Friday, October 09, 2009

CBS Orders Pilot for New Hawaii Five-O

Hawaii Five-O (CBS)

Variety is reporting that CBS has committed to a pilot for an updated version of its iconic crime drama series Hawaii Five-O. Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci (Fringe) will supervise the script.

CBS has long wanted to reboot the series, which originally aired on the network for 12 seasons (from 1968 through 1980). In August 2008 it was widely reported that an updated version of the series was in the works for CBS, with the son of Steve McGarrett as the new head of elite state police unit, but it was not picked up. No information about the direction the new pilot will take was reported.

The first seven seasons of the series are available on DVD from Mysteries on TV: Hawaii Five-O. Fancast has a rotating and somewhat random selection of episodes from the series available to view online. Watch "One for the Money" (Season 2, Episode 19) below:

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Mystery Bestsellers for October 09, 2009

Mystery Bestsellers

A list of the top 15 for the week ending October 09, 2009 has been posted on the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books website.

Yet another week with no change in the top four, with the third Robert Langdon thriller by Dan Brown, The Lost Symbol, remaining in the top spot. Two titles enter the list this week.

The Professional by Robert B. Parker

Coming in at number 11 is The Professional, the 37th Spenser novel by Robert B. Parker. A knock on Spenser's office door can only mean one thing: a new case. This time the visitor is a local lawyer with an interesting story. Elizabeth Shaw specializes in wills and trusts at the Boston law firm of Shaw & Cartwright, and over the years she's developed a friendship with wives of very wealthy men. However, these rich wives have a mutual secret: they've all had an affair with a man named Gary Eisenhower- and now he's blackmailing them for money. Shaw hires Spenser to make Eisenhower "cease and desist," so to speak, but when women start turning up dead, Spenser's assignment goes from blackmail to murder.

As matters become more complicated, Spenser's longtime love, Susan, begins offering some input by analyzing Eisenhower's behavior patterns in hopes of opening up a new avenue of investigation. It seems that not all of Gary's women are rich. So if he's not using them for blackmail, then what is his purpose? Spenser switches tactics to focus on the husbands, only to find that innocence and guilt may be two sides of the same coin.

Evidence by Jonathan Kellerman

Just making the list in 15th position is the 24th Alex Delaware thriller, Evidence by Jonathan Kellerman. In the half-built skeleton of a monstrously vulgar mansion in one of L.A.’s toniest neighborhoods, a watchman stumbles on the bodies of a young couple–murdered in flagrante and left in a gruesome postmortem embrace. Though he’s cracked some of the city’s worst slayings, veteran homicide cop Milo Sturgis is still shocked at the grisly sight: a twisted crime that only Milo’s killer instincts–and psychologist Alex Delaware’s keen insights–can hope to solve.

While the female victim’s identity remains a question mark, her companion is ID’d as eco-friendly architect Desmond Backer, who disdains the sort of grandiose superstructure he’s found dead in. And the late Mr. Backer, it’s revealed, was also notorious for his power to seduce women.

The rare exception is his ex-boss, Helga Gemein, who’s as indifferent to Desmond’s death as she apparently was to his advances. Though Milo and Alex place her on their short list of suspects, the deeper they dig for clues the longer the list grows. An elusive prince who appears to harbor decidedly American appetites, an eccentric blueblood with an ax to grind, one of Desmond’s restless ex-lovers and her cuckolded husband–all are in the homicidal mix spiced with eco-terrorism, arson, blackmail, conspiracy, and a vendetta that runs deep. But when the investigation veers suddenly in a startling direction, it’s the investigators who may wind up on the wrong end of a cornered predator’s final fury.

The top four mystery bestsellers this week are shown below:

The Lost Symbol by Dan BrownThe Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg LarssonDead and Gone by Charlaine HarrisAlex Cross's Trial by James Patterson

Please visit the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books where we are 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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Thursday, October 08, 2009

Mystery Book Review: In the Guise of Mercy by Wendy Hornsby

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of In the Guise of Mercy by Wendy Hornsby. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

In the Guise of Mercy by Wendy Hornsby

by
A Maggie MacGowen Mystery

Perseverance Press (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-56474-482-5 (1564744825)
ISBN-13: 978-1-56474-482-1 (9781564744821)
Publication Date: September 2009
List Price: $14.95

Review: After an absence of 12 years, Maggie MacGowen returns to film a documentary with a very personal connection in In the Guise of Mercy, the sixth mystery in this series by Wendy Hornsby.

Monday began as an ordinary day, but it became anything but for Maggie. Suffering from a brain cancer and determined not to let it eat at him any longer, Maggie's husband, ex-cop Mike Flint, kills himself. In a final message to Maggie, he asks that she document the one open case that has dogged him since he left the LAPD. About a decade earlier, a teenage boy named Jesus Ramon got out of the backseat of Mike's official car at high noon in downtown Los Angeles, and was never seen again. "Go back to the beginning and walk it down," Mike wrote. "And be careful who you trust. Watch six, Maggie. There are people who won't want anyone opening this up again." Maggie's not sure she can learn anything new about the case, but believes she has to try, as a tribute to her late husband.

As an investigative documentary filmmaker, Maggie proposes to use her profession as a means of accomplishing her task. After presenting her overview to Lana, her producer, she asks if Maggie will have it all figured out by the scheduled air date. "Maybe not all of it, maybe none of it. That isn't the point, is it? We're going to look at two cultures in the city, law enforcement and street criminals. Minimally, we'll explain some of the complexities of that relationship. Maximally, we'll find Jesus." And this is really what In the Guise of Mercy is all about. It is a behind-the-scenes look at the making of a documentary. The story is at times riveting, the revelations surprising. Cops and criminals using each other as a means of advancing their own agendas is the primary theme here (Jesus was, in fact, a snitch for Mike), but the author (through Maggie) studies the nuances, results and outcomes of these partnerships. It's quite well done, and an interesting variation on a cold case investigation.

Of special note here is the author's style of writing. Here's a passage from early in the book that illustrates the elegance that imbues much of the narrative:

After Jesus got into Mike's car, myth and fact became so muddied by speculation, obfuscation, personal agenda and moral attitude that Jesus, the actual boy, a missing child, was forgotten. Out of the inevitable distortions that came from the endless telling and retelling of events imperfectly known, in his absence Jesus Ramon emerged as a sort of mythic giant, a symbol for something far larger than anyone who was present on Alvarado Avenue that January day could ever have imagined. His disappearance became a ten-ton gorilla on the back of the Los Angeles Police Department, and on Mike Flint's heart.

Finally, the title merits mention. It comes from a netsuke called Malice in the Guise of the Goddess of Mercy, a rendition of Kuan Jin, the Buddhist Goddess of Mercy, from whose robes peeked out the hideous face of Malice. It's an interesting, and most appropriate, title for this terrific novel.

Special thanks to Perseverance Press for providing an ARC of In the Guise of Mercy for this review.

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

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing In the Guise of Mercy from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): Filmmaker Maggie MacGowen has taken on many tough assignments over the years. However, when she discovers a note from her newly dead husband, Detective Mike Flint, urging her her to take a fresh look at a decade-old unsolved case of a boy who went missing, she isn't sure that she s up to the challenge. But how does one say no to a dead man? Maggie seeks information from anyone who has a connection: a spoiled cop, an ex-con taxi dancer, the dead youth's gang set -- the hookers, the cons, the addicts, the homeless and the hopeless -- and the good and decent people among them who remain the foundation of a community always in transition, always under siege. The answers Maggie discovers aren't what she expects, nor is the sometimes deadly opposition from all sides. But she finds strength from her own resilience ... and an acceptance of Mike's final decision.

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Wednesday, October 07, 2009

Second Season of The Mole Available to View Online

The Mole (ABC)

Several weeks ago we reported that the first season of The Mole was available to view online. We've now learned that the second season is now available as well (though, unlike the first season, it is not available on DVD).

The Mole was a reality series that aired on ABC, in both its original format and as a celebrity edition. Contestants were required to complete a series of (sometimes) complex challenges to move on in the game, however one of the contestants was a "mole", someone whose role it was to sabotage as secretly as possible the tasks to be completed. At the end of each challenge, contestants were asked a series of questions; the one answering the least correctly (the mole will, of course, know all of them) was eliminated.

The series (well, the original ones, not necessarily the celebrity editions) was intelligent, well produced, and had an exceptional host in Anderson Cooper. The first season of The Mole as well as the first celebrity edition are available on DVD from Mysteries on TV: The Mole. Meanwhile, enjoy the second season online as long as it is available; the first episode can be seen below:

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Mystery Book Review: The Yard Dog by Sheldon Russell

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

The Yard Dog by Sheldon Russell

by
A Hook Runyon Mystery

St. Martin's Minotaur (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-312-56670-0 (0312566700)
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-56670-8 (9780312566708)
Publication Date: September 2009
List Price: $24.99

Review: Set in the mid-1940s along the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway lines in northern Oklahoma, Sheldon Russell introduces a rather unusual character, Hook Runyon, a one-armed railroad agent, sometimes known as a "yard dog", hired to run off hobos and arrest pickpockets, in The Yard Dog, the first mystery in this series.

Spark Dugan, a non-too-bright loner, has lived in a tar paper shack beneath a railway trestle just about all his life. He discovered early on that when the coal cars stopped at the station, chunks of coal would fall to the ground. He gathered the bits of coal and finding a ready market, sold them to local residents for heating or cooking. On a good day he would make enough money for some “shine” to drink, a Bull Durham to smoke, and some baloney for frying. But now there's a war on, and Oklahoma has a POW camp with 5000 prisoners along the rail lines. More trains are coming, which means more people, which means Spark has to be more careful not to be seen taking the coal, even at night. One night he is evidently not careful enough. The next morning his body is found beneath a refrigerator, or "reefer", car on the tracks. Hook Runyan was both a friend and customer of Spark. Spark had delivered a bucket of coal every morning to Hook’s home–an old caboose. Although the men that find him said Spark must have committed suicide, Hook does not even consider that as an option. He believes Spark was murdered. But why? He doesn’t know. But he and his good friend Runt, the local moonshiner, set out to learn the truth. What they find is a far greater crime than any they could have ever imagined.

Russell has created one of the most noteworthy characters in modern detective fiction. Hook Runyon is tough, smart, witty ... and collects first editions! When he begins to investigate the death of Spark, he heads for the POW camps, the only recent change in the landscape. There are prisoners who are ordered to help unload the trains that pass through, and of course there are men who guard them. But there's also the local millionaire, Hugh Favor, who owns the Favor Oil Company. Hook's investigation suggests there is some relationship–conspiracy?–between Favor and the train deliveries, but he's unsure how to proceed ... and who at the camp may also be involved and benefits.

The Yard Dog has so much to offer. Russell relives the horrors of Hitler's Germany, and its impact on rural Americans in the form of POW camps. Into this mix he brings a one-armed yard dog, a book collector who takes a shine to moonshine. And there's a new lady in his life, Dr. Reina Kaplan, who is down from New York to teach English to the prisoners. The plot is well thought out, the characters memorable, the setting unusual, overall it's incredible. The Yard Dog is not only one of the best debuts of the year, it is among the best mysteries of the year.

Special thanks to guest reviewer Betty of The Betz Review for contributing her review of The Yard Dog and to St. Martin's Minotaur 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 Yard Dog from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right. The Yard Dog (Kindle edition) is also available. Learn more about the Kindle, Amazon's Wireless Reading Device.

Synopsis (from the publisher): The Yard Dog takes place near the close of World War II, when a large number of Nazi POWs were incarcerated in camps scattered across the prairies of the United States.

At Waynoka Divisional Point, near POW Camp Alva, the disillusioned Hook Runyon is assigned by the railroad to run off hobos and arrest pickpockets. Left behind in the war because of the loss of his arm in a car accident, Hook lives in a caboose, collects rare books, and drinks busthead liquor. When a coal picker by the name of Spark Dugan is found run over by a reefer car, Hook and his sidekick, Runt, the local moonshiner, suspect foul play and are drawn into a scheme far greater than either could have imagined. This conspiracy reaches the highest echelons of the camp and beyond and will push Hook and Runt to their physical and mental limits.

Hook is a complex character, equal parts rough and vulnerable, an unlikely and unwilling hero. He is more than matched by Dr. Reina Kaplan, a Jewish big-city transplant to Camp Alva who is battling her own demons and has been put in charge of educating the Nazi inmates in the basics of democracy before their eventual return to Germany.

Vivid descriptions of period detail, stark landscapes, and unique characters make this first book in the Hook Runyon series a fascinating mystery full of tension and deep insight.

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HBO Renews Noir-otic Comedy Bored to Death

Bored to Death (HBO)

Despite what seem to be decidedly tepid reviews, and after airing only 3 of its 8 episodes to date, in a press release today HBO announced it has renewed Bored to Death for a second season. (We watched the pilot episode online several weeks ago, but sometimes series start slow and get better. The pilot is no longer available online, but is available On Demand.)

Created by author Jonathan Ames, Bored to Death follows the misadventures of a fictional Jonathan Ames, a young Brooklyn writer who pursues his quixotic dream of emulating heroes from classic private detective novels. The show stars Jason Schwartzman as Ames; Ted Danson as George Christopher, a high-profile magazine editor and Jonathan’s needy boss; and Zach Galifianakis as comic book illustrator Ray Hueston, Jonathan’s confidant.

Bored to Death airs Sundays at 9:30 PM on HBO. More information about the series can be found on the HBO: Bored to Death website; and the trailer can be seen below:

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Amazon.com Lowers Price of Kindle to $259; Introduces International Version for $279

Amazon Kindle

Amazon.com announced today a new price reduction for its Amazon Kindle, to $259 effective immediately. An Amazon Kindle with international access was also announced for $279. The international version can be pre-ordered, with shipments expected to begin within two weeks.

The Kindle is a wireless reading device that is just over 1/3" thick, and at 10.2 oz., lighter than a typical paperback. 3G wireless allows you to purchase and download books anywhere, anytime, with no monthly fees or service plans, and no need to search for Wi-Fi hotspots. Up to 1500 books can be stored on a Kindle.

Currently, over 350,000 books, newspapers, magazines, and more are available for the Kindle. For more information about the Amazon Kindle, including all technical details, use this link.

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Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Her Interactive Announces Twitter Soap Opera for Warnings at Waverly Academy

Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy

In a press release today, Her Interactive announced a Twitter soap opera to promote the next game in the Nancy Drew PC game series, Warnings at Waverly Academy, due in stores on October 13th but available for pre-order now.

Watching Waverly starts today and continues through October 16th. Five game characters fill in background and details of the game from their own perspective: Leela Yadav, Megan Vargas, Izzy Romero, Danielle Hayes, and Corine Myers, who tweet out their daily lives and update fans about the events as they unfold.

Gameplay description: You, as Nancy Drew, are undercover at a prestigious girls' boarding school to discover the culprit behind threatening notes and dangerous accidents aimed at its valedictorian candidates! Is there a secret someone wants to protect or are the malicious pranks intended to scare away the competition - permanently? Solve the mystery before the threats turn deadly and you're expelled from the case!

Watch a trailer for Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy below:

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Mystery Book Review: In Their Blood by Sharon Potts

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of In Their Blood by Sharon Potts. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

In Their Blood by Sharon Potts

by
Non-series

Oceanview Publishing (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 1-933515-62-7 (1933515627)
ISBN-13: 978-1-933515-62-5 (9781933515625)
Publication Date: September 2009
List Price: $25.95

Review: The 23-year-old son of a couple, who was brutally murdered in their home, returns to assume custody of his teenage sister and to identify his parent's killer in In Their Blood, a debut thriller by Sharon Potts.

Jeremy Stroeb is in Portugal, avoiding his family and responsibility, when his parents are inexplicably shot to death one night in their bedroom. His mother was a respected accountant, a partner in her firm; his father a politically active economics professor at a local university. Though the police believe the murders to be part of a burglary gone wrong, the only things missing are laptops belonging to the couple. Reasoning that his parents weren't killed by a random stranger, Jeremy takes a job at his mother's firm, and enrolls in classes at his father's university, with the intention of learning more about his parents, their associates, and what one of them might have known that someone was willing to kill for.

Fans of John Grisham's thrillers will likely be drawn to In Their Blood, which works both to the book's advantage and disadvantage. On the plus side is the familiarity of the plot and its pacing, which is really well done, moving the story forward at just the right speed, introducing elements that may be relevant to the outcome -- or not -- and enhancing the suspense without overwhelming it. But familiarity also works on the downside, resulting in a sense of predictability, or maybe inevitability, to the story. In what seems to be an effort on the part of the author to compensate, at least in part, for the latter, there are a lot of sources for suspects and motives ... maybe too many. From the university campus to the corporate boardroom to various relatives and neighbors, there is no shortage of leads for Jeremy to discover and follow up on.

A strong secondary theme in the book is family, in particular, familial relationships and responsibilities. Here it's a little less successful, mostly in the heavy-handed way it's used to drive home some plot points and as motivation for the actions of certain characters.

Overall, though, In Their Blood is a thriller that offers the reader plenty of twists and turns, solid clues to follow and red herrings to distract, and a well-written and developed storyline that is sure to please.

Special thanks to Oceanview Publishing for providing an ARC of In Their Blood for this review.

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

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing In Their Blood from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): Born into a life of privilege, Jeremy Stroeb loves freedom, loathes responsibility and drops out of college to start backpacking across Europe. But this free-spirited drifter crashes back to brutal reality when his parents, Rachel and Daniel Stroeb, are murdered in their home on Miami Beach.

When he returns to Miami, Jeremy assumes guardianship of his teenage sister, Elise, who is traumatized and convinced the killer will be back for her.

With steely, urgent resolve, Jeremy vows to find out what really happened to Rachel Stroeb, the respected CPA and Daniel Stroeb, the controversial professor. Determined to get on the inside of his parents' lives, Jeremy takes a job at the accounting firm where his mother worked, and enrolls at the university where his father taught.

But too many details don't add up. With mounting certainty that his parents were anything but the people he thought they were, Jeremy must face the toughest questions of all. Who were Rachel and Daniel Stroeb? And when will the killer be back for the next of kin?

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Dennis Lehane Writing Sequel to Gone Baby Gone

Gone Baby Gone by Dennis Lehane

An article in yesterday's Boston Herald profiled author Dennis Lehane and reported that his next novel is a sequel to the 1998 mystery Gone Baby Gone, which features Boston private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro. The pair was last seen in the 1999 thriller Prayers for Rain.

“I thought I would never write about them again,” said Lehane. “Then all of a sudden I thought, what would it be like if a girl walked back into your life that was part of the most guilt-inducing decision you had ever made.”

He added, “It’s 11 years later, and that same girl goes missing again. And now he’s gotta find her again,” he said. “Initially he doesn’t want to, but then he finds himself chasing this part of the past that almost destroyed him and every relationship he’s ever had. It’s something he never made peace with.”

A 2007 film adaptation of Gone Baby Gone starred Casey Affleck and Michelle Monaghan as the principal characters.

The title of the new book wasn't provided, nor a release date, only sometime "next summer or early fall".

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