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Friday, May 29, 2015

The Operation Storage Weekly Link Round-Up




I'm beginning to think that my return to knitting is serious. This past week I've been working in my craft room to create more storage. I've been taking advantage of coupons and sales to buy more yarn, and I'm expecting another buying spree in a couple of weeks. I'm not the type of person who allows herself to have stacks and piles of anything in the house, so... Yikes!

Almost finished!

My reorganization involved emptying a bookcase on the craft side of the room. All the photo albums and genealogy binders moved to the opposite side out of the shot. Then I filled the shelves with canvas storage bins. I have to admit that I miss seeing the skeins of yarn exposed in that one bookcase, but I was having trouble with them all trying to slide off onto the floor.

I've got over half of my yarn stash sorted and the bins labeled now. All I have to do is finish with the rest. For me, organizing is right up there with reading and needlework. I just hope I don't fill those empty bins too quickly!

And now... on to the links!



►Books, Movies & Other Interesting Tidbits◄
  • British Pathé has made over 80,000 historic videos available on YouTube.
  • Miss Marple vs. the Mansplainers: Agatha Christie's feminist detective hero.
  • Digital publishing is bringing censorship woes to Iran.
  • Google has revealed the new typeface for their eBooks.
  • How do your favorite Game of Thrones characters look in the book versus the show?
  • Agatha Christie's forgotten Syrian memoir is going to be republished.
  • The songs that make us cry. 
  • The true face of Shakespeare has been revealed for the first time. 
  • I had to share the story of Bahrisons Bookshop in Delhi, India, because one of my favorite fictional detectives, Tarquin Hall's Vish Puri, has his office above the bookshop.
  • Would you buy an eBook from a hotel or airport
  • Major publishers do not seem to be listening to their authors.


►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄


►Channeling My Inner Elly Mae Clampett◄
  • A library for the birds
  • Arttu was a very lucky little Finnish red squirrel.


►The Happy Wanderer◄
  • This church in Belgium looks very plain... until you see it from different angles.
  • You're probably going to want to book your next vacation in the Hebrides of Scotland after you look at these 31 photos.


►I  ♥  Lists & Quizzes◄



That's all for now. Don't forget to stop by next Friday when I'll be sharing a freshly selected batch of links for your surfing pleasure!

Have a great weekend, and read something fabulous!


Thursday, May 28, 2015

The Readaholics and the Falcon Fiasco by Laura DiSilverio


First Line: The white suit was a bad idea.

Amy-Faye Johnson's life in Heaven, Colorado, is...well... pretty heavenly. Her event planning business is booming. Her friends and fellow members of the Readaholics book club are great, and the parents she loves so dearly live only a few blocks away. But clouds are appearing on her horizon.

Amy-Faye agrees to plan a wedding without knowing that the groom is the ex-boyfriend she still pines for. But the absolute worst is when one of her fellow Readaholics dies very suddenly and very mysteriously.

Ivy's death is ruled suicide by poison, but Amy-Faye and the others in the book club don't buy it. Following the example of one of her favorite literary sleuths, Amy-Faye and her friends do a bit of their own investigating and discover that Ivy was hiding some very dangerous secrets. Can Amy-Faye close the book on this case before the killer can put an end to her snooping?

I've just found a new cozy series to enjoy. Although DiSilverio's first Readaholics mystery could have used a bit of tightening, I just kept finding more and more things about this book to make me smile. 

Amy-Faye is just the sort of protagonist cozy mystery readers love. She's smart and funny and loyal-- and of course, she's not above a bit of snooping when she feels justice isn't being done. She's going to have to take care, however, or her sleuthing will have a detrimental effect on her event planning business.

I'm not one to appreciate toxic parents. When it comes to the mysteries I read, I'd much prefer that-- if the parents are too obnoxious to live-- they be neither seen nor heard. I'm thrilled to report that although our heroine's are quirky, Mom and Dad are delightfully so (especially Amy-Faye's mother, the retired librarian-turned-book-reviewer), and I'll be happy to visit with them any time.

Amy-Faye's also got a first-rate group of friends who all have varying backgrounds, talents, and personalities. This certainly bodes well for the future of the series, and I look forward to learning more about each of them as each book is released.

And how about that mystery, you ask? It's a good one with a very well-disguised villain. I do like to be kept guessing! Unfortunately I don't enjoy being kept waiting, which is what I must do until the next time the Readaholics book club meets.
 

The Readaholics and the Falcon Fiasco by Laura DiSilverio
ISBN: 9780451470836
Obsidian © 2015
Mass Market Paperback, 336 pages

Cozy Mystery, #1 Readaholics mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased at The Poisoned Pen.


 

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Blood Orchids by Toby Neal


First Line: Drowning isn't pretty, even in paradise.

Police officer Lei Texeira had a deeply troubled childhood that will not leave her no matter how hard she tries to bury it. When she finds two murdered teenagers, she is greatly affected and becomes obsessed with finding the girls' killer.

As she becomes more involved with the investigation, she can't get over the feeling that she's being stalked, and this serves to throw her together even more with the new detective to whom she's becoming attracted. Lei's going to need all the protection she can get because the killer does have her in his sights.

Author Toby Neal paints such a lush and gorgeous picture of Hilo, Hawaii, that I wanted to board the first plane that would take me there. From its beaches to its christmas berry bushes to its fern forests to its "vog" (volcanic emissions from Kilauea), I just couldn't get enough. Hilo and its surroundings are perfect for a mystery series.

I also enjoyed the character of Dr. Wilson, the police therapist. In many ways the scenes between Wilson and Lei were the best in the book and showed Lei's true path to healing from her traumatic past.

There's a lot to like in Blood Orchids. In fact, that's the main problem: there's too much. There are murders, kidnaps, rapes, a stalker, people popping up from Lei's past, shootings, meltdowns, therapy sessions, a romance-- enough action for two books-- and I felt the story would've flowed much better if a few of these elements had been left out.

I also had doubts about Lei's effectiveness as a police officer. This character has emotional meltdowns that cause her to black out. Not a good thing when someone is supposed to be protecting and serving. At least by book's end Lei seemed to be on the brink of putting her past behind her.

I may have had my doubts about parts of Blood Orchids, but the book does have good bones. I'm certainly curious about Lei's next investigation, and who could turn down another trip to Hilo?
 

Blood Orchids by Toby Neal
eISBN: 9780982952404
Mythic Island Press © 2011
eBook, 312 pages

Police Procedural, #1 Lei Crime mystery
Rating: B-
Source: Purchased from Amazon. 


And the Winner of My Carolyn Hart Giveaway Is...


Congratulations to Cathy K. of Ohio, the winner of my Carolyn Hart Giveaway. One autographed copy of Don't Go Home and one commemorative mug are on their way to you!

A big Thank You also to everyone who entered. I wish that I were independently wealthy so that I could send you all autographed books and mugs! 





June 2015 New Mystery Releases!


June is prime pool reading time for me, so you've got to know that I've been keeping my eyes peeled for all sorts of good reads to take out there to devour!

One thing that's a bit different this month is that I had a glitch in my May radar and left two goodies off my list. I decided to include them in June's list rather than ignore them because I thought you wouldn't mind. (You don't, do you?)

As usual, my picks are grouped by their release dates, and I've included all the information you'll need in order to find them at your own favorite "book procurement" locations. Book synopses are courtesy of Amazon.



Happy Summer and Happy Reading!



=== Already on the Shelves ===


Title: The Golden Age of Murder
Standalone Non-Fiction
ISBN: 9780008105969 
Publisher: HarperCollins
Hardcover, 528 pages

Synopsis: "A real-life detective story, investigating how Agatha Christie and colleagues in a mysterious literary club transformed crime fiction, writing books casting new light on unsolved murders whilst hiding clues to their authors’ darkest secrets.

This is the first book about the Detection Club, the world’s most famous and most mysterious social network of crime writers. Drawing on years of in-depth research, it reveals the astonishing story of how members such as Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers reinvented detective fiction.

Detective stories from the so-called “Golden Age” between the wars are often dismissed as cosily conventional. Nothing could be further from the truth: some explore forensic pathology and shocking serial murders, others delve into police brutality and miscarriages of justice; occasionally the innocent are hanged, or murderers get away scot-free. Their authors faced up to the Slump and the rise of Hitler during years of economic misery and political upheaval, and wrote books agonising over guilt and innocence, good and evil, and explored whether killing a fellow human being was ever justified. Though the stories included no graphic sex scenes, sexual passions of all kinds seethed just beneath the surface.

Attracting feminists, gay and lesbian writers, Socialists and Marxist sympathisers, the Detection Club authors were young, ambitious and at the cutting edge of popular culture – some had sex lives as bizarre as their mystery plots. Fascinated by real life crimes, they cracked unsolved cases and threw down challenges to Scotland Yard, using their fiction to take revenge on people who hurt them, to conduct covert relationships, and even as an outlet for homicidal fantasy. Their books anticipated not only CSI, Jack Reacher and Gone Girl, but also Lord of the Flies. The Club occupies a unique place in Britain’s cultural history, and its influence on storytelling in fiction, film and television throughout the world continues to this day.

The Golden Age of Murder rewrites the story of crime fiction with unique authority, transforming our understanding of detective stories and the brilliant but tormented men and women who wrote them."


Title: The Water Knife
Author: Paolo Bacigalupi
Standalone Thriller
ISBN: 9780385352871
Publisher: Knopf
Hardcover, 384 pages

Synopsis: "The American Southwest has been decimated by drought. Nevada and Arizona skirmish over dwindling shares of the Colorado River, while California watches, deciding if it should just take the whole river all for itself. Into the fray steps Las Vegas water knife Angel Velasquez. Detective, assassin, and spy, Angel “cuts” water for the Southern Nevada Water Authority and its boss, Catherine Case, ensuring that her lush, luxurious arcology developments can bloom in the desert and that anyone who challenges her is left in the gutted-suburban dust.

When rumors of a game-changing water source surface in Phoenix, Angel is sent to investigate. With a wallet full of identities and a tricked-out Tesla, Angel arrows south, hunting for answers that seem to evaporate as the heat index soars and the landscape becomes more and more oppressive. There, Angel encounters Lucy Monroe, a hardened journalist, who knows far more about Phoenix’s water secrets than she admits, and Maria Villarosa, a young Texas migrant, who dreams of escaping north to those places where water still falls from the sky.

As bodies begin to pile up and bullets start flying, the three find themselves pawns in a game far bigger, more corrupt, and dirtier than any of them could have imagined. With Phoenix teetering on the verge of collapse and time running out for Angel, Lucy, and Maria, their only hope for survival rests in one another’s hands.  But when water is more valuable than gold, alliances shift like sand, and the only truth in the desert is that someone will have to bleed if anyone hopes to drink
." 


=== June 2 ===


Title: High Country Nocturne
Author: Jon Talton
Series: #8 in the David Mapstone P.I. series set in Phoenix, Arizona
ISBN: 9781464203985
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
Hardcover, 326 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "A cache of diamonds is stolen in Phoenix. The prime suspect is former Maricopa County Sheriff Mike Peralta, now a private investigator. Disappearing into Arizona’s mountainous High Country, Peralta leaves his business partner and longtime friend David Mapstone with a stark choice. He can cooperate with the FBI, or strike out on his own to find Peralta and what really happened. Mapstone knows he can count on his wife Lindsey, one of the top “good hackers” in law enforcement. But what if they’ve both been betrayed? Mapstone is tested further when the new sheriff wants him back as a deputy, putting to use his historian’s expertise to solve a very special cold case. The stakes turn deadly when David and Lindsey are stalked by a trained killer whose specialty is “suiciding” her targets. In depressed, post-recession Phoenix, every certainty has become scrambled, from the short hustle of the powerful real-estate industry to the loyalties Mapstone once took for granted. Could Peralta really be a jewel thief or worse? The deeper Mapstone digs into the world of sun-baked hustlers, corrupt cops, moneyed retirees, and mobsters, the more things are not what they seem. Ultimately, Mapstone must risk everything to find the truth. High Country Nocturne is an ambitious, searing, and gritty novel, with a fast-paced story as hard-edged as the stolen diamonds themselves.


Title: Resorting to Murder: Holiday Mysteries
Edited by Martin Edwards
Short Story Collection from the British Library Crime Classics series
ISBN: 9780712357487
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
Paperback, 320 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "Holidays offer us the luxury of getting away from it all. So, in a different way, do detective stories. This collection of vintage mysteries combines both those pleasures. From a golf course at the English seaside to a pension in Paris, and from a Swiss mountain resort to the cliffs of Normandy, this new selection shows the enjoyable and unexpected ways in which crime writers have used summer holidays as a theme. These fourteen stories range widely across the golden age of British crime fiction. Stellar names from the past are well represented - Arthur Conan Doyle and G. K. Chesterton, for instance - with classic stories that have won acclaim over the decades. The collection also uncovers a wide range of hidden gems: Anthony Berkeley - whose brilliance with plot had even Agatha Christie in raptures - is represented by a story so (undeservedly) obscure that even the British Library seems not to own a copy. The stories by Phyllis Bentley and Helen Simpson are almost equally rare, despite the success which both writers achieved, while those by H. C. Bailey, Leo Bruce and the little-known Gerald Findler have seldom been reprinted.


Title: The Rhyme of the Magpie
Author: Marty Wingate
Series: #1 in the Birds of a Feather cozy series set in England
ISBN: 9781101883389 
Publisher: Random House Alibi
eBook, 281 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "With her personal life in disarray, Julia Lanchester feels she has no option but to quit her job on her father’s hit BBC Two nature show, A Bird in the Hand. Accepting a tourist management position in Smeaton-under-Lyme, a quaint village in the English countryside, Julia throws herself into her new life, delighting sightseers (and a local member of the gentry) with tales of ancient Romans and pillaging Vikings.

But the past is front and center when her father, Rupert, tracks her down in a moment of desperation. Julia refuses to hear him out; his quick remarriage after her mother’s death was one of the reasons Julia flew the coop. But later she gets a distressed call from her new stepmum: Rupert has gone missing. Julia decides to investigate—she owes him that much, at least—and her father’s new assistant, the infuriatingly dapper Michael Sedgwick, offers to help. Little does the unlikely pair realize that awaiting them is a tightly woven nest of lies and murder.


Title: Innocence, or Murder on Steep Street
Author: Heda Margolius Kovály
Standalone mystery set in 1950s Czechoslovakia
ISBN: 9781616954963
Publisher: Soho Crime
Hardcover, 256 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "1950s Prague is a city of numerous small terrors, of political tyranny, corruption and surveillance. There is no way of knowing whether one’s neighbor is spying for the government, or what one’s supposed friend will say under pressure to a State Security agent. A loyal Party member might be imprisoned or executed as quickly as a traitor; innocence means nothing for a person caught in a government trap.

But there are larger terrors, too. When a little boy is murdered at the cinema where his aunt works, the ensuing investigation sheds a little too much light on the personal lives of the cinema’s female ushers, each of whom is hiding a dark secret of her own.

Nearly lost to censorship, this rediscovered gem of Czech literature depicts a chilling moment in history, redolent with the stifling atmosphere of political and personal oppression of the early days of Communist Czechoslovakia
." 


Title: The Missing and the Dead
Series: #9 in the Logan McRae police procedural series set in Aberdeen, Scotland
ISBN: 9780007494606
Publisher: HarperCollins
Hardcover, 592 pages

Synopsis: "One mistake can cost you everything…

When you catch a twisted killer there should be a reward, right? What Acting Detective Inspector Logan McRae gets instead is a ‘development opportunity’ out in the depths of rural Aberdeenshire. Welcome to divisional policing – catching drug dealers, shop lifters, vandals and the odd escaped farm animal.

Then a little girl’s body washes up just outside the sleepy town of Banff, kicking off a massive manhunt. The Major Investigation Team is up from Aberdeen, wanting answers, and they don’t care who they trample over to get them.

Logan’s got enough on his plate keeping B Division together, but DCI Steel wants him back on her team. As his old colleagues stomp around the countryside, burning bridges, Logan gets dragged deeper and deeper into the investigation. 


One thing’s clear: there are dangerous predators lurking in the wilds of Aberdeenshire, and not everyone’s going to get out of this alive…


Title: Finders Keepers
Author: Stephen King
Standalone
ISBN: 9781501100079
Publisher: Scribner
Hardcover, 448 pages

Synopsis: "A masterful, intensely suspenseful novel about a reader whose obsession with a reclusive writer goes far too far—a book about the power of storytelling, starring the same trio of unlikely and winning heroes King introduced in Mr. Mercedes.

“Wake up, genius.” So begins King’s instantly riveting story about a vengeful reader. The genius is John Rothstein, an iconic author who created a famous character, Jimmy Gold, but who hasn’t published a book for decades. Morris Bellamy is livid, not just because Rothstein has stopped providing books, but because the nonconformist Jimmy Gold has sold out for a career in advertising. Morris kills Rothstein and empties his safe of cash, yes, but the real treasure is a trove of notebooks containing at least one more Gold novel.

Morris hides the money and the notebooks, and then he is locked away for another crime. Decades later, a boy named Pete Saubers finds the treasure, and now it is Pete and his family that Bill Hodges, Holly Gibney, and Jerome Robinson must rescue from the ever-more deranged and vengeful Morris when he’s released from prison after thirty-five years.

Not since Misery has King played with the notion of a reader whose obsession with a writer gets dangerous. Finders Keepers is spectacular, heart-pounding suspense, but it is also King writing about how literature shapes a life—for good, for bad, forever
." 


Title: The Darkness Rolling
Authors: Win and Meredith Blevins
Series: #1 in the Yazzie Goldman historical series set in Monument Valley, Arizona
ISBN: 9780765378606
Publisher: Forge Books
Hardcover, 288 pages

Synopsis: "Upon his return from World War II, Seaman Yazzie Goldman realizes that not much has changed at his family's trading post in Monument Valley--and yet everything is different. His grandfather, Moses Goldman, has suffered a debilitating stroke, and while Yazzie's mother Nizhoni is doing her best, the post is slowly falling apart.

Nizhoni is thrilled that Yazzie has returned to help bring the trading post back to prosperity. Excitement comes from the nearby filming of a John Ford movie starring Henry Fonda. Director Ford enlists the tall, strong, half-Navajo and half-Jewish Yazzie to serve as a translator, and as a bodyguard for the beautiful actress Linda Darnell. Someone is sending Linda threatening letters, and as Yazzie investigates, he finds himself falling for her.


Yazzie isn't the only one to have recently returned home. A man who calls himself Zopilote, the Buzzard, has spent the last twenty-five years in jail steeping himself in the ancient Navajo chant "Darkness Rolling" and consumed with rage at the people who put him there--Yazzie's mother and grandfather.


A thrilling, heart-pounding read of family, adventure, romance, and vengeance, The Darkness Rolling is the first in an evocative historical mystery series by award-winning authors Win and Meredith Blevins
.


=== June 9 ===


Title: Second Street Station
Author: Lawrence H. Levy
Series: #1 in the Mary Handley historical series set in Brooklyn, New York
ISBN: 9780553418927
Publisher: Broadway Books
Paperback, 336 pages

Synopsis: "Mary Handley is a not your typical late-nineteenth century lady. She's fiery, clever, daring—and she’s not about to conform to the gender norms of the day. Not long after being fired from her job at the hat factory for insubordinate behavior, Mary finds herself at the murder scene of Charles Goodrich, the brother of a prominent alderman and former bookkeeper of Thomas Edison. When Mary proves her acumen as a sleuth, she is hired by the Brooklyn police department—as the city’s first female policewoman—to solve the crime. The top brass of the department expect her to fail, but Mary has other plans. As she delves into the mystery, she finds herself questioning the likes of J. P. Morgan, Thomas Edison, and Nikola Tesla. Mary soon discovers the key to solving the case goes well beyond finding a murderer and depends on her ability to unearth the machinations of the city’s most prominent and respected public figures, men who will go to great lengths to protect their secrets.

Much like Mr. Churchill’s Secretary and Maisie Dobbs, Second Street Station presents a portrait of a world plunging into modernity through the eyes of a clever female sleuth. Mary Handley is an unforgettable protagonist whose wit, humor, and charm will delight readers from the very first page
." 


Title: Mountain Rampage
Author: Scott Graham
Series: #2 in the National Park series set in Rocky Mountain National Park
ISBN: 9781937226459
Publisher: Torrey House Press
Paperback, 265 pages

Synopsis: "In the riveting second installment of the National Park Mystery Series, archaeologist Chuck Bender finds himself and his young wife and stepdaughters in the crosshairs of an unknown killer when he defends his brother-in-law from false accusations of murder in the brutal slaying of a resort worker in Rocky Mountain National Park.






=== June 16 ===


Title: The Precipice
Author: Paul Doiron
Series: #6 in the Mike Bowditch game warden series set in Maine
ISBN: 9781250063694
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Hardcover, 336 pages

Synopsis: "When two female hikers disappear in the Hundred Mile Wilderness-the most remote stretch along the entire Appalachian Trail-Maine game warden Mike Bowditch joins the desperate search to find them.

Hope turns to despair after two unidentified corpses are discovered-their bones picked clean by coyotes. Do the bodies belong to the missing hikers? And were they killed by the increasingly aggressive wild dogs? 

Soon, all of Maine is gripped with the fear of killer coyotes. But Bowditch has his doubts. His new girlfriend, wildlife biologist Stacey Stevens, insists the scavengers are being wrongly blamed. She believes a murderer may be hiding in the offbeat community of hikers, hippies, and woodsmen at the edge of the Hundred Mile Wilderness. When Stacey herself disappears along the Appalachian Trail, the hunt for answers becomes personal. 

Can Mike Bowditch find the woman he loves before the most dangerous animal in the North Woods strikes again?


=== June 23 ===


Title: Brutality
Author: Ingrid Thoft
Series: #3 in the Fina Ludlow P.I. series set in Boston, Massachusetts
ISBN: 9780399171185
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons
Hardcover, 464 pages

Synopsis: "When soccer mom Liz Barone is attacked in her kitchen and left with a life-threatening injury, Fina Ludlow is hired by Liz’s mother to identify her attacker. It’s unusual for Fina to take a case that isn’t connected to the family firm, Ludlow and Associates, but Liz was in the process of suing her alma mater, New England University—a suit that could be a legal gold mine.

Twenty years earlier, Liz was an NEU soccer star known for her physical toughness; however, a serious cognitive decline has soured her soccer memories. She’s convinced that her aggressive style of play—and the university’s willingness to ignore head injuries in favor of a win—has put her health and her future in jeopardy, and someone needs to be held responsible.

Was Liz attacked to stop her lawsuit, or were there other secrets in the seemingly innocent woman’s life? Fina convinces her father and boss, Carl, to take the case, and discovers that wading into the financially lucrative and emotionally charged world of collegiate sports requires nerves of steel. As the list of suspects grows and hidden agendas are revealed, Fina wonders if any game is worth the price
." 


=== June 30 ===


Title: Death in Brittany
Author: Jean-Luc Bannalec
Series: #1 in the Commissaire Dupin police procedural series set in France
ISBN: 9781250061744
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Hardcover, 320 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "An international bestseller, this captivating whodunit introduces Commissaire Dupin-a clever but cantankerous traditional police inspector in an idyllic French seaside village.







What a great lineup of books for June! If I went by cover alone, I would choose Death in Brittany followed very closely by The Darkness Rolling. If I went merely by the book synopsis, I'd give the edge to The Water Knife for rather obvious reasons.

What about you? Which books did you add to your personal wish lists? Inquiring minds would love to know!


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

The Question of the Missing Head by E.J. Copperman/Jeff Cohen


First Line: The telephone rang.

When Janet Washburn picked up the phone to call Questions Answered, she had no idea that she was about to enter into a possibly life-changing event. What she thought would be a quick question about the New York Times crossword puzzle turned into a trip to the business to deal with its owner in person. Samuel Hoenig has Asperger's Syndrome, and although he can find the answer to just about anything you'd want to know, you have to be able to ask the right questions.

Once there, Janet forgets what she wanted to know and finds herself helping Samuel with a complex baseball question. In walks Marshall Ackerman with a question of his own: who stole a preserved head from the Garden State Cryonics Institute? It's a question that has Samuel's investigative juices flowing. When he and Janet go to the Institute, they find that the theft has escalated to murder. Can Samuel's powers of deduction uncover a killer?

The Question of the Missing Head is a story that I enjoyed from first page to last. Its convoluted (but not confusing) mystery was so much fun to follow, and it had a lot to do with the characters that Jeff Cohen has created. 

Samuel is marvelous-- at times exasperating, brilliant, startling, and downright funny. What I didn't find all that unusual is that I identified with him in a few things like ringing telephones and surprises. He owes a lot to the love and parenting of his mother, who has one of the best lines in the book. Cohen not only shows Samuel's strengths, he shows his weaknesses as well-- and I'm with Samuel on sudden, earsplitting noises that won't stop (although I don't react in quite the same way). 

Samuel is also very careful to clear up any confusion with television's Adrian Monk, which might help a few readers. His passions are baseball and the Beatles, and I love his theory that he can tell a lot about a person by discovering their favorite Beatles song. I even wonder what Samuel would tell me if I said "In My Life"?

Out-of-work photographer Janet Washburn is the perfect associate for Samuel. She doesn't overreact to any of Samuel's peculiarities, and the conversations she's able to have with him about subjects like his mother and the investigation into the death at the Institute are both illuminating and touching. These talks tell readers a lot about both characters.

I was momentarily alarmed when Detective Lapides arrived on the scene because I thought the book was going to be saddled with the resident too-stupid-to-live cop. I should have known better. In Lapides Cohen has created a police officer who might not be the sharpest knife in the drawer, but he knows his limitations. Lapides wants to do a good job, and he's willing to follow Samuel's good advice which many other detectives wouldn't have the sense to do.

And because Samuel's priorities are different from most people's, he doesn't get upset at one point when the investigation starts to bog down. What's more important than the investigation? You're just going to have to read the book to find out.  This first Asperger's mystery got me hook, line, and sinker, and I look forward to Samuel's next investigation... err... question.


The Question of the Missing Head by E.J. Copperman/Jeff Cohen 
ISBN: 9780738741512
Midnight Ink © 2014
Paperback, 336 pages

Amateur Sleuth, #1 Asperger's mystery
Rating: A
Source: Purchased at The Poisoned Pen.


 

Monday, May 25, 2015

Craig Johnson at The Poisoned Pen!




This wasn't my first rodeo. I knew that I had to get to The Poisoned Pen in plenty of time to get preferred seating if I wanted to see more than the top of Craig Johnson's hat. My only regret was that-- once again-- one of Denis's favorite authors was making his Phoenix appearance on a day Denis had to work. I did indeed get my favorite parking space, and I had more than enough time to get my reserved copies of Dry Bones and The Golden Age of Murder before roping a chair and making myself comfortable. 

I didn't bring a book with me, since I knew that I'd have Martin Edwards' book in my hot little hands, but as it turned out, I didn't even open it. I had a feeling that my favorite octogenarian would be there, and I was right. In fact, she was almost as early as I. We had a wonderful time chatting about books, television, genealogy, life, and anything else that struck our fancy while we waited for the event to begin. My friend had printed out a page from her genealogy to show Craig because-- wait for it-- she has a Longmire in her family tree! How cool is that?


The Witness Relocation Program


L to R: Barbara Peters, Craig Johnson


Host Barbara Peters came out a few minutes early to talk to us while Craig finished signing books in another room. While one of the staff members did a quick equipment check, Barbara told us that she'd been the store's only employee for the first two years it was open, and she had to do everything. "Now I can't ship a package or swipe a gift card. It's very disheartening."

She also spoke about the waxing and waning of favorite genres in the book world. "Now the flavor of the week is domestic suspense due to the popularity of Gone Girl. All these books are coming out where everyone in your family wants to kill you. I think it's the most depressing genre!" (And I wasn't the only one who agreed with her.)

By the excited hum that started at the back of the bookstore and was moving its way up, I knew that the hero of the hour had arrived. Craig Johnson has come to The Poisoned Pen for every single one of his books-- even when his publisher wouldn't foot the bill and he had to travel from Ucross, Wyoming, here to Phoenix on his motorcycle.

Available Now!
Craig began by talking about the cover of Dry Bones. He really likes it. "It was another one of those covert operations between me and the artist who lives in Nashville. You know, trying to find the artist who does your covers is like trying to find someone in the Witness Relocation Program. Publishers really don't like it when authors and artists get together and gang up on them, which is exactly what we did."

Barbara-- who wears a perpetual smile whenever she interviews Craig-- urged him to tell us about the Tony Hillerman Short Story Prize. "My wife Judy saw the announcement for this and showed it to me. 'You can do this,' she said

"I told her, 'I don't know. I've never written a short story.' Then I left the house to get some work done. Now anyone who's ever shoveled out a barn knows you have lots of free time for your mind. So I thought about it, wrote something up, and handed the first draft to Judy

"'You can do better,' she said. So I worked on it, sent it in, and forgot about it. Then I get this phone call from Anne Hillerman asking me if I was going to be in Santa Fe on a certain weekend. When I said that I wasn't, Anne said, 'We'd really, really, really like you to be there.' It never occurred to me that I'd won. I just thought I was on the short list. And that's when I got to meet Tony Hillerman.

"I was proud when Tony Hillerman told me, 'The Cold Dish was the best book I read last year. It should've won the Edgar.'"


The Genesis of Jen


Craig Johnson
The genesis of Dry Bones came during Craig and Judy's travels in other countries while on tour for his books. They visited the London Museum of Natural History, and the plaque on the T. Rex skeleton said that it came from Wyoming.

After visiting natural history museums in other countries (granddaughter Lola was with them), Craig said, "It seemed that all the T. Rexs around the world were from Wyoming. That made me do some research. You all remember a T. Rex named Sue?"  Almost all of us nodded our heads.

"Sue was found on an Indian rancher's land in the Powder River country of Wyoming. Naturally he claimed it as belonging to him. 'No, your ranch is on tribal lands, so the T. Rex belongs to the tribe,' the tribal leaders told the rancher. Then the Feds got out their GPS and  said, 'No, that's not quite true. This T. Rex isn't on tribal land. It's on leased land from the government. It belongs to all of us.'

"When the skeleton-- which had been named Sue-- went up for auction, the Field Museum in Chicago was fighting it out with an Arab sheik who wanted it for his entryway or something. Now, the Field Museum may have big shoulders, but it doesn't have deep pockets, so it needed help if Sue was to come to Chicago to live. Sure enough, McDonald's and Walt Disney underwrote the Field Museum's $8 million bid, and Sue went to Chicago."

#SaveJen
Those of us who bought a copy of Dry Bones also received a #SaveJen pin which was designed by Judy's cousin (who also designed the original Absaroka County emblem). Hill City wanted to keep Sue, so the #SaveJen pin is a take-off on that.


No free pass for Walt


Craig smiled and said, "I don't know how many protagonists out there are having grandchildren like Walt is. I'm rather proud of that. It's more realistic. I figure I'm getting older every day, and I don't see why Walt should get a free pass." 


The 1% Solution


Craig's next book is The 1% Solution, although Judy thinks that title's going to change. In it, we get to meet Lola-- the woman Henry Standing Bear's '59 Cadillac is named after. She's a stripper from Sturgis, South Dakota, and "she's hell on wheels," Craig said. The title is a take-off on Nicholas Meyer's The Seven-Per-Cent Solution because Henry is reading an anthology of Sherlock Holmes stories, and his Sherlockian comments annoy Walt to no end. "And this year is the 75th anniversary of the motorcycle rally at Sturgis," Craig said. "They're expecting over a million motorcyclists. I don't know if any of you remember the riots in Hollister? Well, they really weren't riots. A bunch of bikers got drunk, fell off their bikes and created a media sensation, but the American Motorcycle Association came out with a remark that only 1% of motorcyclists were problematic. Well, now all the hardcore bikers who are outlaws and members of gangs wear patches that say '1%-er.'

"My book takes place in Hulett, Wyoming, which is right across the border from Sturgis. Its population is 396 souls with a police department of one. They're expecting over 50,000 bikers in Hulett this summer, and I thought they just might need Walt and Henry's help."

Before moving on to another topic, Craig let us know that his favorite source of stories is sheriffs-- particularly ones who are retired because they don't have to worry about being re-elected.


Netflix


You can't talk about the books anymore without talking about the Longmire television series, which was cancelled in a bone-headed move by A&E. ("Bone-headed" is my choice of words, not Craig's.) A social media uproar ensued which led to the series being picked up by Netflix.

"Netflix's opinion was 'if it ain't broke, we're not going to fix it,'" Craig told us. "They're only going to add 20 minutes of content per episode-- no commercials-- and all of the new episodes will hit at the same time this fall. But you're all going to watch just one episode per week-- right?" From the sound of the laughter in the room, I have a feeling that most of us intended to binge watch when those new episodes are available.

"Pay channels are the only ones that are willing to take chances. You can see it with Game of Thrones, Outlander, and other series that are doing so well," Craig continued. "The people in charge of pay channels seem to remember that there are folks like writers-- and things like books."

He's often asked if he's going to do any cameos for Longmire. "No. No cameos. My acting ability peaked when I was five and could play a dead guy."

Last year, Craig and Judy were on the road promoting his books for more than 200 days, which led Barbara to compare Craig's schedule to recently deceased B.B. King, who was known to make 341 appearances in one year.

Barbara also wanted to know if there was going to be a Christmas novella this year. "No, there won't be one this year," Craig replied. (Huge groans from the audience.) "Judy and I were on the road too much, but I have an idea in my head. I'm fifteen chapters into the next book, and in a couple of weeks, we'll be home and I'll get that finished and start working on a novella for next year."


The Western Star


"Do you want to hear about the book that's coming out two years from now?" Craig asked. (A chorus of YES from the audience.) "It's called The Western Star. Walt is down in Douglas at the Law Enforcement Academy. The hotel is next to an interesting bar that has photographs of Wyoming law enforcement officers on the walls. Walt is sitting drinking a Rainier after passing his firearms certification when these younger sheriffs come and sit down with him. Of course, all the sheriffs are younger than Walt now. They look up at this photo that shows a big old locomotive with a line of lawmen in their hats and gunbelts standing by it, and one of them asks, 'Is that the very last running of the Western Star?' Walt says, 'Yes, it is.'

"From 1948 to 1972 the Wyoming Sheriffs Association's yearly junket was held... on a train!... that went from Cheyenne to Evanston on the other end of the state and back. 1972 was the first year that Lucian Connolly had hired Walt Longmire. Every sheriff was allowed to invite one guest-- which led to quite a few altercations-- and one of the young sheriffs looked at Walt and said, '24 armed sheriffs on a train!' Walt replies, 'Yeah. When we started.'"

"STOP THERE!" Barbara demanded because we all wanted to know more.


This 'n' That


Craig also told us a bit about Longmire Days in Buffalo, Wyoming. Thousands of fans show up for it. "I know one of these days, I'm going to be writing a book about a TV show coming to Durant to film. There's no doubt in my mind that's going to happen somewhere down the road," Craig said with a laugh.

"We have all these events during Longmire Days," Craig continued. "There's a poker run. There's trap shooting. They have a parade. There's a softball game between the Cowboys and the Indians which is really not fair because my buddy Marcus Red Thunder gets every ringer softball player from every reservation in Montana to play on the Indians team. It's like the Cowboys are playing the '27 Yankees, and they get slaughtered every year. I swear we're going to have a special t-shirt made up for the Cowboys team that says 7th CAVALRY!

"Robert Taylor who plays Walt Longmire in the TV series has won the Longmire Cup for trap shooting the last two years running. He's really, really good," Johnson said, "which was a shock for all the Wyoming enthusiasts that this actor could shoot so well. Of course, he's got a five-year-old daughter, so he's getting some practice in. The Longmire Cup is a big trophy-- but it's got a Rainier beer can on the top."

Route 66 was also mentioned. Europeans are fascinated by it and think that they're going to find charming little motels and quirky restaurants all down its length. Craig keeps trying to tell them that the interstate system ate at least half of Route 66, but they don't seem to be listening.

This is when Barbara mentioned that she and her husband will be taking author Dana Stabenow to La Posada (in Winslow, Arizona on Route 66) to eat at the Turquoise Room ("one of the best restaurants ever") for Thanksgiving. 

Stay tuned for a future giveaway!
Craig's books have now been translated into Bulgarian. "I held one of the copies in my hand and said, 'I do not see my name anywhere on this cover,'" Craig laughed.

When asked about his writing, Craig said, "It's a joy to do it. I really love writing. It's like breathing to me." I don't know about you, but that kind of sums up how I feel about reading his books.

As usual with a Craig Johnson event, the evening was over much too soon, and it was time for the crowd to line up to get their books signed. If you are fortunate enough to attend one of his events, be forewarned. The line to sign his books moves very slowly. Everyone wants to share anecdotes with this very personable man. I tried to conduct a fast sign-and-dash (just to be different), but Craig wasn't having any part of it. Maybe it's because I'm one of those Book Blog Ladies.

For any of you who would like to experience the next best thing to being at The Poisoned Pen for this event, I encourage you to watch it on Livestream. That way, you'll get every single bit of awesomeness!