The latest Memory Man novel, David Baldacci’s The Fix, is The Poisoned Pen’s Hot Book of the Week.
Here’s the summary.
Amos Decker witnesses a murder just outside FBI headquarters. A man shoots a woman execution-style on a crowded sidewalk, then turns the gun on himself.
Even with Decker’s extraordinary powers of observation and deduction, the killing is baffling. Decker and his team can find absolutely no connection between the shooter–a family man with a successful consulting business–and his victim, a schoolteacher. Nor is there a hint of any possible motive for the attack.
Enter Harper Brown. An agent of the Defense Intelligence Agency, she orders Decker to back off the case. The murder is part of an open DIA investigation, one so classified that Decker and his team aren’t cleared for it.
But they learn that the DIA believes solving the murder is now a matter of urgent national security. Critical information may have been leaked to a hostile government–or worse, an international terrorist group–and an attack may be imminent.
Decker’s never been one to follow the rules, especially with the stakes so high. Forced into an uneasy alliance with Agent Brown, Decker remains laser focused on only one goal: solving the case before it’s too late.
*****
Would you like a signed copy of David Baldacci’s latest? You can order The Fix through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2oUM6Tr
Jeff Guinn, author of The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple, will be at The Poisoned Pen on Wednesday, April 26 at 7 PM.
Reporter Robert Anglen from The Arizona Republic will discuss the book with Guinn. Anglen has written a fascinating review of the book. https://bit.ly/2oV9v5G
If you can’t make it to the program on Wednesday, you may still want to buy a signed copy of The Road to Jonestown after reading Anglen’s review. You can order a copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2pHLTBH
Lincoln Rhyme is back! And, Jeffery Deaver talked about him at The Poisoned Pen since he is on book tour for The Burial Hour.
Here’s the summary of the new book.
Forensic detective Lincoln Rhyme is back with his most harrowing case yet in this newest installment of Jeffrey Deaver’s New York Times bestselling series.
A businessman snatched from an Upper East Side street in broad daylight. A miniature hangman’s noose left at the scene. A nine-year-old girl, the only witness to the crime. With a crime scene this puzzling, forensic expertise of the highest order is absolutely essential. Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs are called in to investigate.
Soon the case takes a stranger turn: a recording surfaces of the victim being slowly hanged, his desperate gasps the backdrop to an eerie piece of music. The video is marked as the work of The Composer…
Despite their best efforts, the suspect gets away. So when a similar kidnapping occurs on a dusty road outside Naples, Italy, Rhyme and Sachs don’t hesitate to rejoin the hunt.
But the search is now a complex case of international cooperation–and not all those involved may be who they seem. Sachs and Rhyme find themselves playing a dangerous game, with lives all across the globe hanging in the balance.
*****
If you listen to Jeffery Deaver talk with Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, you’ll hear them talk about the slight changes in Lincoln Rhyme’s physical condition. You can watch the event on Livestream. https://livestream.com/poisonedpen/events/7204527
Check out the photos from the evening.
Jeffery DeaverDeaver and Barbara Peters
Barbara Peters giving away a copy of Eliot Pattison’s Water Touching Stone to a lucky audience memberThe book signing line
Don’t forget! You can order a signed copy of The Burial Hour through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2pTdmzt
Once in a while, I get the chance to interview authors. Today, I’m talking with Lisa Preston, author of The Measure of the Moon.
Lisa, would you introduce yourself to the readers?
I am, of course, a lifelong reader and I wrote in childhood, starting with horse stories because I couldn’t find enough of them. I still write what I’d like to read: character-driven revelations, stories moved forward by interesting people in interesting situations.
Introduce us to Greer and Gillian from The Measure of the Moon.
Greer is a rural boy, the youngest child in a rowdy family, with five grown siblings. Gillian is a thirties-something photographer and film rescuer in Seattle who is dysphoric in her marriage to a good guy, and she needs to figure that out.
Tell us about The Measure of the Moon, without spoilers.
As a whole, this is a novel about protecting the people you love. Moon explores childhood post-traumatic stress through parallel stories. The link between Greer and Gillian’s lives is a good guess for some readers, while other reviewers are gobsmacked. I love those different reactions to Moon.
The Measure of the Moon has some very dark elements. How do you escape from the dark side in your daily life?
Realistically, I think many of us aren’t free of those dark slices of life, but living through tough events with healthy choices makes all the difference. Bringing that hope forward in my novels lets the reader find a satisfying resolution.
Alaska and Washington. You’ve lived both places as an adult. What are your favorite spots to take visitors?
I love open country. I take friends to the trails and the big views, whether on the shore, looking up to my mountains, or high in the hills, gazing out to the sea.
You’ve been a paramedic and a police officer. What was the most unusual work experience that you can tell us about?
Those jobs make you clean up after some of the most shocking, heartbreaking and unbelievable human behaviors. Delivering secret babies was a challenge. There was a teen who’d successfully hidden her pregnancy from her parents, and a bathtub birth from a woman who’d hidden it from her husband. The latter call necessitated police protection for the woman and for us in the Fire Department. Death notifications I delivered as a cop are stuck in my memory, as are so many bizarre and ugly events that I expect most civilians really do not want to know.
What made you decide to write fiction?
I’ve always been a reader and loved great fiction. As a child, I’d pause after finishing a good story and want to give back the pleasure that the novelist lavished on me. I love the timelessness of good books.
What authors have inspired you?
The first was in childhood, when Mrs. Kendall read Wilson Rawls’s Where the Red Fern Grows aloud to our class. It was my favorite part of third grade. Hearing a wonderful story unfold lets the mind run free. I’ve read countless good works since then, with many more to come.
What author would you like to recommend who you think has been underappreciated?
With a nod to my friend Jo-Ann Mapson who recommended this novel to me, I suggest Joyce Weatherford’s Heart of the Beast, which deserved its wonderful reviews.
You attended Left Coast Crime in Hawaii. What was your favorite experience at the conference?
Honolulu Havoc was a hoot. I got to: say hi to Barbara and Robert; give a talk at the “˜Meet the New Authors’ Breakfast; co-host a banquet table with the lovely Catriona MacPherson; moderate a roaring panel featuring Doug Lyle, Patty Smiley, Ellen Kirschman, AK Gunn, Bette Lamb and John Burley; then speak on a panel about specialized police work.
The big serendipity of this year’s Left Coast, however, was discovering that the wonderful Janet Rudolph may have been my high school English and Humanities teacher! We’re still combing back through the dates, but she was on her first job where I went to school, at around the same time.
Did you miss Matthew Quirk at The Poisoned Pen to talk about his latest novel, Dead Man Switch?
Here’s the premise.
“WHEN IT COMES TO QUIRK, I FOLLOW A SIMPLE THREE-STEP PLAN: BUY, CANCEL PLANS, READ.” –Gregg Hurwitz, bestselling author of Orphan X and The Nowhere Man
Someone is hunting down America’s most elite special ops soldiers–in their homes.
A deadly fall on a rugged stretch of California coast. A burglary gone wrong in Virginia. These incidents seem unrelated, but the victims were living undercover, their true identities closely held secrets. They are members of a classified team, the last line of defense against foreign threats. Now, someone is assassinating them, one by one, taking out family members and innocent bystanders to make the deaths seem like accidents.
With every success, the killers grow bolder. Their ultimate goal: Lure Hayes and his remaining fellow soldiers to Manhattan, to eliminate them all in a single devastating strike. To save his teammates and thousands of innocent lives, Hayes must find a way to stop a seemingly unstoppable weapon.
Dead Man Switch delivers nonstop twists, turns, and action in a high-stakes thriller about what happens when the fight abroad follows our covert operators home-and their painstakingly constructed double lives are shattered.
*****
Because author Philip Kerr was in town, he attended the program. Some of the photos include both authors.
Left to right – Philip Kerr, Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, and Matthew QuirkQuirk and KerrKerr and QuirkMatthew Quirk signing booksSigning Dead Man Switch
You can order a signed copy of Dead Man Switch through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2phP4jd
Christina Kovac’s The Cutaway is The Poisoned Pen’s pick for “Hot Book of the Week”.
Here’s the description.
“The Newsroom meets Gone Girl.“ —Cosmopolitan
The Cutaway draws you into the tangled world of corruption and cover-up as a young television producer investigates the disappearance of a beautiful Georgetown lawyer in this stunning psychological thriller, perfect for fans of Paula Hawkins and Gillian Flynn.
When brilliant TV news producer Virginia Knightly receives a disturbing “MISSING” notice on her desk related to the disappearance of a beautiful young attorney, she can’t seem to shake the image from her head. Despite skepticism from her colleagues, Knightly suspects this ambitious young lawyer may be at the heart of something far more sinister, especially since she was last seen leaving an upscale restaurant after a domestic dispute. Yet, as the only woman of power at her station, Knightly quickly finds herself investigating on her own.
Risking her career, her life, and perhaps even her own sanity, Knightly dives deep into the dark underbelly of Washington, DC business and politics in an investigation that will drag her mercilessly through the inextricable webs of corruption that bind the press, the police, and politics in our nation’s capital.
Harkening to dark thrillers such as Gone Girl, Luckiest Girl Alive, and Big Little Lies, The Cutaway is a striking debut that will haunt you long after you reach the last page.
*****
Did it catch your attention? You can order The Cutaway through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2offvnM
How many of you fell into mysteries because you discovered Agatha Christie? Even if that wasn’t the reason, you may have read a number of her books. Radhika Jones discussed “In Praise of Agatha Christie’s Accidental Sleuths” in a recent New York Times article. https://nyti.ms/2os9TZi
Now, you’re looking for Agatha Christie books, aren’t you? Check out the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2otZgoy
In the May 2017 edition of the Midmonth BookNotes, you’ll find the latest signed books by Tessa Arlen, Robyn Carr, lots of great romance selections , and so much more… Click here to view the PDF.
Were you a fan of Tony Hillerman’s Leaphorn & Chee novels? If so, I hope you’ve discovered Anne Hillerman’s novels featuring Leaphorn, Chee and Manuelito. She’s on book tour for Song of the Lion.
Here’s the summary of the latest book.
A deadly bombing takes Navajo Tribal cops Bernadette Manuelito, Jim Chee, and their mentor, the legendary Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, back into the past to find a vengeful killer in this riveting Southwestern mystery from the bestselling author of Spider Woman’s Daughter and Rock with Wings.
When a car bomb kills a young man in the Shiprock High School parking lot, Officer Bernadette Manuelito discovers that the intended victim was a mediator for a multi-million-dollar development planned at the Grand Canyon.
But what seems like an act of ecoterrorism turns out to be something far more nefarious and complex. Piecing together the clues, Bernadette and her husband, Sergeant Jim Chee, uncover a scheme to disrupt the negotiations and inflame tensions between the Hopi and Dine tribes.
Retired Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn has seen just about everything in his long career. As the tribal police’s investigation unfolds, he begins to suspect that the bombing may be linked to a cold case he handled years ago. As he, Bernadette, and Chee carefully pull away the layers behind the crime, they make a disturbing discovery: a meticulous and very patient killer with a long-simmering plan of revenge.
Writing with a clarity and grace that is all her own, Anne Hillerman depicts the beauty and mystery of Navajo Country and the rituals, myths, and customs of its people in a mystery that builds on and complements the beloved, bestselling mysteries of her acclaimed father, Tony Hillerman.
*****
Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, interviewed Anne Hillerman for the program. We have several photos.
Anne Hillerman with Patrick Millikin in the back room as she signs books.Entering the store for the event.Anne HillermanAnne Hillerman and Barbara Peters
And, don’t forget. Anne Hillerman did sign copies of Song of the Lion, so we have signed copies available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2oadnyx