Hot Book of the Week – Nelson DeMille’s The Cuban Affair

As you can tell by the blog title, Nelson DeMille’s The Cuban Affair is the Hot Book of the Week at the Poisoned Pen. You can order a signed copy through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2xTOVsS

Cuban Affair

Here’s the description of the book.

From the legendary #1 New York Times bestselling author of Plum Island and Night Fall, Nelson DeMille’s blistering new novel features an exciting new character—U.S. Army combat veteran Daniel “Mac” MacCormick, now a charter boat captain, who is about to set sail on his most dangerous cruise.

Daniel Graham MacCormick—Mac for short—seems to have a pretty good life. At age thirty-five he’s living in Key West, owner of a forty-two-foot charter fishing boat, The Maine. Mac served five years in the Army as an infantry officer with two tours in Afghanistan. He returned with the Silver Star, two Purple Hearts, scars that don’t tan, and a boat with a big bank loan. Truth be told, Mac’s finances are more than a little shaky.

One day, Mac is sitting in the famous Green Parrot Bar in Key West, contemplating his life, and waiting for Carlos, a hotshot Miami lawyer heavily involved with anti-Castro groups. Carlos wants to hire Mac and The Maine for a ten-day fishing tournament to Cuba at the standard rate, but Mac suspects there is more to this and turns it down. The price then goes up to two million dollars, and Mac agrees to hear the deal, and meet Carlos’s clients—a beautiful Cuban-American woman named Sara Ortega, and a mysterious older Cuban exile, Eduardo Valazquez.

What Mac learns is that there is sixty million American dollars hidden in Cuba by Sara’s grandfather when he fled Castro’s revolution. With the “Cuban Thaw” underway between Havana and Washington, Carlos, Eduardo, and Sara know it’s only a matter of time before someone finds the stash—by accident or on purpose. And Mac knows if he accepts this job, he’ll walk away rich…or not at all.

Brilliantly written, with his signature humor, fascinating authenticity from his research trip to Cuba, and heart-pounding pace, Nelson DeMille is a true master of the genre.

*****

Nelson DeMille fans are invited to meet him on Thursday, October 5 at 7 PM at the Paradise Valley Doubletree Hilton, 5401 N. Scottsdale Road. Michael Koryta will interview DeMille, followed by the book signing. The program itself is free. Call the Poisoned Pen at 480-947-2974 for details.

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Betty Webb’s Summer Reading

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Before turning to crime, Betty Webb was a journalist. She’s the author of the Lena Jones series set in Arizona, serious mysteries featuring a private investigator. Desert Vengeance is the most recent title from Poisoned Pen Press. On the lighter end of the scale, the Gunn Zoo mysteries are set in California. Betty’s volunteer work at the Phoenix Zoo led to these books. Puffin of Death is the latest title. Her website is https://www.bettywebb-mystery.com/. Webb’s books are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2jKnUCX

Thank you, Betty, for sharing the books you read.

*****

I read these books during my 9-day trip to Casper, Wyoming, to see the total eclipse.

 

“Sleeping in the Ground,” by Peter Robinson

Sleeping in the Ground

I’ve always been a sucker for British mysteries, especially Robinson’s. Since I live in the desert, where the summer temps can ““ and often do — reach 120 F, Robinson’s chilly Yorkshire moors help cool me down. For the same reason, I’m a sucker for the Nordic authors, such Yrsa Sigurdardottir’s “My Soul to Take,” and Arnaldur Indridason’s “Silence of the Grave.” They’re all freezing up there.

“The Wine of Angels,” by Phil Rickman

Wine of Angels

I was turned onto Rickman by mention of his work in DorothyL. Again, a wonderful British mystery, this time using a female vicar for protagonist. Murder, sexism, class snobbery ““ this novel’s got them all. Rickman’s books also includes a certain amount of woo-woo, a genre I’ve always enjoyed, so this was a double delight.

“The Girl with all the Gifts,” by M.R. Carey

Girl with all the Gifts

Since I mentioned woo-woo, I might as well mention one of the most popular of all the woo-woos ““ ZOMBIES! This terrific novel stars a young zombie child and her interaction with her teacher (whom she promises not to bite). It’s my favorite of the We’re-All-Doomed genre. Spoiler alert: I love happy endings, so I’m happy to tell you that both the zombie child and her teacher are still alive in the end (although a lot of other characters aren’t).

*****

Thank you, Betty. Check the Web Store for Betty Webb’s selections. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Naomi Hirahara’s Summer Reading

naomi Hirahara

As I recently mentioned, Naomi Hirahara will be a Guest of Honor at Left Coast Crime in Reno in 2018. Her final Mas Arai book, Hiroshima Boy, will be out by then. Because both of Hirahara’s parents were in Hiroshima at the time of the atomic bombing of the city, this book has a close connection. Her books are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2fiCuQn

Hiroshima Boy

Naomi Hirahara is the Edgar Award-winning mystery writer based in Southern California. Her final and seventh Mas Arai mystery, HIROSHIMA BOY, will be released in March by Prospect Park Books. Her third Officer Ellie Rush mystery, TROUBLE ON TEMPLE STREET, is being presented as an online monthly serial for Discover Nikkei (www.discovernikkei.com). She is a co-guest of honor with William Kent Krueger at Left Coast Crime Reno next year.

Naomi Hirahara’s website is www.naomihirahara.com

She’s another author who took time from a very busy schedule to write for us. Thank you, Naomi. (You’ll want to check the Web Store for Naomi’s book suggestions.)  https://store.poisonedpen.com/

*****

Truth be told, I haven’t been able to do much mystery reading this summer. With two books due ““ one fiction and the other nonfiction, it was a furious race on two different tracks. While one project was idling, the other required me to be at the steering wheel. I was able to read a few books while traveling on trains and taking breaks.
Brooklyn Wars by Triss Stein

Brooklyn Wars

I’m a big fan of Triss’s amateur sleuth, Erica Donato. She’s a history scholar who works at a small museum; I can certainly relate, even though Erica’s home base is in Brooklyn and I’m firmly planted on the left coast. The latest novel involves the redevelopment of the old Navy Yard. Since I’ve written a book for the Port of L.A., I’m a sucker for untold shipping tales and Brooklyn Wars doesn’t disappoint.

Trail of Echoes by Rachel Howzell Hall

Trail of Echoes

I know that this mystery is not Rachel’s latest, but I’m a little behind. Rachel’s homicide detective Elouise “Lou” Norton has such a likeable quick wit. Here her observation skills and experience are vital in solving the death of a teenager who lived in the same Los Angeles housing projects that Lou left behind.

Colorado Boulevard by Phoef Sutton (December release)

Colorado Boulevard

I kind of cheated on this one because Phoef’s third Crush novel won’t be out until December, perfect timing because the mystery has a connection to Pasadena’s Rose Parade. I read an ARC and I admit that I’m biased because I live in the town he writes about. Jumping from different character’s POV, Colorado Boulevard brings new depth to the story of the tall, taciturn bodyguard.

Good Byline by Jill Orr

Good Byline

It seems to me that there’s a dearth of new cozy amateur sleuths this season, but Jill Orr’s Riley Ellison, a library assistant in a small town in Virginia, may whet your appetite. She’s young, perky and, yes, a little impetuous, but that makes it fun, yes? Here Riley must discover the real reason why her childhood best friend passed away.

The Silent Second by Adam Walker Phillips

Silent Second

There aren’t that many new male authors attempting to write the comic mystery ““ that’s why Adam Walker Phillips’ human resource company drone, Chuck Restic, is so refreshing. I’m fascinated by corporate politics, so this debut mystery definitely delivers.

 

Since my schedule is slowing down a bit, I can’t wait to do some heavy-duty reading this fall. There are two mysteries written by Japanese Americans that I look forward to dig into: Joe Ide’s critically acclaimed IQ and Julie Shigekuni’s In Plain View, which is more literary than genre.

Happy reading with your pumpkin cheesecake Ben & Jerry’s ice cream! (At least that’s my food of choice.)

Con Lehane’s Summer Reading

Con Lehane large

Con Lehane has done a little bit of everything in his life. He has been a college professor, union organizer, labor journalist, and has tended bar at two-dozen or so drinking establishments. He teaches fiction writing and mystery writing at The Writer’s Center in Bethesda, Maryland. The bartending experiences came in handy when he wrote his mysteries featuring New York City bartender Brian McNulty. McNulty also appears in Lehane’s current series featuring a librarian at the building everyone thinks of as the New York Public Library, the library on 42nd Street. In November, the first in the series, Murder at the 42nd Street Library, will be followed by Murder in the Manuscript Room. Both books can be ordered through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2jGAT8u

Con Lehane’s website is www.conlehane.com

Thank you, Con, for writing a guest post and helping out a librarian.

*****

An early-fall question from Lesa: What did you read this summer? Fair enough for a blog post.

I read mostly mysteries—but other things, too. I do a lot of reading and rereading of classic mysteries, though I also have a bookcase filled with books of my contemporaries.

Recent reads include Ross Macdonald’s The Chill, one of my favorites that I reread periodically. It features Lew Archer, Macdonald’s loner private detective, who’s hired by a distraught young man to find his brand new wife who disappears virtually on their wedding night. She’s running from reverberations of a tragedy in her past that have caught up with her in the present. Before Archer can find her a murder takes place—one that Archer might have prevented—and the young bride is the prime suspect. As is his wont, Archer traces the complex stories of a number of people’s lives to uncover the twisted relations in the past that have led to dire consequences in the present. What I like about the Macdonald stories is that sense of how misdeeds in the past haunt the present.

Chill

Another book I began this summer and am still reading now into the fall also has to do with coming to grips with the past, or the past having its grip on you, Absalom, Absalom!  by William Faulkner. He’s the author of the much quoted line: “The past is never dead; it’s not even past,” which might well describe Ross Macdonald’s stories as much as his own. This complex and difficult book from the 1930s, thought by some to be a masterpiece, takes place before during and after the Civil War, and though told from multiple points of view, is essentially about one ruthless, vulgar man, Thomas Suptkin, his rise from nothing to wealth while wreaking havoc on his family and ultimately bringing about his own destruction when his dark past catches up with him.

Absalom

Finally, a recent discovery of mine is Donna Leon—recent for me despite the fact she’s been writing her Commissario Guido Brunetti Venice-based mysteries for a quarter century. I started with her first book,  Death at La Fenice, in which the commissario investigates the death by poisoning of a renowned orchestra conductor. This story too revolves around terrible deeds in the past resolving themselves in murder in the present. I liked how Brunetti conducted his investigation. More than that, I liked how he viewed the world and the people around him as he did it.

Death at La Fenice

*****

Check out the Web Store to find the books Con Lehane read. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Cara Black’s Summer Reading

Cara's Paris picture

Yesterday, Jenn McKinlay mentioned that I am in Paris. Author Cara Black is there right now, too. Tonight, my friends and I are going to see and hear Cara at WHSmith, The English Bookshop and Tearoom. (See, even when I’m out of the country, I’ll go to see authors.)

WHSmith

Cara is going to be there to talk about her mysteries, the Aimée Leduc Investigations set in Paris. Murder in Saint-Germain is the seventeenth, and most recent, in the New York Times bestselling series. The mysteries are available through the Web Store, https://bit.ly/2w5MTCl

You can learn more about Cara, and her books, at her website, www.carablack.com

Before she left for Paris, Cara wrote about her summer reading. Thank you, Cara.

*****

Maybe you spend your summer reading after applying SP50 on the sand and turning the pages of your  “˜beach reads’ or you spent summer in the city, back of your neck getting hot and gritty, and reading in the cool evening over a glass of wine. I read in my window nook, by a heater, where I’m sheltered from the fog drifting down from Twin Peaks. I live in San Francisco, where as Mark Twain said he never experienced a colder winter until he’d spent the summer in San Francisco. My summer reads might not have crossed your radar so I thought I’d mention three female writers who I have discovered. I hope you will, too. I caught up with two authors whose series books I wanted to catch up on and one who I shamefully should have begun reading before. I say shamefully because I should have realized before how good a writer she is.

Since I enjoy British and European mysteries, I follow recommendations from MrsPeabodyInvestigates, (   https://mrspeabodyinvestigates.wordpress.com/ ) a British librarian whose blog I’ve followed for a long time. Her suggestions and reviews bring crime fiction  and mystery books to attention that I didn’t know about. When Mrs P blogged about a Finnish writer who played punk music and was a special ed teacher that sold me. She doesn’t disappoint. So last year I discovered Kati Hiekkapelto and was hooked. Kati writes a series and this summer I inhaled her latest in the Anna Fekete series, The Exiled, her 4th. While Anna is of Hungarian descent and grew up in Serbia near the border then emigrated to Finland – she is a cop first and foremost, the rest of her identity comes later and finds her wondering in this book. In The Exiled, Anna is back where she grew up in Serbia, it’s hot, she’s feeling like a fish out of water and her mother nags her about being 30 and not being married. Then her bag is stolen in the village and things snowball. This book really explores Anna’s trying to come to terms with her identity, family, their expectations and the how corruption and small towns don’t change in the Balkans. Highly recommended.

Exiled

Ok I’m late to the Susan Hill party. Other writers have told me about her, a British author, for years and now, I realized I should have listened sooner. This summer at a book store I found A Question of Identity, the fifth or sixth I think in the Simon Serrailler series. I decided to plunge in. It’s set in a British village that’s seen better times, even a small bookstore that’s struggling but the scuffed about the edges charm inherent with current social issues pulled me in. I  inhaled it. Jump in anywhere and read these!

Identity

Here’s another British author via MrsP’s blog, Anya Lipska. Anya’s debut crime novel, Where the Devil Can’t Go, (a Kiszka and Kershaw novel) introduces young London policewoman and an older Polish man and shows a different side of East London and the communities that live there. Janusz Kiszka, unofficial ‘fixer’ to East London’s Polish community, and a man with his own distinctive moral code, has been hired to track down a missing waitress. Meanwhile, DC Natalie Kershaw, a rookie detective who’s not afraid of breaking a few rules, investigates the suspicious deaths of two Polish girls. It’s a  fascinating take grounded in police procedure of what it means to live in London now – multi-layered and a cultural trip to Poland.  I love the wit and humor the characters bring from different worlds in the microcosms that are London today! Enjoy!

Devil Can't Go

*****

Thank you, Cara. And, I don’t know about others, but I’m checking out MrsP’s blog.

Jenn McKinlay’s Summer Reading

Jenn McKinlay latest

I don’t know how Jenn McKinlay manages to read anything with her busy family and her writing schedule. Her latest Bluff Point Romance, Barking Up the Wrong Tree, was just released, and the third will be out in January. The new Library Lover’s Mystery, Death in the Stacks, has a November release date. Jenn’s one of the Poisoned Pen’s local authors, so you can buy signed copies through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2f8kk0a/

You can learn more about the librarian turned New York Times bestselling author at her website, www.jennmckinlay.com.

Thank you, Jenn, for squeezing in time to tell us about your summer reading.

*****

So, Lesa is off gallivanting in Paris and has left her blog in the clutches of authors. Oh, honey, what were you thinking? Quick, everyone, grab an ARC out of her towering pile of TBRs and let’s snuggle up with her cats, drink her tea, and have a good read.

I’m just joshing. As Lesa knows, I used to be a librarian so asking me to recommend books is like, well, suffice to say we could be here all day so I will whittle it down to three of my favorite recent reads.

WHEN FALCONS FALL. I was late to the party for C.S. Harris’s fantastic Sebastian St. Cyr series. Inexcusably rude of me, I know. So, how did I find this brilliant author? I was doing a group signing at the Poisoned Pen and one of the authors was C.S. Harris. We got to chatting and she was smart and funny and had a great laugh, so naturally, I bought the first book in the series What Angels Fear. And then I fell head over heels for St. Cyr. I mean a Regency nobleman who solves murders? Give me more! And she has. The entire series is terrific. We were recently signing together — again at the Pen — and I told her, “St Cyr is my fictional boyfriend, you know that, right?” C.S. (Candi) laughed and said, “Mine, too.” WHEN FALCONS FALL is the latest in this great series and while you don’t have to start at the beginning, I would because St. Cyr’s character arc is a wonderful read.

Falcons

YOU’LL NEVER KNOW, DEAR. The face of the doll on the cover should have warned me that Hallie Ephron had penned a suspenseful page-turner that was going to suck me in and not spit me out until the very end. This was one of my favorite reads of the past few months. Hallie is brilliant at setting the scene, capturing the cadence of the South, and delving into the complex relationships between mother and daughter and sisters and how the past haunts the present with unanswered questions that simply can not be ignored. I was fortunate in that I actually got a sneak peek at this novel because Hallie and I blog together on Jungle Red Writers and she was very generous and sent me an advanced copy. Hallie and I have never met in person, so I am very much looking forward to meeting her and my other blog companions at Bouchercon in Toronto this October. Also, I can’t wait to hear what Hallie is working on next!

youllnever

A STUDY IN SCARLET WOMEN. I am a Sherlockian. Don’t scoff! It is an actual word. I saw it listed in the Urban Dictionary, so I am citing my source. Anyway, how did I stumble upon Sherry Thomas’s fantastically refreshing twist on Sherlock Holmes? Well, we share a publisher (Berkley) and they put out a promotional piece about the book on Twitter and I thought, “˜A female Sherlock Holmes? Yes, please!’ And I am so glad I did. Sherry Thomas manages to capture the socially awkward, inquisitively brilliant, and fiercely independent Charlotte (Sherlock) Holmes perfectly. I found when I wasn’t reading the book, I was thinking about it, which to me is always an indicator of a terrific read. The second in the series A CONSPIRACY IN BELGRAVIA just came out and I can’t wait to jump back into Charlotte’s world.

Scarlet women

Thanks so much for letting me visit, Lesa. Bon Voyage! And, yes, I do expect to see a picture of you in a beret upon your return!

*****

Merci, Jenn. I appreciate it!

You can find Jenn’s books, and her book suggestions at the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

Lisa Unger’s Summer Reading

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Lisa Unger is the New York Times and internationally bestselling, award-winning author of fifteen novels, including the latest psychological thriller THE RED HUNTER. You can order that title, and Unger’s other books, through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2xtvNBR

Red Hunter

Her books are published in twenty-six languages worldwide, have sold millions of copies and have been named “Best of the Year” or top picks by the Today show, Good Morning America, Entertainment Weekly, Amazon, Indie Booksellers, Goodreads and Sun Sentinel to name a few.

Lisa, thank you for taking time to discuss some books with readers. I hope it helps that you were able to pick possible selections out of your To Be Read (TBR) pile.

*****

One of the many gifts of being a professional writer is the constant stream of new books that come to my door ““ galleys from agents and publishers, the final phase in a fellow author’s outpouring of years, hopes, dreams. One of the challenges of being a professional writer is the constant stream of books that come to my door. My pile of galleys grows.

I know how important it is to receive endorsements from fellow writers ““ not just to readers but to authors. It’s hard to ask, and even harder to wait, knowing your work is sitting on the desk of another writer.  I have been grateful that hugely important, fabulously successful, enormously talented authors have taken time out from their lives to read my own work and offer praise. So,

I don’t take this charge lightly, and do my best to attend to every book that comes my way. Sometimes I can’t; there are simply not enough hours in the day. Or my life overflows with commitments and obligations. Maybe the work just doesn’t resonate. I can almost always find something positive to say, and actively try to. But sometimes ““ it’s not you, it’s me ““ I just can’t fall in love.

This summer ““ with my daughter off from school, a deadline bearing down ““ I had even less time to read. So, a pile has grown on the shelf behind my desk. Every day it sits, tilting under its own weight, silently recriminating me for my negligence.  

 

Will you help me? Let’s go through a couple of them together.

LIAR’S CANDLE by August Thomas (April 2018)

Liar's Candle

The earnest and passionate editor assured me that August, the young author, is a prodigy, having written this debut at the tender age of 23, with a string of academic honors to her name before that. Do I remember, the editor asked, what it was like to be in my twenties wondering if it was all going to work out? I do. Though it was so very long ago (oh, not really!), I remember it well.  It was clear in the first few pages that this was going to be a remarkable novel ““ tightly plotted, well-written, astute beyond the author’s years. Penny Kessler takes a job as an intern in the American embassy in Ankara, Turkey. Young and naïve, she’s quickly drawn into a web of betrayal and deception. I can’t tell you how things are going to work out for poor Penny. That would just be wrong. But, August, I think you’re going to be okay, kid.

JAR OF HEARTS by Jennifer Hillier (June 2018)

Freak. Creep. The Butcher. A catalog of my exes? No! The super cool titles of books written by the talented Jennifer Hillier. JAR OF HEARTS ““ now that’s a great (and seriously creepy) title. This one came from a favorite editor with a bribe, the promise of another galley he knew I wanted (the next one from my pal Gregg Hurwitz). The nerve! Worse than that, it worked! And lucky for me ““ because from page one I was intrigued by Geo, the slippery heroine at the heart of Hillier’s dark and twisted tale of buried secrets, and a serial killer ex-boyfriend. Hillier’s masterful story-telling and compelling voice pulled me deeper and deeper. You’ll cringe and want to cover your eyes (which of course you can’t because you’re reading) many times, I assure you, but you won’t be able to stop turning the pages.

WORLD ENOUGH by Clea Simon (Nov. 2017)

World Enough

Ah, remember the eighties? The alternative music, the underground clubs? When it was cool to be an outsider and a misfit? Clea Simon certainly does and she captures it perfectly in this atmospheric, twisting, time machine of a mystery featuring former rock journalist, turned corporate cog, Tara Winton. My pal Erin Mitchell sent this one. And when Erin tells me I’m going to like something, I always do. With a colorful cast of characters, a gift for detail, and intricate plotting, Simon takes her readers deep into the esoteric world of the Boston music scene as Tara’s questions about the “accidental” death of an old friend, lead her on a dangerous, twisting path to the past.

STILLHOUSE LAKE by Rachel Caine

Stillhouse Lake

I “met” the wildly talented Rachel Caine via social media when we each published novels with the same title, INK AND BONE.  I had practically sprained my arm patting myself on the back for the brilliance and originality of my title, only to discover that Caine had published her novel ““ a fantasy, and the beginning of stellar series ““ a year earlier. Because of the incident, we became buddies. Then we met in the real world at a conference and she offered me an early read of her new thriller. Again ““ lucky me! A woman discovers that her husband is a serial killer, and her life, and the lives of their two children, are blow to smithereens. She spends the next years on the run, not just from her husband who stalks her from prison, but from the legion of people who believe that she was complicit in his crimes. This is a hold-your-breath, neglect-everything-else-to-get-back-to-the-book, non-stop thrill ride. Populated with vividly drawn characters who live and breathe, STILLHOUSE LAKE hooks you fast and holds you tight. Caine is simply a fantastic storyteller and, here, she is at the top of her game.

HELLBENT by Gregg Hurwitz (Jan. 2018)

Hellbent

Gregg, who is also my pal, is one of my all-time favorite writers. He is one of those rare authors who gets it all right ““ every single time ““ with his clean, beautiful prose, ultra-cool tech, rich characterization, and non-stop action. HELLBENT, the third in his fabulous Orphan X series featuring vigilante Evan Smoak, is no exception. This one doesn’t hit the shelves until 2018, so you have plenty of time to read the first two ““ ORPHAN X and THE NOWHERE MAN. You’ll be breathless for number three where Gregg ratchets up the tension and the stakes (which were both unbearably high already) for the flawed and enormously appealing Smoak.

*****

Thank you, Lisa. Now, you made it difficult for readers who have to wait for these books. Check out Lisa Unger’s website at https://lisaunger.com

*****

Watch for the books in the Web Store, or pre-order whenever you want. https://store.poisonedpen.com

Reed Farrel Coleman’s Summer Reading

ReedColeman

You might know Reed Farrel Coleman as “A New York Times bestseller called a hard-boiled poet by NPR’s Maureen Corrigan and the ‘noir poet laureate’ in the Huffington Post.” Or, you might recognize him as the author of Robert B. Parker’s The Hangman’s Sonnet, the latest Jesse Stone novel. Maybe you know his Gus Murphy novels, such as What You Break. Signed copies of both of these books, and copies of his others, are available through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2xt7KTr

Reed is a four-time Edgar Award nominee in three different categories—Best Novel, Best Paperback Original, Best Short Story—and a three-time recipient of the Shamus Award for Best PI Novel of the Year. He has also won the Audie, Macavity, Barry, and Anthony Awards.

Even with his busy schedule and book tour, he took time to tell us about his summer reading. Thank you, Reed.

*****

Because I’ve had to write and tour two books a year for the last several years, I haven’t had the time to do much summer reading. I was always busy writing new material, doing edits, or, like this weekend, reviewing galley pages. This summer has been a bit different. Only one book to write this year—the prequel novel to Michael Mann’s magnum opus movie Heat—and one tour for Robert B. Parker’s The Hangman’s Sonnet. Busy still? Yes, but I was determined to do more reading this summer and here’s what I’ve been digging into.

 

Prussian Blue

By Philip Kerr

Prussian Blue

Philip Kerr’s Prussian Blue was a fantastic addition to the Bernie Gunther series. The man is a novelist supreme and his books are rare in that they are incredibly entertaining, often heartbreaking, and educational. Yes, I said educational. I thought I knew a lot about Nazi Germany, WWII, the Holocaust, and post war Europe. I thought that until I began reading Kerr.

The Force

By Don Winslow

Force

Like Kerr, Winslow is a masterful writer. And for many of the same reasons I love Kerr’s work, I love Winslow’s. I’ve made a career writing about New York City area cops, so, as much as I respect Don, I approached The Force with a bit of skepticism. I needn’t have worried. The novel is itself a force and exposes not only systemic corruption, but holds a mirror up to many uncomfortable things no one seems to want to talk about.

The Late Show

By Michael Connelly

Late Show

It had been several years since I picked up a Bosch novel. Then I read The Burning Room and I was hooked all over again. Michael’s The Wrong Side of Goodbye was even better. I thought it was about the best Bosch ever. But Michael wasn’t satisfied with just another great Bosch novel. No, in The Late Show he introduces us to a new protagonist, Renee Ballard, a tough detective wronged by her superiors, who never quits and has enough integrity for the whole LAPD. Great character. Excellent story.

The Drifter

By Nick Petrie

Drifter

The first novel in what promises to be a long running series. Petrie hits all the right notes in a book about the tragedy of PTSD. This book isn’t about the war, but it’s actually all about war and what it does to the people who fight them in our name. Yet this is also a first rate crime story filled with interesting and complex characters, a twisty plot, and a classic loner protagonist.

Zero Footprint

By Simon Chase and Ralph Pezzullo

Zero

It’s been a while since I read a quality non-fiction account of what really goes on in a war zone. This book tells it like it is without the requisite hand-wringing rationalizations or macho bullshit. The authors—one a private military contractor, the other a New York Times bestseller—have an unflinching taste for the hard truths of a life spent in service of country and private gain. What becomes of all the men countries train to be killers? Perhaps the best thing I can say about the book is that is helping to inform my own work.

*****

Thank you, Reed. I know Reed Farrel Coleman probably has a hard time fitting in requests because of his busy schedule. You can check that out on his website,   https://reedcoleman.com/ 

And, you can find all of the titles from his book list in the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/

 

Jeffrey Siger’s Summer Reading

Jeff Siger for Poisoned Pen

I’ve never seen Jeffrey Siger look this somber, so he must have taken my request quite seriously when I asked if he’d tell us about his summer reading. Jeff is the author of the wonderful Andreas Kaldis mysteries set in Greece. They are vivid depictions of the country, the politics, and the history, yet they have humor and characters that will bring you back for the next book. The series began with Murder in Mykonos in 2009. Siger’s next book, An Aegean April, is due out in January. Of course you can order the books through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2vYEbWm

Jeff’s website is  https://www.jeffreysiger.com/     Thank you, Jeff, for writing about your summer reading.

*****

I live on an Aegean Greek island where, from the paucity of books I see on the beach, summer reading must conjure up fears in many that reading a book in the sun risks casting a SpongeBob-like shadow upon their tans.  But for the more adventurous beachgoers among us—and those of us who know how to read on our sides—we soldier on to great rewards.  
This summer I was blown away by three books written by three friends of mine, making it a particularly warm and sunny experience, not that they were necessarily warm and sunny books. One’s a hard-edged thriller, and the other two are devilish mysteries taking place in alternate realities, but being the big fan that I am of Haruki Murakami, I like that sort of thing. I also like Moby Dick, which is another sort of reality.

Here are the three that made my summer.
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

I knew Jo Perry long before I knew of her work, and when she told me she was writing a series about a dead guy and a dead dog—Charlie and Rose to be precise—I was at a loss as to what to expect. I’ve now read two in the series and I’m thrilled there’s another out there for me to read. DEAD IS GOOD, the third in the series, is a mesmerizing exploration of the subtleties of our universally shared fate, neatly wrapped up in a crisp, can’t put down mystery. This one kicks off with a woman deciding to commit suicide by cop by opening fire on a North Hollywood police station, and in passing through the netherworld of Charlie and Rose, where the dead can observe the living but not intervene, she sets Charlie and Rose off on a complex sleuthing adventure hoping to somehow protect the love of Charlie’s once-lived life.

Dead is Good

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

Thanks to these three great writers, I enjoyed some terrific summer reading. I wish you the same.
—Jeffrey Siger

Donis Casey’s Summer Reading

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Donis Casey is the author of nine Alafair Tucker mysteries, set in the early 1900s. Most of them take place in rural Oklahoma. However, they’re more than mysteries. They are also a fascinating glimpse into family life at that time with details you might not find in other novels. The Return of the Raven Mocker was the last book. The tenth book in the series, Forty Dead Men, is scheduled for a February 2018 release. All of Donis Casey’s books are available through The Poisoned Pen’s Web Store. https://bit.ly/2jv11mF

Thank you, Donis, for taking time to talk about your summer reading.

*****

Hot Summer Reading

Ah, summer. Or if you live in the Arizona desert like I do, its more like, oh,  $#@&, summer! We deal with reverse seasons here. Fall, winter, and spring are the best times for going out and doing, and summer is the season for doing nothing but sitting beside the pool or next to the air conditioner with a margarita in one hand and good book in the other.

When I read for pleasure, I love to go to an unfamiliar place and live there for a while. I love to be taken on an extended tour, to enjoy the scenery, smell the air, taste the food, maybe time travel a bit, and fall in love with the natives. However, I dont need to be reminded of the heat, so as much as I enjoy them, I save novels such as Annamaria Alfieris Strange Gods, set in 1912 British East Africa, for days that the temperature is not predicted to reach 115º F.

Strange Gods

No, during the summer, give me something like The Sorbonne Affair, Mark Pryors seventh Hugo Marston novel, which transported me to Paris in the fall, with sidewalk cafes, a charming and literate protagonist, and a mystery that was so absorbing that I forgot about the heat for several blessed hours. Ive enjoyed all of the Hugo Marston novels, especially The Paris Librarian, but The Sorbonne Affair had not only a satisfyingly twisty plot, but a side story that filled in some of the long-standing blanks in Hugos past.

Sorbonne Affair

Rhys Bowens In Farleigh Field took me away to another world and another time that I would not have wanted to live though, but her description of the beginning of World War II and how it affected the lives of the the five daughters of Roderick Sutton, Earl of Westerham, made me wonder how I would have coped. The beginning of the tale, when a soldier actually falls from the sky to his death onto the estate when his parachute fails to open, grabbed me immediately. How each of the women of Farleigh Place manages the deprivations of war and how the Sutton family rises to the occasion…or not…kept me reading until so late in the night I couldn’t keep my eyes open.

In Farleigh Field

As much as I enjoy immersing myself in a new book, Im one of those readers who every once in a while loves to revisit a novel or series that gave me particular pleasure. Laura Joh Rowland writes wonderful novels set in Victorian England, but I first fell in love with her Sano Ichiro thrillers for their unique protagonist, a Samurai with unshakable honor. Im enamored of their unusual setting, 15th century Japan, as well.  In every novel, poor Sano teeters on the brink of ruination and disaster through no fault of his own, and in every novel he manages to save himself and his family through wits, skill, and his own code of honor. It never hurts that he can always count on help from his intrepid wife Reiko. Rowlands heart-pounding eighteenth and last Sano thriller, The Iris Fan, came out late in 2014, but to immerse yourself in the total Sano experience, start with the first, Shinju, in which a young and poor Sano risks his own life and reputation to solve a double murder that nobody wants solved, and thus begins his rise to the highest levels of feudal Japanese society.

*****

Hmmm. I’m noticing a pattern here, mysteries that vividly depict a setting, just as Donis Casey’s mysteries depict the early 20th century in Oklahoma. All of these mysteries are available through the Web Store. https://store.poisonedpen.com/  Summer may be over, but you’ll want to stock up on your fall and winter reading.

Donis Casey’s website is https://www.doniscasey.com/