Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Knitty Gritty Murder by Peggy Ehrhart
April 2021 New Mystery Releases!
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.
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."
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?"
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."
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."
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?"
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."
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.
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
The Hiding Place by Paula Munier
Monday, March 29, 2021
Murder at Wedgefield Manor by Erica Ruth Neubauer
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.
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Available June 8, 2021! |
Synopsis:
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."
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Congratulations to the Winner!
Thursday, March 25, 2021
A Sonoran Spring Weekly Link Round-Up
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My favorite part of a Sonoran spring is when my two big Tombstone roses start to bloom. |
- The Navajo Nation remembers those lost to COVID-19 with 1,222 luminarias at Window Rock, Arizona.
- Looking at leisure through early twentieth century trade catalogs.
- A study shows that fingerprint ridges play a key role in the sense of touch.
- Banned books, forbidden topics: some writers aim to smuggle what Iran censors.
- Lauren Du Graf: How a year without my library has changed me.
- Women dominated beer brewing until they were accused of being witches.
- Researchers read a sealed 17th-century letter without opening it.
- Who are you going to call: rethinking the role of police in mysteries.
- How kids learned classical music from old cartoons. (Between cartoons and my mother, I could recognize a lot of classical music.)
- The reason cars have carpeted floors.
- An eleven-year-old boy discovered a fertility amulet in the Israeli desert.
- A medieval woman wore this "birthing girdle" to protect herself during labor.
- Solved: the mystery of a lonely human skull in an Italian cave.
- Contractors discovered a forgotten medieval tunnel beneath a Welsh garden.
- Archaeological finds in Mesa and Tempe, Arizona, connect the O'odham peoples' history to the present day.
- Authorities recovered intricate Renaissance armor stolen from the Louvre in 1983.
- A forgotten Last Supper scene attributed to the Renaissance master Titian spent a century hiding in plain sight.
- A New York City nurse found a long-lost famous painting inside her own home.
- Sperm whales learned to avoid whaling ships-- and warned other whales.
- Watch this man help a baby squirrel drink from his water bottle.
- The wild world of a new nature preserve in Ecuador.
- Watch this beautiful butterfly with distinctive wing markings that look like the lucky number 88.
- Watch a drowsy dog fight off falling asleep.
- How do you weigh a hummingbird?
- Facts about animals using camouflage in a very crowded rainforest where everyone looks like prey.
- A wolf has been spotted near Yosemite for the first time in a century.
- Wisdom, the world's oldest known banded wild bird has returned to Midway atoll. More from Smithsonian magazine.
- Take a look at this detailed sterling silver chai tea kettle and cup ring.
- Intricate steampunk spiders made from old watches.
- Trinidad & Tobago: Rum, calypso, cricket, and crime fiction.
- The Brooklyn Heights Moonstruck house with a lush interior and parking is on sale for $12.85 million.
- How Rosalie Barrow Edge saved birds.
- Eighteen unsung scientists who didn't get enough credit.
- Women scientists were written out of history. It is Margaret Rossiter's lifelong mission to fix that.
- The stories behind fifteen pasta shapes.
- Ten of the most disappointing book-to-movie adaptations in recent years.
- Eleven facts about Judy Blume's Are You There, God? It's me, Margaret.
- Woman's World Book Club: the best in this week's fiction.
- Five great thrillers set in wild places.
- Twelve pieces of unsolicited advice for 19th-century girls.
- Eighteen facts about Silence of the Lambs.
- Sixteen beach reading nooks to get you in the summer spirit.
A Voice in the Night by Andrea Camilleri
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
A Cruel Deception by Charles Todd
Snoozing in the Sun at the Wildlife World Zoo
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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. |
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This lion woke up from a snooze in the sun and was walking over to continue his nap in a patch of shade. |
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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. |
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
Shattered Dreams by Frank Hayes
Sunday, March 21, 2021
Win an Autographed Copy of Elly Griffiths' The Postscript Murders!
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..."
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.
~~~The Rules~~~
- To be entered in the drawing, send an email to kittlingbooks(at)gmail(dot)com.
- The subject line of your email must read Postscript Giveaway.
- The body of your email must have your name and mailing address.
- Send your entries to me by noon, Sunday, March 28, 2021.
- Due to the high cost of postage, this giveaway is open to US residents only.