Sunday, July 31, 2022
Tahoe Moon by Todd Borg
Saturday, July 30, 2022
July 2022 Additions to My Digital Security Blanket
Thursday, July 28, 2022
The He's Home! Weekly Link Round-Up
- What discourse regulation by social media giants means for democratic societies.
- On James Patterson and diversity in crime fiction.
- Romance novels are getting increasingly hot and heavy in the kitchen. (Move over bodice rippers, it's all about apron tuggers now.)
- Not to be confused: Book title edition.
- Southern Gothic crime fiction: a palimpsest and primer.
- Conlangs: how many fictional languages are there?
- Is it fake news? How to evaluate the news sites you're reading.
- This interesting video explains why people looked a lot older in the past than they do today.
- How guillotine haircuts became all the rage in France.
- The ACLU is investigating the Nampa (Idaho) School Board book removal.
- A group of mothers demanded that the books in a Coventry (Connecticut) library Pride display be burned. Yes. You read that right. They want to burn books.
- A man in Florida has sued a library board over LGBTQ and anti-racism books, using one of the nuttiest arguments possible.
- Parents discuss banning books at a Madison (Mississippi) School Board meeting.
- Independence (Missouri) parents are divided over their school board's banning a book over a nonbinary character.
- "A slippery slope": residents defend a Dixon (Illinois) library following a push to remove LGBTQ comics.
- The correlation between sundown towns and book bans: Forsyth County, Georgia.
- The book ban movement has a chilling new tactic: harassing teachers on social media.
- This library director resigned after continuous dramatics over featured books.
- The secrets of a long-overlooked cipher linked to Catherine of Aragon are being revealed.
- The 17th-century Spanish galleon that inspired The Goonies may have washed ashore in Oregon.
- An ancient sanctuary used by Roman soldiers nearly 2,000 years ago has been discovered in the Netherlands.
- Archaeologists have unearthed a Roman mosaic in a rural British town.
- The second ever soldier from the Battle of Waterloo has been unearthed... with his teeth intact.
- Everyone wants to cast the blame on someplace else. Manuscripts and art support archaeological evidence that syphilis was in Europe long before explorers could have brought it home from the Americas.
- The earliest known images of two Biblical heroines have been unearthed in Israel.
- A hidden Van Gogh portrait has been found on the back of a painting at the National Galleries of Scotland.
- Hawaiian waters may get too hot for breeding humpback whales due to climate change.
- The maned wolf is a strange cross between a fox and a deer, and you've never seen anything like it.
- A bizarre translucent "Jell-O fish" has been pulled from the icy depths in Alaska.
- The lost art of looking at nature.
- "Pawternity leave" is a real things and a few companies are leading the way.
- Seal strandings in Maine have been linked to bird flu.
- Have antillean manatees crossed the Panama Canal into the Pacific?
- Wild bats can remember sounds for years.
- Inside Rome's secure vault for stolen art.
- A tour through Italy's massive "Museum of Abandonment."
- What human-made structures can be seen from space?
- The mystery of the world's least American cactus.
- Preservationists say that the Library of Congress makeover plan is vandalism.
- Wildfires blaze in London during a record heatwave.
- The best places to discuss books online.
- One name, two writers: the story of Michael Field.
- Parveena Ahangar, the Iron Lady of Kashmir.
- Meet the authors with Philadelphia ties working to diversify children's books.
- Jim Thorpe's stripped Olympic gold medals have finally, officially been reinstated. More from Smithsonian Magazine. A 110-year wrong has finally been righted.
- After more than 150 years, sculptor Edmonia Lewis finally gets her degree.
- The bookish life of Dolly Parton.
- Seven locked-room mysteries that will keep you in suspense.
- Seven frosty thrillers to cool you down on sweltering summer days.
- Nine books about women who can't get out of their heads.
- Fifteen thought-provoking non-fiction reads for your book club.
- Fourteen ways to get out of a reading slump.
- The best places to find audiobook narrator jobs for beginners.
- Bookish magnets.
- Almost perfect: 55 movies with 99 percent ratings on Rotten Tomatoes.
- The top ten TV dramas for those who like true crime.
- Five brilliantly plotted mysteries recommended by Louise Penny.
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
Red Flags by Lisa Black
First Line: Few things mobilize people more quickly than a missing child.
D.C. crime analyst, Dr. Ellie Carr, has a shock when she's called to investigate the case of a missing baby and learns that the child's mother is her own cousin. Although close during their childhoods, Ellie and Rebecca drifted apart, and now Rebecca is half of a Washington, DC power couple with her wealthy lobbyist husband.
Rebecca and her husband want to leave no stone unturned in the search for their infant son, so they call in Dr. Rachael Davies from the prestigious Locard Institute. At first, Ellie is uncomfortable working with Rachael, but as their investigation leads them through a web of greed and ambition, the partnership becomes more natural.
Everything boils down to a Senate hearing on the billion-dollar gaming empire. Ellie and Rachael have to put all the pieces together before that hearing, or it won't just be the life of an infant that is at stake.
~
Red Flags is a solid series launch with all the forensic details CSI fans have come to love. A big part of the plot hinges on child safety on the internet, which everyone would agree is extremely important. But no matter how many restrictions are placed on computer games aimed at children, no matter how many things parents try to drill into their children's heads, kids will be kids-- seemingly compelled to do stupid stuff all the while insisting that they'd never be dumb enough to do it. Yes, there is more than one child at risk in this book, and one of the best things about Red Flags is watching those children working out how to save themselves. (Speaking of red flags, if one is waving madly above your head at the thought of child endangerment, I'd like to put your mind at rest without saying any more that might possibly give away the plot.)
Tuesday, July 26, 2022
August 2022 New Mystery Releases!
McKenna calls Sergeant Jack Santiago. They discover Dexter's body crushed by a recently-cut tree. The cause of death appears to be suicide. But as McKenna investigates, the details don't make sense, and he learns of other apparent suicides that are suspicious.
McKenna's girlfriend Street Casey is driving with Camille Dexter when someone runs them off a steep mountain road. They miraculously survive.
When McKenna finds a common thread to all the deaths, that connection leads to the girl, the only person in the group who's still alive. McKenna thinks he knows the killer's identity, the meanest, most twisted man he's ever met. But before McKenna can find him, the man kidnaps Camille..."
As a lone portal back to the living for traumatized spirits, Rita is terrorized by nagging ghosts who won’t let her sleep and who sabotage her personal life. Her taboo and psychologically harrowing ability was what drove her away from the Navajo reservation, where she was raised by her grandmother. It has isolated her from friends and gotten her in trouble with the law.
And now it might be what gets her killed.
When Rita is sent to photograph the scene of a supposed suicide on a highway overpass, the furious, discombobulated ghost of the victim—who insists she was murdered—latches onto Rita, forcing her on a quest for revenge against her killers, and Rita finds herself in the crosshairs of one of Albuquerque’s most dangerous cartels. Written in sparkling, gruesome prose, Shutter is an explosive debut from one of crime fiction's most powerful new voices."
Now Charlie has returned to the coastal town where his mother vanished, on disciplinary leave from his job with the police sex-crimes unit, and permanent leave from his marriage. After two decades worrying away at the mystery of his mother's disappearance, he's run out of leads.
Then the skeletal remains of two people are found in the excavation of a new building site... and the past comes crashing in on Charlie."
The woman had been house-sitting at Serpent's Point and Wesley is surprised to discover that she was conducting an investigation into unsolved missing persons cases. Could these enquires have led to her murder?
While the case takes Wesley to Yorkshire and the Cotswolds, archaeologist Neil Watson is making a dramatic discovery of his own in the fields near the house.
When a skeleton is uncovered, the pressure rises to find a killer, and Wesley and Neil realise that Serpent's Point holds more secrets than anyone could have imagined."
Six years later, with the clan chiefs routed and the Highlands subsumed into the British state, Iain lives a quiet life, working as a bookseller in Inverness. One day, after helping several of his regular customers, he notices a stranger lurking in the upper gallery of his shop, poring over his collection. But the man refuses to say what he's searching for and only leaves when Iain closes for the night.
The next morning Iain opens up shop and finds the stranger dead, his throat cut, and the murder weapon laid out in front of him - a sword with a white cockade on its hilt, the emblem of the Jacobites. With no sign of the killer, Iain wonders whether the stranger discovered what he was looking for - and whether he paid for it with his life. He soon finds himself embroiled in a web of deceit and a series of old scores to be settled in the ashes of war."
Then, Rocket goes suspiciously missing. With his former teammate likely in danger, Bernie goes back to his old high school for answers, where much that he remembers turns out not to be true―and there are powerful and dangerous people not happy with the questions Bernie is asking.
Bernie soon learns that he misunderstood much about his high school years – and now, Chet and Bernie are plunged into a dangerous case where the past isn’t dead and the future could be fatal."
The French and Spanish governments agree to mount a joint operation to stop the assailants, and Bruno is the local man on the spot who mobilizes his resources to track them down. While Bruno tries to keep the peace, his friend Florence reaches out for help. Her abusive ex-husband is about to be paroled from prison and she fears he will return to reclaim their children. Will Bruno and Florence be able to prevent this unwanted visit? Despite the pressures, there is always time for Bruno to savor les plaisirs of the Dordogne around the table with friends."
As his colleagues begin their investigation, Suleyman is distracted by troubles of his own. His wedding to Gonca Serekoglu is days away, but when Gonca receives her bridal bedcover from a Roma haberdasher and discovers that it is covered in blood, she sees this as a curse on their marriage. Suleyman asks his old friend Cetin Ikmen to help him uncover the truth, but the task is not that simple...
Meanwhile, as the stories swirling around Muftugolu become increasingly sinister, the dead man's wife appears, laying claim to his valuables, and Suleyman is drawn into a dark and dangerous world of smuggling and savagery . . ."
When the body of a white man is found frozen in the Himalayan foothills near Dehra Dun, he is christened the Ice Man by the national media. Who is he? How long has he been there? Why was he killed?
As Inspector Persis Wadia and Metropolitan Police criminalist Archie Blackfinch investigate the case in Bombay, they uncover a trail left behind by the enigmatic Ice Man - a trail leading directly into the dark heart of conspiracy.
Meanwhile, two new murders grip the city. Is there a serial killer on the loose, targeting Europeans?
Rich in atmosphere, the thrilling third chapter in the CWA Historical Dagger-winning Malabar House series pits Persis against a mystery from beyond the grave, unfolding against the backdrop of a turbulent post-colonial India, a nation struggling to redefine itself in the shadow of the Raj."
Although Allie is no longer an investigative journalist, her instincts are sharper than ever. When she discovers a lead about the exploitation of society's most vulnerable, Allie is determined to give a voice to those who have been silenced.
As Allie edges closer to exposing the truth, she travels behind the Iron Curtain, to East Berlin on the brink of revolution. The dark heart of the story is more shocking than she ever imagined. And to tell it, Allie must risk her freedom and her life . . ."
Her quiet life as a well-integrated immigrant is suddenly shaken when her beautiful eldest daughter, Bamby, becomes the main suspect in two murders linked to a lethal illegal immigration racket.
Is Bamby really involved? And why is everyone desperate to get their hands on Leyli's mysterious red notebook?"
For Tracy, that means reopening the potentially explosive investigations Lisa was following on the dark night she vanished: an exposĂ© of likely mayoral graft; the shocking rumors of a reserved city councilman’s criminal sex life; a drug task force scandal compromising the Seattle PD; and an elusive serial killer who disappeared just as mysteriously as Lisa.
Sheriff Heidi Kick may not be a fan of the new group, but she is also dismayed by the hostile reaction of the Bad Axe community. With a murder investigation on her hands, the situation becomes more complicated when Sheriff Kick finds out an ex-boyfriend from her youth is out on parole early and looking to hunt her down. With a tumultuous snowstorm on the horizon, the cult members are on the verge of freezing, Bad Axe is on the edge of violence, and Sheriff Kick is just one false step away from losing her family, her town, and her very life.
By a writer at the height of his powers, Bad Day Breaking is a thrilling mystery that explores the price paid for following false leaders and the power we each have to triumph over trauma."
Monday, July 25, 2022
The Unkept Woman by Allison Montclair
Sunday, July 24, 2022
On My Radar: Elly Griffiths' The Last Remains!
She sees immediately that the bones are modern and they are soon identified as the remains of Katherine Sands, who went missing in the 1990s. Katherine attended a spiritual well-being course and suspicion falls on the leader of the course - Ruth's friend, Cathbad.
The Police start to investigate the group and find that there are other missing women, making matters even worse for Cathbad. The trail leads Nelson to the famous Neolithic flint mines in Grimes Graves and to an archaeology group. Ruth agrees to infiltrate the group and there meets a figure from her own past. Soon the race is on to exonerate Cathbad, but will Ruth and Nelson uncover the truth in time to save their friend?"