Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Knitty Gritty Murder by Peggy Ehrhart

First Line: Pamela Paterson was enjoying her coffee, her crumb cake, and the welcoming atmosphere of her best friend's kitchen.
 
Found strangled to death with a circular knitting needle, farm-to-table enthusiast Jenny Miller will never be able to finish her cookbook. With the murder weapon pointing uncomfortably close to home, Pamela and Bettina, two members of Arborville's Knit & Nibble group, decide to put their sleuthing talents to the test to uncover a killer who likes to knit.

Once they begin asking questions, they learn that Jenny Miller had plenty of enemies, so the suspect list is long. Are they going to be able to find the killer before anyone else dies? They're going to have to work fast.

~

Knitty Gritty Murder is the seventh Knit & Nibble cozy featuring a happy-to-be-single Pamela Paterson and her best friend, Bettina, who is a reporter for the local newspaper. Author Peggy Ehrhart paints vivid scenes with her use of color, and the comforting rituals her main characters take part in make readers feel right at home. 

Pamela is comfortable in her own skin and really doesn't feel the need to be paired up with a man no matter how hard Bettina pushes her. In fact, the whole subject of romance for Pamela really isn't necessary. This makes me wonder if there are any cozy mystery series being written in which the protagonist is happily single and everyone else is content to leave her that way? Pamela, who is widowed, has a daughter away at college who occasionally irritates me by trying to boss her mother around. (Kids these days! I dunno...) She also works for a magazine that allows Ehrhart to introduce some fascinating topics on various fiber arts. It's unfortunate that the magazine does not exist because I would subscribe to it.

If you're in the mood for good people doing the right thing, for tasty food, colorful knitting projects, a fairytale-like hometown, and a nice little mystery to solve, by all means, pick up Knitty Gritty Murder and all the rest of the Knit & Nibble mysteries.
 
Knitty Gritty Murder by Peggy Ehrhart
eISBN: 9781496733917
Kensington Books © 2021
eBook, 304 pages
 
Cozy Mystery, #7 Knit & Nibble mystery
Rating: B
Source: Net Galley

April 2021 New Mystery Releases!

 
My usual view out the window is of the pool. With this flare-up of cellulitis, I've had to construct an alternate blogging station here in the family room, and I have to admit that, although this set-up isn't ideal, I do enjoy sitting here with the patio door open so I can smell and see my huge Tombstone rose bushes blooming.

Keeping my legs elevated for such long periods would be excruciatingly boring if not for knitting, British crime dramas on the telly, and BOOKS. There would have to be something desperately wrong for me not to keep an eye peeled for new books.

The following are my picks of the best new crime fiction being released during the month of April. I've grouped them by their release dates, and the covers and synopses are courtesy of Amazon.

Let's see how many of these are on your own Need-to-Read lists!


=== April 1 ===


Title: Lies We Bury
Author: Elle Marr
Standalone thriller set in Portland, Oregon.
303 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

Synopsis: "Two decades ago Marissa Mo escaped a basement prison―the only home she’d ever known. At twenty-seven, Marissa’s moved beyond the trauma and is working under a new name as a freelance photographer. But when she accepts a job covering a string of macabre murders in Portland, it’s impossible for Marissa not to remember.

Everything is eerily familiar. The same underground lairs. Sad trinkets and toys left behind, identical to those Marissa had as a child. And then there is the note meant just for her that freezes Marissa’s blood: See you soon, Missy.

To determine the killer’s next move, Marissa must retrieve her long-forgotten memories and return to a past she’s hidden away. But she won’t be facing her fears alone. Someone is waiting for her in the dark."
 
 
=== April 6 ===
 
 
Title: Deadly Editions
Series: #6 in the Scottish Bookshop cozy series set in Edinburgh, Scotland.
304 pages
 
*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.
 
Synopsis: "It’s a quiet, snowy morning at The Cracked Spine bookshop, when bookseller Delaney Nichols receives a mysterious visitor, a messenger. He presents her with a perplexing note: an invitation to a meeting with eccentric socialite Shelagh O'Conner, who requests Delaney’s participation in an exclusive treasure hunt. Delaney is intrigued, but also cautious: Shelagh, while charming in person, has a reputation for her hijinks as a wealthy young woman in the '70s. She was even once suspected for the murder of a former boyfriend, though ultimately cleared of all charges.

But Delaney is enticed by the grand prize at the end of the treasure hunt: a highly valuable first edition copy of The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, by Robert Louis Stevenson. The winner is also to receive the contents of Shelagh's vast library, and all participants will earn a large sum of cash.

The night after the first meeting of the treasure hunters, however, several homes in Edinburgh are robbed in a manner reminiscent of Shelagh's old tricks. And when a man connected to Shelagh is killed, suspicion builds. Except Shelagh herself has disappeared from her home, seemingly kidnapped by the villain.

Terror mounts throughout the city as Delaney attempts to solve the mystery, while trying to evade the killer's clutches. But it’s hard to know who to trust when around every corner, a new monster could be lurking.


Title: The French Paradox
Author: Ellen Crosby
Series: #11 in the Wine Country mysteries set in Virginia.
256 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

Synopsis: "In 1949, during her junior year abroad in Paris, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis bought several inexpensive paintings of Marie-Antoinette by a little-known 18th century female artist. She also had a romantic relationship with Virginia vineyard owner Lucie Montgomery's French grandfather - until recently, a well-kept secret.

Seventy years later, Cricket Delacroix, Lucie's neighbor and Jackie's schoolfriend, is donating the now priceless paintings to a Washington, DC museum. And Lucie's grandfather is flying to Virginia for Cricket's 90th birthday party, hosted by her daughter Harriet. A washed-up journalist, Harriet is rewriting a manuscript Jackie left behind about Marie-Antoinette and her portraitist. She's also adding tell-all details about Jackie, sure to make the book a bestseller.

Then on the eve of the party a world-famous landscape designer who also knew Jackie is found dead in Lucie's vineyard. Did someone make good on the death threats he'd received because of his controversial book on climate change? Or was his murder tied to Jackie, the paintings, and Lucie's beloved grandfather?
 
 
Title: A Deadly Twist
Author: Jeffrey Siger
Series: #11 in the Andreas Kaldis police procedural series set in Greece.
320 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

Synopsis: "When Athens journalist Nikoletta Elia disappears while on assignment on the island of Naxos, her editor calls on Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis to investigate. Sent to report on the conflict between preservationists and advocates for expanded tourism, Nikoletta is approached by a fan who takes credit for several suspicious deaths she'd reported on in the past. The assassin claims to have abandoned that life, and convinces the reporter to write about him and his murderous exploits for hire.

Kaldis sends his deputy, Yianni, to look into her disappearance when an unidentified body is found at the base of a cliff. Who is the mysterious corpse, and where is Nikoletta? Leads turn into more dead bodies in this twisting tale of greed, corruption, and murder that puts Kaldis, his family, and members of his team in the path of a ruthless killer who will stop at nothing to keep dark secrets buried―forever."
 
 
=== April 13 ===
 
 
Title: Dance With Death
Author: Will Thomas
Series: #12 in the Barker & Llewelyn historical mystery series set in Victorian England.
320 pages
 
*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.
 
Synopsis: "In June of 1893, the future Nicholas II travels to London for a royal wedding, bringing with him his private security force and his ballerina mistress, Mathilde Kchessinska. Rumored to be the target of a professional assassin known only as La Sylphide, and the subject of conspiracies against his life by his own family who covet his future throne, Nicholas is protected by not only private security, but the professional forces of both England and Russia.

All of these measures prove inadequate when Prince George of England is attacked by an armed anarchist who mistakes him for Nicholas. As a result, Barker and Llewelyn are brought in to help track down the assassin and others who might conspire against the life of the tsarevich . The investigations lead them down several paths, including Llewelyn's old nemesis, the assassin Sofia Ilyanova. With Barker and Llewelyn both surviving separate attempts on their lives, the race is on to find both the culprit and the assassin they hired. Taking them through high society (including a masked ball at Kensington Palace) and low, chasing down motives both personal and political, Barker and Llewelyn must solve the case of their life before the crime of the century is committed.


Title: The Unkindness of Ravens
Author: M.E. Hilliard
Series: #1 in the Greer Hogan amateur sleuth series.
336 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

Synopsis: "Greer Hogan is a librarian and an avid reader of murder mysteries. She also has a habit of stumbling upon murdered bodies. The first was her husband's, and the tragic loss led Greer to leave New York behind for a new start in the Village of Raven Hill. But her new home becomes less idyllic when she discovers her best friend sprawled dead on the floor of the library.

Was her friend's demise related to two other deaths that the police deemed accidental? Do the residents of this insular village hold dark secrets about another murder, decades ago? Does a serial killer haunt Raven Hill?

As the body count rises, Greer's anxious musings take a darker turn when she uncovers unexpected and distressing information about her own husband's death...and the man who went to prison for his murder . She is racked with guilt at the possibility that her testimony may have helped to convict an innocent man.

Though Greer admires the masters of deduction she reads about in books, she never expected to have to solve a mystery herself. Fortunately, she possesses a quick wit and a librarian's natural resourcefulness. But will that be enough to protect her from a brilliant, diabolical murderer?

And even if Greer manages to catch the Raven Hill killer, will living with her conscience prove a fate worse than death?
"
 
 
Title: One Got Away
Author: S.A. Lelchuk
Series: #2 in the Nikki Griffin private investigator series set in California.
304 pages

Synopsis: "Nikki Griffin, a private-investigator when she isn’t running her small bookstore, is on a case. The matriarch of one of the wealthiest San Francisco families has been defrauded by a con-man, and her furious son enlists Nikki to find the money. And find the con-man.

Nikki isn’t a fan of men who hurt women. Her secret mission, born of revenge and trauma, is to do everything she can to remove women from dangerous situations―and to punish the men responsible.

As Nikki follows the trail toward the con-man, she realizes that no one involved is telling her the whole truth. When the case overlaps with her attempt to protect a woman in trouble, and Nikki’s own life is put in danger, Nikki has to make terrible choices about who to save―and how to keep herself alive.
"
 
 
=== April 20 ===
 
 
Title: In Her Tracks
Author: Robert Dugoni
Series: #8 in the Tracy Crosswhite police procedural series set in Washington.
383 pages

Synopsis: "Returning from an extended leave in her hometown of Cedar Grove, Detective Tracy Crosswhite finds herself reassigned to the Seattle PD’s cold case unit. As the protective mother of an infant daughter, Tracy is immediately drawn to her first file: the abduction of a five-year-old girl whose parents, embattled in a poisonous divorce, were once prime suspects.

While reconstructing the days leading up to the girl’s disappearance, Tracy is brought into an active investigation with former partner Kinsington Rowe. A young woman has vanished on an isolated jogging trail in North Seattle. Divided between two critical cases, Tracy has little to go on except the treacherous deceptions behind a broken marriage―and now, the secrets hiding behind the closed doors of a deceptively quiet middle-class neighborhood.

To find two missing persons, Tracy will have to follow more than clues, which are both long cold and unsettlingly fresh. Given her own traumatic past, Tracy must also follow her instincts―to whatever dark and dangerous places they may lead."
 
 
=== April 27 ===
 
 
Title: The Last Good Dog
Author: Alan Russell
Series: #6 in the Gideon & Sirius police procedural series set in California.
320 pages
 
Synopsis: "LAPD detective Michael Gideon and his K-9 partners investigate the disappearance of a retired US Marshal and her bomb-sniffing dog after a suspicious encounter."
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
One thing's certain: there's going to be some good reading available in April. Sounds to me like we should all pick a couple to take outside so we can enjoy both the stories and the burgeoning spring. 
 
Did any titles in particular strike your fancy? Which ones? You know that inquiring minds would love to know!

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

The Hiding Place by Paula Munier

First Line: Summer 1999. Beautiful women kept you waiting with a clear conscience because they really believed that the party didn't start until they got there.
 
When her late grandfather's dying deputy hands Mercy Carr the cold case that's always haunted him, the timing couldn't be worse. The man who murdered her grandfather has just escaped from prison, and a fellow Army veteran has turned up, claiming that Elvis is his dog, not hers. What does finding Beth Kilgore twenty years after she disappeared got to do with these events that are threatening everything she holds most dear?
 
It's the last straw when her beloved grandmother goes missing. Mercy needs help, and it means that she has to forgive Vermont Game Warden Troy Warner long enough to enlist his aid. With time running out, Mercy and her dog Elvis must team up with Troy and his search-and-rescue dog Susie Bear to unravel long-buried secrets and find her grandmother.

~

Paula Munier's Mercy Carr series gets stronger with each book. In this third entry, The Hiding Place, much of the mystery and the action concern Mercy's relationships with all the people in her life. A great deal of tension also comes from Hallet, the Army veteran who is determined to take Elvis away from Mercy. Readers of the series will know how important woman and dog are to each other, so I have to admit that I was often more concerned with deducing how Hallet could be convinced to leave well enough alone than I was with all the other elements in Munier's multi-layered mystery.
 
There's much to like about the "bones" of this series. Mercy herself is a strong, fascinating character as are others like game warden Troy Warner. Munier also brings her setting of the Vermont outdoors to life. Of course, there is also the very strong draw of the resident working dogs: Elvis the Belgian Malinois, a former war dog suffering from PTSD, and Troy's search-and-rescue Newfoundland mix, Susie Bear. (I do wish that Munier would stop referring to Susie's "pumpkin head" so much, however.) There's even the added bonus of a third dog, a gorgeous golden retriever, Sunny, whom Mercy calls the "mood ring of dogs."

If you enjoy multi-layered mysteries set in the great outdoors and filled with marvelous dogs and strong humans, you should become acquainted with Paula Munier's Mercy Carr series. Do that, and you've set yourself up for some mighty fine reading.
 
 
 
The Hiding Place by Paula Munier
eISBN: 9781250153081
Minotaur Books © 2021
eBook, 336 pages
 
Law Enforcement/Working Dog, #3 Mercy & Elvis mystery
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Monday, March 29, 2021

Murder at Wedgefield Manor by Erica Ruth Neubauer

First Line: England, 1926. One wheel of the biplane slammed into the ground, the wings tipping precariously, before the second wheel made contact and the little plane righted itself, hustling along the soft dirt track before coming to an untidy stop.
 
Wedgefield Manor, deep in the tranquil English countryside, is the perfect respite for Jane Wunderly and her Aunt Millie before their return to the United States. Aunt Millie is enjoying the company of her long-lost daughter, Lillian, and their host, Lord Hughes. Jane, on the other hand, finds her flying lessons exhilarating. 

Yes indeed, it's all fun and games until one of the estate mechanics dies in an automobile crash. To everyone's shock, the young man's death is no accident: the brake lines on the car were cut. But was the intended victim actually Simon? The country house is filled with suspects and targets.  Thankfully, Mr. Redvers, who helped Jane solve a mystery in Egypt, is on hand to help her because, with all the visiting relatives, secretive servants, and strangers who wander about the property at night, Jane has her hands full in bringing a killer to justice.

~

This is another light, fun read from Erica Ruth Neubauer. The mystery is filled with misdirection, and I loved the fact that Jane was learning to fly, which reminded me of several events and people from that time period. The only thing that slightly bothered me was Jane's romantic waffling about Mr. Redvers. The reason why her indecision didn't make me roll my eyes was that, with the experiences she had in her own marriage (she's a widow), she would be extremely hesitant to put herself in another relationship.

If you love reading light, fun country house mysteries set in the 1920s when women were beginning to enjoy more independent lives, Murder at Wedgefield Manor should certainly be your perfect cup of tea.

 
Murder at Wedgefield Manor by Erica Ruth Neubauer
eISBN: 9781496725905
Kensington Books © 2021
eBook, 304 pages
 
Historical Mystery, #2 Jane Wunderly mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Net Galley

On My Radar: Allison Montclair's A Rogue's Company

The subject of women in World War II seems to be a hot property in the historical mystery genre, and so far I haven't gotten my fill. There were too many unsung female heroes during that time, and I think it's going to take awhile before telling their stories-- in both fiction and non-fiction-- will begin to sour.

Allison Montclair's Sparks & Bainbridge series about two very different women who open a marriage bureau in London has been a joy to read. In fact, the second book, A Royal Affair, was one of my Best Reads of 2020. Once you know that, you have to know that I did a little happy dance when I learned that the release of the third book will be taking place in June. Let me tell you more about it.

 

Available June 8, 2021!

Synopsis: 

"In London, 1946, the Right Sort Marriage Bureau is getting on its feet and expanding. Miss Iris Sparks and Mrs. Gwendolyn Bainbridge are making a go of it. That is until Lord Bainbridge―the widowed Gwen's father-in-law and legal guardian―returns from a business trip to Africa and threatens to undo everything important to her, even sending her six-year-old son away to a boarding school.

But there's more going on than that. A new client shows up at the agency, one whom Sparks and Bainbridge begin to suspect really has a secret agenda, somehow involving the Bainbridge family. A murder and a subsequent kidnapping sends Sparks to seek help from a dangerous quarter―and now their very survival is at stake.
"

 
 
It sounds as though this third book really focuses on Gwen Bainbridge, whose family situation is very painful to her. I'm certainly looking forward to finding out what happens!

What about you? Have any of you read the Sparks & Bainbridge mysteries? Inquiring minds would love to know!

Sunday, March 28, 2021

Congratulations to the Winner!

 



Congratulations to Evelyn L. from Missouri! She's the winner of an autographed copy of Elly Griffiths' The Postscript Murders
 
I've got the book packaged, and it will be on its way to you bright and early Monday, Ev. Enjoy!

Thursday, March 25, 2021

A Sonoran Spring Weekly Link Round-Up

 

 
I almost forgot that I needed to schedule this to post! I'll blame it on the medical appointments, all of which are going well, but maybe it also had something to do with the fact that I didn't have any photos to share. Now I have two, and since talking about medical appointments is boring, I'll share the photos instead. 

My favorite part of a Sonoran spring is when my two big Tombstone roses start to bloom.


Coming home from one of my appointments yesterday, I saw evidence that someone has taken up residence at the top of the big senita cactus in our front garden. Now Denis and I want to know just what our new neighbor is!


Enjoy the links!

 
►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄
 
►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄
 
►Channeling My Inner Elly Mae Clampett◄
 
►Crafty Gems◄
 
►The Happy Wanderer◄
 
►Fascinating Folk◄
 
►I ♥ Lists◄
 
 
That's all for this week! Don't forget to stop by next Friday when I'll be sharing a freshly selected batch of links for your surfing pleasure.
 
Stay safe. Stay healthy. And don't forget to curl up with a good book!

A Voice in the Night by Andrea Camilleri

 
First Line: He woke up at exactly six-thirty a.m., rested, fresh, and perfectly lucid.
 
A robbery at a local supermarket is a standard case for the police... or is it? When the manager is later found hanging in his office, Inspector Montalbano and his team have their doubts. 

They soon have a second case on their hands when the body of a brutally murdered young woman is found in the apartment of a rich young man who has a flawless alibi and whose father is the president of the province.
 
As they begin to investigate, the supermarket robbery leads to a large local company, and as the pieces come together, Montalbano is going to need every ounce of knowledge and skill he possesses because justice will be coming face to face with the insatiable machinery of politics and the mafia.
 
~
 
When I need a little break from the normal ebb and flow of crime fiction, I know I can always turn to the irascible Inspector Salvo Montalbano and his team. Not only do I get to enjoy a mental vacation in Sicily with its memorable landscape and mouth-watering food, but I also learn about the area's political machinations. That I also get to laugh is mere icing on the cake.
 
I love watching Montalbano put the pieces of a puzzle together. In some ways, he reminds me of Martin Walker's Bruno, Chief of Police because he knows the local people he serves so well. It also doesn't hurt that Montalbano's knowledge of the mafia and local politics is encyclopedic.
 
In each book, the grumpy crime-solving maestro usually has something to say about the world at large with which I find myself in total agreement. In A Voice in the Night, it's an observation about intolerance: "Why so much mutual intolerance? Why was it that nobody could any longer stand his neighbor, his coworker, or even his schoolmate?" It certainly does seem to be that way, doesn't it?
 
Two more things that I love about this book and the entire series are Stephen Sartarelli's wonderful translations and Camilleri's sense of humor. Montalbano may be grumpy and have a short fuse, but Camilleri knows how to make us laugh about it. This time around, Montalbano starts having trouble remembering names which makes him worry that he's turning into Catarella. Long-time fans of the series love Catarella, who's usually the butt of jokes. But  Camilleri has waved his magic wand over this character and made him someone who's not just the source of laughs but also someone who does have special talents and can even make us cry from time to time. A Montalbano book without Catarella is a book without its zest.
 
If you love learning about other countries, their landscapes, their culture, their food, and how things work, by all means, make your acquaintance with Salvo Montalbano and his team. You'll find yourself laughing and learning through the entire series. I'm looking forward to the next time I visit the inspector.    
 
A Voice in the Night by Andrea Camilleri
Translated from the Italian by Stephen Sartarelli.
ISBN: 9780143126447
Penguin © 2016
Paperback, 288 pages
 
Policed Procedural, #20 Inspector Montalbano mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Paperback Swap

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

A Cruel Deception by Charles Todd

 
First Line: England, Late March, 1919. I was changing the surgical dressing on a patient in Ward 3 when Matron sent for me.
 
Representatives from the Allied governments have gathered in Paris to put the final touches on the Peace Treaty that will officially end World War I, but bitter disagreements have already broken out. Bess Crawford is sent to Paris on a personal mission for the Matron of the London headquarters of the Queen Alexandra's, of which Bess is a part. Bess would much rather stay and work with the severely wounded in England, but she can't refuse Matron.
 
She has been asked to find Matron's son, Lawrence Minton, who has gone missing from his duties at the peace talks. Contrary to what she expected, Bess finds that Minton is a very disturbed man who is well on the way to becoming addicted to opiates. He doesn't care if he lives or dies. Bess is convinced that something haunts him, and that he must somehow be brought to face that event before it destroys him completely.
 
~
 
Many readers may have expected Charles Todd's Bess Crawford series to end when World War I ended, but this writing team has continued Bess's adventures in order to create a portrait that illuminates the cost of war on human lives—the lingering pain and horror that no armistice or peace treaty can assuage. Bess has continued her nursing, working with severely wounded soldiers, but in A Cruel Deception, she finds herself thinking about what else she might want to do with her life. She also finds herself thinking about Simon Brandon who seems to be on holiday in Scotland-- and a mysterious woman might be involved. I imagine that I'm not the only fan of this series who's wanted Bess to start thinking more seriously about Simon. Who knows? We may be getting our wish.
 
Another thing that Charles Todd deals with so well in this series is how Bess has gotten used to living her own life and making her own decisions without deferring to her family. This is something many women in this time period found themselves doing for the first time, and they liked it.
 
This series often deals with various issues wounded soldiers had to face, and in A Cruel Deception, it's the anguish of mental trauma, that most difficult affliction for most people to understand or to even begin to deal with. Here, what we now call PTSD is treated with sensitivity and understanding as Bess tries to find out why someone is attacking both Minton and herself, as well as learning what happened to Minton that makes him want to destroy himself. It's another tale well told, and I'm looking forward to the next time I meet Bess.  
 
A Cruel Deception by Charles Todd
eISBN: 9780062859860
William Morrow © 2019
eBook, 336 pages

Historical Mystery, #11 Bess Crawford mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

Snoozing in the Sun at the Wildlife World Zoo

You probably thought that I'd forgotten all about those photos I took when Denis and I visited the Wildlife World Zoo a few weeks ago, but now that I'm slowly getting used to another round of medical appointments and new routines, I can play catch-up with the things that fell by the wayside.

The day we visited was one of those gorgeous days in February that make winter visitors flock here by the thousands (even when they shouldn't because of the pandemic). The zoo is so large that, unless it's the weekend or a holiday, social distancing isn't a problem, and this time around almost everyone wore masks like good little boys and girls. Many of the animals were napping, but I didn't mind a bit.

Here are a few of my picks from the photos I took. Enjoy!


This Australian black swan was keeping a very close eye on me in the Kangaroo Walkabout.



Sorry about the quality of this one. It didn't matter what position I got myself in, I couldn't get a shot that didn't have the wires in it. But I had to commemorate my very first conversation with a great horned owl, although it didn't seem to catch my name...



And if you thought I'd visit the zoo and not stop by to see the meerkats, you were sadly mistaken! I got to meet this fellow just as he got ready for his nap.



This lion woke up from a snooze in the sun and was walking over to continue his nap in a patch of shade.



All the kangaroos in the Walkabout area were napping.



The Axis deer preferred the shade.



So did these reticulated giraffes, although others were out in the sun.



I think jaguars are gorgeous.



This Egyptian goose was on guard duty outside the Walkabout area.



And this is why. Who can resist fuzzy goslings?



Not I!



Last one-- I promise!



My favorite of them all. This is the first time I played peekaboo with a bobcat that thought it was perfectly camouflaged in a tree.


I hope you enjoyed your visit to the Wildlife World Zoo. Hopefully, I can get some work done on the photos I took at the Desert Botanical Garden so I can share those with you as well.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Shattered Dreams by Frank Hayes

First Line: The early morning sun was just high enough to make him squint.
 
Although the burnt out shell of a trailer and the charred body inside show all the signs of a meth lab gone wrong, Sheriff Virgil Dalton sees enough evidence there to tell him that there was foul play. Then another fatality that's supposedly an accidental death tells Dalton that there's a sinister pattern beginning to emerge. 
 
Could that pattern have anything to do with a local company whose rapid growth is changing the face of the land he loves? Maybe. Maybe not. But it does show that there's a killer on the loose who will stop at nothing to cover his tracks. Sheriff Virgil Dalton has a lot of work to do and only a very little time in which to get it done.
 
~
 
In my opinion, Sheriff Virgil Dalton ranks right up there with others in my Sheriffs Pantheon. What others? Try Walt Longmire and Joanna Brady for starters. I just wish there were more than three books in this series because the message these books convey is much greater than the sum of their parts.
 
There's a slow, steady unfolding of the mystery in Shattered Dreams, but the mystery is just the tip of the iceberg. We experience the age-old problem of fighting a city council that wants the sheriff's department to perform miracles on a broken shoestring budget-- a city council that took ten years to decide to spend money to install a stop light at a dangerous intersection. Times are changing, and the problems of the world are coming to this small town where that old yellow dog used to be able to sleep out in the middle of Main Street. No matter how much the city council wants to live in the past, they must be dragged into the here and now.

What makes Shattered Dreams and the other two books in the series (Death at the Black Bull and Death on the High Lonesome) so good is what I call the People Angle. The characters draw you in and keep you wanting more. Rosie, the dispatcher who keeps the office shipshape and everyone in line, puts me in mind of Walt Longmire's Ruby. Something happens to another character, and readers will be left reeling in shock but ultimately comforted by how everyone draws together.

Sheriff Virgil Dalton is the type of lawman readers can respect and grow to love. He's quiet and observant. He sees value in the sorts of people that most folks write off, people whom others believe are only fit to gossip about. He's always putting everyone else ahead of himself, sometimes to his own detriment. And, like Sheriff Joanna Brady over in Cochise County, Arizona, he knows that his "job is about way more than just catching bad people; it's about helping good people, too, and about putting broken lives back together."  
 
Even more than the solution of the mystery, it's how Frank Hayes, in often evocative and poetic language, has created a world and characters who, despite it all, focuses on the good that means the most to me. When I read a Virgil Dalton mystery, I am in Hayes' world. Want to know how deep? Shattered Dreams made me forget that I was stranded in a lonely hospital room, that's how deep. And this will keep me coming back time after time after time. I long for more books in this series, and I sincerely hope that this is one wish that comes true.
 
Shattered Dreams by Frank Hayes
eISBN: 9781950461004
Beyond the Page Publishing © 2019
eBook, 190 pages
 
Police Procedural, #3 Sheriff Virgil Dalton mystery
Rating: A+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Win an Autographed Copy of Elly Griffiths' The Postscript Murders!


I haven't had a giveaway so far this year, and it's high time I did something about that, isn't it?
 
How would you like to win an autographed UK hardcover copy of Elly Griffiths' The Postscript Murders, fresh from The Poisoned Pen? I thought so! Let me tell the uninitiated more about the book before I talk about how you can win it. 

If you click on the book title above, you'll be directed to my review of the book, but here's a photo and the synopsis:

"The death of a ninety-year-old woman with a heart condition should absolutely not be suspicious. DS Harbinder Kaur certainly sees nothing to concern her in carer Natalka's account of Peggy Smith's death.

But when Natalka reveals that Peggy lied about her heart condition and that she had been sure someone was following her...

And that Peggy Smith had been a 'murder consultant' who plotted deaths for authors, and knew more about murder than anyone has any right to...

And when clearing out Peggy's flat ends in Natalka being held at gunpoint by a masked figure...

Well then DS Harbinder Kaur thinks that maybe there is no such thing as an unsuspicious death after all.

From the sleepy seaside town of Shoreham to the granite streets of Aberdeen, The Postscript Murders is a literary mystery for fans of Anthony Horowitz, Agatha Christie and anyone who's ever wondered just how authors think up such realistic crimes...
"
 
 
~~~What You Will Win~~~

One autographed hardcover UK edition of Elly Griffiths' The Postscript Murders. It has a protective mylar cover on the dust jacket, was purchased from The Poisoned Pen Bookstore, and has been gently read once (by Yours Truly). You can see it in the photo above.

Now for the rules of the giveaway...
 
 

~~~The Rules~~~

  1. To be entered in the drawing, send an email to kittlingbooks(at)gmail(dot)com.
  2. The subject line of your email must read Postscript Giveaway.
  3. The body of your email must have your name and mailing address.
  4. Send your entries to me by noon, Sunday, March 28, 2021.
  5. Due to the high cost of postage, this giveaway is open to US residents only.
 
 
~~~The Small Print~~~

Very Important: If your emails are missing any of the required information, i.e., the correct subject line and your name and mailing address, you will not be entered to win. How do you know if you've been entered? If you have not received an email from me within 24 hours which says, "Your entry has been received. Good Luck!" you'll know something went wrong. That's okay. Try again.
 
 
The winner will be notified by email, and the announcement will be made here on Kittling: Books on Sunday, March 28, 2021. The book will go out in the mail the very next day.


Now it's time for all of you to fill up my inbox with entries! 
Start Spring with a new mystery to read!