Saturday, April 14, 2012

Ashes to Dust by Rex Kusler is This Week's Amazon Deal Vote Winner

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Ashes to Dust by Rex Kusler as this week's Amazon Deal Vote Winner. The deal price of $1.99 is valid this weekend only.

Visit the deal page to see this week's winners in all four categories — Instant Video, MP3 Album, Kindle Book, and Game Download — and to vole for next week's winner.

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Ashes to Dust by Rex Kusler

Ashes to Dust by Rex Kusler
An Alice James and Jim Snow Mystery
Publisher: AmazonEncore

This is the second mystery to feature the casino security expert and former Las Vegas homicide detective, partners in the James & James Detective Agency.

About Ashes to Dust (from the publisher): Since first joining forces, Alice James and Jim Snow have been a great — if odd — crime-fighting team. He’s a forty-something former Las Vegas homicide detective who quit the force to become a full-time poker player. She’s a model-turned-cocktail waitress whose foray into casino security led her into law enforcement. Together they are the James & James Detective Agency, and their newest case is a doozy.

Jack Roberts comes to them for help solving the brutal murder of his daughter Laura, a cocktail waitress whose body was found burning in the Nevada desert. Among the suspects: an obsessive ex-boyfriend, a mentally unbalanced construction worker, a temperamental roommate, a shady fiancĂ© … perhaps even the client himself! Alice knows that if they can crack this case, business will come pouring in. But first she will have to manage Snow’s ill-timed midlife crisis and deal with the chemistry crackling between them.

Important Note: Amazon.com updates its weekly deal vote winners every Friday. The title referenced above is available at a discounted price of $1.99 from Friday, April 13, 2012 through Sunday, April 15, 2012 only.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Weekly Deal Vote Winner Amazon Weekly Deal Vote Winner.

My Dear Charlotte by Hazel Holt is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature My Dear Charlotte by Hazel Holt as today's free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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My Dear Charlotte by Hazel Holt

My Dear Charlotte by Hazel Holt
Publisher: Coffeetown Press

Hazel Holt is the author of the long-running Mrs. Malory series of mysteries. This stand-alone is a departure from this work, a novel-in-letters written "with the assistance of Jane Austen's letters."

About My Dear Charlotte (from the publisher): This British Regency mystery is set in the early 1800s and infused throughout with the actual language of Jane Austen, one of the world’s great stylists and comic writers.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Friday, April 13, 2012

The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Warren Adams; The First Detective Novel?

The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Warren Adams

Can you name the first detective novel ever published?

Many believe it to be Wilkie Collins's The Moonstone, published in 1868. Others speculate it might be Émile Gaboriau's first Monsieur Lecoq novel, L'Affaire Lerouge, published in 1866.

But many scholars consider Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, originally published as an eight-part serial in "Once A Week" magazine in 1862 under the pseudonym Charles Felix, then as a single-volume novel in 1863 by Bradbury & Evans, to truly be the first.

The Notting Hill Mystery begins in London, where the wife of the sinister Baron R__ dies after drinking from a bottle of acid, apparently while sleepwalking in her husband's home laboratory. It looks like an accident, until insurance investigator Ralph Henderson learns that Baron R__ took out numerous life insurance policies on his wife. Henderson descends into a maze of intrigue including a diabolical mesmerist, kidnapping by gypsies, slow-poisoners, a rich uncle's will … and three murders. Presented as Henderson's evidential findings — diary entries, family letters, chemical analysis reports, interviews with witnesses, along with a crime scene map — the novel displays innovative techniques that would not become common features of detective fiction until the 1920s.

The British Library has published a new edition of this book that also includes George du Maurier's illustrations, the first edition to do so since the original publication in serial form.

The official publication date of the book in the US is April 15th, 2012, — it was published in the UK in February — but it is already available to purchase.

CWA Dagger in the Library Award Longlist Announced

The Crime Writers' Association

The Crime Writers' Association has released its longlist for the 2012 Dagger in the Library Award. This award is somewhat different in that it is given to an author for a sustained body of work, rather than an individual book. Authors are nominated by libraries and book groups within the UK.

The shortlist for this award — as well as for several other dagger awards — will be announced at CrimeFest on May 25th, with the awards themselves presented on July 5th, 2012.

The 2012 CWA Dagger in the Library longlist …

Belinda Bauer
Simon Beckett
S. J. Bolton
Frances Brody
Gordon Ferris
Elena Forbes
Nicci French
Elly Griffiths
John Harvey
Susan Hill
Shona MacLean
Peter May
Steve Mosby
Imogen Robertson
M. J. Trow

New Trailer for Sherlock's Second Season

Sherlock, Season 2 (PBS)

PBS has released a new trailer for the second series (season) of Sherlock, which we've embedded below.

Sherlock Holmes, the world's foremost consulting detective (played by Benedict Cumberbatch) and the beleaguered Dr. John Watson (Martin Freeman) stalk again in three thrilling new episodes that premiere on PBS's Masterpiece Mystery! Sunday, May 6th, at 9 PM (ET/PT).

The Mystery Bookshelf: A Bad Day for Scandal by Sophie Littlefield, a Stella Hardesty Mystery

The Mystery Bookshelf: New Mystery,  Suspense and Thriller Books

The Mystery Bookshelf, where you can discover a world of mystery and suspense, is pleased to feature a new crime novel we recently received from the publisher.

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A Bad Day for Scandal by Sophie Littlefield
A Stella Hardesty Mystery (3rd in series)
Minotaur Books (Trade Paperback)
Publication Date: April 2012
ISBN-13: 978-1-250-00227-3

A Bad Day for Scandal by Sophie Littlefield

About A Bad Day for Scandal (from the publisher): When big-city businesswoman Priss Porter returns to town with a body in her trunk, she expects Stella Hardesty to dispose of it for her. She’s even got a snapshot of Stella doing what she does best—curing women-beaters by the use of force—in case Stella needs convincing. But Stella refuses to cooperate, only to hear later that Priss has gone missing. Stella is implicated when Sheriff “Goat” Jones discovers a scarf she left at the house. He warns her to stay local, but Stella and her partner, Chrissy Shaw, go looking for Priss in Kansas City. When Priss’s body is found, Stella must investigate a host of suspects, including a crooked but libidinous female judge and a coterie of jealous male escorts.

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About the author: Growing up in rural Missouri, Sophie Littlefield is the daughter of a history professor father and an artist mother. She earned a degree in computer science and made very little use of it. Her first novel won the 2010 Anthony Award for Best First Novel and the 2009 RT Book Award for Best First Mystery. She currently lives near San Francisco, California. Visit her website at SophieLittlefield.com.

Mysterious Reviews: Mysteries Reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books Crime novels by Sophie Littlefield reviewed by Mysterious Reviews: A Bad Day for Sorry (2009).

Purchase Options for A Bad Day for Scandal:

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle EditionBarnes&Noble Print and/or Nook Book editioniBookstore (iTunes)

The Flatey Enigma by Viktor Arnar IngĂłlfsson; Excerpt and Giveaway

The Flatey Enigma by Viktor Arnar Ingolfsson

Icelandic crime novelist Viktor Arnar Ingólfsson is the author of six mysteries, the fourth of which, Flateyjargátan, was originally published in 2002 and subsequently nominated for the prestigious Glass Key Award in 2004. The English translation of this book, titled The Flatey Enigma (trade paperback, Kindle ebook, and audiobook editions), was recently published by AmazonCrossing in the US and we are thrilled to be able to present an excerpt from the book and give three of our readers a chance to win a copy of it.

The storyline takes place near a deserted island off the western coast of Iceland in 1960. The dawning of spring brings new life for the local wildlife. But for the body discovered by three seal hunters, winter is a matter of permanence. After it is found to be a missing Danish cryptographer, the ensuing investigation uncovers a mysterious link between the researcher and a medieval manuscript known as The Book of Flatey.

Before long another body is found on the tiny island. This time, in the ancient Viking tradition, the victim's back has been mutilated with the so-called blood eagle. Kjartan, the district magistrate's representative sent to investigate the crime, soon finds himself descending into a dark, dangerous world of ancient legends, symbolism, and secret societies to find a killer.

Steeped in the mystery and lore surrounding the Flateyjarbók, or the Book of Flatey, in which was recorded the histories of the Norse kings, The Flatey Enigma ends each chapter with a clue and answer from the forty questions making up the puzzle, the so-called "Aenigma Flateyensis", that students sailing from Iceland to study in Copenhagen in 1871 devised to entertain themselves on the journey. It is, however, the fortieth question and key to the riddle that has never been solved …

The island of Flatey is a real place. Situated in the middle of Iceland's Breiðafjörður, a large shallow bay encircled by mountains and glaciers, it was a center of Icelandic cultural life in the 13th century when the Flateyjarbók was constructed. A sparsely populated island, its residents subsisted on seal meat, fishing, and the harvesting of down. The island's peculiarities, remoteness, and harsh winter climate make it the perfect setting for this gripping thriller about a series of murders with a mysterious connection to an enigmatic riddle.

The first chapter of The Flatey Enigma is reprinted below; you can read the first five chapters on Scribd via this link. At the bottom of this post is information on how you can enter to win one of three copies of the book, courtesy of EMG Promotions.

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Wednesday, June 1, 1960

An easterly wind swept across Breidafjördur with the break of dawn, and a sharp spring breeze intensified the foam of the waves breaking on the strait between the Western Isles. A determined puffin flew low, skimming the surface of the waves at high speed, and an inquisitive sea raven stretched its wings on a reef. Black guillemots plunged into the ocean, while knowing seagulls circled the air high above, scanning the horizon for food. The whole of creation in the fjord was ablaze with life and alertness in the glaring morning sun.

A small but sturdy motorboat tackled the choppy waves and moved away from the island of Flatey toward the south. The small vessel was a converted old rowboat and tarred in black, with its name painted on the stern in large white letters: RAVEN. It carried a crew of three: a young boy, a grown man, and another, who was considerably older. Three generations from a small croft called Ystakot, on the western corner of the island of Flatey.

Jón Ferdinand, the eldest, sat at the stern, steering. White stubble sprouted from his hollow face, and black snuff trickled out of his wide nostrils. Some tufts of gray hair spilled out of his old peaked cap, groping for his face in the wind. His big and rawboned hand held the tiller, as the old eyes under his bushy eyebrows searched for a little island in the south. It wasn't such an easy course to sail, even though visibility was good. Islets and skerries were scattered across the horizon before the mainland, beyond which lay the Dalafjoll mountains in the blue dusk.

Jón Ferdinand steered the boat head-on against the largest waves but held his course in the gaps between them. It was a small vessel, so it could be unpleasant if the waves hit the side of the boat directly. But the old man sailed by his instincts and seemed to enjoy this duel with the sea.

Gudvaldur, the steersman's son, sat on the thwart in front of the engine bay, smoking a pipe and sharpening a large pocketknife. Bareheaded, in a thick woolen sweater, he turned away with his pipe to avoid the spray of the waves that occasionally splashed over the gunwale. He had a weather-beaten face and a rugged expression and was blind in his left eye, following an injury to the eyeball that had whitened as it healed. The other eye was pitch black. Gudvaldur was named after a long-dead ancestor who had visited his mother in a dream, but locals normally just called him Valdi and associated him with the croft of Ystakot in Flatey.

A freak high wave broke over the boat, splashing the curly hair on the back of Valdi's neck. He looked up and scanned ahead. "Careful, Dad," he barked. "Don't forget it's Ketilsey were going to; you're heading too far south."

The old man smiled, flashing his few yellow teeth and raw gums.

"Too far south, too far south," he repeated in his husky voice, turning the boat against the wave, and Valdi resumed smoking his pipe and fiddling with his knife once he saw they were back on course again.

Little Nonni Gudvaldsson sat on a folded sail at the bow, clinging to the gunwale with both hands. He was feeling cold and seasick, and although he was well used to the sea and didn't normally allow the chill and queasiness to get to him, this was worse than usual because of his urgent, unseamanlike need to empty his bowels. Nonni had been late that morning and forgot to visit the outhouse before they left. He made no mention of this to his father because Valdi would just have told him to squat over the gunwale and do it right there. The boy didn't fancy that in these rough waters. Every now and then he stretched his head over the stern to see if they were drawing any closer to their destination, but the boat seemed to be taking forever. Then he lay on the folded sail again, pigheadedly bit his lip, and tried to contract the muscles of his anus. Shutting his eyes tight, he muttered to himself over and over: "For Christ's sake, Jesus, for Christ's sake, don't let me shit in my pants today."

He glanced toward the front of the boat again.

"Dad, Dad," he called out, "Grandpa's forgetting himself again."

Valdi looked up and turned to the old man. "You're veering too far east. We're going to Ketilsey, remember? Seal hunting."

The old man seemed bewildered a moment but then regained his focus. He wrestled with another wave and headed straight for the island, which was now just a short distance away. Then he looked at Valdi, muttering an old refrain: "To Ketilsey the men did row, to catch the sixteen seals."

Valdi didn't answer, stuck his knife back into his pocket, and emptied his pipe on the gunwale. Then he moved back to the stern.

The tide was out at the island, and the landing toward the south was well sheltered. Valdi took command of the boat now and Jón Ferdinand waited, ready with a small anchor dangling from a long chain. The boat broke a wave, which crashed on the rocks, and Valdi turned the engine off as the old man dropped the anchor. The chain slid overboard with a rattle, and shrieking birds shot into the air from the island. A seal surfaced a short distance away before suddenly vanishing into the depths again. Little Nonni stood ready at the stern, and as soon as the anchor had steadied the boat, he managed to grab a bulky, rusty iron ring hanging from the rock, and to slip the rope through it and fasten it. Hopping onto the boat again, he stretched over to grab a pile of old newspapers from the place where they were kept under the cover of the engine bay. Valdi watched the boy leap off the boat and disappear behind the rock.

"I've told you many times before not to shit on the island," he growled. "The seals will pick up your scent for weeks."

Little Nonni felt a tinge of guilt. This was one of the golden rules of seal hunting, but he couldn't help it. He ran up the island, found a good spot between the rocks, and yanked down his pants. The relief was immense, and he started to look around now. Natural monoliths formed a sheltered alcove, and two eider ducks lay brooding a short distance away. They were perfectly still, and only a trained eye would have been able to distinguish them from the turf. A sea pie perched on a rock and screeched loudly. His nest was probably close by on the edge of the shore. Further on, under a mighty boulder, lay the carcass of a large animal.

Nonni had often seen things like this on the shore, small whales, fat gray seals, or the bloated carcass of an old sheep. The novelty of this specimen, though, was that it was dressed in a green parka.



"Tell me about the Flatey Book," he asked.

She pondered a moment. "Do you want to hear the long story or the short one?" she finally asked.

"The longer story if you have the time."

She gazed through the window where the sun was setting behind the mountains in the northwest and said in a soft voice, "I've got plenty of time now."

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For a chance to win a trade paperback edition of The Flatey Enigma, visit Mystery Book Contests and click on the "Viktor Arnar Ingólfsson: The Flatey Enigma" contest link, enter your name, e-mail address, and this code: 2667. (One entry per person. US and Canada residents only. Contest ends April 20th, 2012.)

The Lies Have It by Jill Edmondson is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Lies Have It by Jill Edmondson as today's third free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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The Lies Have It by Jill Edmondson

The Lies Have It by Jill Edmondson
A Sasha Jackson Mystery
Publisher: Iguana Press

This is the third mystery to feature the Toronto PI.

About The Lies Have It (from the publisher): It’s election time in Toronto, and this year’s mayoral race is hotly contested. However, private investigator Sasha Jackson is more focused on bondage than ballots. After a wild night at a fetish party, a man Sasha had briefly met is found murdered near Cherry Beach, the whip marks on his back punctuated by two bullet holes. It initially seems like naughty sex that went a bit too far, but Sasha soon discovers that politicos like to play rough too, and might be hiding more than just their handcuffs.

Meanwhile, Sasha has two other cases on the go. A couple of distraught parents have hired her to find their runaway daughter Macy. Sasha’s search for the girl leads her to some of Toronto’s shadier neighborhoods where she learns more than she wants to about teenaged angst and Ecstasy.

On top of the spank me, shank me cases, Sasha’s restaurateur brother has referred her services to a fine dining colleague who is convinced that someone in his restaurant is cooking the books instead of cooking five-star meals. Sasha should have just asked ‘Where’s the beef?’ but instead she spends a rainy night looking for it.

When Sasha dries off, she encounters an artistic dominatrix with passion for the environment, a political wife who never met a camera she didn't love, and a furry white cat that will inadvertently help to expose everything about Sasha’s latest case.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Kindred Crimes by Janet Dawson is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Kindred Crimes by Janet Dawson as today's second free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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Kindred Crimes by Janet Dawson

Kindred Crimes by Janet Dawson
A Jeri Howard Mystery
Publisher: Janet Dawson

The winner of the 1989 St. Martin's Press Best Private Eye Mystery Contest, this is the first book (in a series of ten to date) to feature the Oakland (CA) private investigator.

About Kindred Crimes (from the publisher): Renee Foster left her toddler son with her mother-in-law, cleaned out the joint bank account — and vanished. Now her husband wants Jeri Howard to find his wife, though it looks like she doesn’t want to be found.

A simple missing persons case? There’s nothing simple about it. People aren’t who they seem. The past comes back with a vengeance. And the trail leads to murder.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

The Four Last Things by Timothy Hallinan is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Four Last Things by Timothy Hallinan as today's free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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The Four Last Things by Timothy Hallinan

The Four Last Things by Timothy Hallinan
A Simeon Grist Mystery
Publisher: Hallinan Consulting

Originally published by Dutton in 1989, this mystery introduced the Los Angeles private investigator.

About The Four Last Things (from the publisher): Simeon Grist knows L.A. inside and out — the sex for sale, the chic seductions, every rip-off from City Hall to Venice. So when he's hired by a Hollywood recording company to shadow one Sally Oldfield, suspected of embezzlement, Grist discovers she's entangled in The Church of the Eternal Moment — a million-dollar religious scam built around a 12-year-old channeler and the voice of a man who has been dead for a millennium.

When Sally turns up dead, Simeon knows he's become the next target of a very flesh-and-blood entity waiting in the back alleys of sin and salvation to give him a brutal look at the four last things: death, judgment, heaven and hell — revelations he could definitely live without …

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

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