Archive for category Murder Mystery

Review: THE LOVER by Laura Wilson

The Lover

Laura Wilson

Felony and Mayhem Press

ISBN: 978-1-934609-88-0

$14.95

321 pages

Reviewed by Amanda Capper

The Lover is a very good read with the added titillation of being a BOAT (Based on a True). This book revolves around The Blackout Ripper and will entice any fan of true crime to research further, if for no other reason than to see just how much in common The Lover has with Jack the Ripper.

Set in London during the Second World War, the story centers on three characters; Lucy, a young woman reaching maturity during uncertain times; Rene, a prostitute constantly living under a threat of local violence; and Jim, an Air Force pilot who becomes the love interest of Lucy. The author writes in the first person for each of these characters and does an excellent job of keeping the voice of each character distinct. Laura Wilson also does an excellent job of suspense, tying the characters together at crucial points of the story and giving the reader a very good idea of what motivates both victim and murderer.

The Lover also reminds us how darn good we have it these days. If our cable goes down, or our internet speed slows, we think we’re hard done by. But black-outs were routine during the war. In order to decrease targets for enemy planes, all lights were extinguished and Londoners were expected to head for air raid shelters under ground. Where they sat and listened to the bombs fall, wondering all the time if the bombs would fall on their homes and any loved ones who didn’t make it to an air raid shelter in time. Add to these fears the horror of someone attacking and mutilating the most helpless of women and you have an account of a whole city on the brink of insanity.

It is a can’t-put-down, up-all-night type of book because you want/need to know what happens next to these three main characters, as well as the secondary characters woven into their lives. As with any good book, when the end comes, you want more. Guaranteed to send the reader into research mode.

 

Copyright © 2011 Amanda Capper

DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep for consideration in preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

 

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Review: FEVER DREAM by Dennis Palumbo

Fever Dream

Dennis Palumbo

Poisoned Pen Press

ISBN-9781590589595

342 pages

$14.95 (soft cover)

Reviewed by Laura Hartman

 

The weather isn’t the only thing heating up in Dennis Palumbo’s latest Daniel Rinaldi novel. Fever Dream finds psychologist Rinaldi on the hot plate when he is called in by the Pittsburg PD to help the only survivor of a bank robbery gone bad. Treva is so traumatized she is unable or unwilling to communicate with anyone but Rinaldi.

Things go from bad to worse as shady politicians, kidnapping and death circle around Rinaldi. Nothing comes easy in this case, especially when half of the cops on the PD resent the consulting psychologist and his theories.

Stirring in ex-girlfriends, former patients and the possibility of a new love interest thickens the plot as things become more and more complicated. The fast-paced action makes this novel a real page turner, but take the time to appreciate the beauty of Palumbo’s writing. Descriptions like “…spreading tendrils of Interstate 76 reaching delicately into furrowed valleys…” are gems found throughout the book.

Fever Dream is Palumbo’s second in his Daniel Rinaldi Mystery series, following Mirror Image. I have not read the first in the series and found Fever Dream fine as a stand-alone novel. Because it was well written and intriguing, I am looking forward to going back and reading the first in his series.

Copyright © 2011 Laura Hartman

DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep for consideration in preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

 

 

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Review: MURDER IN A BASKET by Amanda Flower

Murder In A Basket

An India Hayes Mystery

Amanda Flower

ISBN: 978-1-4328-2567-6

Five Star Publishing

281 Pages

Reviewed By Diane Grace

India Hayes, college librarian and struggling artist, is talked into running a face-painting booth at the Founders’ Day Festival by her older sister, Carmen. She’s not sure how her sister persuaded her to dress in the pink pioneer costume, including mobcap and granny boots, but that’s a small problem when she finds one of her fellow artists dead.

The woman, a basket weaver named Tess Ross leaves behind an angry blacksmith husband, an adopted son, squabbling siblings, an artists co-op she helped start and a labradoodle with a trust fund.

India with her backbone of cooked spaghetti and relatives that put the word dysfunctional in the dictionary, finds herself talked into searching for the killer by the distraught son, a college student with a crush on India. In her search for answers she is conned by the victim’s lawyer into being the foster-owner of the labradoodle until things are settled. To make matters worse, Tess is the sister of the college provost, India’s pompous superior. The further India looks into the matter the worse things get. With a little luck, India will find the answer to her quest before she becomes the murderer’s next victim.

Murder In A Basket is Amanda Flower’s sophomore effort in a series featuring India Hayes, college librarian and amateur artist. Ms. Flower’s writing style fits in nicely with other professional cozy mystery writers, Earlene Fowler, M.C. Beaton, Barbara Colley and others. The story has more twists and turns than the baskets the murder victim made. India goes blundering into one situation after another. And if she can’t get into enough trouble by herself, her neighbor and family will be happy to do it for her. All in innocence of course.

This is a delightful story, I would find myself immersed in the characters, rooting for them to succeed, cringing when they got in over their heads. Made me wish there was a Stripling, Ohio and a Founders’ Festival to visit. I can recommend Murder In A Basket without qualm one to any cozy mystery reader.

Copyright 2011 by Diane Grace

Disclosure of material connection: I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep in consideration preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

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Review: THE CONCERT KILLER by R J McDonnell

The Concert Killer

RJ McDonnell

isbn 978-0-9814914-5-5

Published by Kileena Publishing Scranton, PA

308 pages

Reviewed by Marlene Pyle

This is the third novel in the Rock & Roll series, again featuring former band member and mental health counselor, Jason Duffy. Now a private investigator, Jason staffs his office with past clients from his days as a therapist, and they are a quirky but lovable crew.

The son of a gruff retired cop, Jason comes naturally to the field of crime fighting, but he doesn’t always see eye to eye with his old-school, traditional dad. Jason’s also recently begun living with his school teacher girlfriend, Kelly, and they don’t quite have all the kinks in their relationship worked out yet.

But Jason’s got bigger problems. The novel opens with the murder of a young woman in a restroom at a concert arena. When it becomes evident that a serial killer is picking off victims at local concerts, the concert promoters hire Jason to track him down, but some of the businessmen seem more worried about their profit margins than the safety of their customers.

The murderer is a misguided religious fanatic. He keeps score of his kills on the back of a dollar bill and leaves taunting clues at the scene of each brutal crime. As Jason gets closer to identifying the killer, his own life and those of the people he loves may also be in danger.

Fast paced and full of action, this is a well-told story set in the glamourous world of high-dollar rock and roll.

Copyright 2011 Marlene Pyle

Disclosure of material connection: I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep in consideration preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

 

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Review: DYING FOR A DANCE by Cindy Sample

Dying For A Dance

Cindy Sample

Published by L & L Dreamspell

ISBN 978-1-60318-427-4

263 pages

Cover price $16.95

Reviewed by Marlene Pyle

You’ve got to love Laurel McKay, the main character in Cindy Sample’s novel, “Dying For a Dance.” Laurel is a divorced mom in her late thirties who works in banking by day. In the evenings she’s taking ballroom dance lessons to prepare for her best friend’s wedding. But there’s more than just the foxtrot going on in the dance studio.

When two of the dance instructors are murdered, Laurel is quickly drawn into the hunt for a killer. Her boss is one of the prime suspects, so she needs to clear his name, and it doesn’t hurt that she has the hots for the hunky lead detective either.

Laurel is funny and sarcastic. With a blade being held to her throat, her first thought is that “nobody better move, especially me.” Her second concern is that her captor had just called her fat.

Backed up by Laurel’s loving but highly critical mother, her gay work assistant, Stan, and Tom, the cute cop, the cast of characters is packed with humor. “Dying” is a light-hearted romantic comedy sure to please female mystery fans.

Copyright 2011 Marlene Pyle

Disclosure of material connection : I have a material connection because I received a review copy that i can keep in consideration for preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

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Review: THE SANDBURG CONNECTION by Mark De Castrique

The Sandburg Connection

Mark De Castrique

ISBN: 978-1-59058-943-4

Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press

Trade Paperback 288 pages

Price: $14.95

Reviewed by: Ron Smyth

 

The Sandburg Connection is the first book I have read by Mark de Castrique though he has written at least ten including five in the Buryin’ Barry series and two earlier efforts in the Sam Blackman series. The prose is smooth and unobtusive and he clearly understands the technique of plotting and how to keep things moving along.

It begins as a simple assignment to follow Professor Janice Wainwright, who is suing her doctor, and catch her in physical activities that undercut her claim. When she visits Connemara, Carl Sandburg’s home in Flat Rock N.C. Sam thinks he has his evidence until she is found, by him, semiconcious and bleeding at the top of Glassy Mountain. Her last words were “Wendy. It’s the verses. Sandburg’s verses”. An autopsy reveals painkillers in her blood and solid proof of the surgeon’s errors. Whatever compelled this woman to climb such an arduous trail must have been very important. The theft of some Sandburg volumes from the Wainwright farmhouse makes Sam wonder what Pulitzer Prize winner Sandburg might posess that results in multiple murders.

Of course Sam is an obvious suspect to the local authorities, but When the woman’s daughter tries to kill Sam he irrationally decides to help her. Sam is in the fortunate position of having a source of funds that means he can play Don Quixote when he wishes. It would appear this source is shady although details are in the earlier books that I haven’t read.

Nevertheless, by the end of the third chapter Sam has been a witness, a suspect and almost a corpse so the author is more than capable of keeping the action flowing. And Sam, a veteran Army CID member who lost a leg in Iraq has the potential to be an interesting lead character with his Do What Has To Be Done attitude.

Now a modern regional mystery, and I read a lot of them, needs a plot, a detailed setting in both place and time, and a lead character who could only truly exist in that setting. The stronger, the better. Ideally, like Tony Hillerman, the plot grows naturally only in that unique place and the detective would not be truly believable anywhere else. Could you really see Spenser operating on a Navajo Reservation or Nero Wolfe trying to solve Joe Leaphorn’s cases? But Sam’s potential as an interesting character is vitiated by the almost casual attitude that Mark De Castique takes to even the most important moral choices Sam makes. Late in the book the author sets Sam up in a plot to harm the villain i.e. Do What Has To Be Done and then has him make this essential decision in a single throwaway paragraph. How disappointing. And the only way I know the book is taking place in the south is Sam eating hushpuppies and drinking a mixed drink that is half sweetened and half unsweetened ice tea. The plot at least uses the Confederacy but the MacGuffin could have been almost anything and the setting need not be North Carolina although that does allow Sandburg to be involved. Usually an author who has done a considerable amount of research errs in trying to put too much of it in the book. De Castique is too experienced to make that mistake. If anything he goes too far the other way although we do learn at least some things about Carl Sandburg.

Next time I want more. I want to learn more about Sam as an individual and his partner Nakayla as well. More moral qualms for the leading character than a single paragraph can resolve, more reason to think that I’m in a unique rather than a generic setting and hopefully a plot that could only happen in North Carolina. The mystery here is solidly plotted and professionally competent but the mystery isn’t end the point in a regional mystery, it is merely the starting point, a framework which will be clad in the sounds, sights and smells of the locality. That is a weakness in this volume. Sam could be so much more than he is here if he wasn’t presented as just another standard flippant, wisecracking PI. And surely there are things that exist only in North Carolina that we can experience together. I’d like to spend some more time with him.

Copyright 2011 Ronald Smyth

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Review: MURDER IN THE 11th HOUSE by Mitchell Scott Lewis

Murder in the 11th House

Mitchell Scott Lewis

Published by Poisoned Pen Press

ISBN-9781590589502

239 pages

$24.95 Hardcover

Reviewed by Laura Hartman

Mitchell Scott Lewis introduces us to David Lowell in his debut novel, Murder in the 11th House, the first in his Starlight Detective Agency Mysteries. Lowell is an eccentric self-made millionaire that relies on astrological charts to guide his daily life, determine what stocks to purchase or sell and solve murders.

In an effort to spend more time with his daughter Melinda, Lowell agrees to help her prove the innocence of an accused murder. Melinda’s client, Ms. Johnny Colbert is accused of murdering a judge that she threatened in open court. Melinda believes her brash, loudmouthed client is innocent and Lowell’s charts confirm his daughter’s opinions. When someone resorts to attempted murder to get the Starlight Detective Agency off the case, the action heats up from a simmer to a boil.

This was a fun book. It was unlike other mysteries, due to the astrological angle. Whenever Lowell met someone new, he asked their birthdate and time of birth so he could work up a chart on them to better understand them. Who hasn’t read their horoscope in the paper at one time or the other? I wanted to contact Lowell with my birth info to have him “read” me! And it was interesting to look behind the curtain a bit by learning what the 11th house (and other houses) represented in the astrological world.

Lewis was spot on creating cool characters for his novel. He promises more by crafting different personalities that mesh and conflict in and out of the the detective agency. I can’t wait to see his next book.

 

Copyright © 2011 Laura Hartman

DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep for consideration in preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

 

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Review: THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE MURDEROUS by Chester D. Campbell

The Good, the Bad and the Murderous

Chester D. Campbell

Night Shadows Press, LLC

ISBN: 978-0-9846044-4-9

$15.00

257 pages

Reviewed by Amanda Capper

This second Sid Chance mystery is a good read for the price. Only $15.00 and you get good guys, bad guys and dead bodies. Wrong turns, red herrings and finally a solution that pulls them all together. What more do you need from a thriller? Well…a little more suspense would have been nice.

Djuan Burden, a convicted murderer recently freed from prison, inadvertently steps right into another murder scene and police detectives are more than willing to slap the handcuffs on him and consider the case closed. Private Investigator Sid Chance initially finds himself agreeing with the detectives until he and his partner Jasmine LeMieux uncover evidence of other crimes that have little to do with Djuan. How they unravel the clues, connect the dots and eventually figure out the good guys from the bad is a good study of methodical detective work.

But I was never on the edge of my seat. The reader doesn’t get to know Djuan very well so I felt little sympathy for him. And not until 207 pages into the book does our hero find himself in any kind of danger and though that chapter is tense and well-written, it was a long time coming. Even the grand finale does not include the sort of comeuppance the reader may expect or desire for the villain.

Also lacking in this book is chemistry between Sid and his partner Jaz. Not sure if there is a romance brewing there or not, and maybe that uncertainty is the way Mr. Campbell wants it, but their interaction struck me as too formal.

If I’m going to buy a thriller I want foul language, aggression and sexual tension. But if I’m looking for a well-written murder mystery, this book would do fine.

 

Copyright © 2011 Amanda Capper

DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION

I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep for consideration in preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.

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Review: REUNION by Carl Brookins

Reunion

Carl Brookins

ISBN: 978-1-59080-668-5

Copyright: 2011

Publisher: Echelon Press

Trade Paperback 265 pages

Price: $13.99

Reviewed by: Dorothy Francis

How were you persuaded to attend your high school reunion? Maybe friends talked you into attending. Maybe the though of seeing an old flame enticed you to go.

How did you prepare for the event? Tried to loose 10 pounds? Bought a new outfit to wear? Manicure? Pedicure? New hair-do?

In REUNION, Jack Marston persuaded his lover Lori Jacobs to leave their home in Minneapolis to spend a weekend in the small Midwest town of Riverview while attending her high school reunion. Both are enjoying their new relationship and Jack is eager to see the people and places that had influenced Lori in her youth.

The story opens with Jack and the Riverview sheriff encountering a body suspended from the tines of a hayrack behind a party room of the restaurant where the graduates were celebrating a night of their reunion. Brookins pulls the reader into the scene through visual details as well as through the odor of blood contrasted with the fragrance of new mown hay.

This was the first of several bodies to be found during the reunion. Was someone targeting these seniors? Were these murders connected to the classmate found dead at the scene of a car crash five years ago? Or a classmate who died long ago at the river’s swimming hole? Seeking answers to these questions put Jack and Lori in grave danger. Bullets that zinged through their car as they drove along a deserted country road could have been a warning or maybe poor marksmanship. In probing for answers, they turn up real estate shenanigans, possible blackmail plots, and many unanswered questions that will have you flipping the book’s pages long after you planned to retire for the night.

The story of a class reunion of 75 people plus their spouses and guests requires the introduction of many characters. As you read you may wonder which of these characters are important. Answer: all of them. Read carefully. Brookins has created a convoluted plot that is well worth your reading time.

Copyright 2011, Dorothy Francis

 

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Review: DEAD MAN’S SWITCH by Tammy Kaehler

Dead Man’s Switch

Tammy Kaehler

Poisoned Pen Press

Hardcover, August 2011

ISBN13: 9781590588819

Reviewed by Agnes Dee

Kate Reilly has always wanted to race full time and professionally. She’s had experience, so it’s a natural for the owner of a car to hire her on the spot to replace a driver found dead. What isn’t natural? She’s the one who discovered the body.

The police suspect her. The racing press barely holds back with a barrage of accusations. Through it all, Kate has to prove herself innocent of the murder, and keep her mind on the upcoming race.

Tammy Kaehler has spent time working in the racing circuit, and has brought to the book many technical details of the cars, the tracks, the team and the media that surrounds this sport. Her character sees herself as an athlete, one who has to be in top form all the time - even more so because she is a woman.

Drivers in the sport are always in the public eye as stars of a racing team. They need to inspire confidence in every member of that team, including the people putting up the money.

Kate brings in the bad guy, as well as some other criminals, in a totally professional, yet humble, way.

Copyright 2011  Agnes Dee

DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: I have a material connection because I received a review copy that I can keep for consideration in preparing to write this content. I was not expected to return this item after my review.


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