Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Redemption by Deborah J. Ledford
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
September 2023 New Mystery Releases!
Eva senses a lack of interest from the department as she embarks on the investigation. But their reluctance only fuels her fire. Eva teams up with tribal police officer and longtime friend Cruz “Wolf Song” Romero to tackle a mystery that could both ruin her reputation and threaten her standing in the tribe.
This is an uncomfortable case for Detective Inspector Matthew Venn. Greystone is a place he visited as a child, a community he parted ways with. Superstition and rumor mix with fact as another body is found, and Venn finds his judgment clouded.
As the winds howl, and Venn and his team investigate, he realizes that no one, including himself, is safe from Scully Cove’s storm of dark secrets."
Thirty years later, as the city of Reykjavík celebrates its 200th anniversary, journalist Valur Robertsson begins his own investigation into Lára's case. But as he draws closer to discovering the secret, and with the eyes of Reykjavík upon him, it soon becomes clear that Lára's disappearance is a mystery that someone will stop at nothing to keep unsolved . . ."
When Penny Dahl calls the Finders Keepers detective agency hoping for help locating her missing daughter, Holly is reluctant to accept the case. Her partner, Pete, has Covid. Her (very complicated) mother has just died. And Holly is meant to be on leave. But something in Penny Dahl’s desperate voice makes it impossible for Holly to turn her down.
Mere blocks from where Bonnie Dahl disappeared live Professors Rodney and Emily Harris. They are the picture of bourgeois respectability: married octogenarians, devoted to each other, and semi-retired lifelong academics. But they are harboring an unholy secret in the basement of their well-kept, book-lined home, one that may be related to Bonnie’s disappearance. And it will prove nearly impossible to discover what they are up to: they are savvy, they are patient, and they are ruthless.
Holly must summon all her formidable talents to outthink and outmaneuver the shockingly twisted professors in this chilling new masterwork from Stephen King."
But at the exhibition opening, there’s a panicked shout of ‘Fire!’ In the confusion, the main attraction―an extremely expensive book―is stolen from under everyone’s nose, as is a valuable painting lent by Sir Hector Farley-Stroud. Then the race, which starts as a charming day out, ends in a shocking death. And to top it all off, the Farley-Strouds reveal they’re in debt and might lose their house.
Anxious that one of the royals is in danger, Teddy springs into action. He has to get the royal pair to safety, but first he has to find them. And they're not the only ones missing - where is his superior, Deputy Commissioner Howard Lane?
Soon, in the depths of the tropical darkness, Teddy has his answer - and is confronted by his worst nightmare. Plunged into his most high-profile investigation yet, Teddy knows he has to solve this case fast . . . or heads will roll."
A cold case has just been assigned to Dan Pardee, a field officer with the newly formed Missing and Murdered Indigenous People’s Task Force. Rosa Rios, a young woman of Apache descent and one-time rodeo star, vanished three years ago. Human remains, a homicide victim burned beyond recognition, were discovered in Cochise County around the time she went missing. They have finally been confirmed to be Rosa. With Sheriff Joanna Brady’s help, Dan is determined to reopen the case and bring long-awaited justice to Rosa’s family. As the orphaned son of a murdered indigenous woman, he feels an even greater, personal obligation to capture this killer.
Then one day he notices two children, around six or seven, sitting all alone on a bench. Hardly checks if they’re okay and sees injuries on both children. Someone is hurting these kids.
He reports the incident to Child Protective Service.
That should be the end of it. After all, Hardly's not even good at looking out for himself so the last thing he wants to do is look out for anyone else. But he's haunted by the two kids, his heart breaking for them. And the more research he does the less he trusts that Child Protective Services —understaffed and overworked—will do anything about it.
That leaves…Hardly. He is probably the last person you’d ever want to count on. But those two kids have nobody else but him. Hardly has to do what's right and help them.
For the first time in his life, Hardly decides to fight for something. This might be the one point in his entire life, he realizes, that is the entire point of his life. He will help those kids.
At first, trying to gather evidence that will force the proper authorities to intervene, Hardly is a total disaster. Gradually, with assistance from unexpected allies, he develops investigative skills and discovers he’s smarter and more capable than he ever imagined.
But Hardly also discovers that the situation is more dangerous than he ever expected. The abusive father who has been hurting these children isn’t just a lawyer—he also runs a violent drug-dealing operation. The mother claims she wants to escape with the kids—but Hardly isn't sure he can trust her.
Before celebratory vino flows on opening day, a stranger appears in an otherwise pristine guest room, lifeless and covered in blood. Bria can’t understand why murder would check into Bella Bella. And police are just as puzzled. As suspicions fall on a B&B employee, what’s certain is that saving her reputation—and surviving—depend on catching the real killer before it’s too late.
Flanked by her feisty best friend, Rosalie, and well-traveled sister, Lorenza, Bria vows to prove to everyone in Positano that no one at Bella Bella was involved with the crime. But as the women expose a scandal that stretches across their dazzling tourist village, it will take everything they’ve got to name the murderer and avoid becoming the next target of someone’s deadly vendetta . . ."
The hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Wokesley, are new to the area, and Phyllida gladly offers their own overwhelmed housekeeper some guidance while events get underway. Family friends have been enlisted to play the suspects, and Mr. Wokesley excels in his role of dead body. Unfortunately, when the game’s solution is about to be unveiled, the participants discover that life has imitated art. Mr. Wokesley really is dead!
In the absence of Inspector Cork, Phyllida takes temporary charge of the investigation, guiding the local constable through interviews with the Murder Game actors. At first, there seems no motive to want Mr. Wokesley dead . . . but then Phyllida begins to connect each of the suspects with the roles they played and the motives assigned to them. It soon becomes clear that everyone had a reason to murder their host—both in the game and in real life. Before long, Phyllida is embroiled in a fiendishly puzzling case, with a killer who refuses to play by the rules . . ."
As violence erupts, Suleyman and his team work tirelessly to expose a shocking tale of corruption, power and betrayal - but not before more blood is shed on these dark and dangerous streets."
Monday, August 28, 2023
The Sunset Years of Agnes Sharp by Leonie Swann
Sunday, August 27, 2023
On My Radar: Francis Spufford's Cahokia Jazz!
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Available February 6, 2024! |
On a snowy night at the end of winter, Barrow and his partner find a body on the roof of a skyscraper. Down below, streetcar bells ring, factory whistles blow, Americans drink in speakeasies and dance to the tempo of modern times. But this is Cahokia, the ancient indigenous city beside the Mississippi living on as a teeming industrial metropolis, filled with people of every race and creed. Among them, peace holds. Just about. But that corpse on the roof will spark a week of drama in which this altered world will spill its secrets and be brought, against a soundtrack of jazz clarinets and wailing streetcars, either to destruction or rebirth."
Thursday, August 24, 2023
A Ranging Farther Afield Weekly Link Round-Up
- How translated fiction captured a new generation of readers.
- The gamification of reading is changing how we approach books.
- The curious link between Oppenheimer, The Terminator, and a forgotten '80s Sting tune.
- Lynn Hightower on writing a heroine with hearing loss.
- The soup that stopped a war.
- How to find a book club online or in person.
- A new adult Marvel crime series will be written by S.A. Cosby, Lisa Jewell, and Alex Segura.
- Europa Editions and literature as a bridge.
- Florida's drive to scrutinize what kids read is costing tens of thousands of dollars.
- Indiana author John Green calls out the Hamilton East Public Library on its book reshelving policy.
- Should Botetourt County (Virginia) libraries be for adults only?
- Concerns over sex content leads Florida schools to pull Shakespeare.
- Illinois outlaws book bans, but not for incarcerated people.
- Anti-book ban bills have been introduced in the New York State Assembly.
- The Illinois book ban law has gathered steam in the Michigan legislature.
- The truth about Iowa's book ban.
- School librarians inspect "over a million books" to comply with the new Florida law.
- Despite her Facebook post, a Greenbriar (Arkansas) legislator denies that his wife has swapped books from Little Free Libraries.
- The Alabama GOP has joined the discourse criticizing LGBTQ+ content in public libraries.
- Confusion over new laws leads to alleged closure of Escambia County (Florida) school libraries.
- The battle over books comes at a cost.
- Texas revamps Houston schools, closing libraries and angering parents.
- An Iowa school district is using ChatGPT to help remove library books.
- Book battles are raging nationwide, and a Washington library could be the nation's first to close.
- Books banned in other states have fueled the Vermont lieutenant governor's reading tour.
- An ancient Roman boat from the empire's frontier was unearthed in a Serbian coal mine.
- DNA links 42,000 living people to enslaved and free African Americans buried in Maryland.
- The grocery list sketched by Michelangelo.
- In Colonial Williamsburg, thieving rats save history.
- Metal detectorists discovered 2,000-year-old gold coins in Wales.
- A secret tunnel-- with a key purpose-- was uncovered beneath palace ruins in Poland.
- A storm sank a whaling ship 186 years ago. See the treasures being found by divers.
- From the Sphinx to the Terracotta Army, photos show ten historical sites when they were discovered and after they were excavated.
- Two baby condors at Pinnacles National Park are healthy, "adorable fluffballs".
- A zookeeper cured an orangutan's morning sickness with pregnancy tea.
- Watch a man try to trick a squirrel into charging his cell phone.
- Nile crocodiles recognize and react to the sound of crying babies. (That made the hair on the back of my neck stand up...) More from Live Science.
- Can peacock vasectomies save this Florida town?
- Bison are being introduced to the Russian Arctic to replace extinct woolly mammoths. But why?
- An injured cheetah remembers the photographer who helped him and becomes friends with him.
- What parrots are saying when they mimic humans.
- Travel memoirs that aren't by the usual white dudes.
- The curious case of the Colorado River's missing water.
- Once a year, this 19th-century Michigan ghost town comes to life.
- Two buildings collapse and others are damaged in record-setting glacial floods in Alaska.
- United will be the first airline to add Braille to its plane interiors.
- Cape Cod: The perfect location for a mystery.
- Why some U.S. cities changed their original names.
- Montana youths have won a key climate lawsuit on their right to a "clean and healthful environment". Yay!
- Five ways of looking at Harriet Tubman.
- That time Eleanor Roosevelt disappeared for ten days.
- What it was like for Carol Spencer to design for Barbie.
- Watch wing walker Gladys Ingle climb from one plane to another to make a mid-air tire change in 1926.
- Scotland's ten best authors of all time, according to The Scotsman readers.
- These artists are redefining the American West.
- My first thriller: James Patterson.
- The bestselling science fiction books of all time.
- Bookstores with fantastic websites for browsing.
- Fifteen obscure words that are pure fire.
- Ten books for fans of Criminal Minds.
- The most haunted movies in Hollywood history.
- The great, reluctant detectives of crime fiction.
- Fourteen of the best books to read on a plane.
- Seventeen thought-provoking books.
Wednesday, August 23, 2023
The Housekeepers by Alex Hay
Tuesday, August 22, 2023
While Miz Kittling Knits: Cold Case
Monday, August 21, 2023
Death on the Trans-Siberian Express by C.F. Farrington
Sunday, August 20, 2023
On My Radar: Molly Guptill Manning's The War of Words!
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Available September 26, 2023! |
By war’s end, over 4,600 unique GI publications had been printed around the world. In newsprint, troops made sense of their hardships, losses, and reasons for fighting. These newspapers—by and for the troops—became the heart and soul of a unit.
Thursday, August 17, 2023
The I Sense a Trend Weekly Link Round-up
- At Readercon, print is still king.
- How to buy Kindle books: a step-by-step guide for all devices.
- Chris Vognar wants to know why he hoards more books than he can possibly read.
- Should Book Twitter switch to Book Tumblr?
- The wrath of Goodreads.
- A TikTok publishing house is bad news for books.
- What do we want from the bookish internet?
- Paperback or hardcover? Used or new? Let's talk about our book habits.
- Tracie D. Hall is leading her fellow "warrior" librarians in the fight of the century.
- Teacher Sarah Bonner put an LGBTQ+ book on her classroom reading list. Then someone filed a police report.
- The Temecula (California) School District Board has been sued over its ban on the teaching of critical race theory.
- Grappling with a new law, resellers say that fearful Florida teachers are tossing books.
- The American Library Association and the American Association of School Librarians are responding to the Houston (Texas) Independent School District's decision to eliminate 28 school libraries and their respective school librarians. Yes... these 28 libraries are to be converted to "detention centers".
- Botetourt County (Virginia) debates raising the library book checkout age amidst concerns over explicit content.
- Residents spoke out against creating a book-rating system at the Timberland (Washington) Regional Library.
- Wyoming library director Terri Lesley was fired for refusing to remove LGBTQ books from the children's section.
- From PEN America: Booklash: Literary Freedom, Online Outrage, and the Language of Harm.
- An "exceptional" Roman shipwreck was discovered with hundreds of intact 2,000-year-old jars off the coast of Italy.
- Every equinox the Maya Pyramid of Kukulcan at Chich'en Itza puts on a spooky ancient light show.
- A Roman-era cemetery with over 100 tombs has been unearthed in Gaza.
- Archaeologists discovered a 900-year-old English cathedral's hidden medieval crypt.
- X-rays have revealed that the Crusader sword found in the Holy Land was bent, possibly in a naval battle.
- UNESCO recommends adding Venice to the list of World Heritage sites that are in danger.
- A rare "Ides of March" dagger coin minted by Brutus after Julius Caesar's murder went to auction recently.
- How an English exile ended up at the court of Genghis Khan's grandson.
- Fishermen spotted a rare endangered Rice's whale in the Gulf of Mexico.
- How birds called fork-tailed drongos can spot look-alike "imposter" eggs in their nests.
- Tickling rats reveals a brain region linked to laughter and play. (I want to hear a rat laugh.)
- A little black shelter cat named Sir Indiana Bones works at a skeleton museum in Oklahoma City.
- A clever black bear figured out how to shut down an annoying water fountain.
- A rare roseate spoonbill was recently spotted in Wisconsin for the first time in 178 years.
- Watch an orphaned baby hyena bond with a rescued puppy.
- India's cheetah reintroduction is threatening an Indigenous tradition.
- Get a bird's-eye view on the Minnesota Zoo's new elevated walkway.
- Airlines will be required to make bathrooms more accessible. (Which will give them anotehr excuse to jack up the fees they charge. Not that I'm cynical or anything...)
- And while I'm on the subject: Why airplane legroom has decreased over time.
- Gardiners Island in East Hampton, New York is still in the family after a 400-year history which includes a witch hunt and a pirate.
- The Kindred Spirit mailbox on Bird Island, North Carolina saved a nature reserve.
- The Italian town of Pienza silenced a historic bell that kept tourists awake. Now, the locals can't sleep.
- View 15 beautiful lighthouses.
- Take a look at a unique floating hotel room in Sweden covered in hundreds of sustainable birdhouses.
- The 20 U.S. cities American tourists love and hate the most.
- The "Night of Terror" when women were beaten and tortured for the right to vote.
- Stephanie Kwolek: the groundbreaking chemist whose invention stops bullets.
- Susie King Taylor: from a secret school to becoming the first Black army nurse of the Civil War.
- Yepoka Yeebo on John Ackah Blay-Miezah, the Ghanaian con man who swindled the world.
- Remembering William Friedkin.
- Sports legend Althea Gibson served up tennis history when she broke through in 1950.
- Pioneering Black zoologist Charles Henry Turner's insights were a century ahead of their time.
- 12 mysteries to read if you love Only Murders in the Building.
- Celebrate the next National Book Lovers Day with these 17 books.
- 19 of the best books set in the Midwest.
- Authors on their favorite fictional escapes.
- The best descriptions of first love in literature.
- 7 Dutch crime dramas to binge watch.
- Will Dean's top ten locked-room thrillers.
- Five excellent mid-century mysteries.