Wednesday, October 06, 2010

BFG Game Promotions Ending October 19th, 2010

Big Fish Games

Here's a new promotion from Big Fish Games: the popular game Mystery Case Files: Return to Ravenhearst is now available for just $3.49 when you use the coupon code RTR349 at checkout. This offer expires on October 19th, 2010.

But there's more! You can save 35% off the retail price of any standard game by using the coupon code FUNGAMES, now through October 19th, 2010. Plus, new customers get a free BFG Game Club Membership for one month! BFG Club Members save 30-70% on all games, have early access to new games, and have the opportunity to earn free games every month!

To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn (Book Review)

Mysterious Reviews: Mystery, Suspense, Thriller and Crime Novel Reviews, edited by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books

To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn. A Chet and Bernie Mystery. Atria Hardcover, September 2010.

Bernie Little of the Little Detective Agency and his canine partner and companion, Chet the Jet, are on the case of a missing elephant trainer -- and a missing elephant -- in To Fetch a Thief, the third mystery in this series by Spencer Quinn.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn.

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Mysterious Reviews is your source for the latest mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime novel reviews, edited by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books.

New Carina eBook Mysteries for October 2010

Carina Press: Your next great read!

Each month, Omnimystery News is pleased to list new mystery and suspense titles from Carina Press, an ebook only publisher. Links on this page are for the Kindle edition of the book; click on the banner to the right to be taken to CarinaPress.comCarinaPress.com to purchase other ebook formats.

New mysteries for October 2010 from Carina include:

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Storm Warning by Toni Anderson
Buy the Book!

Storm Warning by Toni Anderson
Non-series

Sorcha Logan is looking for peace.

Recently returned to her hometown on Scotland's craggy coast, Sorcha wants to tame the spirits that made her flee. When she finds a corpse in the surf, however, she can't suppress the memory of discovering her father's body. Nor can she suppress the ghosts that haunt her—or the town's conviction that she's dangerous, and a witch.

Ben Foley is looking for a killer.

An American DEA agent, Ben is in town to investigate the suspicious death of his partner. He's sure that Sorcha knows more than she's letting on—but the more time he spends with the sexy suspect, the less he can fight their illicit attraction. And the less certain he is she's involved with a drug cartel.

But can Ben protect Sorcha from being set up? Or worse—killed?

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Trash Course by Penny Drake
Buy the Book!

Trash Course by Penny Drake
Non-series

Terry Faye loves travelling the world while working as a private investigator. But this latest case is a doozy—and it's right here in Ann Arbor.

Two elderly recluses, Howard and Lawrence Peale, have stopped communicating with the outside world, and Terry and her boss have been put on the case. The catch: the Peales are hoarders. A clean sweep isn't going to be easy, even with cute photographer Zack Archer lending a hand.

The more digging Terry does in the Peale mansion, the more dirt she uncovers. And after she discovers two dead bodies, it's going to take a lot more than just elbow grease and a nice guy sidekick to find out what's happened ...

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Carina PressCarinaPress.com, a division of Harlequin, is a digital-first publisher offering ebooks in a variety of genres, including mystery. eBooks from Carina can be read on the Apple iPad, Amazon Kindle, Sony Reader, B&N Nook, Borders Kobo, BlackBerry and mobile phone.

Film Adaptation of Larklight by Philip Reeve Gets New Director

Larklight by Philip Reeve
More information about the book

The Hollywood Reporter's Heat Vision blog is reporting that Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy) will direct a film adaptation of the young adult space adventure Larklight by Philip Reeve.

In Larklight -- the first of three books in the series -- Art Mumsby and his irritating sister Myrtle live with their father in a huge and rambling house called Larklight … that just happens to be traveling through outer space. When a visitor arrives, it is far from an innocent social call. Before long Art and Myrtle are off on an adventure to the furthest reaches of space, where they will do battle with evil forces in order to save each other -- and the universe.

The other two books in the series are Starcross and Mothstorm.

Mr. E. Reviews Shutter Island

Mr. E. reviews mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime drama television and film for Omnimystery

I had high expectations for Shutter Island. Although I hadn't read the Dennis Lehane thriller from which it was adapted (and still haven't -- it's on my ever-longer to-be-read list), I was drawn to the storyline and the film's trailers really captured my imagination. A cast of A-list actors and an A-list director couldn't hurt ... or so I thought.

Read the full text of our review at Mr. E. Reviews: Shutter Island.

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Mr. E. Reviews is your source for mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime drama reviews of television and film.

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

Vermilion Drift by William Kent Krueger (Book Review)

Mysterious Reviews: Mystery, Suspense, Thriller and Crime Novel Reviews, edited by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books

Vermilion Drift by William Kent Krueger. A Cork O'Connor Mystery. Atria Hardcover, September 2010.

PI Cork O'Connor is hired by a local mine operation to look into threats the company has received -- and hired separately by the mine's owner to look for his missing sister -- in Vermilion Drift, the tenth mystery in this series by William Kent Krueger.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: Vermilion Drift by William Kent Krueger.

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Mysterious Reviews is your source for the latest mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime novel reviews, edited by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books.

New Trailer for The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest (2010)

The trailer for the third and final installment of the Swedish-language films based on the Millennium trilogy of thrillers by Stieg Larsson, The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest, was released a few days ago, and can be seen below.

Adapted from book The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest, which remains, months after its publication in the US, a bestselling mystery to this day, the film has a limited release opening in theaters October 29th.

English-language adaptations of the books are currently in pre-production. The cast of the first film, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, to be directed by David Fincher, includes Daniel Craig, Rooney Mara, and Christopher Plummer.

Solve Six Mysteries in Two Hidden Object Game Collections

Insider Chronicles: A New Perspective on Mystery (Windows PC)
Insider Chronicles: A New Perspective on Mystery (Windows PC)

Two mystery game collections are being released today at special prices.

Insider Chronicles: A New Perspective on Mystery includes three games in the "Insider Chronicles" series, where you travel to some of the world's most famous cities in search of clues.

First, it’s up to you to solve the biggest art robbery in decades! The Stolen Venus puts you on the case to track down the criminals responsible for the theft of Botticelli’s "The Birth of Venus". Discover centuries-old hidden facts and enigmas, and enjoy addicting mini-games on your pursuit of justice!

Next, stroll through the gothic and gloomy alleys of Prague, listen to chansons on the streets of Paris and enjoy the elegant and light architecture of Venice in the second game in the series. This time you are looking for clues to shed some light on Casanova’s life and reveal his greatest secret. Unfold the mystery that is Casanova, the world`s most famous lover and adventurer, in The Secret of Casanova!

Then, when the winners of Italy’s largest lottery mysteriously disappear, and it's up to you to track them down. The case takes on a whole new light when you discover drawings by Leonardo da Vinci that could unlock the mystery. Without a minute to lose, you must put together the clues, unravel the riddles, and solve the puzzles in the exciting seek and find adventure Missing in Rome!

Natalie Brooks: Triple Trouble (Windows PC)
Natalie Brooks: Triple Trouble (Windows PC)

Natalie Brooks: Triple Trouble includes three mysteries to unravel featuring teenage detective Natalie Brooks.

In Secrets of the Treasure House, help Natalie uncover the mystery of a lifetime as you search the secret rooms and hidden corridors of her family estate. Join our intrepid heroine as she solves puzzles, finds hidden items and interacts with colorful characters, including a chief of police whose ambitions might not align with the right side of the law!

In The Treasures of the Lost Kingdom, help Natalie save her grandfather, a renowned archaeologist, from kidnappers holding him ransom for an ancient treasure map. She has just 24 hours to find the map, solve the mystery of a terrible curse and unmask the truth behind a legendary ghost train!

In The Mystery of Hillcrest High, Natalie is on the case to solve another mysterious crime. This time, she’s on a quest to find her missing high school friend Chad Robertson, who has been kidnapped by a gang of criminals who are out to commit the crime of the century!

Macmillan Publishers Creates Film Division

Macmillan Publishers

Deadline|New York is reporting that Macmillan Publishers -- probably best known to mystery fans by its Minotaur Books imprint -- has launched Macmillan Films, with the intent to produce what it publishes.

First up is a co-production with Summit Entertainment for the film adaptation of Tempest, the first in a trilogy of young adult thrillers being written by Julie Cross about a 19-year-old time traveler who witnesses his girlfriend's murder and inadvertently jumps back in time two years; stuck there, he's recruited by a shadowy government agency run by the man he thought was his father and vows to save his girlfriend no matter the cost.

OMN Welcomes Tom Llewellyn, Author of The Tilting House, a Mystery for Kids

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is thrilled to welcome Tom Llewellyn as our guest blogger. Tom is the author of the children's mystery The Tilting House (Tricycle Press, Hardcover, June 2010, 978-1-58246-288-2).

Today, Tom writes about the book's setting -- the real "tilting house." And he's also providing our readers with an opportunity to win a copy of his book. Visit Mystery Book Contests, click on the "Tom Llewellyn: The Tilting House" contest link, enter your name, e-mail address, and this code (9013) for a chance to win! (One entry per person; contest ends October 19, 2010.)

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The setting for my novel, The Tilting House, is an old home in Tacoma, Washington, built for a mad, mysterious occupant named F. T. Tilton (hey, it’s a kid’s novel, so a little wordplay is allowed). The house was built with floors that tilt precisely three degrees toward the center. And over the years, Tilton covered the walls with bizarre scientific writings.

When a new family moves in, plenty of creepy things start to happen. Walls disappear. Rats talk. Pocketknives grow. Brothers Josh and Aaron enlist the help of their neighbor, Lola, to solve the mystery of the house—and its original, deranged owner—before it’s too late (cue creepy music—oooooooohhhh).

Nearly all of the action takes place in and around the home, so I figured the house itself had to become tangible. It had to feel like dimensional space that a young reader could navigate in his or her brain. Here’s what made that possible: The house is my house. I live in it.

OK, so my floors don’t tilt three degrees. But since it was built in 1898, marbles and pencils do tend to congregate in my home’s downhill corners. And the features of the two houses are nearly identical. In the book, Josh and Aaron discover talking rats in The All The Way Up Room. That room exists in my house, at the top of a stairway that begins in the bedroom I share with my wife. As I wrote about the entryway in the novel, I sat in a chair in my own entryway and described the walls and stairway I saw, physically, right in front of me. Before Josh climbed through the dim, cobwebby attic, I climbed through my own attic, on all fours, balancing precariously on the ceiling joists of the floor below.

Authors expound for hours on the idea of back-story: what motivates a character? What would the character do in situations that don’t even appear in a book? What formed the character’s childhood, even if that childhood is never mentioned?

The same is true for setting—at least in The Tilting House. A good setting has its own back-story. So I created a mythology of this place that the reader will never read, but I think they’ll sense in the pages. I know what Tilton would have kept in his closets and in his junk drawer. I know where each doorway leads—even the ones that are never opened. While Josh discovers plenty of creepy surprises in the rooms he explores, I know plenty of other mysteries that Josh may never find.

Living in the inspiration for the setting made for a straightforward writing process. When I described a complicated bit of action, I could literally walk through it to make sure I was describing it correctly. And even though plenty of fantastic things happen in the book, I think the stories still feel set in a real space.

I will say that there were some sections of the book that I’ll probably regret writing. In one key section of the book, Josh and Aaron have the hair-raising task of looking for a body in the crawlspace. Since then, I’ve had to grab a flashlight and go down into that creepy place to check a leaky pipe. I couldn’t help wondering if I might trip over a dead body or two.

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Tom Llewellyn grew up in a drafty, old house (without tilting floors) on the shores of the Puget Sound. One winter, the house got so cold that the water in the toilet actually froze. Tom survived (thanks to plenty of blankets) and went on to study creative writing at the University of Washington in Seattle. He has worked as a trade journalist and copywriter, and is the cofounder of the guerrilla art project, Beautiful Angle. Tom lives with his wife and four rambunctious children in a Victorian-era home (with tilting floors) in Tacoma, Washington, the city which provides the setting for The Tilting House. For more information about the author and the book, visit TheTiltingHouse.com.

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The Tilting House by Tom Llewellyn
More information about the book

About The Tilting House: Brothers Josh and Aaron Peshik are about to discover that their new home with the tilting floors hides many mysteries.

When the boys and their neighbor Lola discover the hidden diary of F. T. Tilton, the brilliant but deranged inventor who built the house, they learn a dark secret that may mean disaster for the Peshik family. Can the kids solve the riddles of the tilting house before time runs out?

Praise for The Tilting House:

"Llewellyn's debut is inventive, gripping, and shot through with macabre details." -- Publishers Weekly

"... a genre-blending page-turner with plenty of room in its eaves for sequels. One to watch." -- Kirkus Reviews

"Llewellyn’s first novel takes the classic family-in-a-new-house motif and mixes in just the right creaky touches of the macabre ..." -- Booklist

For a chance to win a copy of The Tilting House, courtesy of the author, visit Mystery Book Contests, click on the "Tom Llewellyn: The Tilting House" contest link, and enter your name, e-mail address, and this code (9013) in the entry form. (One entry per person; contest ends October 19, 2010.)

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