For Mysteries & More!

Tag: Fiction

Unearthing Murder

Read along with The Poisoned Martini this Spring… Mysteries are all about uncovering hidden truths.  Archaeology is all about unearthing secrets of the past.  Together they are a natural fit for an exciting story that presents a murder to solve and details about another time and place.  Such stories have long been part of the… Read More ›

Dead Man’s Folly

“It’s a very wicked world, M. Poirot.  And there are very wicked people in the world.  You probably know that as well as I do.  I don’t say so before the younger people, it might discourage them, but it’s true…Yes, it’s a very wicked world…” So says Mrs. Folliat to M. Poirot at the end of Chapter… Read More ›

The Big Over Easy

It’s not a hardboiled mystery.  (I really, really couldn’t resist.)  Detective Inspector Jack Spratt of the Nursey Crimes Division–understaffed, underfunded, and underwhelming (though not how you might think)–is called in to investigate the demise of Humperdinck Jehoshaphat Aloysius Stuyvesant van Dumpty, aka Humpty Dumpty. Businessman, philanthrophist, and large egg, Dumpty has seemingly committed suicide.  It… Read More ›

Castle

Although imperfect, episode 4.14 “The Blue Butterfly” (original air date: February 6, 2012) will no doubt rank as a favorite episode of one of Castle, a series I’ve enjoyed immensely since its premiere in 2009. The TV Series, Castle, features the ongoing adventures of best-selling author Richard Castle (Nathan Fillion) as he shadows one NYPD precinct’s detectives… Read More ›

Dragon Bones, Dragon Blood

To survive, Wardwick of Hurog plays the role of simpleton; to regain a kingdom, Ward must prove his mettle and his worth. “Hurog means dragon.”  As we discover several times during the course of the two novels that–to date–tell the story of Ward, heir of the Shavig throne; his family, and the land of the… Read More ›

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 ›

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