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Review

Death at the White Hart

by Henrietta Thornton May 1, 2025

A likable duo is at the center of Broadchurch-creator Chibnall’s debut: detectives Nicola Bridge and her newbie partner, Harry Ward, dubbed Westlife for his boy-band looks and first name. Small-town Fleetcombe, on England’s Dorset coast, is the setting; it’s Nicola’s hometown, and she’s back to separate her husband from an affair, a plot line that creates a realistic undercurrent of desperation that matches the bizarre crime facing the new partners. The naked body of a man is found tied to a chair on a road near town. That’s odd enough in Fleetcombe, where sharp words at the local pubs—one of them the White Hart of the book’s title—are about as violent as it gets. But there’s more: the body has a stag’s antlers affixed to its head, a sinister touch that eager Harry tries to tie to mythology and local history, only to be brought back to earth by his more practical and seasoned colleague. Work the evidence, she says, setting the two on a winding path that creates a solid procedural enjoyably filled with oddball townspeople, personal travails, the inevitable local criminal element, and one very savvy little girl, a character whom readers will want to swoop in and save. This absorbing thriller shows all the hallmarks of having been written by a master of TV drama.

May 1, 2025 0 comment
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Review

What a Way to Go

by Brian Kenney May 1, 2025

Yes indeed, this is certainly one hell of a way to go. When Anthony Wistern has a bit of an accident during his 60th birthday—he falls onto an expensive, large party decoration that pierces him—he ends up dead, of all things. Worse, he finds himself to be in a sort of rundown waiting room, where he is meant to stay until he can recall what or who it was that killed him. He’s reputed to be vastly wealthy—though does he actually have the funds to back up his claims of belonging to the one percent?—and all his family cares about, from his sarcastic wife Oliva to their four useless, repugnant, and adult children, is what Anthony had in the bank. Obsessively watching his family on Limbo TV, hoping for some hints as to how he died, which would allow him to get sprung, Anthony is astonished to find that no one seems to be making any sort of fuss over his demise. In fact, Olivia seems quite put out at the mess he has left behind, including both his financial problems (where did the money go?) and social issues (such as a mistress). The book is narrated by Anthony; Olivia; and a third character, the Sleuth, a young woman, an obsessive blogger, and a true-crime fanatic who is convinced Anthony was murdered and will jump over any fence to prove it. As with Mackie’s earlier book, How to Kill Your Family, this is chock full of plots both large and small, although when it comes to dark humor, this book is the clear winner.

May 1, 2025 0 comment
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Review

Midnight Burning

by Henrietta Thornton April 24, 2025

Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein met in real life. Here that short interaction is included—the author has done his research, big time—but as part of a fictional steadfast friendship between the two that’s filled with loving banter and crime solving. The series debuts in 1937 as the scientist and actor are older, well-known figures. Chaplin is considering a movie that will lampoon Hitler (his real film The Great Dictator) and Einstein is teaching at Caltech and following with dread and guilt the development of a devastating weapon, the atom bomb, enabled by his work. When Nazis visit LA as part of a propaganda effort and all signs point to looming danger, the friends team up with Georgia Ann Robinson, the first Black female detective in LAPD history (also a real person), to thwart the plans. Antisemitism and racism are given lurid front seats here, with both shown as grotesque blights on our world. Readers will readily see parallels with white-nationalism today, making this a timely and ire-provoking read. They will also learn a great deal about Chaplin (less about Einstein, though he’s still well fleshed out), with his ladies-man ways on full display along with his kindness and sharp wit. This series promises to mix fun capers with serious societal commentary and is one to watch out for.

April 24, 2025 0 comment
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Review

Veil

by Jeff Ayers April 24, 2025

The disappearances seemed ordinary at first, with the police thinking those gone were runaways. Then more vanished, all at night, and curfews were implemented. John Calhoun, a teacher with a fractured family, has his son vanish after going around a corner. The wave continues, and the news and government have no answers. When John’s wife is taken in broad daylight by an invisible force that drags her away screaming, it’s clear that whatever is responsible won’t stop until every person on the planet is abducted. But who is responsible, and what is their motive? John and his 13-year-old daughter hunker down in their house and begin a survivalist lifestyle to avoid being next. At the same time, the neighborhood around them becomes a scene right out of the classic Twilight Zone episode The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street. Janz, the pseudonym of Craig Shaeffer, uses his background and influences growing up to craft a tense and twisty thriller. The surprises come later in the story when John is forced to fight back by making sacrifices to save his family and the motivations behind the disappearances come to light. Janz takes the quintessential theme of how far you would go to protect your family to clever and horrifying heights.

April 24, 2025 0 comment
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Review

That Missing Piece is Killing Me

by Brian Kenney April 24, 2025

Alice Pepper has one busy life. She’s director of the West Hazel, Oregon, public library. She’s the center of a group of friends—all puzzle fanatics—who regularly meet for meals and puzzling. And she’s got plenty of family members, like her nieces, whose lives she needs to keep an eye on. She may have had to put off retirement because her divorce has wiped out much of her savings, but Alice always keeps focused on what’s important. And in much of this book it’s the disappearance of her friend Michelle Chong, martial and visual artist, that has Alice’s attention. Did Michelle run away, finally escaping from that no-good husband to create a life elsewhere, or was she a victim of domestic violence? Nearly half the book is devoted to searching for Michelle, and once that’s resolved this second book in the series (after Puzzle Me a Murder) expands deeper into Alice’s world—which is loving and caring, yes, but also features major pieces of the past she has been unable to resolve. For fans of Richard Osman, Nancy Bush, and Leslie Meier.

April 24, 2025 0 comment
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Review

The Game is Murder

by Henrietta Thornton April 17, 2025

In Ward’s clever and unusual debut, the reader is put to work solving a murder, their task propelled by a sassy narrator who insults them throughout. The tale opens with murder-mystery dinner at which guests hear the story of a nanny who’s murdered in a case of mistaken identity; when the former man of the house, Lord Verreman, discovers that he hasn’t killed his wife, Lady Verreman is able to escape. At least, that’s what police believe. At the dinner, guests are told of various anomalies at the scene and alibis and motives for others connected to the case, and are led through the inquest after the nanny’s autopsy. Then the viewpoint switches: a detective is hired by the rich couple’s son and is required to visit the the home where the murder happened, hear the evidence—in a most unusual delivery—and reveal the culprit. These first two sections are unusual enough, but the third tops them: the reader is presented with all the evidence and must make choices step by step as to what they believe, in the end reaching a verdict of their own (a contract is in place, after all). What an intriguing start for this author!

April 17, 2025 0 comment
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Review

She Didn’t See It Coming

by Jeff Ayers April 17, 2025

Bryden seems to have the perfect family. She has a loving husband, Sam, and an adorable three-year-old daughter named Clara. One night when he’s working late, Sam gets a call from Clara’s daycare. Bryden has not picked up their daughter and is not answering her phone or responding to texts. Sam picks Clara up and arrives home to find Bryden’s cell phone and purse in the apartment and her car parked in the garage. Where did she go, and what happened to her? Detective Jayne Salter of the Albany Police Department gets the case. From the moment she starts investigating, she finds Bryden’s family, friends, and neighbors all seem to be hiding something. But does that make one of them guilty? Lapena keeps the suspense and mystery going to the final page. Readers, at one point, will think everyone is responsible for Bryden’s disappearance, but the truth is shocking and surprising. Jayne will uncover more murder and chaos than she’s bargaining for, and Lapena could have a series character on her hands with this charismatic detective.

April 17, 2025 0 comment
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Review

It Should Have Been You

by Brian Kenney April 17, 2025

Hang on to your hat! This latest from Andrea Mara is one twisty terror ride that will have readers glued to the page. The premise starts out simple enough. Susan O’Donnell, a high-school math teacher, is a new mother, her daughter Bella having been born four months ago. Safe to say Susan is exhausted, sleep deprived, and anxious. So when she reads a snide WhatsApp message from the local neighborhood queen, clearly directed at Susan, she sends it on to her two sisters with her own remarks: “omg she’s such a smug wagon. I’d love to send her the pics of her husband wrapped around the PR girl at the opening party for Bar Four…” Bitchy? Totally. Funny? Yes, indeed. Except that Susan makes a dreadful mistake: she sends her post to not just her sisters, but to the 300 residents of her housing estate. Time to grovel and beg for forgiveness. Except things don’t work out quite that way. Instead, this one incident sets in motion a series of lies, violence, and murder that no one can stop. A knock-out.

April 17, 2025 0 comment
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Review

All My Bones

by Danise Hoover April 17, 2025

On this second visit to The Old Juniper Bookshop in Enigma, Georgia, on a Sunday morning in April, shop owner Madeline and friend Gloria, an Episcopal priest, act on the notion to prep the bleak front lawn of the shop for planting roses. Unfortunately, they uncover the body of the town’s most difficult and wealthy citizen instead. Circumstances make Gloria the prime suspect and, of course, Madeline must save her friend. There is the influence of money, old family disputes, and a wonderful wealth of small-town gossip that also fuels the situation, a not-actually-haunted haunted opera house, not-for-sale rare books that actually are, and a very erudite gardener/poet. Maddie and her cohort work against the wisdom that says to leave things alone and of course solve the crime. In the end there is justice, and a bit of romance. Perhaps even the rosebushes will get planted. Will we make it back to Enigma, maybe in the Fall? I wouldn’t be surprised.

April 17, 2025 0 comment
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Review

Sounds Like Trouble

by Brian Kenney April 17, 2025

This second novel in the “Sounds Like a Plan” series provides the same high-energy, pedal-to-the-metal narrative as the first book, while keeping the romance between our two detectives very much alive and humor very much in evidence. Jackson Jones and Mackenzie “Mac” Cunningham have barely set up their PI practice—most of their office is still in boxes—when they are summoned by three of Los Angeles’s leading gangsters. Seems like these mobsters have an urgent matter on their hands, and even though they are big-time rivals, they have come together to command Jackson and Mac to take up the case. Specifically, they want them to locate a missing person who is likely close to death. What has the gangsters so worried? The fact that this missing person has been gathering dirt on the three of them for decades, and it will all become public information once he dies. As much as Jackson and Mac would like to say a big No! to this career opportunity, they aren’t given that choice. With the clock ticking, these two detectives—who can’t even agree on how to decorate their office—reluctantly head out into LA’s ritziest neighborhoods with the LAPD right behind them. Fierce and fiery dialogue between the detectives helps to make this a winning series that offers crime fiction readers and adventurous romance readers much to enjoy.

April 17, 2025 0 comment
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