Hot Book of the Week – Death of an Eye

Dana Stabenow kicks off a new mystery series with Death of an Eye, the current Hot Book of the Week at The Poisoned Pen. She will also appear at the bookstore, this afternoon, Saturday, Dec. 8 at 2 PM, joining Laurie R. King and Leslie Klinger who will sign For the Sake of the Game. Signed copies of the books by all of the authors are available through the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Here’s the summary of Death of an Eye.

Alexandria, 47BCE: Cleopatra shares the throne with her brother Ptolemy under the auspices of Julius Caesar, by whom Cleopatra is heavily pregnant with child. A shipment of new coin meant to reset the shaky Egyptian economy has been stolen, the Queen’s Eye has been murdered and Queen Cleopatra turns to childhood friend Tetisheri to find the missing shipment and bring the murderer to justice.

Angela Crider Neary’s Favorite Holiday Reading – Part 2

Yesterday, I introduced author Angela Crider Neary with holiday selections that were a tribute to her father, Bill Crider. Today, Neary has another recommendation to make. Thank you, Angela, for writing two posts.

*****

Rhys Bowen’s The Twelve Clues of Christmas

One of my favorite cozy mystery series is Rhys Bowen’s Royal Spyness series.  The heroine of these books, Lady Georgiana Rannoch (Georgie), comes from royal lineage and is thirty-fourth in line for the throne, but when her brother cuts off her allowance, she is forced to make ends meet by taking unskilled jobs like working at a cosmetics counter, housekeeping, or even spying for the Queen.  To the chagrin of her family, she prefers this manner of supporting herself rather than marrying someone she doesn’t love for money.  Georgie always makes the most of her situation without complaint and with a relatable, modern, and down-to-earth attitude.  When the Christmas installment in the series, The Twelve Clues of Christmas, was released, I was eager to soak in the mystery, along with the holiday vibe.


For Christmas, Georgie abandons the thought of spending the holiday with her brother and sister-in-law at their drab and freezing family castle in Scotland, and escapes to a quaint Dickensian village where she has found a position as hostess at an upper-class house party.  Georgie begins the holiday enjoying traditional Christmas customs, as well as festive food and drink, but soon, mysterious accidents begin to happen.  With a death occurring each day in tandem with the twelve days of Christmas, the party guests begin to get nervous, and Georgie wonders if the deaths are simply tragic accidents, or something more sinister.

 
My favorite part about the story is that it surrounds you in an atmosphere of cozy old-fashioned English Christmas cheer wrapped in a blanket of twinkling snow, notwithstanding the eerie specter of murder lurking around each corner.  Appearances from Georgie’s libidinous mother, her ex-policeman grandfather, and her true love, Darcy, make the story all the more merry.  Complete with a country house setting and quirky characters, this Agatha Christie-esque whodunit is a perfect mood-setter for the holidays. 

*****

Are you still looking for a gift for someone? There are signed copies of Rhys Bowen’s The Twelve Clues of Christmas, as well as some of her other books, available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2LV4U1i

The book also includes an English Christmas companion, full of holiday recipes, games, and more!

Angela Crider Neary’s Favorite Holiday Reading – Part 1

Angela Crider Neary is an attorney by day and cat detective writer by night. She is an avid mystery reader and especially enjoys reading novels set in interesting locales. She was inspired to write her first mystery novella, LI’L TOM AND THE PUSSYFOOT DETECTIVE BUREAU: THE CASE OF THE PARROTS DESAPARECIDOS, by one of her favorite areas in San Francisco, Telegraph Hill. Angela’s books can be ordered through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2SpJrgC

Today is the first of two postings featuring Angela Crider Neary’s selections. As I mentioned earlier, two years ago, Bill Crider was the first author to volunteer to write a post about his favorite Christmas book. Angela wrote one post as a tribute to her late father. Although his holiday books are not available through the Web Store, many of his other books are. https://bit.ly/2Qwx9FZ   I thought this was a perfect post to honor Bill Crider. Thank you, Angela.

*****

Bill Crider’s Christmas Sherlock Holmes short stories –


Lesa had perfect timing when she invited the submission of summaries of favorite Christmas stories, as I had just finished re-reading two of my father, Bill Crider’s, Christmas Sherlock Holmes stories.  I always love reading Dad’s works because I can see signs of him in his writing – the little nuggets revealing his interests and personality.  I can often envision him reading the story to me, himself, although the Holmes stories are not written in his typical Texas voice.

 
“The Adventure of the Christmas Ghosts” originally appeared in Holmes for the Holidays, and “The Adventure of the Christmas Bear” appeared in More Holmes for the Holidays.  They were both reprinted in a collection of short stories by Bill Crider, Eight Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.  


“The Adventure of the Christmas Ghosts”


It’s December 22nd and the halls of 221B Baker Street have not been decked due to Sherlock Holmes’s lack of holiday sentimentality. When Franklin Scrooge, the great nephew of Ebeneezer, arrives, Holmes immediately deduces that Scrooge had been losing sleep. It seems that Scrooge has been having problems, similar to those of his great uncle, with ghosts.  Could it be that Scrooge’s visions arise from something he ate, or will the logic-minded Holmes find himself confronting a question he would, in normal circumstances, perfunctorily dismiss, “Do you believe in ghosts?” 


“The Adventure of the Christmas Bear”


Sherlock Holmes finds himself grumpy and bored with the Christmas season, as it hasn’t offered him a chance to exercise his intellect. This affliction is soon cured, however, when Oscar Wilde shows up at 221B Baker Street.  Holmes becomes more cheerful upon Wilde’s revelation that he believes someone is trying to kill him. After the two debate whether truth lies strictly in the facts or whether truth can remain beyond the reach of facts, Wilde tells Holmes of his prior visions of bears and that they have often been a prelude to violence against him. Wilde has recently seen someone who looks like a bear and who has made an attempt on his life. Holmes sets out to solve a case involving an American Buffalo hunter, a Wild West show, a Christmas play, and, of course, bears, set against the icy backdrop of a London Christmas.  But will the answer lie in art or facts?  


I was impressed by Dad’s ability to mimic the tone of the Sherlock Holmes stories, and I liked how he weaved the historical characters of Oscar Wilde and Buffalo Bill into “Christmas Bear.”  I later found myself reading up on Wilde and Bill, since reading fiction for me often leads to a history lesson.  In “Christmas Ghosts,” I enjoyed how Dad incorporated the Dickens characters into the story with an interesting spin on what really might have caused Ebenezer’s rehabilitation.  I may just have to re-read A Christmas Carol this year.  I will be making Dad’s Christmas Holmes stories a part of my annual holiday reading tradition.

*****

Bill Crider

Ridley Pearson’s New Project

What’s Ridley Pearson up to nowadays? According to Shelf Awareness, he’s written a new graphic novel in the Super Sons series, directed at middle school readers. https://www.shelf-awareness.com/dedicatedshelf/2018-12-03/ridley_pearson:_super_sons:_the_polarshield_project.html

Here’s the description of Ridley Pearson’s Super Sons: The Polarshield Project.

The polar ice caps have nearly melted away, causing devastation to coastal cities. Erratic, deadly weather forces everyone inland, tearing families apart. Earth is facing its greatest crisis–and Superman and Batman are nowhere to be found.

Jon Kent and Damian “Ian” Wayne are opposite in every way except one–they are the sons of the World’s Greatest Heroes! To uncover a global conspiracy, this unlikely dynamic duo will need to learn to trust each other and work together to save the Earth. But who is the mysterious Candace, and what secrets does she hold that could be the key to everything?

From New York Times best-selling author Ridley Pearson (Kingdom Keepers) and artist Ile Gonzalez comes the first book in an epic new series that follows the Super Sons of Superman and Batman as they struggle to find their place in a rapidly changing world!

*****

You can pre-order Super Sons: The Polarshield Project, or order Ridley Pearson’s other books through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2KSrrsG

Val McDermid’s Broken Ground

Richard Lipez recently reviewed Val McDermid’s fifth Karen Pirie cold case mystery, Broken Ground. The article in The Washington Post provided some background for the series and McDermid’s writing. The review itself is an excellent way to discover this series if you haven’t yet read it. https://wapo.st/2QbN6SI

Of course, The Poisoned Pen carries Broken Ground and McDermid’s other works. You can order them through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2TZmoe2

Here’s the description of Broken Ground.

Internationally bestselling author Val McDermid is one of our finest crime writers, and her gripping, masterfully plotted novels have garnered millions of readers from around the globe. InBroken Ground, cold case detective Karen Pirie faces her hardest challenge yet.

Six feet under in a Highland peat bog lies Alice Somerville’s inheritance, buried by her grandfather at the end of World War II. But when Alice finally uncovers it, she finds an unwanted surprise—a body with a bullet hole between the eyes. Meanwhile, DCI Pirie is called in to unravel a case where nothing is quite as it seems. And as she gets closer to the truth, it becomes clear that not everyone shares her desire for justice. Or even the idea of what justice is.

An engrossing, twisty thriller, Broken Ground reaffirms Val McDermid’s place as one of the best crime writers of her generation.

Patricia Smiley – In the Hot Seat

SmileyPatricia(web)

On Thursday, December 6th at 7 PM, Patricia Smiley and Matt Coyle will appear at The Poisoned Pen to discuss their latest books. Coyle will sign Wrong Light while Smiley will talk about and sign The Second Goodbye. Signed copies of their books are available through the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Patricia Smiley was kind enough to agree to sit “In the Hot Seat” and answer questions about her book and other subjects. Thank you, Patricia.

Patricia, would you introduce yourself to the blog readers?

I’m the author of four humorous mystery novels featuring a gutsy businesswoman named Tucker Sinclair, her quirky mother, and a group of interesting friends. After that series came to an end, I went in a totally different direction with a hard-boiled series about a gutsy female LAPD Homicide detective named Davie Richards, her quirky father, and a group of interesting friends. Is there a pattern developing here? Aside from writing, I have an MBA, organize my T-shirts by color, hate to vacuum but I’ll Hoover the cat hair off the furniture if I know you’re stopping by. I’m a loyal friend, an animal lover, a chronic volunteerer, a native Washingtonian who’s lived in Los Angeles for so long I almost feel like I belong. I write about L.A. because at the end of every freeway exit is another neighborhood and another writer’s story.

Please introduce us to Davie Richards.

Davie’s father Bear often says, “You can love the job but the job will never love you.” But Davie loves her job. She believes, as most homicide detectives do, that she alone stands in the shoes of the victim, protecting their interests above all others. She’s thirty-one, a petite redhead who over compensates for her diminutive size by striving for competence, including earning the LAPD’s highest shooting award, the Distinguished Expert Marksman and Sharpshooter medal called a DX. She’s a second-generation LAPD detective whose dream has always been to work homicide. She has a tight-knit circle of friends and a long list of nicknames. Her partner calls her Green-eyed Ninja. Her father calls her Ace. Her grandmother just calls her Sweetie.

Tell us about The Second Goodbye, without spoilers.

Second Goodbye-2

As avid crime-fiction readers know, good detectives never assume anything. As Davie investigates an old unsolved gang murder, her boss hands her a file to work in her spare time—an old suicide case in a gun store that he’s always found suspicious but has never had time to pursue. As Davie juggles both cases, her search for justice takes her from the mean streets of L.A. to the crystal blue waters of the British Virgin Islands. The Second Goodbye is a story about love and betrayal, friendship, and one detective’s dogged pursuit of the truth no matter where it leads or at what the personal cost.

When I started plotting this novel, many desperate ideas ricocheted around in my head. My first decision was to bring back Jon Striker, a character I’d introduced in Outside the Wire, the second book in the Pacific Homicide series. Secondly, I’ve always been fascinated by money laundering. The basics weren’t hard to grasp, but the details seemed unfathomable, which is why crooks like it so much. Then, at Bouchercon in New Orleans I met a cop who suggested I research suicides in gun stores for plot ideas. In the midst of all that, I went on a sailing trip in the British Virgin Islands and joked with my friends that I’d use the trip as a tax write off. Once I learned the BVIs were a haven for money launderers, the plot was off and running.

I was going to ask how you researched the police for the Davie Richards series, and then learned of your experiences with the LAPD. How have you taken advantage of that experience?

When I was writing my first novel in the Tucker Sinclair series I needed to write a scene in a police station, but I had no idea how to do that because I’d never been in a police station. At a Neighborhood Watch meeting I learned about the LAPD’s volunteer program. I applied and that began a 15 year stint as a volunteer and later a Specialist Reserve Officer, working in Community Relations, with detectives at the LAX substation, and finally in the Pacific Area detective squad room where I was trained as a burglary and theft investigator. My close proximity to members of law enforcement, as well as listening to stories and cop patois, gave me a unique perspective—an outsider working from the inside. Those years were about the most fun I’ve ever had.

I know everyone’s publishing journey is different. Tell us about your experience.

Let’s just say it was a long and bumpy road that was survivable only because I have a sense of humor. My first agent had just started to send my book to publishers when 9-11 happened. Two weeks later, amidst the massive uncertainty in the country, she called to tell me she had quit her job and was leaving New York. I eventually got another agent who sold my book. Then I waited for what seemed like at eternity for the editorial letter, only to discover that my new editor had left the job without telling me. My second editor died while reviewing my manuscript, ushering in my third editor. The book was finally published but only after two and a half years of uncertainty. There’s more, but it may end up as fodder for my next novel so—no spoilers.

What’s the most memorable experience you’ve had involving the mystery community?

There are countless memorable experiences but the most consequential and heartwarming are due to established authors who gave me a leg up when they didn’t have to. I will always give a special nod of gratitude to Elizabeth George who began as my teacher and mentor and along the way became my friend.

Would you tell us about your next book?

Not sure. Stay tuned.

A personal question. If visitors come, where do you like to take them in L.A.?

Sailing (because…dolphins), Santa Monica pier and 3rd Street Promenade (a peek at SoCal life), Venice Beach (the chainsaw juggler and other wacky stuff), The Getty Museum (a city bus takes you there for 35 cents), my favorite Mexican restaurant (hand-made margaritas!), Malibu (because I love it so much), Hollywood (but only for the brave) and of course my house (to oooh and ahhh over my cats).

What books are on your TBR (To Be Read) pile?

My TBR pile is stacked to the ceiling. I buy a lot of books but when I’m writing I rarely read fiction. And since it seems like I’ve been writing nonstop forever, I’m way behind. I did recently finish Lost Luggage by Wendall Thomas (well written and hilarious), and the ARC of Matt Coyle’s upcoming book Wrong Light (evocative and suspenseful). At the moment I’m deep into Less by Andrew Sean Greer (a literary novel that is engaging and beautifully written). Next on my TBA pile is The Force by Don Winslow.

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

Far too many talented authors fit into this category. It’s one of the sad realities of the publishing business. If I could summon a genie by rubbing a magic lamp, I’d use all my wishes to change that.

Thank you, Patricia. Patricia Smiley’s website is https://patriciasmiley.com/. Check it out!

Jeffrey Siger, Lawyer Turned Author

2018 is ending on a high note for Poisoned Pen Press author Jeffrey Siger. Within one week, his latest Andreas Kaldis mystery, An Aegean April, was named one of the top crime novels of the year by Library Journal, and he was profiled in an article in Greek City Times. Gina Mamouzelos’ article is entitled, “The Great Man Behind Greece’s Crime Mysteries”. https://bit.ly/2PdNZ7L

Mamouzelos’ article provides fascinating background and a profile. After you read it, you might want to order Siger’s books through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2KOiKQ6

Intrigued? Some of the books are available as signed copies, including the most recent book in the series, An Aegean April.

Here’s the description of An Aegean April.

The beautiful Greek island of Lesvos, birthplace of the poet Sappho, and for centuries an agrarian paradise famed for anise-flavored ouzo and tasty sardines, sees its serenity turn into chaos as the world watches boatloads of refugees daily flee onto its shores from Turkey across the narrow Mytilini Strait. 

Mihalis Volandes is one of Lesvos’ elite, the patriarch of a storied shipping clan. He’s weathered many changes in his long life, and when a government policy accelerates the surge of refugees onto his island, he rises to prominence in relief efforts he sees as growing increasingly ineffectual. 

One evening, after working to stir up support for his breakthrough plan to strike at the heart of the lucrative refugee trafficking trade, he returns to his mansion in darkness – only to fall victim in his own garden to a swishing sword. 

A refugee-turned-local-aid-worker is found at the scene, splattered with Volandes’ blood, and swiftly arrested by island police. Case closed – or would be, if young Ali Sera were not working with SafePassage, an NGO (non-government organization), headed on Lesvos by American Dana McLaughlin. McLaughlin is having none of Ali’s arrest. Within hours the phone rings in the Athens office of Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis, and she’s requesting that Kaldis take over the investigation. 

Volandes was a prominent citizen and the crime particularly gruesome. Could it be terrorism or something else? But whether Ali is guilty or framed, Andreas can’t ignore a powerful motive for the murder. Volandes’ daring plan, if implemented, would soon shut down the cash-generating refugee-trafficking pipeline between Turkey and Lesvos. 

And so, we’re off on a nail-biting ride with Kaldis and his team through Byzantine island politics, deteriorating diplomatic relations, and a world on fire with intrigues and more brutal deaths. 

This ninth Andreas Kaldis thriller once again links modern Greece to its ancient past, the powerful grip of myths upon its people, and cutting edge issues of societal change affecting our world at large.

Lee Child’s Jack Reacher Mash-Up (Fake)

Oh, but it’s too good not to share. Maybe you can’t get the fake books Lee Child mentions in the video, but you can always buy the actual Jack Reacher books through the Web Store. There are still signed copies of Past Tense available, if you’re thinking of a gift for someone, or even yourself. https://bit.ly/2z4duCD

If you’re a fan of Lee Child’s Jack Reacher, you will want to watch the short video.

Lori Rader-Day’s Favorite Holiday Book

A couple years ago, I asked authors to write a post about their favorite Christmas mystery. This year, I asked them to tell us about their favorite holiday book. Lori Rader-Day, Mary Higgins Clark Award-winning author of Under a Dark Sky is sharing one of my all-time favorite books. Thank you, Lori.

There are holiday books with holidays in them—and then there are books that call you away from the Yule even though they have few holiday tidings within. I’m fond of a few of the first kind (“A Christmas Memory” byTruman Capote comes to mind), but my favorite is the latter, the books that warm without actual holiday plot lines, that inspire the activities of the holidays—blanket fort, hot tea—but don’t necessarily have, you know, elves in them.

            The book I re-read almost every year around this time is 84, Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff. No elves.

            I’ll warn you: this is sad book. If you don’t like sad, please don’t read this and then @me on Twitter about how I ruined Christmas. Christmas has a minor role in the book, as does Easter, stories from mythology and the classics, women’s hosiery,and powdered eggs.  Foremost, though, this short epistolary nonfiction book is about bookselling and reading, about friendships and distance, and about writing. The collection of letters(remember letters?) shows the development of a friendship between Hanff, an acerbic writer in New York, and a solicitous bookseller in London, and the ways their relationship creates a community during hard times.

            The real question may be…why do I love this rather non-holiday book around the holidays? Is it because it’s short and maybe I’m trying to get one last read in before the end of the year? Don’t judge. Beyond that, though, this book is about kindness and connection, and isn’t that what the holidays are really about? Or should be?

*****

Thank you, Lori. Helene Hanff’s 84, Charing Cross Road is available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2Q2P2MX

Lori Rader-Day’s award-winning books are also available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2Pa2pFO