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Tag: Book

The First Mystery I Ever Read

He wears a deerstalker hat and trenchcoat.  Equipped with a magnifying glass and his trusty detective manual, he searches for clues and solves cases.  No, not Sherlock Holmes.  It’s Detective Mole! I’ve long remembered that very first mystery story I ever read.  Well, bits and pieces.  I remembered it was a Detective Mole story.  He was investigating… Read More ›

Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

When we first meet Flavia de Luce, she has been tied up and left in a closet.  Does she panic?  Oh, no.  She quite calmly extricates herself and inwardly chides her two tormentors—her older sisters, Ophleia and Daphne—for their ineptness while at the same time planning up a revenge scheme of her own.  Need we point… Read More ›

Blackout

Imagine waking up, alone, and not remembering who you are. “I was a killer.  I woke up knowing that before I knew anything else.”  Cal Leandros hasn’t forgotten everything, just the important parts of his life.  Who is he?  Does he have family?  Friends?  And, more importantly, why is the beach where he came to… Read More ›

Hawkes Harbor

In an asylum, Dr. Phillip McDevitt “is intrigued by his newest patient, a troubled young man recently transferred from the state hospital for the criminally insane.  Jamie Sommers suffers from depression, partial amnesia, and an unaccountable fear…” In 2004, S. E. Hinton released Hawkes Harbor, her first novel in 15 years.  Best known for gritty… Read More ›

Gingerbread Cookie Murder III

On a more serious note, Leslie Meier’s “Gingerbread Cookies and Gunshots” rounds out the trilogy of novellas offered in Gingerbread Cookie Murder.  “It was Christmas…again.”  That’s how this Lucy Stone mystery begins.  A much more somber tone than the two previous entries. The last in my “A Taste of Murder” discussion series, Gingerbread Cookie Murder features… Read More ›

Gingerbread Cookie Murder II

“Christmas with my parents is always a mixed bag.”  Oh, dear.  With an opening line like this, where are we headed? Moving to a retirement community doesn’t necessarily benefit one’s health, at least for one individual  in Laura Levine’s novella, “The Dangers of Gingerbread Cookies.”  Fans of Janet Evanovich might very well enjoy this taste of… Read More ›

Gingerbread Cookie Murder I

Ever had to put up with a neighbor’s noise pollution?  That’s what Hannah Swensen is faced with early on in “Gingerbread Cookie Murder.” The last in my “A Taste of Murder” discussion series, Gingerbread Cookie Murder features the talents of three authors: Joanne Fluke, Laura Levine, and Leslie Meier each of whom contribute a novella-length mystery to… Read More ›

Trolls

With the recent release of The Elder Scrolls: Skyrim—an awesome game by the way—which is set in the homeland of the Nords, I’m reminded of one of my first forays into Norse Mythology.  As a kid, I discovered The Troll Book at my local library and checked out—more than once—this informative look at the lore of Trolls…. Read More ›

Sweet Revenge

Remember the old adage?  Revenge is a dish best served cold.   In this 14th culinary mystery featuring caterer/sleuth Goldy Schulz, that saying would be well suited. Former district attorney Drew Wellington has made his fair share of enemies, and Goldy’s on the scene when Drew is drugged, poisoned, stabbed, and left for dead in the… Read More ›

The Chocolate Cat Caper

The first in the Chocoholic mystery series takes Shakespeare’s adage, “first kill all the lawyers,” to heart.  Clementine Ripley, a high-profile defense attorney, takes a fatal bite of chocolate and then promptly falls over a balcony landing at Lee McKinney’s feet. In her first full-length appearance (see this entry about the short story), Lee McKinney has once again… Read More ›

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