Laurie R. King, Island of the Mad & A Venetian Tea

Laurie R King signs Island of the Mad with Venetian Tea!

WHEN:
June 9, 2018 @ 2:00 pm ““ 3:00 pm
WHERE:
The Poisoned Pen Bookstore
4014 N Goldwater Blvd
Scottsdale, AZ 85251
USA
COST:  Free

Join us for Venetian Tea, masks, give-a-ways, prosecco and biscotti!

*Feel free to let your inner Venetian out with attire and masks!

From Laurie:

Yes, my beloved Poisoned Pen Books in Scottsdale is sneaking in a special pre-launch launch party on the Saturday, a whole 3 days early.  And yes, you can get a copy of the hardback that very day, and have me deface it with my signature before you snatch it back to spend the rest of the weekend reading it on the Lido—or rather, by the pool at Scottsdale’s delightfully retro Valley Ho.

I’m not going to BoucherCon this year, so unless you’re going to Left Coast, you may not catch me at all [sad face]. But to tempt you to Scottsdale, we’re making this a biggish do. The Valley Ho offers us a king or double-queen room for just $99 a night (or $119 pool view).  We’ll either do a dinner get-together, or maybe Sunday brunch, more to come when we’ve had a chance to gauge interest.  To get the Ho’s special price for this, phone them at 866-987-2052 and let them know it’s the Poisoned Pen rate.

<<Click here to order a signed copy>>

Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes untangle the slippery threads of insanity and deadly secrets as they investigate a disappearance in the New York Times bestselling series that Lee Child called “the most sustained feat of imagination in mystery fiction today.”

A June summer’s evening, on the Sussex Downs, in 1925. Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes are strolling across their orchard when the telephone rings: an old friend’s beloved aunt has failed to return following a supervised outing from Bedlam. After the previous few weeks”“with a bloody murder, a terrible loss, and startling revelations about Holmes”“Russell is feeling a bit unbalanced herself. The last thing she wants is to deal with the mad, and yet, she can’t say no.

The Lady Vivian Beaconsfield has spent most of her adult life in one asylum after another, yet she seemed to be improving”“or at least, finding a point of balance in her madness. So why did she disappear? Did she take the family’s jewels with her, or did someone else? The Bedlam nurse, perhaps?

The trail leads Russell and Holmes through a lunatic asylum’s stony halls to the warm Venice lagoon, where ethereal beauty is jarred by Mussolini’s Blackshirts, where the gilded Lido set may be tempting a madwoman, and where Cole Porter sits at a piano, playing with ideas…

Mystery Writers of America – June Releases

Here are the June 2018 books by some of Mystery Writers of America’s members, as reported by the organization on their website https://mysterywriters.org/new-books-by-mwa-members-june-2018/ . They may all be found at your local Independent Bookstore.  (If you’re reading this, we hope you consider the Poisoned Pen to be your local independent bookstore..) Check out the Web Store for these books, or others by the authors. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

 

Books

Cara Black, Murder on the Left Bank, Soho Crime
Leslie Budewitz, As the Christmas Cookie Crumbles, Midnight Ink
Kate CarlisleBuried in Books, Berkley
Joelle Charbonneau, Eden Conquered, HarperCollins ““ HarperTeen
Tracy ClarkBroken Places, Kensington
John ConnollyThe Woman in the Woods, Simon & Schuster ““ Atria
Sheila ConnollyMurder at the Mansion, Minotaur
Charlie Donlea, Don’t Believe It, Kensington
Robert Dugoni, A Steep Price, Thomas & Mercer
Jeremy Finley, The Darkest Time of Night, St. Martin’s Press
John GilstrapScorpion Strike, Kensington
Leonard GoldbergA Study in Treason, Minotaur
Matt GoldmanBroken Ice, Forge
Elizabeth GunnBurning Meredith, Severn House
Leigh HearonRunaway Murder, Kensington
Jennifer HillierJar of Hearts, Minotaur
Paddy HirschThe Devil’s Half Mile, Forge Books
David HousewrightLike to Die, Minotaur
Lisa JacksonLiar, Liar, Kensington
Laurie R. King, Island of the Mad, Bantam
Stephen KingThe Outsider, Simon & Schuster ““ Scribner
R.J. KoretoThe Body in the Ballroom, Crooked Lane
Paul Levine, Bum Deal, Thomas & Mercer
Terrence McCauleyThe Fairfax Incident, Polis
James Patterson & Bill Clinton, The President is Missing, Little, Brown
James Patterson, Murder in Paradise, Grand Central
Bryan Reardon, The Real Michael Swann, Dutton
Cynthia Riggs, Widow’s Wreath, Crooked Lane
Charles Rosenberg, The Trial and Execution of George Washington, Hanover Square
Randall SilvisOnly the Rain, Thomas & Mercer
Maggie Toussaint, Confound It, Camel Press
Peggy TownsendSee Her Run, Thomas & Mercer
J.D. TraffordGood Intentions, Thomas & Mercer
James W. Ziskin, A Stone’s Throw, Seventh Street

Robert Dugoni, A Steep Price

Dugoni

Robert Dugoni returns to the Poisoned Pen on Wednesday, June 13 at 7 PM to discuss and sign his latest book, A Steep Price. He’ll be in conversation with Bryan Gruley, author of Starvation Lake. Autographed copies of A Steep Price can be pre-ordered through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2JxAtto

Steep Price

Here’s a summary of A Steep Price.

New York Times bestselling author Robert Dugoni’s thrilling series continues as Seattle homicide detective Tracy Crosswhite is plunged into a case of family secrets and murder…

Called in to consult after a young woman disappears, Tracy Crosswhite has the uneasy feeling that this is no ordinary missing-persons case. When the body turns up in an abandoned well, Tracy’s suspicions are confirmed. Estranged from her family, the victim had balked at an arranged marriage and had planned to attend graduate school. But someone cut her dreams short.

Solving the mystery behind the murder isn’t Tracy’s only challenge. The detective is keeping a secret of her own: she’s pregnant. And now her biggest fear seems to be coming true when a new detective arrives to replace her. Meanwhile, Tracy’s colleague Vic Fazzio is about to take a fall after his investigation into the murder of a local community activist turns violent and leaves an invaluable witness dead.

Two careers are on the line. And when more deadly secrets emerge, jobs might not be the only things at risk.

The Pharaoh Key Teaser

It’s almost time! Douglas Preston will be at the Poisoned Pen on Tuesday, June 12 at 7 PM. He’ll be joined by Lincoln Child via Skype. They will discuss the latest Gideon Crew thriller, The Pharaoh Key. You can preorder a signed copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2JmDj7U

Each book will be personally autographed by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. They are unable to add personalized inscriptions. Instead, each copy comes with a special insert created by the authors only for copies sold by the Poisoned Pen!

Key

Here’s the summary of The Pharaoh Key.

Gideon Crew–brilliant scientist, master thief, intrepid adventurer–is shocked when his former employer, Eli Glinn, vanishes without a trace, and Glinn’s high-tech lab Effective Engineering Solutions shuts down seemingly overnight.

Fresh off a diagnosis that gives him only months to live, Crew is contacted by one of his former coworkers at EES, Manuel Garza, who has a bead on one final treasure hinted at in EES’s final case, the long-awaited translation of a centuries-old stone tablet of a previously undiscovered civilization: The Phaistos Disc.

What lies at the end of the trail will either save Gideon’s life–or bring it to a sudden, shocking close. Crew once again faces incredible odds–but as Gideon has proved again and again, there’s no such thing as too great a risk when you’re living on borrowed time.

*****

Why is this a teaser? CrimeReads recently published an excerpt from the book. While we can’t reprint that excerpt, we can certainly link to the site. I’m sure CrimeReads will appreciate all the readers that use the site. Check out the excerpt. https://crimereads.com/the-pharoah-key/

A Linda Castillo Teaser

Linda Castillo, author of the Kate Burkholder mysteries, set in Ohio’s Amish country, will be back at the Poisoned Pen on Sunday, July 8 at 2 PM. Her new book in the series, A Gathering of Secrets, will be released that week. You can pre-order a copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2Jjs9kt

Gathering of Secrets

Here’s the summary of A Gathering of Secrets.

A deadly fire exposes the dark side of Amish life in A Gathering of Secrets, a harrowing new thriller in the New York Times bestselling series by Linda Castillo.

When a historic barn burns to the ground in the middle of the night, Chief of Police Kate Burkholder is called in to investigate. At first, it looks like an accident, but when the body of eighteen-year-old Daniel Gingerich is found inside—burned alive—Kate suspects murder. Who would want a well-liked, hardworking young Amish man dead? Kate delves into the investigation only to find herself stonewalled by the community to which she once belonged. Is their silence a result of the Amish tenet of separation? Or is this peaceful and deeply religious community conspiring to hide a truth no one wants to talk about? Kate doubles down only to discover a plethora of secrets and a chilling series of crimes that shatters everything she thought she knew about her Amish roots—and herself.

As Kate wades through a sea of suspects, she’s confronted by her own violent past and an unthinkable possibility.

*****

Why is this teaser so early? Linda Castillo just wrote a piece for Criminal Element. It’s called “Kate Burkholder and Setting a Thriller Series in Amish Country.” You might want to read it while it’s still fresh. https://bit.ly/2HcGj1q

Colleen Coble’s 10 Writers She Hates

Suspense writer Colleen Coble recently wrote an article for Booklist‘s Mystery Month. It’s called, “10 Crime Writers I Hate (Because They’re Too Good). It’s a fun article to check out. https://bit.ly/2LaFtVu

You can find Coble’s own books, and books by all of the authors mentioned, through the Web Store. If she caught your attention, try an author or two that you haven’t read. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Hot Book of the Week – Laird Barron’s Blood Standard

Laird Barron, author of Blood Standard, is at the Poisoned Pen Thursday, May 31 at 7 PM. Can’t make it at the last minute? Blood Standard is the Hot Book of the Week, and signed copies are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2ISQzlc

Blood Standard

Here’s the summary of Blood Standard.

Award-winning author Laird Barron makes his crime fiction debut with a novel set in the underbelly of upstate New York that’s as hardboiled and punchy as a swift right hook to the jaw–a classic noir for fans of James Ellroy and John D. Macdonald.

Isaiah Coleridge is a mob enforcer in Alaska–he’s tough, seen a lot, and dished out more. But when he forcibly ends the moneymaking scheme of a made man, he gets in the kind of trouble that can lead to a bullet behind the ear. Saved by the grace of his boss and exiled to upstate New York, Isaiah begins a new life, a quiet life without gunshots or explosions. Except a teenage girl disappears, and Isaiah isn’t one to let that slip by. And delving into the underworld to track this missing girl will get him exactly the kind of notice he was warned to avoid.

Tracy Clark, In the Hot Seat

T Clark

Tracy Clark’s debut mystery, Broken Places: A Chicago Mystery, was just released. You can order a copy of it through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2xk9YGl

I was lucky enough to have the chance to ask Tracy a few questions, to put her in the Hot Seat. I’m glad she took the time. I hope you take the time to read the interview.

Tracy, would you introduce yourself to the readers?

Hi, readers! I’m Tracy Clark, mystery writer, native Chicagoan, currently sweating the release of “BROKEN PLACES, a Chicago mystery,” my debut novel, the first in a series featuring Cass Raines, former CPD detective turned PI. When not working or writing, or thinking about writing or trying to convince myself I really should be writing, I’m out and about. I love Broadway musicals, old Hepburn and Tracy films, game nights with friends, binge-watching Netflix, and a well-brewed cup of tea … and ginger snaps. I love ginger snaps. Jeez, I sound like I’m a 100 years old. I’m not. Pinky swear.

Tell us about Cass Raines.

Cassandra Raines is African-American, 34, lanky, no-nonsense, and absolutely dogged in her determination to fight for truth and justice. She’s happily single, rabidly independent, and a bit of a wiseass. That’s what I like most about her. At twelve, she lost her mother to cancer and her father handed her off to her grandparents. She learned early to rely on her own strengths, follow her own path, and keep it moving. Her grandparents, gone now, left Cass their only valuable possession, their South Side three-flat, which she nurtures and frets over, as though it were a living, breathing thing. The building is her last tangible connection to the family she’s lost. Luckily, her close circle of steadfast friends has become her new family, and Cass will do anything to protect it. In Broken Places we meet Detective Cass Raines of the Chicago Police Department on the worst day of her life. She’s been shot and lies dying on a rooftop, having killed a young gangbanger in order to save her partner’s life. This event, this nightmare, the weight of the guilt she carries afterward, jumpstarts the story and will resonate throughout the series.

Tell us about Broken Places without spoilers. 

Broken Places

A few years out from the rooftop, the scar of the gangbanger’s bullet still visible on her chest, Cass has turned in her badge and has settled in as a PI, taking only work that interests her. Father Ray Heaton, her mentor and father figure, whom she calls “Pop,” comes to her and asks for help in finding the person vandalizing his church and rectory. Though Pop tells her it’s likely just kids breaking windows and turning over garbage carts, Cass suspects he’s holding something back, something far more serious. Cass is proved right when she finds Pop dead inside his confessional, the body of an unknown Hispanic boy lying in a pool of blood on the altar steps. The police too quickly conclude that the deaths are the result of a burglary gone wrong; that the would-be burglar and the priest struggled for the banger’s gun, the boy was shot, and the priest, consumed by remorse, took his own life as penance. But Cass knows differently, because she knew Pop, and a simple vandalism case suddenly gives way to an all-out pursuit to clear Pop’s name and find the person responsible for his death.

Can you tell us anything about Cass Raines’ next case?

Book two is entitled “Borrowed Time.” (Or it is now. The title may change.) A couple of months have passed since Pop’s murder and Cass is slowly regaining her equilibrium, though she still finds herself absently picking up the phone to call Pop before it hits her, again, that he’s well and truly gone. She’s grieving. As the story opens, her one-woman agency is experiencing a bit of a dry spell, so she’s handing out summonses on behalf of a law firm. It’s easy, mindless work, all the work she’s currently up for. That is until she’s asked to look into the death of Timothy Ayers, the scion of a prominent Chicago family, whose body is found floating in Lake Michigan, just yards away from his abandoned yacht. The police peg the case as an unfortunate accident. Tim was drunk, high, and simply slipped and fell overboard. But Jung Byson, the delivery boy at Cass’s favorite diner, believes differently. He tells Cass he knows his friend was murdered and he wants her to prove it. Reluctantly, she signs on, and soon discovers that there were quite a few people with reason to want Tim Ayers dead, including his own brother, that there have been other “accidental” deaths similar to Ayers’, and that her own client has been withholding crucial information and is wanted by the police. She must now find Jung, put the puzzle pieces together, and trap a killer … before he kills again.

Let’s talk about Chicago. Why do you think it’s such a popular setting for mystery and crime fiction?

Chicago is an awesome setting for mystery and crime fiction. Al Capone, John Dillinger and “Bugs” Moran walked our streets. You can still see bullet holes in some of the buildings! Not to glorify the nefarious, but something’s brewing in a town where something like four of the last nine governors have been hauled off to prison for corruption. If you can’t write a story of greed, graft and murder and mayhem set in this town, you haven’t got one in you. The Chicago Way is a thing. It’s a certain swagger, an attitude. It is one greedy hand washing the other, envelopes filled with payoff money slipped into a politician’s hands. Breathe deeply enough and you can practically smell the fear sweat wafting out of City Hall as the Feds reel in the latest pol caught (on tape, no less) with his or her hand in the till. I’ll note here that not all of our elected officials are crooked. We undoubtedly have some very fine, upstanding individuals serving their constituents with honor and integrity. Chicago is also filled with hardworking, law abiding, salt of the earth citizens who’ve never stolen a nickel in their entire lives … but, frankly, they don’t make for good mystery fiction. Writers go for the underbelly; we laser in on what doesn’t work, not what does, on what stinks to high heaven, not what smells like roses. Chicago, the land of the stinky onions, is fiction gold!

If someone comes to visit, where do you take them to show off Chicago?

I avoid the usual tourist stops, unless they specifically ask to see them. I venture into the neighborhoods. Chicago, the city of neighborhoods, has a lot of fascinating spots worthy of a closer look—Pilsen, Greek Town, Chinatown, Bronzeville, the historic Pullman community. Chicago has gotten some pretty negative press lately, but our vibrant neighborhoods–each one distinctive, each one an integral part of the city’s overall makeup—practically crackle with life, ethnic vibrancy and color. You haven’t truly experienced Chicago if you haven’t wandered off the beaten path and gotten down to people level.

In one of my reviews, I said Cass reminds me of Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone. What authors have inspired you?

Certainly Grafton; she was a master. I’ll miss Kinsey and her pickle and peanut butter sandwiches. I’ve got a long list of inspirations, including Marcia Muller, Margaret Maron, Sara Paretsky, Susan Dunlap, Nancy Pickard, Karen Kijewski, Eleanor Taylor Bland, Barbara Neely, Chester Himes, Walter Mosley, Raymond Chandler, Mickey Spillane, Dashiell Hammett, James Patterson, David Baldacci, many, many, many more. I was also a tremendous fan of Robert P. Parker’s Spenser and Sunny Randall series. His writing was so clean, so economical. There are great new writers of color making a mark now, too—Kellye Garrett, Valerie Burns, Danny Gardner, Delia Pitts, just to name a few. I’m reading Garrett’s “Hollywood Homicide” right now. It’s awesome.

What’s on your TBR pile right now?

You mean piles? LOL. So many books so little time. At the moment, there are six books right at the top of pile one. They are “The Romanovs,” by Simon Sebag Montefiore, which I’m itching to get to; Ann Cleeves’ “Harbor Street,” an old Vera Stanhope entry; “Go Down Together,” by Jeff Guinn, about Bonnie & Clyde, (there’s something about these two I cannot get enough of); Lee Child’s “Killing Floor;” “End Game,” by David Baldacci, and “Anything You Say Can and Will be Used Against You,” by Laurie Lynn Drummond. And don’t even get my started on what’s waiting for me on my Kindle.

What did you read as a child? What was your favorite book? Or, if you prefer, who was your favorite character?

My favorites were the Nancy Drew mysteries. When I was around twelve I got my first Agatha Christie novel. I think she wrote more than eighty novels, plays and short stories? I’m pretty sure I got through them all. Christie gave way to Sara Paretsky’s PI heroine V.I. Warshawski, which opened the door up to Marcia Muller’s Sharon McCone, Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone, Karen Kijewski’s Kat Colorado, and so many others. My all-time favorite book, however, the one I read over and over again, is Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird.” It’s perfect, simply perfect. Scout’s my favorite character.

Name an author or book that you wish had received more attention.

The late Eleanor Taylor Bland. Her Marti MacAlister series about an African-American female detective is awesome, a real pleasure to read. I had the honor of knowing Eleanor. She was a thoughtful, elegant writer.

Thank you, Tracy.

Tracy Clark’s website is www.tracyclarkbooks.com

Betty Webb & The Gunn Zoo Mysteries

Betty Webb’s May release from Poisoned Pen Press, The Otter of Death, has one of the cutest covers I’ve seen lately. Signed copies are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2xhvGLf

Otter of Death

Here’s the summary of the book.

While taking the yearly “otter count” at a marsh near Gunn Landing Harbor, California, zookeeper Theodora Bentley sees Maureen, her favorite otter, swimming around clutching someone’s expensive smartphone. When Teddy rescues the device, she discovers a photograph of a murder-in-progress. A hasty search soon turns up the still-warm body of Stuart Booth, PhD, a local Marine Biology instructor.

Booth was a notorious sexual harasser of young female students, so the list of suspects is long enough to make Teddy wonder if the crime will ever be solved. But when her friend, Lila, one of Booth’s original accusers, is arrested and charged with his murder, Teddy begins to investigate. This creates considerable tension with Teddy’s fiancé, Sheriff Joe Rejas. He believes the ever-inquisitive zookeeper might be putting her own life at risk, and so orders her to butt out.

Concerned for her accused friend, Teddy ignores Joe’s ultimatum. She questions not only members of Gunn Landing’s moneyed social elite, but also the other side of the financial spectrum – the financially strapped young women willing to do almost anything to pay for their college tuition. Alarmed by Teddy’s meddling, Booth’s killer fights back – first with a death threat, then via gunshot.

In this fifth Gunn Zoo Mystery, Teddy is torn between living a peaceful life on her Monterey Bay houseboat with her three-legged dog DJ Bonz, or moving inland to marry Joe, who comes with kids and a mother who has her own mysterious agenda. The choice is scary for Teddy – who has barely been managing her own many-times-married mother, and her imperious employer, Aster Edwina Gunn, overlord of the famed Gunn Zoo. Teddy’s life is further complicated by a wayward snow monkey named Kabuki, taunter of teenage boys. The zookeeper’s dedication to her charges – including the anteater, the koala, the llama, and Magnus, the polar bear cub from Iceland (met in Teddy’s last adventure, The Puffin of Death), never falters in a cleverly plotted series rich in characters and in animal lore.

*****

I had hoped to interview Betty for the blog. But, she took off for Paris. Then, Elise Cooper from Crimespree Magazine beat me to it. So, you can check out Cooper’s interview with Webb here. https://crimespreemag.com/interview-with-betty-webb/

Checking in with Louise Penny

Those of us who await our annual Chief Inspector Armand Gamache book from Louise Penny have to wait until November this year. Kingdom of the Blind will be released then, although you can pre-order it, or order other books in the series, through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2LeWZJ2

Kingdom of the Blind

In the meantime, while we all wait impatiently for the return to Three Pines, there’s an article in The New York Times to check out. Dan Bilefsky’s Saturday Profile is called, “An Affable Canadian Author With a Penchant for Murder”.  https://nyti.ms/2Lu4lIE

Louise Penny

If you’re a fan, you might want to read it. Bilefsky captures Penny’s books with one phrase, “more intricately wrought tone poems than procedurals”. It’s a profile worth reading.