in the story that will attract readers as it exposes them to a world that many won’t have known existed in several planes.

Sophie Hannah: Closed Casket, Hercule Poirot #2 redux Sunday, Sep 11 2016 

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This year marks the 100th anniversary of the year Agatha Christie created Hercule Poirot. After last year’s first reincarnation in The Monogram Murders, it’s clear Sophie Hannah has inhabited Poirot’s world, to so many reader’s delight. She celebrates this anniversary with the second volume, Closed Casket,taking Poirot to Ireland and a house filled with bitter relatives, all with a motive for murder.

This is vintage Christie in style and Hannah does a grand job with a compelling plot that has a most clever climax at its end.

Lady Athelinda Playford has long inhabited the world of youths in her beloved children’s book series which feature the precocious juvenile Shrimp Seddon and her band of child detectives. Auntie M particularly enjoyed the description of Shrimp’s dog, as mentioned by Scotland Yard’s detective Edward Catchpool, (not a fan of Shrimp Seddon) as the ” . . . fat, long-haired Anita.”

Catchpool has been invited to Lady Playford’s estate Lillieoak in County Cork for no apparent reason he can discern, yet such is the Playford name’s weight that he decides the author must wish to have him correct her descriptions of detectives and he decides to attend. He is surprised to find his acquaintance, the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, has also been invited for the week, as has Lady P’s two lawyers.

The household contains Lady P’s two children, the married son Harry, Viscount Playford, and his wife Dorothy; daughter, the Hon. Claudia and her fiancé, Dr. Randall Kimpton; Lady P’s secretary, Joseph Scotcher; his nurse, Sophie Bourlet; and the usual staff of a cook, a maid, and a peculiarly quiet butler.

Into this set up, classic Christie, comes the whopper that thrusts the action forward: Lady P has had Michael Gathercole, one of her lawyers, redo her will that afternoon. Instead of leaving her estate divided equally between her son and daughter, as had been expected, she now intends to leave her entire estate to . . . her dying secretary, Joseph Scotcher.

With only weeks to live, Scotcher is surely an unusual choice on so many levels, her action makes Poirot decide he and Catchpool have been invited in order to stop a murder.

Yet a murder does occur, and very soon after the dinner where the will change is announced, in spite of Poirot’s plan to stop it. Now his task is to determine the real reason why Lady Playford changed her will–and who is the murderer.

He soon finds out that most of the household had a motive for the killing, which might stump a normal brain, but then, we are dealing with those little grey cells. Kirkus’s says: ” . . . the climactic revelation that establishes the killer’s motive is every bit as brilliant and improbable as any of Christie’s own decorous thunderclaps.”

Rebecca Tope: The Coniston Case Wednesday, Sep 7 2016 

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Auntie M has to admit she has a certain fondness for Rebecca Tope, as the British author of several series kindly gave her a blurb for one of her own mysteries, The Scarlet Wench, set in the Lake District.

So it was a great delight to return to the Lake District in the newest in Tope’s series, The Coniston Case. It’s almost Valentines’ Day in Windermere and florist Persimmon–Simmy–Brown is feeling a bit overwhelmed. There are far too many red roses being ordered, she decides, and to add to her feeling of urgency, she’s suddenly being given a few anonymous deliveries that are sent without signatures to their cards, and which meet with unexpected unhappy explosions toward Simmy from their recipients.

An out of the way delivery to Coniston, which has its own florist and leaves Simmy wondering just why Persimmon’s Petals was chosen, bring DI Moxon to her shop. The unsigned bouquet for a Mr. Hayter of Rosebay Echoes has been found in his house, never put in water. And there’s no sign of Mr. Hayer himself until his bod is found on the fells, an apparent suicide.

Sammy’s upset by the rash of these anonymous orders. In the middle of trying to figure out this muddle comes her Worcester friend, Kathy, for a visit. Kathy’s daughter is in the area and Simmy agrees to put her up so Kathy can figure out what her daughter is keeping from her. Worcester is Simmy’s old hometown, and Kathy’s appearance adds to Simmy’s disquiet. As happy as she is to see her old friend, Kathy reminds her of her lost baby and marriage.

Running a floral shop, Simmy has learned flowers can be sent for reasons other than niceties, apology or revenge among them. “A florist put herself in the line of fire simply by being associated with major life events where emotions were heightened and families forced to confront disagreeable truths.”

Then a second man, a housemate of Mr. Hayter, is found murdered at Rosebay Echoes, and once again, Simmy finds herself involved in crime, against her better judgement.

With her helper, Melanie, and young friend Ben on the case, it will be up to Simmy to help DI Moxon figure out just what’s going on, and how climate change experiments and caves figure into the situation. It’s a perplexing mystery, almost a perplexing as Simmy’s feelings towards local potter, Ninian, and DI Moxon.

Marilyn Meredith: Seldom Traveled Sunday, Sep 4 2016 

Please welcome prolific author Marilyn Meredith, who will discuss writing her newest Tempe Crabtree mystery, Seldom Traveled.

Seldom Traveled Front Cover

Fiction Too Close to Fact

by Marilyn Meredith

This is not the first time this has happened to me—writing a book and then having a similar thing happen in real life after the book is finished.

When I began writing Seldom Traveled I didn’t know I’d be including a raging forest fire. But as happens so often, as the characters became defined and the mystery developed, I knew that a huge fire had to happen.

After I’d finished the book and sent it off, the first big fire of the season broke out in the rugged canyons and hillsides above Santa Barbara. Next came the horrendous fire at Lake Isabella that consumed 100 homes and took two lives.
Lake Isabella Forest Fire

In the foothills and the mountains where I live conditions are prime for a fire—a drought followed by enough rain to produce lots of growth that dried quickly when the weather turned hot. Many of the trees in the mountains are dying because of the several years of drought, creating plenty more fuel for a fire.

As I’m writing this, so far, we’ve been spared.

My heroine, Tempe Crabtree, in her role as deputy, is assigned to make sure all the residents of remote homes and cabin have left the area. The job itself is dangerous as she avoids the fast moving flames—but that’s not the only threat she must face.

Other stories I’ve written have had scenes and parts in them that ended up being repeated in part in real life—either something that was reported in the news, or happened to someone I knew.

I like it much better when something I write doesn’t end up happening later. . .

Marilyn Meredith
Seldom Traveled Blurb:
The tranquility of Bear Creek is disrupted by a runaway fugitive, a vicious murderer, and a raging forest fire. Deputy Tempe Crabtree is threatened by all three.

Me at A Crushing Death Book signing
Marilyn Meredith’s Bio:
Marilyn has had so many books published, she’s lost track of the count, but it’s getting near 40. She lives in a community similar to the fictional mountain town of Bear Creek, the big difference being that Bear Creek is a thousand feet higher in the mountains. She is a member Mystery Writers of American, three chapters of Sisters in Crime, and is a board member of Public Safety Writers of America.
http://fictionforyou.com
http://marilynmeredith.blogspot.com/
She’s also on Facebook and Twitter as MarilynMeredith.

New Contest: Winners will be randomly picked from those leaving the most comments on the blog posts. Each winner can choose one of the earlier books in the series as either a print book or e-book.

Tomorrow I’ll be with Maggie King at http://maggingking.com/

End of Summer Beach Reads: Robertson, Korman, Ballard Friday, Sep 2 2016 

Auntie M has three lovelies coming your way, perfect for the Labor Day beach weekend:

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Michael Robertson’s Baker Street Mystery series have a devoted following of the two brothers who receive and answer the mail for 221B Baker Street addressed to Sherlock Holmes. The hijinks continue in The Baker Street Jurors.

With barrister Reggie Heath finally off on his honeymoon, solicitor Nigel Heath is keeping the office running smoothly. Well, maybe not that smoothly. He’s actually been living in the office after his American adventure and its accompanying romance ended badly. It’s up to Lois, their receptionist/legal secretary/admin. assistant/ barrister’s clerk to keep him topped off with coffee, working on the wills and other legal papers that cross his desk and having an occasional shower to get him out of his depression.

Then Nigel receives a jury summons–but in that day’s mail, so does Sherlock Holmes! Nigel promptly makes a paper plane of Sherlock’s summons and sails it out the open window. He does, however, turn up to do his duty, and is immediately drawn to one of the young female jurors. This might not be too bad at all, he thinks.

But it couldn’t be worse when he’s assigned as an alternate juror to the case of the century: National hero Rory McSweeny is on trial for the murder of his wife, the victim of a horrendous beating with McSweeny’s own cricket bat. On the verge of leading England’s team to another international championship, the papers have been full of outraged talk mostly pro and con about the accused man playing in the games.

It’s not a case for the faint-hearted as the jurors start having unfortunate accidents. One of the alternates seems to be more than closely acquainted with the sayings of Holmes, too. And then the judge is persuaded that the jury must travel to Devon to see the site of McSweeny’s alibi, and things take a decided turn for the worse. Before it’s over there will be accidents during a storm, rumors of secret tunnels, and a locked room murder. Bright and sparkling with that Robertson irony.

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The Killer Wasps Mysteries bring the four friends–antique dealer Kristin, tiny Sophie, Bootsie and Holly–back together for another outing. The annual Tomato Show is at the country club, and their goal is to outdo their nemesis Eula, just in the annual Tomato Show, but also in the tennis tournament.

But then a valuable painting of a pastoral scene disappears from the country club, and everyone is pointing fingers at everyone else. What are the four friends to do but investigate? They secretly hope Eula is to blame, but can only find evidence of another crime: buying her tomato plant entry from a New Jersey dealer.

And as if the gals haven’t enough on their plates, a new Mega Wine Mart plans to open in their little village, cutting a swath right through their forest. Everyone’s in favor of cheap wine, but to take out their forest for it takes the cake. It’s not bad enough that Sophie is going through a tough divorce, and the details of that one will bring a smile to your face, she’s also hoping for a proposal from her loving Joe.

It’s enough to drive a gal to drink! A charming cozy series~

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Mignon Ballard bring her two series heroines together in a charming cozy set in the small Georgia town of Elderberry in Slightly Bewildered Angel.

It’s 1944 and schoolteacher Dimple Kilpatrick and her town do their best to help with the war efforts, while worrying about the ones they care for serving in the armed forces and trying to cope with rationing. Things are made worse when the boardinghouse cook, Odessa Kirby, who helps Miss Dimple’s friend Phoebe Chadwick run the house on a shoestring, has to leave to care for a relative.

But all is not lost when on the doorstep they find Augusta Goodnight, whose wise ways with cooking and even cleaning soon save the day. Then the shy Dora arrives, hoping to stay on the library’s porch, toting her things in a paper bag. She brings out the town’s charitable spirit and soon she’s being fed and cared for.

Miss Dimple is suitably shocked when Dora is found dead in the church, and Augusta persuades her she must find the culprit. She enlists her friends to search for clues, even traveling to Dora’s hometown, where her horrible married life is exposed. It will be up to Augusta to convince Miss Dimple to follow the threads that will solve the mystery that will change Miss Dimple’s life.

A heartwarming cozy with exacting period details and the the meeting of Ballard’s two sleuthing heroines.