Will Dean & The Last One

Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, recently talked with Will Dean, who is living off the grid in Sweden. Dean is the author of The Last One, available in the Webstore. https://bit.ly/47nCILm

Here’s the summary of The Last One.

An unputdownable locked-room thriller about family, trust, and survival from the acclaimed author of the “utterly thrilling” (Lisa Jewell, #1 New York Times bestselling author) First Born.

When Caz steps onboard the exclusive cruise liner RMS Atlantica, it’s the start of a vacation of a lifetime with her new love, Pete. On their first night they explore the ship, eat, dance, make friends, but when Caz wakes the next morning, Pete is missing.

And when she walks out into the corridor, all the cabin doors are open. To her horror, she soon realizes that the ship is completely empty. No passengers, no crew, nobody but her. The Atlantica is steaming into the mid-Atlantic and Caz is the only person on board. But that’s just the beginning of the terrifying journey she finds herself trapped on in this white-knuckled mystery.


Will Dean, author of The Last Thing to Burn which was shortlisted for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year, grew up in the East Midlands of the United Kingdom. After studying law at the London School of Economics and working in London, he settled in rural Sweden where he built a wooden house in a vast forest, and it’s from this base that he compulsively reads and writes. His debut novel, Dark Pines, was selected for Zoe Ball’s book club on ITV, shortlisted for the National Book Award (UK), The Guardian’s Not the Booker prize, and was named a Telegraph book of the year.


I think you’ll enjoy the conversation with Will Dean.

The Lady from Burma by Allison Montclair

Recently, Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, welcomed Alan Gordon who writes the Sparks & Bainbridge series as Allison Montclair. Montclair’s latest book is The Lady from Burma. There are signed copies of The Lady from Burma available in the Webstore. https://bit.ly/459AkWK

Here’s the summary of The Lady from Burma.

In Allison Montclair’s The Lady from Burma, murder once again stalks the proprietors of The Right Sort Marriage Bureau in the surprisingly dangerous landscape of post-World War II London…

In the immediate post-war days of London, two unlikely partners have undertaken an even more unlikely, if necessary, business venture – The Right Sort Marriage Bureau. The two partners are Miss Iris Sparks, a woman with a dangerous – and never discussed – past in British intelligence and Mrs. Gwendolyn Bainbridge, a war widow with a young son entangled in a complicated aristocratic family. Mostly their clients are people trying to start (or restart) their lives in this much-changed world, but their new client is something different. A happily married woman has come to them to find a new wife for her husband. Dying of cancer, she wants the two to make sure her entomologist, academic husband finds someone new once she passes.

Shortly thereafter, she’s found dead in Epping Forest, in what appears to be a suicide. But that doesn’t make sense to either Sparks or Bainbridge. At the same time, Bainbridge is attempting to regain legal control of her life, opposed by the conservator who has been managing her assets – perhaps not always in her best interest. When that conservator is found dead, Bainbridge herself is one of the prime suspects. Attempting to make sense of two deaths at once, to protect themselves and their clients, the redoubtable owners of the Right Sort Marriage Bureau are once again on the case.


ALLISON MONTCLAIR grew up devouring hand-me-down Agatha Christie paperbacks and James Bond movies. As a result of this deplorable upbringing, Montclair became addicted to tales of crime, intrigue, and espionage. She now spends her spare time poking through the corners, nooks, and crannies of history, searching for the odd mysterious bits and transforming them into novels of her own. She is the author of the Sparks & Bainbridge historical mystery series, which begins with The Right Sort of Man.


Enjoy the discussion of women, British history, the post-war years, and Montclair’s characters.

Bruce Borgos’ Debut

Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, recently welcomed debut author Bruce Borgos to the bookstore. Borgos’ first novel is The Bitter Past. There are signed copies of The Bitter Past available in the Webstore. https://bit.ly/3QnTaoL

Here’s the description of this fascinating novel.

In the tradition of Craig Johnson and C. J. Box, Bruce Borgos’s The Bitter Past begins a compelling series set in the high desert of Nevada featuring Sheriff Porter Beck…

Porter Beck is the sheriff in the high desert of Nevada, north of Las Vegas. Born and raised there, he left to join the Army, where he worked in Intelligence, deep in the shadows in far off places. Now he’s back home, doing the same lawman’s job his father once did, before his father started to develop dementia. All is relatively quiet in this corner of the world, until an old, retired FBI agent is found killed. He was brutally tortured before he was killed and clues at the scene point to a mystery dating back to the early days of the nuclear age. If that wasn’t strange enough, a current FBI agent shows up to help Beck’s investigation.

In a case that unfolds in the past (the 1950s) and the present, it seems that a Russian spy infiltrated the nuclear testing site and now someone is looking for that long-ago, all-but forgotten person, who holds the key to what happened then and to the deadly goings on now.


BRUCE BORGOS lives and writes from the Nevada desert where he works hard every day to prove his high school guidance counselor had good instincts when he said “You’ll never be an astronaut.” He has a degree in political science which mostly served to dissuade him from a career in law while at the same time tormenting his wife with endless questions about how telephones work. When not writing, you can usually find him at the local wine store. He is the author of The Bitter Past.


It’s a fascinating discussion about the defense industry, radiation, building the bombs; timely topics right now. Check out the event.

Shari Lapena’s Bestseller, Everyone Here is Lying

The blurb in the Webstore is correct. Shari Lapena’s Everyone Here is Lying is “AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!” It appears at number ten on the bestseller list on Aug. 13.

Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, recently welcomed Lapena for a live event at the bookstore. There are signed copies of Everyone Here is Lying available in the Webstore. https://bit.ly/3YnbIYw

Here’s the description of Everyone Here is Lying.

AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!

Another thrilling domestic suspense novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Couple Next Door

“The most addictive book I’ve read in ages—so slick and disquieting and clever. Just brilliant.” —Lisa Jewell, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Family Remains

“Lapena is a master of manipulation.” —USA Today

Welcome to Stanhope. A safe neighborhood. A place for families.

William Wooler is a family man, on the surface. But he’s been having an affair, an affair that ended horribly this afternoon at a motel up the road. So when he returns to his house, devastated and angry, to find his difficult nine-year-old daughter, Avery, unexpectedly home from school, William loses his temper. 

Hours later, Avery’s family declares her missing. 

Suddenly Stanhope doesn’t feel so safe. And William isn’t the only one on his street who’s hiding a lie. As witnesses come forward with information that may or may not be true, Avery’s neighbors become increasingly unhinged. 

Who took Avery Wooler?

Nothing will prepare you for the truth.


Shari Lapena is the internationally bestselling author of the thrillers The Couple Next Door, A Stranger in the House, An Unwanted Guest, Someone We Know, The End of Her, Not a Happy Family, and Everyone Here Is Lying, which have all been New York Times and The Sunday Times (London) bestsellers. Her books have been sold in forty territories around the world. She lives on a farm outside of Toronto.


Imagine everything wrong that could happen, and then you’ll enjoy the conversation about Lapena’s writing.

Dame Denise Mina in Conversation

Barbara Peters and Patrick Millikin tag teamed to talk with Dame Denise Mina. Her new books are Three Fires and The Second Murderer. You can order them through the Webstore. https://tinyurl.com/2p835rvm

Denise Mina is the New York Times bestselling author of The End of the Wasp Season and Gods and Beasts. Her recent novel Conviction was chosen as a Reese Witherspoon Book Club Pick. Rizzio is her latest novel published by Pegasus Crime. She is a regular contributor on the subject of crime fiction for television and radio. Denise lives in Glasgow.


Here’s the summary of Three Fires.

From the award-winning master of crime fiction, Denise Mina re-imagines the “Bonfire of the Vanities,” a series of fires lit throughout Florence at the end of the fifteenth century—inspired by the fanatical Girolamo Savonarola.

Girolamo Savonarola was a Dominican friar living in Florence at the end of the fifteenth century. An anti-corruption campaigner, his hellfire preaching increasingly spilled over into tirades against all luxuries that tempted his followers toward sin. These sermons led to the infamous “Bonfire of the Vanities”—a series of fires lit throughout Florence for the incineration of everything from books, extravagant clothing, playing cards, musical instruments, make-up, and mirrors to paintings, tapestries, and sculptures.

Railing against the vice and avarice of the ruling Medici family, he was instrumental in their removal from power—and for a short time became the puritanical leader of the city. After turning his attention to corruption within the Catholic Church, he was first excommunicated and then executed by a combination of hanging and being burned at the stake.

Just as in Rizzio—her latest novel with Pegasus Crime—Denise Mina brings a modern take to this fascinating historical story, drawing parallels between the febrile atmosphere of medieval Florence and the culture wars of the present day. In dramatizing the life and last days of Savonarola, she explores the downfall of the original architect of cancel culture and, in the process, explores the never-ending tensions between wealth, inequality, and freedom of speech that so dominate our modern world.


Here’s the description of Mina’s The Second Murderer.

Philip Marlowe is on the hunt for a missing heiressand up against a rival PIin this smart and atmospheric authorized mystery from acclaimed crime writer and “one-of-a-kind storyteller” Denise Mina (James Patterson), the first woman to recreate Raymond Chandler’s infamous detective.

Has Philip Marlowe finally met his match?

It’s early fall when a heatwave descends on Los Angeles. Private Detective Philip Marlowe is called to the Montgomery estate, an almost mythic place sitting high on top of Beverly Hills. Wealthy socialite Chrissie Montgomery is missing. Young, naïve, and set to inherit an enormous fortune, she’s a walking target, ripe for someone to get their claws into. Her dying father and his sultry bottle-blonde girlfriend want her found before that happens. To make sure, they’ve got Anne Riordan—now head of her own all-female detective agency—on the case, too.

The search for Chrissie takes the two investigators from the Montgomery mansion to the roughest neighborhoods of LA, through dive bars and boarding houses and out to Skid Row. And that’s all before they find the body at The Brody Hotel. Who will get to Chrissie first? And what happens when a woman doesn’t want to be found?

In The Second Murderer, Denise Mina becomes the first woman to recreate Raymond Chandler’s infamous detective, delivering a clever and timely new take on Philip Marlowe, as well as a propulsive, dark, and witty mystery all its own.


Enjoy the conversation with Denise Mina.

David Joy & Those We Thought We Knew

Patrick Millikin from The Poisoned Pen recently welcomed David Joy for an event. The Webstore has signed copies of Joy’s new book, Those We Thought We Knew. https://bit.ly/3Kiscva

Here’s the summary of Those We Thought We Knew.

“A beautifully fearless contemplation.” –S. A. Cosby

From award-winning writer David Joy comes a searing new novel about the cracks that form in a small North Carolina community and the evils that unfurl from its center.

Toya Gardner, a young Black artist from Atlanta, has returned to her ancestral home in the North Carolina mountains to trace her family history and complete her graduate thesis. But when she encounters a still-standing Confederate monument in the heart of town, she sets her sights on something bigger.

Meanwhile, local deputies find a man sleeping in the back of a station wagon and believe him to be nothing more than some slack-jawed drifter. Yet a search of the man’s vehicle reveals that he is a high-ranking member of the Klan, and the uncovering of a notebook filled with local names threatens to turn the mountain on end.

After two horrific crimes split the county apart, every soul must wrestle with deep and unspoken secrets that stretch back for generations. Those We Thought We Knew is an urgent unraveling of the dark underbelly of a community. Richly drawn and bracingly honest, it asks what happens when the people you’ve always known turn out to be monsters, what do you do when everything you ever believed crumbles away.


David Joy is the author of When These Mountains Burn (winner of the 2020 Dashiell Hammett Award), The Line That Held Us (winner of the 2018 SIBA Book Prize), The Weight of This World, and Where All Light Tends to Go (Edgar finalist for Best First Novel). Joy lives in Tuckasegee, North Carolina.


You can tell Joy and Millikin like to talk together. Enjoy the conversation.

Michael Koryta & Spencer Quinn, in Person

Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, recently welcomed Michael Koryta and Spencer Quinn for a live event at the bookstore. Michael Koryta’s latest book is An Honest Man. Spencer Quinn kicks off a new series with Mrs. Plansky’s Revenge. There are signed copies of both books available in the Webstore. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Here’s the description of An Honest Man.

“Michael Koryta’s best book” (Stephen King) opens with a yacht full of bodies, a woman hiding from killers on a nearby island, and a man trying to prove his innocence and save his life—in a breathtaking thriller from the New York Times bestselling author of Those Who Wish Me Dead.Israel Pike was a killer, and he was an honest man. They were not mutually exclusive.

After discovering seven men murdered aboard their yacht – including two Senate rivals – Israel Pike is regarded as a prime suspect. A troubled man infamous on Salvation Point Island for killing his own father a decade before, Israel has few options, no friends, and a life-threatening secret.

Elsewhere on the island, 12-year-old Lyman Rankin seeks shelter from his alcoholic father in an abandoned house only to discover that he is not alone. A mysterious woman greets him with a hatchet and a promise: “Make a sound and I’ll kill you.”

As the investigation barrels forward, Lyman, Israel, and the fate of the case collide in immutable ways. Written with mounting suspense, stirring emotion, and deep understanding of character, Koryta continues to prove why David Baldacci has called him “an exceptionally gifted storyteller” and Michael Connelly has deemed him “one of the best of the best, plain and simple.”


Michael Koryta is the New York Times bestselling author of seventeen novels—including Those Who Wish Me Dead, which has been adapted into a film starring Angelina Jolie and directed by Taylor Sheridan. His previous novels were New York Times notable books, national bestsellers, and have won numerous awards, including the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Koryta is a former private investigator and newspaper reporter. He lives in Bloomington, Indiana, and Camden, Maine.


Here’s the summary of Spencer Quinn’s Mrs. Plansky’s Revenge.

Mrs. Plansky’s Revenge is bestselling author Spencer Quinn’s first novel in a new series since the meteoric launch of Chet and Bernie–introducing the irresistible and unforgettable Mrs. Plansky, in a story perfect for book clubs and commercial fiction readers.

Mrs. Loretta Plansky, a recent widow in her seventies, is settling into retirement in Florida while dealing with her 98-year-old father and fielding requests for money from her beloved children and grandchildren. Thankfully, her new hip hasn’t changed her killer tennis game one bit.

One night Mrs. Plansky is startled awake by a phone call from a voice claiming to be her grandson Will, who desperately needs ten thousand dollars to get out of a jam. Of course, Loretta obliges—after all, what are grandmothers for, even grandmothers who still haven’t gotten a simple “thank you” for a gift sent weeks ago. Not that she’s counting.

By morning, Mrs. Plansky has lost everything. Law enforcement announces that Loretta’s life savings have vanished, and that it’s hopeless to find the scammers behind the heist. First humiliated, then furious, Loretta Plansky refuses to be just another victim.

In a courageous bid for justice, Mrs. Plansky follows her only clue on a whirlwind adventure to a small village in Romania to get her money and her dignity back—and perhaps find a new lease on life, too.


Spencer Quinn is the pen name for Peter Abrahams, the Edgar-winning, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of the Chet and Bernie mystery series, as well as the #1 New York Times bestselling Bowser and Birdie series for middle-grade readers. He lives on Cape Cod with his wife Diana and with his dogs Pearl and Dottie.


Enjoy the conversation and the laughter.

Kicking Off August

It’s hard to believe it’s almost August. The Poisoned Pen has a full slate of authors appearing, either in person, or virtually. Check the schedule, and then check the Webstore for their books. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Denise Mina
Catherine Ryan Howard
Shari Lapena
Jacqueline Carey /Diana Gabaldon
Bruce Borgos

Robert J. Lloyd & The Poison Machine

Michael Barson recently interviewed Robert J. Lloyd, author of The Poison Machine, for http://Bookreporter.com. Once you read the interview, you might be interested in ordering the book through the Webstore, https://bit.ly/3YdH8jR.

Here’s the interview, used with permission from Barson.

Newly released in paperback, THE POISON MACHINE is the thrilling sequel to Robert J. Lloyd’s THE BLOODLESS BOY, which was a New York Times Best New Historical Novel of 2021. This time, early scientists Harry Hunt and Robert Hooke of the Royal Society stumble on a plot to kill the Queen of England. In this interview conducted by Michael Barson, Senior Publicity Executive at Melville House, Lloyd explains how his approach to historical research changed between books one and two, gives us his thoughts on reading reviews of his work, and previews the next two entries in the Hunt & Hooke series — the third installment of which will release in the spring of 2024.

Question: When you wrote THE POISON MACHINE, you expanded upon the 17th-century universe of protagonists Harry Hunt and Robert Hooke that you created in your first novel, THE BLOODLESS BOY. Now both England and France share the stage as major settings for the action. What might a third country of interest be for you to utilize during that same Restoration period?

Robert J. Lloyd: The third book in the series — THE BEDLAM CADAVER — is very London-bound, perhaps as a reaction to all that research I had to do for 17th-century Paris! I’m still at the planning stage for book four, but I intend to take Harry to Amsterdam. (So, to answer your question properly, the Dutch Republic.) That way, he gets to meet two contemporaries who were correspondents with, as well as rivals to, Robert Hooke. These are Antony van Leeuwenhoek and Christiaan Huygens, microscopist and astronomer respectively. (Hooke was both.) I’d also like an appearance from Baruch Spinoza, who wasn’t well known in his own lifetime, but who influenced philosophy greatly later on. (Harry’s views, strangely enough, often coincide with Spinoza’s.)

Q: The historical research that has gone into these novels is impressive. For THE POISON MACHINE, did you have to alter course at any point in the story because you realized you had been operating on a faulty assumption about 17th-century life in England and France?

RJL: I didn’t really, because I allowed myself more freedom when planning and writing THE POISON MACHINE than with THE BLOODLESS BOY. I embraced the “fiction” part of historical fiction far more and was less pedantic about historical accuracy, especially in the science, or “new philosophy.” Hooke’s diary and Philosophical Transactions are full of tantalizing glimpses of experiments that were suggested at the time, either by Hooke or by another of the Royal Society Fellows, or performed once and never developed. So it’s possible, I think, to posit Harry as being ahead of the historical record as far as his experimental trials, or the villain with his development of a poison based on hydrogen cyanide, which is usually stated to have been discovered 70 or so years later.

Q: Can you name a few of the novels you’ve read featuring the scientific knowledge of the Restoration period that may have inspired you to utilize that background when you began writing historical fiction?

RJL: When I started, I think the only two authors who used Restoration science in their plots were Neal Stephenson (with his Baroque Cycle) and Iain Pears (with his AN INSTANCE OF THE FINGERPOST). But there were other books that inspired me to write historical fiction more. Anything by Barry Unsworth, who I think is the master, and particularly Lawrence Norfolk’s LEMPRIÈRE’S DICTIONARY, which is the book I finished reading and said, “I want to write one of these.”

Q: THE POISON MACHINE and your first book, THE BLOODLESS BOY, have received a wealth of positive reviews from both sides of the Atlantic. Are you the kind of author who gets nervous anticipating a new book’s reviews? Or do you make an effort to simply ignore them?

RJL: When the first reviews came in, I was very thin-skinned and took to heart every criticism, whether constructively meant or not. Then I realized that the reviews were contradictory. Some people loved the level of detail in the books; others thought it slowed down the plots too much. Some found the plots rich and rewarding; others found them confusing. Some found them slow burners; others said they were immediately gripped. Some found the characters dull; others were enthralled by them. Some hate the 17th-century dialogue and terms I use; others love them. So I began to relax about reviews. It’s great when someone enjoys the stories I write, and it’s a shame if they don’t get on with them. But I’ve created a particular world that pleases me, and that has to be my main guide.

Q: The Hunt & Hooke series now will move on to the third book, THE BEDLAM CADAVER, which will appear in the spring of 2024. Do you intend to keep the series continuing indefinitely? Or would you like your writing to move in a different direction sometime in the near future?

RJL: I’m lucky that the 1680s was a particularly busy time, so there are loads of events that can impact Harry Hunt and Robert Hooke and with which they can involve themselves. Whether willingly or unwillingly. I’m still very attracted to my two main characters and certainly not tired of them yet. As Harry is a young man, his character — an old-fashioned word, I know — changes the most. Hooke is a bit more set in his ways. I also like the way their relationship changes over time. There’s a big shock, relationship-wise, in THE BEDLAM CADAVER!

One thread I need to resolve, which has run through all three books in the series, is the Popish Plot and what happens to the two perjurers, Titus Oates and Israel Tonge. That’s for book four, I think.


Check out the description of The Poison Machine.

“Lloyd once again infuses his world with the sights, sounds, and smells of the late 17th century…for what’s bound to be one of the best historical novels of the year.” — CrimeReads

In a thrilling sequel to The Bloodless Boy —a New York Times Best New Historical Novel of 2021 — combining the color and adventure of Alexandre Dumas and the thrills of Frederick Forsyth — early scientists Harry Hunt and Robert Hooke of the Royal Society stumble on a plot to kill the Queen of England . . .

London, 1679 — A year has passed since the sensational attempt to murder King Charles II, but London is still a viper’s nest of rumored Catholic conspiracies, and of plots against them in turn. When Harry Hunt — estranged from his mentor Robert Hooke — is summoned to the remote and windswept marshes of Norfolk, he is at first relieved to get away from the place.

But in Norfolk, he finds that some Royal workers shoring up a riverbank have made a grim discovery — the skeleton of a dwarf. Harry is able to confirm that the skeleton is that of Captain Jeffrey Hudson, a prominent member of the court once famously given to the Queen in a pie. Except no one knew Hudson was dead, because another man had been impersonating him.

The hunt for the impersonator, clearly working as a spy, will take Harry to Paris, another city bedeviled by conspiracies and intrigues, and back, with encounters along the way with a flying man and a cross-dressing swordswoman — and to the uncovering of a plot to kill the Queen and all the Catholic members of her court. But where? When?

The Poison Machine is a nail-biting and brilliantly imagined historical thriller that will delight readers of its critically acclaimed predecessor, The Bloodless Boy.


Robert Lloyd, the son of parents who worked in British Foreign Office, grew up in South London, Innsbruck, and Kinshasa. He studied for a Fine Art degree, starting as a landscape painter, but while studying for MA degree in The History of Ideas that he first read Robert Hooke’s diary, detailing the life and experiments of this extraordinary man. After a 20-year career as a secondary school teacher, he has returned to painting and writing. Author of The Bloodless Boy, which was selected by Publishers Weekly as a Mystery Book of the Year and The New York Times as a Best New Historical Novel of 2021.