Nick Petrie’s Favorites of 2017

Nick Petrie

“Lots of characters get compared to my own Jack Reacher, but Petrie’s Peter Ash is the real deal…The writing is terse and tense, full of wisdom and insight, and the plot is irresistible.” — Lee Child, New York Times-bestselling author of Night School

When you read that quote, you understand why Nick Petrie made the selections he did for his favorite crime novels read in 2017. They’re all hard-hitting novels.

Nick Petrie received his MFA in fiction from the University of Washington and won a Hopwood Award for short fiction while an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. His first novel, The Drifter, was nominated for the Edgar and the Hammett Prize for Best Novel., and won the International Thriller Writer (ITW) and Barry awards for Best First Novel. Petrie’s third novel in the Peter Ash series, Light It Up, is scheduled for release on January 16. His web site is https://nickpetrie.com/

Light It Up

You can meet Nick Petrie at The Poisoned Pen on Monday, January 15 at 7 PM, and he can sign your copies of Light It Up and other Peter Ash novels. Hank Phillippi Ryan will host the program, and Petrie will be joined by Andrew Grant. If you can’t be at The Poisoned Pen that night, you can order copies of Petrie’s books through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2ktYXtr

Now, are you curious as to what books Petrie selected as his favorite crime novels read in 2017? If any of his choices interest you, you can order them through the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Thank you, Nick.

*****

I can’t possibly write about the three best books I read in 2017, because there are so many good ones to choose from.  Instead I’ll share three books that have really stuck with me this year.
Where It Hurts, by Reed Farrel Coleman, really stands out. Gus Murphy, the novel’s protagonist, is an ex-cop turned night-shift hotel limo-driver, a walking bruise who can’t stop poking at the wreckage of his life and family.  The character’s inner pain is so deep, it takes everything he can muster to make it through the day. This has the potential for a grim read, but in Coleman’s hands, Gus Murphy is vividly self-aware and darkly funny ““ a sad, wonderful, damaged hero.  The rest of his characters, even the most minor, are just as beautifully rendered.  

Where It Hurts

It’s also a book you don’t want to put down.  Without seeming to hurry, Where it Hurts clips right along.  I won’t give away details ““ the book is too lovely to spoil ““ but the twists and turns are only matched by the lyrical, tough-guy prose. Coleman started out as a poet, and his attention to language is exquisite.

I also love writers who use setting as a character. This book paints a living picture of Long Island, but not the Long Island of the high-dollar Hamptons. This is hungry, desperate, working-class Long Island, with fading businesses and small-time mobsters. I’ve never been there, but after reading this novel, I feel like I could give a bus tour of the place.

The best news is that Where It Hurts has a sequel, What You Break, and Coleman also has a deep backlist with multiple series to dive into.  

I opened Danny Gardner’s debut novel, A Negro and an Ofay, after a long night at a writer’s conference. I intended only to read a few paragraphs, then get some shuteye before an early-morning author panel. Instead I stayed up until two a.m., captured by the cadence of Gardner’s dialog and the world he was building in my head.

Negro and an Ofay

A Negro and an Ofay is set in Chicago in 1952. Elliot Caprice is a mixed-race disgraced Chicago cop, on the run from his former co-workers. He returns home to find the uncle who raised him sick in a flophouse and the family farm in foreclosure. To make things right, Elliot takes a job as a process server, and soon finds himself caught between the Chicago police, a wealthy North Shore family, and the Syndicate.

Gardner’s hero is similarly stuck between white and black Chicago ““ as the title makes clear, this story is all about race in America, with a front-row seat to life as a black man in the era of Jim Crow and red-lining. The book is not a polemic, but a fast-moving hard-boiled detective story, often hilarious and quite moving. Gardner’s characters are delightfully human even as he plays games with stereotypes.  Elliot Caprice is a complex, thoughtful hero with plenty of attitude, a charming and clear-eyed guide to his world.  

Gardner’s voice in this book, especially the dialogue, is a real treat.  He writes with an unapologetically chewy dialect, but it works strongly in the novel’s favor, because that voice immerses the reader in a time and place and culture that is rarely seen. And once you’ve fallen into that world, the language seems utterly natural.  

Although Gardner is anything but heavy-handed, his historical perspective on race can’t help but cast further light on our own times.

When I ask other crime writers about books they love, Winter’s Bone, by Daniel Woodrell, comes up again and again. When I first read it several years ago, I sucked it down in a single sitting.  When I read it again this year, I made myself portion it out slowly, to savor every bit.

Winter's Bone

Sixteen-year-old Ree Dolly is desperately poor in the Ozarks, responsible for her two younger siblings and her crazy mother. Her father, arrested for cooking crank, has put the family house up for his bond, then vanished. Ree must find her father ““ or proof of his death ““ to keep the bondsman from taking the family home. Her path leads directly to her extended family, criminals all.  

Ree Dolly is a wonderful heroine, at once tough and vulnerable, resourceful and desperate to salvage some kind of life for those under her care. The members of Ree’s extended family, in all their violence and dysfunction and weirdness, are instantly recognizable.  The winter Ozarks setting is so evocative that you feel the cold wind even when reading on a hot August day.  

Woodrell’s language, however, is what truly sets this book apart. At first it’s almost startling, because Woodrell does so much with so little, and in such unexpected ways. But you quickly tune into his wavelength and fall inside this gorgeous, harrowing tale.

Because of that beauty and heartbreak, Winter’s Bone is a book I will read again and again.

*****

Nick Petrie’s selections, and his own books, can be found in the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Dean James’ Favorites of 2017

James, Darryl Dean-web

Dean James. Jimmie Ruth Evans. Honor Hartman. Miranda James. Librarian. Author. These are all names and titles for Dean James, librarian turned mystery author. The seventh-generation Mississippian spent over thirty years in Texas before returning home. In the meantime, he wrote reference books, winning an Agatha Award for the nonfiction book, By a Woman’s Hand: Guide to Mystery Fiction by Women. That book was co-written with another librarian, Jean Swanson. He also turned to a life of crime, writing mysteries. Under the name Miranda James, he currently writes the popular Cat in the Stacks mysteries, featuring librarian Charlie Harris and his Maine Coon cat, Diesel. There’s also a spin-off of that series, the Southern Ladies series. The forthcoming Cat in the Stacks mystery, Claws for Concern, will be out in February. However, you can order it, and other mysteries by Dean ( Miranda) James through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2jcedd5

Claws for concern

Dean is another one of the authors who said yes immediately when I asked him to write about his three favorite crime novels read in 2017. Thank you, Dean.

*****

The Shadow District by Arnaldur Indridason

Shadow District

Already known for his award-winning Erlendur series, Indridason starts a new series with this terrific thriller. The dual timeline — Iceland in the present and during World War II ““ is deftly handled by a master storyteller. Nordic crime doesn’t come any better.
This Side of Murder by Anna Lee Huber

This Side of Murder

In the England of 1919 Verity Kent is grieving the death of her husband Sidney during the war, and the last thing she expects is accusations that he committed treason. Lured to an isolated island for an engagement, Verity delves into the murky past of her husband’s fellow officers, looking for the truth about Sidney. Verity’s own past during the war plays a factor in this suspenseful whodunit.
Murder is Bad Manners by Robin Stevens

Bad Manners

The target age of this series is ten and up, but readers with fond memories of Nancy Drew and other juvenile detectives will find much to enjoy and share with the young readers in the family. When Hazel Wong and Daisy Wells find the dead body of Miss Bell, the science teacher, they decide to solve the crime themselves. Set in the 1930s in an English boarding school, this is the first in a delightful series.

*****

Thank you for sharing these suggestions, Dean. Interested readers should check out the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Terry Shames’ Favorites of 2017

Terry Shames

It was perfect timing to ask Terry Shames to share the crime novels she enjoyed reading in 2017. The Macavity Award-winning author of A Killing at Cotton Hill, and other Samuel Craddock mysteries, has a new book in the series coming out in January. If you haven’t yet met Craddock, the chief of police in a small town, Jarrett Creek, in central Texas, start at the beginning of the series, or start with the new book, A Reckoning in the Back Country. Terry’s books are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2yTHiQ6

A Reckoning

Check out Terry Shames’ website at https://www.terryshames.com/

If her choices appeal to you, check the Web Store for copies. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Thanks, Terry, for sharing your choices for favorite crime novels read in 2017.

*****

Last year I was clever enough to keep a list of all the books I read, with little comments and ratings. I was really happy at the end of the year, because it meant I could comment on my year’s favorites. But was I clever enough to do it two years in a row? Oh, heavens, no! Life intervened, and before I knew it, it was spring, and since I had already dropped the ball, I never picked it up again.

So when I promised Lesa I would talk about my three favorite mysteries of the year, I had to rely on my old friend memory. I figured that if a book was good enough for me to remember it, it deserved attention. So here are three books I really enjoyed.

I highly recommend Timothy Hallinan’s two wonderful series, the Junior Bender series and the Poke Raferty series. You can’t go wrong with either of them. But I want to talk about PULPED. It just plain dazzled me. It’s a standalone—sort of. It’s a leap of imagination based on a series he abandoned several years ago. And I do mean “leap of imagination.” It’s one of the most innovative books I’ve read in a long time. I almost hate to reveal the premise because it was so much fun to read and slowly began to realize what was happening.

Pulped

In real life back in the 90’s Hallinan wrote six books featuring a slacker detective named Simeon Grist. The series was discontinued, but in Pulped, Grist still lives in some fictional Neverland. The story recounts a tale of Grist coming to terms with the fact that he isn’t real—but somehow in the story he finds a crime he needs to solve, and falls in love with a real person. I’m not sure anyone but Tim Hallinan could have pulled this off. It’s by turns hilarious, moving, astonishing, and quirky in the best sense of the word.

I read The Woman in Cabin 10 out of curiosity, because it was one of those books that people seemed either to love or to hate. As you can tell from the review of Pulped, I like a book that is innovative—and this book has a great plot. The main character, Lo Blacklock, is roped into one of the oddest situations imaginable—having to spy on people on a yacht via secret passages. And that’s just the beginning. Gradually she comes to realize…well, I won’t give away the plot. Suffice it to say that Agatha Christie would have been pleased to produce such a nifty plot. The action never lets up. For some readers Lo Blacklock was problematic. She’s a drunk, a whiner, and her own worst enemy. But I came to appreciate her because when she’s pushed into a corner, she has a gutsy side. Ware’s writing is supple and compelling, and the book kept me lunging forward. I truly could not put it down.

Cabin 10

The third book isn’t really a book—it’s a series by Rachel Howzell Hall. When I am on a panel at a conference, I always try to read at least one book by each panelist. That’s how I discovered Hall’s wonderful Detective Elouise Norton series. I picked up the third in the series, Skies of Ash at random, and as soon as I got home from the conference I bought the other three. I didn’t mind at all going back to the beginning of the series because the books are self-contained. A few words about  Skies of Ash as an example. It’s one of those “onion” books. The mystery looks smooth on the outside, but as Hall peels away layer after layer, the story becomes more complex. As the plot deepens there are no gratuitous coincidences or unexplained threads. I don’t know what I like best about Hall’s books. Her characters are spot on, so that I feel as if I know them, or someone like them. Her descriptions put me right into scenes. And her writing! She uses metaphors as if they slip onto the page with no effort. She doesn’t waste words, which for me is a high compliment indeed.

Thank you, Terry, for introducing us to Rachel Howzell Hall’s series, and your other choices.

Catriona McPherson’s Favorites of 2017

Catriona

Catriona McPherson may have been born in Edinburgh, Scotland, but once she moved to the United States in 2010, the American mystery community welcomed her with awards. She’s won the Agatha, Bruce Alexander and Macavity Awards for her Dandy Gilver mysteries. Several of her non-series books have won Anthony Awards. And, Lori Rader-Day selected McPherson’s House.Tree.Person. as one of her favorite crime novels read in 2017.

House. Tree.

You can find Catriona’s books in the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2BfzwCZ

And, you can find out more about McPherson and her books at her website. https://catrionamcpherson.com

Now, let’s see what crime novels were the highlights of Catriona McPherson’s reading year. Thank you, Catriona.

*****

When Lesa asked me to name three tippity-top crime-novel favourites of the year, I panicked.  Just three? Three? Out of a rough hundred? But actually there were three that sprang right into my mind as I was reading the email. Three books so memorable they were available to be thought of  – get this – before my first cup of coffee (when I barely remember my own name).

ERRANT BLOOD  by C.F. Peterson (Scotland Street Press).

Errant Blood

I’ve been raving about this book since the summer. I bought it as a duty-read, because I was going to be on a panel with Callum at Bloody Scotland. It blew me away. It’s set in rural Scotland (that’s why we were on the panel together) but there’s no tartan shortbread here. It’s bleak and nail-biting and absolutely satisfying. There’s the best death scene I’ve ever read too. But it’s not dispiriting or depressing.  It’s not cynical. There’s a beautiful line in it early on: “Cruelty is worse than death. Cruelty reveals the gentleness of death”. I agree.

SEVEN SUSPECTS by Renee James (Oceanview Press)

Seven Suspects

This is the third outing for Bobbi Logan but the book reads perfectly as a standalone. Bobbi is a transgender hairdresser who runs a salon business in Chicago, a mother hen to all her stylists and a goddess of vengeance to the transphobic killer who tried to ruin her life years ago. Here she’s battling a stalker, on a quest through those seven suspects, searching for justice and peace.  She’s one of my favourite fictional characters: raw, sweet, tough, vulnerable and ““ need I say? ““ laugh out loud funny

THE CROSSING PLACES by Elly Griffiths (Mariner Books)

Crossing Places

This one’s from 2009 but it’s the start of a series that’s still going. I never manage to start at book one of a series, so when I’m not beating myself up about failing to meet Dr Ruth Galloway, forensic archaeologist, until this year, I’m congratulating myself on my rare achievement. It helps to love Norfolk (the English one) because the landscape of the saltmarsh where Ruth lives and works is an enormous part of the joy of this novel, but Ruth’s character and the descriptions of her job are outstanding too. I spend a lot of time with university types and this book gets it right: the integrity and the in-fighting both. Also, there are cats.

*****

Well, that’s good enough for me – “there are cats”. Thank you, Catriona. Check for the recommendations in the Web Store. If you don’t find what you’re looking for, ask someone on the staff. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Michael Dirda & The British Library Crime Classics

In The Washington Post, Michael Dirda recommended books as presents. The article was “Michael Dirda’s Wondrous Holiday Book Recommendations”. https://wapo.st/2jZwTxF

And, I think Dirda must be as fond of mysteries as we all are. He started the recommendations with mysteries. He lists a few suggestions, but we’re happy to quote this sentence. “Of course, you can’t go wrong with any of the British Library Crime Classics (Poisoned Pen), most of them introduced by Martin Edwards, president of Britain’s Detection Club.”

Are you still looking for presents? Or, at this late date, how about presents for yourself? Search for “British Library Crime Classics” in the search box at the Web Store, or just use this link. https://bit.ly/2jZgfhP

As a teaser, here are just a couple of the titles in that collection, a couple seasonal ones.

Hot Book of the Week – La Posada’s Turquoise Room Cookbook by John Sharpe

La Posada

John Sharpe brings us a taste of the Southwest in the current Hot Book of the Week, La Posada’s Turquoise Room Cookbook. You can order a signed copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2CyojgS

Here’s the summary of the book.

LA POSADA and THE TURQUOISE ROOM RESTAURANT embody the spirit of the early Southwest that was almost lost through decades of neglect. John Sharpe’s revival of the dining experience at the hotel in 2000 demanded a daring vision. The success of that vision is apparent in the restaurant’s atmosphere – one where tradition and innovation are fused to create a unique menu and decor. This cookbook, filled with full-color photographs and more than seventy recipes, allows one to walk the halls of this historic hotel and hear echoes of those who passed before, as well as it allows home cooks to recreate the fabulous meals from Chef John’s masterpiece menu. Savor the innovative blending of flavors from a bygone era and the region. The spirit of La Posada and the Super Chief are still alive and celebrated in this book – always timeless. Including the history of the Fred Harvey Company, the hotel, the restaurant, and the train that made it all possible, this is more than a cookbook. It is a treasure that will offer cooking and reading pleasure for years to come.

*****

If you’d like a little more history of La Posada, check out the webpage. https://laposada.org/history/

Marc Cameron, Tom Clancy fan & author

Cameron

Marc Cameron recently appeared at The Poisoned Pen, along with Leo W. Banks and Matt Coyle. You can still watch the program on Livestream. https://livestream.com/poisonedpen/events/7956531

And, now there’s one more reason to watch it. Cameron’s novel, Tom Clancy: Power and Empire just appeared at number 7 on The New York Times Bestseller List.

Clancy

To top it off, Gregory Cowles wrote a piece for the newspaper, “A Tom Clancy Fan Continues Tom Clancy’s Series.” https://nyti.ms/2jwpW6W

Learn more about Cameron at his website, https://marccameronbooks.com/

You can order a signed copy of Tom Clancy: Power and Empire through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2jUhlLw

Here’s the summary of Marc Cameron’s bestselling novel.

A newly belligerent Chinese government leaves US President Jack Ryan with only a few desperate options in this continuation of the #1 New York Times bestselling Tom Clancy series.

Jack Ryan is dealing with an aggressive challenge from the Chinese government. Pawns are being moved around a global chessboard: an attack on an oil platform in Africa, a terrorist strike on an American destroyer and a storm tossed American spy ship that may fall into Chinese hands. It seems that President Zhao is determined to limit Ryan’s choices in the upcoming G20 negotiations.

But there are hints that there’s even more going on behind the scenes. A routine traffic stop in rural Texas leads to a shocking discovery—a link to a Chinese spy who may have intelligence that lays bare an unexpected revelation. John Clark and the members of the Campus are in close pursuit, but can they get the information in time?

Deanna Raybourn’s Favorites of 2017

Raybourn MS-150 RET 3

Deanna Raybourn’s Lady Julia Grey mysteries have been nominated for Agatha and Dilys Awards. She writes historical mysteries, Gothic thrillers, 1920s adventures novels.The sixth-generation native Texan is also the author of the Veronica Speedwell adventure novels set in 1880s England. I’ve read the January release. The third in the series is The Treacherous Curse. ReadersYou  of Elizabeth Peters’ Amelia Peabody mysteries should appreciate the connection to Egypt and the popularity of Egyptology. But, it’s fans of Jane Eyre who should relish moments of this story.

Treacherous Curse

You can meet Deanna Raybourn on Sunday, January 14 at 2 PM at The Poisoned Pen. Author Tasha Alexander will host Raybourn and Lauren Willig. All three authors will discuss and sign their books. Check out the Web Store for Raybourn’s books. If you can’t make it to the January 14 program, you can order a signed copy of A Treacherous Curse. https://bit.ly/2BlRbLF

And, check out Deanna Raybourn’s own website at https://www.deannaraybourn.com/

Interested in Raybourn’s selections of her favorite crime novels read in 2017? Read about her picks. Then head to the Web Store if she’s enticed you to try one. https://store.poisonedpen.com

Thank you, Deanna. Here are her recommendations.

*****

COUNTESS OF PRAGUE by Stephen Weeks. I adored this debut historical mystery introducing Trixie von Falklenburg. Dynamic, intrepid, curious as a cat—the countess is everything you want in a sleuth. Immensely readable.

countess-of-prague1

 

A STUDY IN SCARLET WOMEN by Sherry Thomas. Just when I thought everything that could possibly be done with Sherlock had been written…In this version, Sherlock Holmes is a woman pushing hard against Victorian constraints. Clever, irresistible, and unforgettable.

Scarlet Women

JANE AND THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS by Stephanie Barron. I have long loved Barron’s series featuring Jane Austen as amateur sleuth, but this holiday offering is by far my favorite. Full of delicious period detail and written with impeccable Austen flair, this one is a holiday treat for any Regency fan.

Jane and the Twelve Days of Christmas

*****

I don’t know about you, but I love to see the different directions the authors go. There are excellent gift suggestions here, if you’re still looking. And, of course, you’re always looking for new ideas for yourself, aren’t you?

Jeffrey Siger’s Favorites of 2017

Jeffrey Siger DSC_3137 3.8mb

Jeffrey Siger’s biography on the site for Poisoned Pen Press authors says, “Jeffrey Siger was born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, practiced law at a major Wall Street law firm, and later established his own New York City law firm where he continued as one of its name partners until giving it all up to write full-time among the people, life, and politics of his beloved Mykonos.”

He’ll probably be embarrassed, but I also found this.

The New York Times described Jeffrey Siger’s novels as “thoughtful police procedurals set in picturesque but not untroubled Greek locales,” the Greek Press called his work “prophetic,” Eurocrime described him as a “very gifted American author…on a par with other American authors such as Joseph Wambaugh or Ed McBain,” and the City of San Francisco awarded him its Certificate of Honor citing that his “acclaimed books have not only explored modern Greek society and its ancient roots but have inspired political change in Greece.”

I’ve read every one of his Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis novels, including the forthcoming one, An Aegean April. He’s a master at revealing the economic and political troubles in Greece, and, in this case, the problems affecting all of Europe. An Aegean April will be released January 2, and Jeff will be at The Poisoned Pen on Thursday, Jan. 4 at 7 PM, along with Thomas Perry, where they will discuss and sign their books. If you have the chance to see them, don’t miss it. If you have to miss it, you can still order a signed copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2jC3gpp

An Aegean April

And, check out Jeffrey’s website at https://jeffreysiger.com/

Now, to the real reason you’re here. You want to see what Jeffrey’s recommendations are, his favorite crime novels read in 2017.

*****

Not much has changed on my mysteries favorites list since I came up with one a few months back.  That’s not because there’s nothing new out there—au contraire, my TBR pile has grown to pillar size.  It’s just that over the past few months I’ve been so caught up in writing a new standalone, while working on an assortment of standing-on-my-toes other projects, that I’ve neglected much of my genre reading.  Bad Jeffrey. But I do have three recommendations, plus a fourth that I dropped from my top-three list only because another Poisoned Pen guest reviewer has already lauded it to the stars. So, here goes.
Let’s start off with the new addition to my list, Warren Easley’s MATTERS OF DOUBT. The first in his Cal Claxton series (now up to #5 with Blood for Wine), featuring an ex-LA Chief Prosecutor who saw the light (as many of we lawyers do), and abandoned big-city legal combat for a one-man country law practice in the idyllic Oregon wine country not far from Portland.  It’s a place of steelheads rising to the fly fisherman’s bait, fine wines, simple cooking, and the companionship of an Australian Shepherd Archie—that’s a dog by the way.

Matters of Doubt

What struck me most about this book—beyond the what’s-going-to-happen-next allure of Easley’s engaging writing voice—was the exploration of intricate relationships in turmoil.  I’m not just talking about Cal Claxton, though he suffered the haunting loss of his wife to suicide.  I’m thinking more of the extensive host of extended family relationships Easley develops premised upon the homelessness shared by so many young in the very heart of what most of us think of as progressive Portland.  Understanding/bigotry, exploitation/generosity, betrayal/loyalty, get deep play in this book, all within the framework of a lawyer just trying to find his own way.  Quite an achievement, especially coming from one who’s not a lawyer—but then again that might explain it all.

PULPED, by Tim Hallinan blew my mind. I had no idea what to expect, but having done many a book event with this peripatetic treasured prose master and teller of ingenious tales, I knew it would be special.  His seventh Simeon Grist novel is all of that and more. Imagine if you exist only as a fictional character, but don’t learn of that until after you fade off into a limbo world once the last unsold copy of the book in which you appear is pulped into newsprint.  Imagine, too, that your only link to the “real” world is when someone opens one of your extant books. To what lengths would you go should you learn that your few remaining readers are being murdered, and once they’re gone, so are you?  This is an instant classic.

Pulped

My third choice is a book I picked up in Hawaii at Left Coast Crime. I’ve long considered Barry Lancet a friend. We’ve gotten lost together in strange cities—in fact once with Hallinan—and he’s endured more of my stories than any one soul should bear (or bare).  But I’d never read one of his acclaimed Jim Brodie books.  I made the mistake of picking up a copy of his award winning JAPANTOWN just before heading off from Oahu to Kauai, a decision putting me squarely at odds with the promised purpose of my trip to that fascinating island. It took threats of grievous bodily harm from she-who-must-be-obeyed for me to put the book aside long enough to drive around and enjoy Kauai.  But I survived, and in so doing became an enthusiastic fan of American antiques dealer and reluctant private eye Jim Brodie, dutifully trailing along beside him from the scene of a multiple murder in San Francisco, into mainland Japan intrigues, and on toward the ultimate redemption and avenging of his past.

Japantown

As for the book I dropped, let’s just say its because a fellow named Thomas Perry picked it as one of his favorites, and though I’m honored to have made the same choice as a master of our craft, I don’t think any gild need be added to his accolade.  Let me just leave it with saying Jo Perry’s DEAD IS GOOD is a mesmerizing exploration of the subtleties of our universally shared fate, neatly wrapped up in a crisp, can’t put down mystery.

Dead is Good

Thank you, my friends, for four great reads.  Now it’s on to 2018 and scaling the top of my TBR pile.

—Jeffrey Siger

*****

Don’t forget to watch for Jeffrey Siger’s own book, An Aegean April. And, check out the Web Store for his recommendations. https://store.poisonedpen.com/