Thursday, April 09, 2009

THWC Announces Rules for the 2009 Hillerman Mystery Competition

The Tony Hillerman Writers Conference (THWC) has posted the guidelines for this year's Hillerman Mystery Competition. Sponsored by St. Martin's Press and Wordharvest, the competition is open to any professional or non-professional writer, regardless of nationality, who has never been the author of a published mystery and is not under contract with a publisher for publication of a mystery.

In brief, the guidelines include:

• Murder or another serious crime or crimes is at the heart of the story, and emphasis is on the solution rather than the details of the crime; and

• The primary setting must be the Southwestern United States, including at least one of the following states: Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Southern California and Utah.

Manuscripts must be received by June 01, 2009. The winner, if one is selected, is expected to be announced in November 2009 and will receive a $10,000 advance against future publication royalties.

For more information, visit the competition rules page.

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ITV Commissions New Crime Drama, Murderland

The Guardian is reporting that Robbie Coltrane has signed for a new three-part crime drama to be aired on ITV titled Murderland. Coltrane previously played criminal psychologist Dr. Eddie "Fitz" Fitzgerald for three seasons on the critically acclaimed series from 1993 through 1995.

Murderland is a thriller of revenge, redemption and rough justice, where three different perspectives eventually piece together the truth. Coltrane plays Gordon Hain, the detective in charge of the investigation.

"Murderland is an emotional thriller, as much a why-dunit as a whodunit. As much a love story as a murder story," said producer Kate Croft. Filming is to begin in June.

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Harper's Island, a CBS Mystery Event, Begins Tonight

Harper's Island is a 13-episode murder mystery about a group of family and friends who travel to a secluded island for a destination wedding. They've come to laugh ... to love ... and, though they don't know it ... to die. As the wedding festivities begin, friendships are tested and secrets exposed as a murderer claims victims, one by one, transforming the wedding week of fun and celebration into a terrifying struggle for survival. Abby Mills, whose mother was killed on the island by a homicidal maniac's rampage seven years ago, journeys home for the first time since the horrific event for the wedding of her best friend, Henry Dunn. Henry, the boy next door, is marrying the woman of his dreams, Trish Wellington, a beautiful and wealthy heiress. But as the wedding week begins, people start dying. Every episode, someone is killed. Wedding guests and island locals, every person is a suspect. No one is safe. No one can be trusted. By the end of the 13 episodes, all questions will be answered, the killer will be revealed and only a few will survive.

For a complete guest list and information about some of the locations on the island, see our earlier post .

Harper's Island, a CBS mystery event, begins tonight at 10 PM (ET).

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Mystery Book Review: Docketful of Poesy by Diana Killian

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of Docketful of Poesy by Diana Killian. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

Docketful of Poesy by Diana Killian

by
A Poetic Death Mystery with Grace Hollister

Perseverance Press (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-880284-97-9 (1880284979)
ISBN-13: 978-1-880284-97-1 (9781880284971)
Publication Date: April 2009
List Price: $14.95

Review: Former school teacher and English poet scholar Grace Hollister returns to England as screenwriter where the filming of her own book is taking place in Docketful of Poesy, the fourth mystery in this series by Diana Killian.

Grace had left England for California after doing research on the poets of the Romantic Era. Her research also included various adventures including meeting a mysterious former jewel thief named Peter Fox (essentially the first three books of this series). She's combined all this information into a book, a memoir if you will, that her publisher has titled Dangerous to Know, not her first choice for an academic tome. An unknown film company, Kismet Productions, has purchased the rights to the book and plans a direct-to-cable movie. Grace had assumed the film would be a documentary, but instead it seems to be developed as a sexy, action movie. Filming begins in Hollywood before moving to England's Lake District where Grace had lived while doing her research. When the screenwriter adapting the book accidentally dies by a hit-and-run driver, Grace is asked to step in. But she finds the death suspicious and "once Grace gets her teeth into a puzzle she never lets go."

To mix metaphors here, reading Docketful of Poesy is like walking in on the middle of what seems to be a very good movie. It's really a wonderful story, with everything a mystery fan would want: a suspicious death, a beautiful setting, endearing characters, witty banter, an unexpected link between disparate events, a tentative (or maybe not so tentative) romance. And yet there's a sense that the reader has missed something, that the book would have been so much more meaningful, more enjoyable, had the first three books, or any of the previous books, been read before this one. It's not that enough background material wasn't presented; it's just that there seems to be inside information simmering beneath the surface that first time readers aren't cognizant of. On balance, Docketful of Poesy is a terrific mystery, but readers familiar with the earlier exploits of Grace Hollister will probably like it even more.

Special thanks to guest reviewer Betty of The Betz Review for contributing her review of Docketful of Poesy and to Perseverance Press for providing a copy of the book for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — Hidden Staircase Mystery Books — All Rights Reserved.

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Docketful of Poesy from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): "Theater of the Absurd" takes on a whole new meaning when former high school teacher and literary scholar Grace Hollister is hired as a script doctor for a straight-to-cable film production of her own academic exploits. Although the film's budget seems boundless, almost no one in the cast or crew seems to have any experience making movies. It would almost be comical in a Woody Allen sort of way ... until history repeats itself for real, and it's curtains for one of the cast.

For more visit Mysterious Reviews, a partner with the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books which is committed to providing readers and collectors of with the best and most current information about their favorite authors, titles, and series.

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First Clues Review: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J. K. Rowling

First Clues: Mysteries for Kids

is delighted to introduce a new feature for our website, book reviews written by students. These students offer their unique perspective on the book in their review and provide a valuable resource to parents looking for new mystery adventures for their kids to read.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J. K. Rowling

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J. K. Rowling

Scholastic (Paperback)
ISBN-10: 0-439-35807-8 (0439358078)
ISBN-13: 978-0-439-35807-1 (9780439358071)
Publication Date: August 2004
List Price: $12.99

Review written by Chris, Age 11, Grade 6. Date of review: April 2009.

Review: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is a book of suspense, action, and magic, written by J. K. Rowling. This is a book that you can not put down until you read the last page! Harry Potter, Ron Weasley, and Hermione Granger are back for their fifth year at Hogwarts, and experience what appears to be their worst year yet. Lord Voldemort, the murderer of Harry Potter’s parents, is back for revenge and attacks the Ministry of Magic in search for Harry Potter.

There are just a few things on Harry Potter’s mind; Professor Umbridge and The Dark Lord. Professor Umbridge has a personality like poisoned honey, and, strangely, works for the Ministry of Magic. Was the impotent government of the magical world trying to interfere with the Hogwarts’ headmaster, Dumbledore? Of course there is also the growing threat of the Dark Lord, Lord Voldemort, Harry has to worry about. The only problem is no one believes the Dark Lord is rising again. Harry worries about this along with his friends, Ron and Hermione. Soon afterwards he comes face to face with the Dark Lord. Is this the final chapter of the heroic Harry Potter? Or is this just the beginning of a new mystery yet to be solved? Packed with breathtaking turns and scenes, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is the most excellent book yet in the Harry Potter Series!

This novel has realistic and spectacular parts such as the killing of the Doxies in the Black Manor. I felt as if these magical creatures were actually chasing me around the Black Mansion and I was spaying them with Doxycide to paralyze them. The Order of the Phoenix was the perfect book for me since I love magic, and I enjoyed reading it. If you want an action packed book, then read Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix. It will blow your mind away! I would recommend this book to anyone who loves magical creatures and magic spells. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is a New York Times Best-Seller and so are the rest of the Harry Potter series. Keep up the good work J. K. Rowling!

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

is pleased to provide information on over 100 mystery series for children and young adults. Each series is conveniently listed under three different age categories (New Sleuth, ages 4 to 7; Future Sleuth, aged 7 to 10; and Sleuth in Training, ages 10 and older). If you have a favorite mystery series you'd like to see added to our site, please contact us.

All student book reviews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in any manner, print or electronic, without the express written consent of the copyright owner. Reviews are published here with permission of the copyright owner.

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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Mystery Calendar: Deadly Ink Conference, Updated Information

Chris Abbott and Debby Buchanan over at Deadly Ink provided us with some updated information on the Deadly Ink Conference being held this June in Parsippany (NJ).

The Guest of Honor will be bestselling author Lincoln Child. The Toastmaster is the hilarious Jeff Cohen. Other authors scheduled to attend are: Kate Gallison, Elena Santangelo, Robin Hathaway, Cheryl Solimini, Steve Rigolosi, KB Inglee, Dennis Tafoya, Ed Rand, Maggie Barbieri, Roberta Rogow, Liz Zelvin, Renee Gardner, Judi McCoy, Evelyn David, Ilene Schneider, Jack Getze, Chris Grabenstein, Jane Cleland, Peggy Ehrhart and Jonathan Santlofer.

They are also going to have a NY cop and a NJ medical examiner to fill participants in on the realities of police work and medical forensics.

The conference is being held at the castle-like Parsippany Sheraton Hotel on June 27-28, 2009. Special hotel rates are available.

For more information about the conference, visit the Deadly Ink website.

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First Clues Review: The Seeing Stone by Holly Black

First Clues: Mysteries for Kids

is delighted to introduce a new feature for our website, book reviews written by students. These students offer their unique perspective on the book in their review and provide a valuable resource to parents looking for new mystery adventures for their kids to read.

The Seeing Stone by Holly Black

The Seeing Stone by Holly Black

Simon & Schuster (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-689-85937-6 (0689859376)
ISBN-13: 978-0-689-85937-3 (9780689859373)
Publication Date: May 2003
List Price: $10.99

Review written by Chris, Age 11, Grade 6. Date of review: April 2009.

Review: The Seeing Stone is the second out of five books in The Spiderwick Chronicles. As the sequel to The Field Guide, Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi have written another book that will keep you reading until dawn! As the Grace Family settles in their new house, Jared and Simon, the boys of the family, start to experience the strangest events. Mallory, Jared and Simon’s sister, also begins to notice bizarre signs in their Aunt Lucinda’s house.

After the first few weeks in their house, the Grace family starts to feel at home, until the Grace Kids, Jared, Simon, and Mallory begin to see strange footprints around the house, telling them they are not alone. They notice the smallest changes when they return home after going out. The strange creatures show themselves when Jared reveals the Field Guide he found in his Aunt Lucinda’s house. When Jared refuses to give the goblins the book, they drag his brother, Simon, and hold him for ransom. Jared must team up with a mythical creature, a brownie, and use the seeing stone to rescue his brother and kill the goblins of their house. Another mystery keeps coming to Jared’s mind. The Field Guide moves from room to room each night and sometimes during the day. Are the goblins up to their no good tricks once again, or is this a whole new mystery that Jared must one day face? Packed with enthralling chapters and turning points that will keep your mouth agape for a day, Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi take action and mystery to a whole new limit!

The Seeing Stone is crammed with realistic scenes such as the goblins roasting the cat over the roaring fire and singing in low and rough squeals. As I read the passage, their squeals filled the air in my room and I could feel the warmth of the fire against my skin. This book is filled with chapters full of mystery and action which I would recommend to anyone, even adults! Tony DiTerlizzi has not disappointed me with his illustrations and Holly Black made me want to purchase the whole series! The Seeing Stone is a New York Times best selling book and so is the rest of the Spiderwick series! Keep up the good work H.B and T.D!

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing The Seeing Stone from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

is pleased to provide information on over 100 mystery series for children and young adults. Each series is conveniently listed under three different age categories (New Sleuth, ages 4 to 7; Future Sleuth, aged 7 to 10; and Sleuth in Training, ages 10 and older). If you have a favorite mystery series you'd like to see added to our site, please contact us.

All student book reviews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in any manner, print or electronic, without the express written consent of the copyright owner. Reviews are published here with permission of the copyright owner.

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Monday, April 06, 2009

Mysteries on TV: The Unusuals and Southland Premiere This Week

Mysteries on TV

No new mysteries on TV series are scheduled for release this week on DVD, but two ensemble crime dramas located on opposite sides of the country are set to debut on network television.

In New York City are The Unusuals, set in the world of NYPD detectives where every cop has a secret.

The Unusuals (ABC)

In the opening episode, Detective Casey Shraeger (played by Amber Tamblyn) has just been transferred to the homicide unit from vice and is instantly thrown into a setting of bullets and bodies. As she begins her new assignment, Casey finds that the force is full of secrets, which serves her well, since she's keeping a few of her own. But her first case is not an easy one, as she's assigned to investigate the death of one of the department's own, the former partner of Detective Jason Walsh (Jeremy Renner), who is now her new partner.

The Unusuals premieres Wednesday, April 8th at 10PM (ET) on ABC.

Southland (NBC)

A raw and authenitic look at a police unit in Los Angeles is the premise of Southland. From the beaches of Malibu to the streets of East Los Angeles, this fast-moving drama will take viewers inside the lives of cops, criminals, victims and their families.

Michael Cudlitz plays John Cooper, a seasoned Los Angeles cop, assigned to train young rookie Ben Sherman (Ben McKenzie). Cooper's honest, no-nonsense approach to the job leaves Sherman questioning whether or not he has what it takes to become a police officer.

Southland premieres Thursday, April 9th at 10PM (ET) on NBC. For those who can't wait, NBC has the pilot episode online at NBC.com.

Please visit Mysteries on TV, your source for the most complete selection of detective, amateur sleuth, private investigator, and suspense television mystery series now available or coming soon to DVD.

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Mystery Godoku Puzzle for April 06, 2009

A new has been created by the editors of the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books and is now available on our website.

Godoku is similar to Sudoku, but uses letters instead of numbers. To give you a headstart, we provide you a mystery clue to fill in a complete row or column (if you choose to use it!).

Mystery Godoku Puzzle for April 06, 2009

This week's letters and mystery clue:

A B C E H L M R T

He is the Vicar of Stoneground, the most haunted parish in England (9 letters).

We now have two weeks of our puzzles on one page in PDF format for easier printing. Print this week's puzzle here.

Previous puzzles are stored in the Mystery Godoku Archives.

Enjoy the weekly Mystery Godoku Puzzle from the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, and Thanks for visiting our website!

   

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Games of Mystery: Between the Worlds, New at Big Fish Games

Games of Mystery

, your source for mystery-themed electronic and board games, parties for kids and adults, and mystery getaway vacations, is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery game from Big Fish Games released today. You can find out more about these games by visiting our page or by clicking on the links provided below.

Between the Worlds

A mysterious evildoer has surfaced and it is up to you to use your sleuthing skills in this enigmatic hidden object game to halt his cryptic spree of violence! As a seasoned detective, you will have to gather clues and explore the untouched crime scenes. Decipher tricky puzzles and minigames. Go Between the Worlds to save the city from these inexplicable crimes by solving the case, and banish the individual behind it all!

Between the Worlds may be downloaded and purchased for as little as $6.99 with the Big Fish Game Club Jumbo Pack. A demonstration version (61.24 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour.

Watch a preview video below:

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Other popular games on our page include several and games, games in the series and in particular the latest, Mystery Case Files: Return to Ravenhearst, Adventure Chronicles: The Search for Lost Treasure, Syberia and Syberia II, The Serpent of Isis, James Patterson's Women's Murder Club: A Darker Shade of Grey, and Nick Chase: A Detective Story.

Read our new game reviews by Ms. Terri: , and .

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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And don't forget to visit for all kinds of mysterious fun!

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Sunday, April 05, 2009

Mystery Book Review: Iced Under by Nadine Doolittle

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of Iced Under by Nadine Doolittle. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

Iced Under by Nadine Doolittle

by
Non-series

Bayeux Arts (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-897411-04-9 (1897411049)
ISBN-13: 978-1-897411-04-9 (9781897411049)
Publication Date: November 2008
List Price: $21.95

Review: At the heart of Nadine Doolittle’s debut novel Iced Under is the frightening concept of whether seven-year-old Oralee Pelletier missing for the last six months has been abducted by a person or persons unknown or is, as an inquest concludes, a victim of “death by misadventure.” It’s a mystery that ensnares about-to-be-finally-divorced Sara Wolseley and her two daughters, eight-year-old Darcy and thirteen-year-old Brittany, who have relocated from the comforts of a Toronto Beaches house to a rustic cottage in Quebec’s small town Stollerton where “the population hovered perpetually at eight hundred,” and the town itself “hung on to existence with the tenacity of a weed.” The trio have barely gotten to meet their neighbours and learn the hardships of winter living in a summer cottage beside Hennessy Lake before Sara discovers the Pelletier child’s body floating in the weeds beneath the hard-frozen lake. It’s a gruesome find and the beginning of a trail of clues leading to a number of suspects, any of whom at any time appear to be more or less guilty of anything from obstructing justice, to complicity, to abduction to kiddie porn to murder- even to a family killing some twenty-seven years ago at the old Hennessy House.

An actor-turned-mystery author, Doolittle shows a lot of potential for her new career. The plot is well managed with its mixture of mysteries and Sara’s deteriorating family circumstances as a nearly poverty stricken divorcee, but with perhaps a clue or two too many to reveal the resolution to the child’s disappearance too soon. And sadly, there are several distracting typos and missing words that interrupt the flow of the narrative. The characterization, however, is well done, and even minor characters like Sara’s estranged television-director husband and his new family in Toronto, and the former actor who died and left her the cottage or the Detective Sergeant in charge of the case appear to be real people to like or despise as required by the story. Oralee’s booze-besotted mother, with her secret about Oralee’s disappearance and her conviction that her daughter has been killed, comes across sympathetically as does Sara left “standing in the driveway with fourteen years of marriage plastered to her face.” Giller Hennessy, Sara’s romantic interest in the story is a suitable lover for her to rescue from his depression over a long-ago murder-suicide even as she struggles with her own troubles with an undependable car and a menial job cleaning the neighbours’ houses. And her employer, Charlene, the bosomy master manipulator of everyone she meets, and who pushes Sara to the verge of alcoholism and self-doubt with her lies, is a work of wickedness to behold. Charlene’s anorexic, self-destructive teen-aged daughter, Ayla, also has a secret or two about Oralee’s disappearance, and other things to be coaxed from her too about someone she hates, as Sara discovers. Sara’s own two kids are suitably described as well, the one the pre-teen still needing her mom, the other the teenager finding her mom and her ministrations insufferable.

Doolittle’s adept at descriptive settings too. Whether it’s a countryside in winter, or a rural library that doles out second hand clothing, or a sugar shack, or a toymaker’s shop of aromatic wooden carvings, or a country store where “There were homey displays of tea towels and wooden spoons set out on gingham, and a small refrigerated deli counter that housed rolls of bologna and blocks of cheese to be ordered by the slice.” Or there’s the nightmare sighting of Oralee’s face under the ice, ”chalk white against the black water” before “Sara woke, choking on her saliva.” And then there’s the lingering thought that another woman “was living in her house. Touching her dishes. Using her bath towels. Sleeping in her bed with her husband. And now she wants her children too.”

Given her achievements here, Nadine Doolittle’s name is one to watch for in the future. Meanwhile, there’s Iced Under to be read and enjoyed.

Special thanks to M. Wayne Cunningham (mw_cunningham@telus.net) for contributing his review of Iced Under and to Nadine Doolittle for providing a copy of the book for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — M. Wayne Cunningham — All Rights Reserved — Reprinted with Permission

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Iced Under from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): Raw from a painful divorce, Sara Wolesley exiles herself and her two daughters to a dilapidated cottage on Hennessy Lake in Western Quebec.

The ice is clear that year, like black cellophane stretching as far as the eye can see.

But the cottage is not the idyll Sara imagined it would be. The cold, the isolation, and money pressure bring her close to a breakdown. Faced with the threat of losing custody of her kids, Sara tries to get a job cleaning for a reclusive man across the ice but he turns her away. With her failures piling up, Sara escapes to the lake where she discovers a child under the ice. Seven year old Oralee Pelletier has been missing for six months.

For more visit Mysterious Reviews, a partner with the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books which is committed to providing readers and collectors of with the best and most current information about their favorite authors, titles, and series.

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Mystery Book Review: The Tricking of Freya by Christina Sunley

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of The Tricking of Freya by Christina Sunley. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

The Tricking of Freya by Christina Sunley

by
Non-series

St. Martin's Minotaur (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-312-37877-7 (0312378777)
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-37877-6 (9780312378776)
Publication Date: March 2008
List Price: $25.95

Review: Christina Sunley's debut novel, The Tricking of Freya, is the story of a young woman, told from her perspective, covering more than a 20 year span during which Freya Morris learns about her family and the secrets they share.

Freya’s ancestors, originally from Iceland, abandoned their homes in 1876 after a ravaging volcano erupted destroying their village with ashen lava. Her grandparents their immediate family journeyed to Canada and settled in Gimli (Icelandic name for Heaven) on the shores of Lake Winnipeg. Freya’s parents subsequently moved to Connecticut. Her father died before she was two years old. She was seven before her mother took her to Gimli to meet her grandmother (Amma) and her Aunt Birdie (Ingibjorg). That summer Aunt Birdie taught Freya Icelandic words and phrases; she was a quick study. Birdie also told her of her grandfather, Olafur, who described their people’s emigration from Iceland in poetry. Soon Freya was able to recite her grandfather’s momentous poems much to the delight of Birdie. Freya eagerly looked forward to their visits in Gimli. She loved being with Aunt Birdie, except when Birdie was acerbic and had spells of being downcast. The summer when she was thirteen, Birdie deceived Freya by telling her that she, her mother and grandmother had planned a big surprise for her: a plane trip to Iceland. Actually Birdie took Freya to Iceland without telling anyone. There Birdie stole a jeep from a friend and drove miles through the wilderness, seeing waterfalls, craters, vast lava fields and green lava moss, and a multitude of sheep. Freya experienced a whole world, both beautiful and frightening. It becomes a vital part of her lengthy letter from which this story is actually told.

Years later, during one of her trips to Gimli, Freda overhears a conversation regarding a child Birdie had given birth to when she was young. Although no one would admit it, Freya is positive that her aunt Birdie had a baby out of wedlock. If she is right then she has a cousin somewhere. Freda gives up her home in mid-Manhattan and her job as a photographer and heads to Gimli to find her cousin. Finally her grandmother’s nurse, who had also been Birdie’s nurse, admitted that Birdie indeed had a child. She gave it up in a “blind adoption”. The adoptive parents would never know who gave birth to the child and Birdie would never know who adopted it. Believing that Birdie would only give her baby to an Icelander, Freya returns to Iceland to continue her quest to find her cousin.

The Tricking of Freya is not a mystery novel by any standard definition, but it is a story filled with myriad twists and turns. It is in many ways a literary maze filled with the unexpected around every corner. The author's beautiful descriptions of Iceland, the country's waterfalls, volcanoes, icebergs, and more are incredible. The reader is drawn into Freda's ancestral lore and the search for her cousin, accompanying her on her journey and participating in an adventure that can best be described as mesmerizing.

Special thanks to guest reviewer Betty of The Betz Review for contributing her review of The Tricking of Freya and to Susan Schwartzman Public Relations for providing a copy of the book for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — Hidden Staircase Mystery Books — All Rights Reserved.

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing The Tricking of Freya from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right. The Tricking of Freya (Kindle edition) is also available. Learn more about the Kindle, Amazon's Wireless Reading Device.

Synopsis (from the publisher): Freya Morris lives an almost nocturnal existence working in a basement photography studio in Manhattan—when she is summoned back to the formative place of her youth, a remote Icelandic-Canadian village called Gimli, where her ancient grandmother clings to life.

Freya is the last in a remarkable family line. Her immigrant grandfather, a famous poet, became the keeper of Iceland’s cultural flame: a powerful blend of language, myth, history, and geneaology, all shaped by the challenge of living on a subarctic island covered by vast lava fields and immense glaciers. After a massive volcanic eruption, he and thousands of others had fled Iceland for America and Canada.

With her widowed mother, Freya spent her childhood summers in Gimli, visiting her grandmother and aunt Birdie, a brilliant but troubled woman who saw in Freya a kindred spirit. On one visit, a freak accident and its aftermath made Freya’s life a confusing blend of secrecy, shame, and exile from her roots.

Two decades later, in Gimli to see her grandmother for the last time, Freya picks up the thread of a family secret—one which leads her on a dramatic quest through the past she has nearly forgotten, culminating in Iceland past and present.

For more visit Mysterious Reviews, a partner with the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books which is committed to providing readers and collectors of with the best and most current information about their favorite authors, titles, and series.

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

The New York Times Profiles Mystery Writer Harlan Coben

Robin Finn, in a Sunday Profile on The New York Times, takes an entertaining look at mystery writer . Coben's most recent mystery, Long Lost, the 9th in the Myron Bolitar series, was published earlier this week.

Finn notes that home base is a stunning Victorian mansion, circa 1865, in New Jersey where a replica Maltese falcon guards the library’s built-in bookcases and an Edgar Award (for Coben's 1996 novel Fade Away) graces the mantel in the parlor.

Asked to compare himself to his series character, sports and entertainment agent Myron Bolitar, Coben says, "He's the man I want to be. He's funnier, faster, stronger, handsomer, more loyal. And the relationship Myron has with his parents is the relationship I imagine I would have had with mine had they lived longer."

Though he's written several non-series bestselling thrillers, he says the escapades of Myron are dearest to his heart. "There are three things that make a person a writer," he concludes. "Inspiration, perspiration and desperation. I’m on page 40 of the next book; Myron hasn't shown up yet. But you never know. That's the beauty of getting paid to make stuff up for a living."

[MBN note: Read our review of Lost Lost in which we said, "[t]he narrative is taut, the pace relentless", adding that is it "one of Coben's most entertaining efforts." .]

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Friday, April 03, 2009

Winners of the 2009 Galaxy British Book Awards Announced

Mystery Book Awards: The Edgars, The Agathas, The Anthonys, and many more.

The 2009 Galaxy British Book Awards were given out this evening honoring the best books and authors of the year.

Mystery and suspense thrillers dominated the awards. The winners include:

• Galaxy Book of the Year: The Suspicions of Mr Whicher by (Bloomsbury)
• Richard & Judy Best Read: When Will There Be Good News by (Black Swan)
• Books Direct Crime Thriller of the Year: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by (Quercus)
• Sainsbury's Popular Fiction Award: Devil May Care by Sebastian Faulks (Penguin 007)
• Play.com Popular Non-Fiction Award: The Suspicions of Mr Whicher by (Bloomsbury)
• Waterstone's New Writer of the Year: Child 44 by (Simon & Schuster)

Previous year's crime thriller winners can be found on .

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Mystery Savings: Buy 2 Bargain Books, Get 3rd Free, at B&N.com

Mystery Savings: Discounted Products and Services on Books, Movies, and more!

Mystery Savings periodically provides our readers with current promotions that offer discounts or other incentives for purchasing mystery-themed products and services products through our partner websites. Below is a special offer recently received by us that we're pleased to pass on at this time.

From today through April 15, 2009, purchase any two bargain books from Barnes&Noble.com and received a third one free! Simply look for the Bargain Free Book Offer icon while shopping. Your credit for the least expensive book will appear at checkout. Except for discounts available through the Barnes & Noble Member program, this offer may not be combined with any other coupon or any discount promotion.

Recent hardcover bestselling mysteries and suspense thrillers available in this offer include Plum Lucky by Janet Evanovich, The Sleeping Doll by Jeffery Deaver, Simple Genius by David Baldacci, The Overlook by Michael Connelly, Cross by James Patterson, Break No Bones by Kathy Reichs, and many, many more. Click on the banner below to start shopping and saving at B&N.com!

Bargain Sale -- B2G3rd FREE

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