Matt Goldman & Carolina Moonset

Fortunately for readers, the publisher did a simultaneous publication of the paperback with the hardcover because all of the hardcover copies of Matt Goldman’s Carolina Moonset are sold out. You can still order a paperback through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/3OVPmHv

Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, recently welcomed Goldman for a virtual event.

Here’s the description of his latest book, Carolina Moonset.

Both suspenseful and deeply moving, Carolina Moonset is an engrossing novel about family, memories both golden and terrible, and secrets too dangerous to stay hidden forever, from New York Times bestselling and Emmy Award-winning author, Matt Goldman.

Joey Green has returned to Beaufort, South Carolina, with its palmettos and shrimp boats, to look after his ailing father, who is succumbing to dementia, while his overstressed mother takes a break. Marshall Green’s short-term memory has all but evaporated, but, as if in compensation, his oldest memories are more vivid than ever. His mind keeps slipping backwards in time, retreating into long-ago yesterdays of growing up in Beaufort as a boy.

At first this seems like a blessing of sorts, with the past providing a refuge from a shrinking future, but Joey grows increasingly anxious as his father’s hallucinatory arguments with figures from his youth begin to hint at deadly secrets, scandals, and suspicions long buried and forgotten. Resurfacing from decades past are mysteries that still have the power to shatter lives—and change everything Joey thought he knew.

Especially when a new murder brings the police to his door…


Matt Goldman is a playwright and Emmy Award-winning television writer for SeinfeldEllen, and other shows. He brings his signature storytelling abilities and light touch to his Nils Shapiro series, which begins with Gone to Dust. He lives in Minnesota with his wife, two dogs, two cats, and whichever children happen to be around.


Enjoy the conversation as Matt Goldman talks about his standalone, Carolina Moonset.

Isabella Maldonado & The Falcon

Patrick Millikin from The Poisoned Pen recently welcomed Isabella Maldonado for a live event at the bookstore. The Falcon is the third book featuring FBI Agent Nina Guerrera. Millikin says he has to be careful to not give away spoilers with this book. So, you might want to pick up a signed copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/3ORZgtC

Here’s the description of The Falcon.

Wall Street Journal bestselling series.

A serial killer wants to play. FBI Agent Nina Guerrera has no time for games.

Six female undergrads at an elite university vanish. The media descends. The families demand action. And as Special Agent Nina Guerrera follows clue by chilling clue, she realizes she’s tracking the most cunning predator of her career.

The case takes a turn for the worse, and the bizarre, when several victims are found perfectly preserved. No signs of violence, no hint of how they died. Just more evidence that the killer is cruel, calculating, and a master of mind control.

With her mission compromised, Nina must face her greatest failure—and greatest fear—to stop a deadly hunter before he claims another prize.


Isabella Maldonado is the award-winning and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of the Detective Cruz series and of The Cipher and A Different Dawn in the Nina Guerrera series. Before turning to crime writing, she wore a gun and badge in real life. A graduate of the FBI National Academy in Quantico and the first Latina to attain the rank of captain in her police department, she retired as the Commander of Special Investigations and Forensics. During more than two decades on the force, she served as a hostage negotiator, department spokesperson, and district station commander. She uses her extensive law enforcement background to bring a realistic edge to her writing. Maldonado lives in the Phoenix area with her family. For more information, visit www.isabellamaldonado.com.


Maldonado introduces her book, and Nina Guerrera’s FBI team.

Cozy Mystery Authors, Krista Davis & Daryl Wood Gerber

John Charles from The Poisoned Pen recently welcomed cozy mystery authors Krista Davis and Daryl Wood Gerber. Davis’ latest book is The Diva Says Cheesecake. Gerber’s new book is A Hint of Mischief. Both books are available in the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Here’s Krista Davis’ The Diva Says Cheesecake.

“Reminiscent of Joanne Fluke’s Hannah Swensen cozies, which also include baking and a group of close friends working together to solve crimes.” ““ Booklist

A delightful new story from a New York Times bestselling author perfect for fans of Joanne Fluke’s Hannah Swensen Mystery series! In this page-turning new book, entertaining guru Sophie Winston is faced with a midsummer nightmare when a celebration in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia, is the appetizer for murder…

Old Town’s midsummer festivities are getting a tasty addition this year. To coincide with a public performance of Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” Bobbie Sue Bodoin, the Queen of Cheesecake, has hired Sophie to organize a dinner with a dessert buffet on the waterfront. Bobbie Sue’s homegrown company is thriving, and since her baking dish overfloweth, she wants to reward her employees.

Bobbie Sue has only one menu demand: no cheesecake! But her specialty isn’t the only thing missing from the evening—Tate, Bobbie Sue’s husband, is too, much to her annoyance. Next morning, however, Tate’s dead body is discovered. Bobbie Sue insists she didn’t kick her spouse to the curb, and begs for Sophie’s help finding the real killer. Digging in, Sophie discovers an assortment of Old Town locals who all had reason to want a piece of Tate. Can she gather together the crumbs the killer left behind in time to prevent a second helping of murder?

Includes delectable recipes and fabulous DIY decorating tips!


Krista Davis is the New York Times bestselling and four-time Agatha Award-nominated author of the Domestic Diva Mysteries, the Pen & Ink Mysteries, and the Paws & Claws Mysteries. She lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia with two cats and a brood of dogs. Her friends and family complain about being guinea pigs for her recipes, but she notices they keep coming back for more. Please visit her at KristaDavis.com.


Here’s the description of Daryl Wood Gerber’s A Hint of Mischief.

From Agatha Award-winning author Daryl Wood Gerber, the third in an enchantingly whimsical series featuring Courtney Kelly, the owner of a fairy-gardening and tea shop in Carmel, California. It’s a special place brimming with good vibes and the kind of magical assistance its proprietor will need to prepare for an old sorority sister’s birthday bash awhile solving a puzzling murder!

Courtney has thrown a few fairy garden parties—for kids. But if a local socialite is willing to dip into her trust fund for an old sorority sister’s fortieth birthday bash, Courtney will be there with bells on. To make the job even more appealing, a famous actress, Farrah Lawson, is flying in for the occasion, and there’s nothing like a celebrity cameo to raise a business’s profile.

Now Courtney has less than two weeks to paint a mural, hang up tinkling windchimes, plan party games, and conjure up all the details. While she works her magic, the hostess and her girlfriends head off for an indulgent spa day—which leads to a fateful facial for Farrah, followed by her mysterious death. Could the kindhearted eyebrow waxer who Farrah berated in public really be the killer, as the police suspect? Courtney thinks otherwise, and with the help of her imaginative sleuth fairy, sets out to dig up the truth behind this puzzling murder .


Daryl Wood Gerber is the Agatha Award-winning, nationally bestselling author of the Fairy Garden Mysteries, the French Bistro  Mysteries, and the Cookbook Nook Mysteries, as well as the Cheese Shop Mysteries written under the name Avery Aames. She  also writes standalone suspense novels and the Aspen Adams Novels of Suspense. Prior to her career as a novelist, she was an  actress with roles in television shows including “Murder, She Wrote,” and she wrote for the popular TV sitcom “Out of this  World.” Originally from the Bay Area, she now lives in Southern California where she likes to cook, garden and spend time with  her frisky Goldendoodle named Sparky. Visit her online at DarylWoodGerber.com.


If you’re a cozy mystery reader, you’ll enjoy the interviews. John Charles asks both writers to talk about their backgrounds, writing, and their latest books.

Julie Clark discusses The Lies I Tell

Julie Clark, the author of The Last Flight, appeared for a live event at The Poisoned Pen to promote her latest thriller, The Lies I Tell. Barbara Peters, owner of the bookstore, welcomed Clark, whose book The Lies I Tell is the Hot Book of the Week. There are signed copies of the book available in the Web Store. https://bit.ly/3nywW3K

Here is the description of The Lies I Tell.

THE INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!

“A mindbender.” —Jessica Knoll

“Riveting…a winner.” —Laura Dave

“A knockout.” —Mary Kubica

From the New York Times bestselling author of The Last Flight comes a twisted con-woman thriller about two women out for revenge—or is it justice?

Two women. Many aliases.

Meg Williams. Maggie Littleton. Melody Wilde. Different names for the same person, depending on the town, depending on the job. She’s a con artist who erases herself to become whoever you need her to be—a college student. A life coach. A real estate agent. Nothing about her is real. She slides alongside you and tells you exactly what you need to hear, and by the time she’s done, you’ve likely lost everything.

Kat Roberts has been waiting ten years for the woman who upended her life to return. And now that she has, Kat is determined to be the one to expose her. But as the two women grow closer, Kat’s long-held assumptions begin to crumble, leaving Kat to wonder who Meg’s true target is.

The Lies I Tell is a twisted domestic thriller that dives deep into the psyches and motivations of two women and their unwavering quest to seek justice for the past and rewrite the future.


Julie Clark is the New York Times bestselling author of The Ones We Choose and The Last Flight, which was also a #1 international bestseller and has been translated into more than twenty languages. She lives in Los Angeles with her family and a golden doodle with poor impulse control.


Enjoy the discussion, especially the segment about con artists.

2022 CWA Dagger Awards

Congratulations to the winners of the CWA Dagger Awards, presented by the United Kingdom’s Crime Writers Association. Check the Web Store for copies of the books, although several might be difficult to find. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

One of the UK’s most prominent societies, the CWA was founded in 1953 by John Creasey; the awards started in 1955 with its first award going to Winston Graham, best known for Poldark.

Dagger Winners 2022

CWA GOLD DAGGER
Sunset Swing, Ray Celestin (Macmillan; Mantle)

CWA IAN FLEMING STEEL DAGGER
Dead Ground, MW Craven (Little, Brown; Constable)

CWA JOHN CREASEY (NEW BLOOD) DAGGER
The Appeal, Janice Hallett (Profile Books; Viper Books)

CWA HISTORICAL DAGGER
Sunset Swing, Ray Celestin (Pan Macmillan; Mantle)

CWA ALCS GOLD DAGGER FOR NON-FICTION
The Disappearance of Lydia Harvey: A True Story of Sex, Crime and the Meaning of Justice, Julia Laite (Profile Books)

CWA CRIME FICTION IN TRANSLATION DAGGER sponsored in honour of Dolores Jakubowski
Hotel Cartagena, Simone Buchholz and translated by Rachel Ward (Orenda Books)

CWA SHORT STORY DAGGER
“˜Flesh of a Fancy Woman’ by Paul Magrs in Criminal Pursuits: Crime Through Time edited by Samantha Lee Howe (Telos Publishing)

CWA DAGGER IN THE LIBRARY
Mark Billingham

CWA PUBLISHERS DAGGER
Faber & Faber

CWA DEBUT DAGGER sponsored by ProWritingAid
The 10:12 by Anna Maloney

THE CWA RED HERRING for services to crime writing and the CWA
In memory of Thalia Proctor

Lincoln Child’s Chrysalis

The Poisoned Pen is hosting Lincoln Child for a virtual appearance on July 12 at 6 PM (9 PM EDT). He’ll be talking about his latest novel, Chrysalis, and signed copies are available in the Web Store. https://bit.ly/3AkBd2r

But, before you attend the program, you might want to read “The story behind Chrysalis” from Lincoln Child’s recent newsletter.

Dear Friend and Reader, 

Instead of sending out a newsletter just to announce that my new thriller, CHRYSALIS, is about to be published, I thought I’d use this space to tell you a little bit about how the book came into being.

If you’ve read any of my Jeremy Logan novels, you may remember he calls himself an “˜enigmalogist’—somebody who solves the strange mysteries no one else has the patience or skill set to address, from the Loch Ness monster to Bigfoot. Initially, I cast him as a modern-day version of the “˜supernatural sleuths’ that were popular in pulp fiction a century ago: a ghostbuster without the campiness. But I soon realized I wanted Jeremy to have the range to address non-supernatural problems as well: terrorists, perhaps, in addition to King Tut’s curse.

A few years ago, I had just completed Logan’s last adventure, FULL WOLF MOON, and was contemplating what he should confront next. Vampires? Zombies? I say this now with tongue in cheek. But for me it was a big deal: as always, I wanted the story to be cutting-edge and driven by techno-thrills, and that meant blowing the dust off any Saturday-afternoon-matinee monsters I decided to bring into the story…along with all their quaint cliches.

I was brooding over this, and had more or less decided on a plot (to be titled WHAT SLEEPS BENEATH), when I attended my daughter’s college graduation. At one of the post-ceremony parties, I fell into conversation with two surgeons who were discussing pacemakers. It’s a little unsettling how casually doctors talk amongst themselves when there are no patients around. Anyway, I soon learned that pacemakers, and implants in general, had progressed much further than I’d ever imagined. What particularly intrigued me was the idea that implants could be “˜upgraded’—not only by replacing them with something smaller and newer, but by modifying their firmware.

In retrospect, it makes sense. But initially I was incredulous. If you own any relatively new cell phone, or smart TV, or even a car, you’re probably familiar with firmware updates: those annoying, often unexpected intervals when the device stops to download something, and you’re warned not to touch it lest you incur dire consequences. This is not the same as upgrading your apps: what’s happening is that your device is modifying the code etched into its own hardware—at a level below the awareness of any operating system or device driver.

Firmware, like software, can have bugs. Thinking about this, I realized I didn’t much like the idea of wearing a pacemaker, version 1.1, only to discover one day that I’d been upgraded to firmware 1.2—and then the next day, learn this new release was flawed. If the device in question was a cell phone, the worst that could happen is it might act strangely, freeze, or get “˜bricked’ until firmware 1.2.1 came along to patch the error. Bummer, admittedly. But if that happened to a device that was keeping you alive…

In the same conversation, I learned a couple of other things that surprised me. Some implants now use radiofrequency, or conductive telemetry, to send or receive signals. Also, the number and kind of implants is growing almost exponentially, year over year.

Fast-forward half a decade from now. Does that mean—if I have some cutting-edge device implanted in my skull to ward off, say, early-onset dementia—some hacker could ride in on a carrier wave, or set off an EMP weapon nearby, and turn the beneficial technology in my head into something out of a nightmare?

This was fascinating, alarming…but also of particular interest to me. It dovetailed, in an unexpected way, with something else that had been on my mind: virtual technology. VR is coming up fast in the rear-view mirror, and I’m not sure we realize just how influential and dominant it’s poised to become.

For those of a certain age, it wasn’t that long ago cell phones were novelties, used just to make calls or, sometimes, play games. Now, they’ve utterly changed our lives and are practically glued to our hands. It’s the same with the web-enabled software these phones run, which could scarcely have been imagined when Netscape first introduced its browser. But it’s the speed at which these devices have become a vital part of our lives I find most astounding. Now: imagine being able to do anything you currently use the web for—watch a football game interactively, play chess with someone halfway around the world, blog, buy groceries, “˜doomscroll’—not at your desk or hunched over your phone, but from within a virtual environment of your choice that looks, feels, and even smells real, but doesn’t require you to leave your chair. A virtual environment where Big Data companies—just like they do today—pay for a “storefront” or some other persistent method of getting your attention…or money.

Don’t let that thought go quite yet. Imagine a virtual mall, or resort, or club, or neighborhood you can walk through—interact with, converse or argue in, purchase things at—from the comfort of your couch. And then consider that this same multitasking hardware and software, to maximize profits and economies of scale, is probably also being used to keep your heartbeat regular. Or your vision correct. Or your insulin levels healthy.

Or whatever.

As a thriller writer, it’s my job to look at things everybody else takes for granted and imagine how they could go spectacularly wrong. Traveling home from my daughter’s graduation, I put aside the Jeremy Logan idea I’d started working on and began to develop another. And this time, the story’s building blocks came together with almost frightening ease—because, to me, it was all true…or rather, soon to be true. All I needed was a conglomerate, with a toe in both the medical and computing fields, that could take this existing potential and bring it to critical mass…except with far, far different results than expected.

That company, and that novel, is CHRYSALIS. Thank you for taking the time to read this. And I hope you’ll let Dr. Logan tell you the rest of the story.

With warm regards,

Linc

To order signed, first-edition copies of CHRYSALIS, click here.

2022 LOCUS Award Winners

Congratulations to the 2022 LOCUS Award winners and nominees. The Locus Science Fiction Foundation announced the winners in each category of the 2022 Locus Awards on June 25, 2022, during the virtual Locus Awards Weekend. Connie Willis emceed the awards ceremony. Check the Web Store for copies of the winning books and nominees. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

SCIENCE FICTION NOVEL

  • WINNER: A Desolation Called Peace, Arkady Martine (Tor; Tor UK)
  • The Galaxy, and the Ground Within, Becky Chambers (Hodder & Stoughton; Harper Voyager US)
  • Leviathan Falls, James S.A. Corey (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
  • The Echo Wife, Sarah Gailey (Tor; Hodder & Stoughton)
  • Klara and the Sun, Kazuo Ishiguro (Knopf; Faber & Faber)
  • Noor, Nnedi Okorafor (DAW)
  • We Are Satellites, Sarah Pinsker (Berkley; Ad Astra)
  • You Sexy Thing, Cat Rambo (Tor)
  • Shards of Earth, Adrian Tchaikovsky (Tor UK; Orbit US)
  • Hummingbird Salamander, Jeff VanderMeer (MCD; Fourth Estate)

FANTASY NOVEL

  • WINNER: Jade Legacy, Fonda Lee (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
  • Light From Uncommon Stars, Ryka Aoki (Tor)
  • The Witness for the Dead, Katherine Addison (Tor; Solaris)
  • Black Water Sister, Zen Cho (Ace; Macmillan)
  • Paladin’s Strength, T. Kingfisher (Argyll)
  • Under the Whispering Door, TJ Klune (Tor; Tor UK)
  • The Last Graduate, Naomi Novik (Del Rey; Del Rey UK)
  • Soulstar, C.L. Polk (Tordotcom)
  • The Jasmine Throne, Tasha Suri (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
  • No Gods, No Monsters, Cadwell Turnbull (Blackstone)

HORROR NOVEL

  • WINNER: My Heart Is a Chainsaw, Stephen Graham Jones (Saga; Titan)
  • Revelator, Daryl Gregory (Knopf)
  • The Final Girl Support Group, Grady Hendrix (Berkley; Titan)
  • Billy Summers, Stephen King (Scribner; Hodder & Stoughton)
  • Later, Stephen King (Hard Case Crime)
  • Moon Lake, Joe R. Lansdale (Mulholland)
  • A Broken Darkness, Premee Mohamed (Solaris)
  • Sorrowland, Rivers Solomon (MCD; #Merky)
  • The Death of Jane Lawrence, Caitlin Starling (St. Martin’s)
  • The Book of Accidents, Chuck Wendig (Del Rey; Del Rey UK)

YOUNG ADULT NOVEL

  • WINNER: Victories Greater Than Death, Charlie Jane Anders (Tor Teen; Titan)
  • This Poison Heart, Kalynn Bayron (Bloomsbury; Bloomsbury USA)
  • The Infinity Courts, Akemi Dawn Bowman (Simon Pulse)
  • The Gilded Ones, Namina Forna (Delacorte; Usborne)
  • A Dark and Starless Forest, Sarah Hollowell (Clarion)
  • Redemptor, Jordan Ifueko (Amulet; Hot Key)
  • Chaos on CatNet, Naomi Kritzer (Tor Teen)
  • A Snake Falls to Earth, Darcie Little Badger (Levine Querido)
  • Terciel & Elinor, Garth Nix (Allen & Unwin; Tegen; Hot Key)
  • Iron Widow, Xiran Jay Zhao (Penguin Teen; Rock the Boat)

FIRST NOVEL

  • WINNER: A Master of Djinn, P. Djèlí Clark (Tordotcom; Orbit UK)
  • The Unbroken, C.L. Clark (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
  • Machinehood, S.B. Divya (Saga)
  • The All-Consuming World, Cassandra Khaw (Erewhon)
  • A Marvellous Light, Freya Marske (Tordotcom; Tor UK)
  • Winter’s Orbit, Everina Maxwell (Tor; Orbit UK)
  • She Who Became the Sun, Shelley Parker-Chan (Tor; Mantle)
  • The Chosen and the Beautiful, Nghi Vo (Tordotcom)
  • Wendy, Darling, A.C. Wise (Titan)
  • Iron Widow, Xiran Jay Zhao (Penguin Teen; Rock the Boat)

Paul Doiron & Sarah Stewart Taylor in Conversation

Barbara Peters, owner of The Poisoned Pen, recently welcomed two authors, Paul Doiron and Sarah Stewart Taylor for a virtual event. Doiron, author of Hatchet Island, and Taylor, author of The Drowning Sea, have signed copies of their books, and they’re available in the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Here’s the description of Hatchet Island.

The eerie, windswept Hatchet Island off the coast of Maine becomes the site of a double murder and a disappearance in this thriller from bestselling author Paul Doiron.

A call for help from a former colleague leads Maine game warden investigator Mike Bowditch and his girlfriend Stacey Stevens on a sea kayaking trip to a research station far off the coast. Stacey spent summers interning on the island, a sanctuary for endangered seabirds, and they are shocked by the atmosphere of tension they encounter when they come ashore. The biologists are being threatened and stalked by a mysterious boatman who they suspect is trespassing on the refuge late at night. And now the sanctuary’s enigmatic founder, whose mind has been slowly unraveling, has gone missing.

Camped on an islet for the night, Mike and Stacey waken to the sound of a gunshot. When they return to the refuge at dawn, their darkest fears are confirmed: two of the three researchers have been brutally murdered and the third has disappeared, along with the island skiff. Mike’s quest to find the missing man leads to a nearby island owned by a world-renowned photographer and his equally brilliant wife. The inhabitants of this private kingdom quickly close ranks, and Mike increasingly comes to believe that someone in the village knows more about the killings than they dare admit.

With no one to trust and miles from shore, Mike Bowditch must stop a ruthless murderer determined to make sure a terrifying secret never sees the light of day.


A native of Maine, bestselling author PAUL DOIRON attended Yale University, where he graduated with a degree in English. The Poacher’s Son, the first book in the Mike Bowditch series, won the Barry award, the Strand award for best first novel, and has been nominated for the Edgar, Anthony, and Macavity awards in the same category. He is a Registered Maine Guide specializing in fly fishing and lives on a trout stream in coastal Maine with his wife, Kristen Lindquist.


Check out the description of Sarah Stewart Taylor’s The Drowning Sea.

In The Drowning Sea, Sarah Stewart Taylor returns to the critically acclaimed world of Maggie D’arcy with another atmospheric mystery so vivid readers will smell the salt in the air and hear the wind on the cliffs.

For the first time in her adult life, former Long Island homicide detective Maggie D’arcy is unemployed. No cases to focus on, no leads to investigate, just a whole summer on a remote West Cork peninsula with her teenage daughter Lilly and her boyfriend, Conor and his son. The plan is to prepare Lilly for a move to Ireland. But their calm vacation takes a dangerous turn when human remains wash up below the steep cliffs of Ross Head.

When construction worker Lukas Adamik disappeared months ago, everyone assumed he had gone home to Poland. Now that his body has been found, the guards, including Maggie’s friends Roly Byrne and Katya Grzeskiewicz, seem to think he threw himself from the cliffs. But as Maggie gets to know the residents of the nearby village and learns about the history of the peninsula and its abandoned Anglo Irish manor house, once home to a famous Irish painter who died under mysterious circumstances, she starts to think there’s something else going on. Something deadly. And when Lilly starts dating one of the dead man’s friends, Maggie grows worried about her daughter being so close to another investigation and about what the investigation will uncover.

Old secrets, hidden relationships, crime, and village politics are woven throughout this small seaside community, and as the summer progresses, Maggie is pulled deeper into the web of lies, further from those she loves, and closer to the truth.


SARAH STEWART TAYLOR is the author of the Sweeney St. George series and the Maggie D’arcy series. Taylor grew up on Long Island in New York and was educated at Middlebury College in Vermont and Trinity College in Dublin. She lived in Dublin, Ireland in the mid-90s and she now lives with her family on a farm in Vermont where they raise sheep and grow blueberries.


Enjoy the descriptions of the islands and books with Paul Doiron and Sarah Stewart Taylor.