Sunday, July 05, 2009

Reading is Fundamental and Macy's Announce Book a Brighter Future

Reading is Fundamental

In a press release issued earlier this week, Reading is Fundamental (RIF) and Macy's announced Book a Brighter Future, a national partnership to raise awareness and support children's literacy.

The Book A Brighter Future campaign is an annual promotion held at Macy's stores during the back-to-school season to help raise money for local RIF programs and to provide reading resources to the children who need them most.

This campaign provides an opportunity for Macy's customers to join the effort and have an impact on literacy in their community. From July 1 through August 31, 2009, Macy’s customers can give $3 and receive a coupon for $10 off a $50 in-store purchase at any Macy’s nationwide. Macy’s will donate 100 percent of every $3 to RIF.

"Giving back to the communities where we work and live is a long-standing priority at Macy's," said Terry Lundgren, chairman, president and CEO of Macy's, Inc. "We are proud that, last year alone, more than a million Macy's customers participated in Book A Brighter Future helping to raise more than $3 million dollars for children who lack access to books. It is a great way for our customers to support the education of children in their own community while enjoying special savings for their back-to-school shopping at Macy's."

For every $3, $1 will support local RIF programs near the Macy's store; $1 will support RIF's Multicultural Literacy Campaign; and $1 will help RIF's ongoing efforts to provide reading resources to millions of underserved children across the country.

(Many thanks to In Reference to Murder for letting us know about this important program.)

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Saturday, July 04, 2009

Mystery Book Review: Death of a Witch by M. C. Beaton

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of Death of a Witch by M. C. Beaton. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

Death of a Witch by M. C. Beaton

by
A Hamish Macbeth Mystery

Grand Central (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-446-19613-4 (0446196134)
ISBN-13: 978-0-446-19613-0 (9780446196130)
Publication Date: February 2009
List Price: $24.99

Review: Twenty-five books ago, Scottish author, Marion Chesney, writing as M. C. Beaton, penned her first Constable Hamish Macbeth mystery, Death of a Gossip, in 1985. Set in the Scottish Highlands village of Lochdubh, the novel introduced the constable, his arch antagonist, Chief Inspector Blair, and Priscilla Haliburton-Smythe, the love of Hamish’s life. Since then Hamish has been twice promoted, twice demoted, and along with his dog Lugs and his pet wild cat, Sonsie, has solved the suspicious deaths of among others a maid, a dreamer, a bore, a dustman, a snob, a prankster, a nag, a travelling man, and even a village. Now, in his same inimitable style and with his same longing for Priscilla, loathing for Blair and love of his village and its residents, Hamish scours the Scottish Highlands to find the murderer of a witch, Catriona Beldame. It’s another fun-filled search for Chesney/Beaton fans of the Macbeth series and an entertaining introduction to the prolific author with several pen names and a shelf full of series and stand-alone novels.

Before he encounters Catriona’s case, Hamish warms up for the main event by capturing three bank robbers and displaying his compassion while covering up for a colleague, the force’s newest recruit, “wee Alice Donaldson.” Flushed with success, and despite a warning from the long-time village seer, Angus Macdonald, that, “Black days are coming,” he moves on to meet Madame Beldame. She has been supplying the local men with “therapy and herbal treatments” and “a secret recipe” for sexual dysfunction. The recipe, however, has turned sour for the men and for their put-upon wives suddenly fending off husbands seeking their “martial rights,” as one mislabels his needs. So, Hamish sets out to intervene and to have Catriona move on. When his attempts fail and he temporarily succumbs to her spell, Hamish publicly blurts out in unguarded frustration, “God, I could kill that woman.” God aside, it’s a statement with its own recipe for disaster when, shortly afterward, Hamish is the first to discover a naked Catriona dead, and before the corpse is removed from her cottage, watches as a disastrous fire consumes the body and any clues to her death.

For CI Blair, the event proves Macbeth’s incompetence. Even hopefully his guilt. But for the constable, it’s the challenge to clear his name and that of the Lochdubh villagers, even though many of them “thought it a fitting end for the ‘witch.’” As he always does, Hamish rises to the challenge, sifting the heather from the thistles and following leads to a variety of suspects and to several additional murders of suspected drug runners and a brothel operator “on the game.” And while Hamish ducks and runs from the maniacal wrath of a besotted, inept Blair, potential perpetrators pop up across the Highlands. So, too, do romantic partners pining for Hamish. A forensic specialist is willing to help him find more than the fuse for the fire that consumed Catriona’s cottage, and a visiting reporter is ever willing to work with him on more than just the “witch’s” story. And, as is to be expected, Priscilla arrives on the scene, too, sometimes at the most inopportune times, depending upon others’ points of view. For Hamish, of course, there are always Lugs and Sonsie to look after and the humour of how their need for care dampens a romantic interlude with one of the women.

While it takes time to get used to the vernacular of Beaton’s characters, it’s well worth the effort. The series with its long standing characters and their idiosyncrasies is tried and true, and Death of a Witch is a welcome addition to its well-deserved reputation.

Special thanks to M. Wayne Cunningham (mw_cunningham@telus.net) for contributing his review of Death of a Witch.

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

Buy from Amazon.com

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): Returning from a foreign holiday, the redheaded Constable Hamish Macbeth senses a dark cloud of evil hanging over his Scottish village of Lochdubh. A newcomer, Catriona Beldame, has cast a spell over the town, and word of her magical powers spreads as fast as the Highland fog. The local men are visiting Catriona’s cottage at all hours of the night and the women are outraged, ready to cast the witch into the sea loch. Hamish himself is charmed by her, too, until he begins to suspect that she is a danger to the town.

The townsfolk simply don’t believe that Catriona is a serious threat, saying that the loveless constable has turned against all women, and before he can prove them wrong, she is murdered. Catriona, in her own wicked way, curses Hamish from beyond the grave, making him the prime suspect in her murder case. Hamish will call upon the assistance of a pretty female forensic expert as he attempts to clear his name –perhaps he will find romance at last! Lochdubh’s loyal constable won’t give up until he can bring peace and quiet back to his beloved village.

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Mystery Book Review: The Genesis Secret by Tom Knox

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

The Genesis Secret by Tom Knox

by
Non-series

Viking (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-670-02088-5 (0670020885)
ISBN-13: 978-0-670-02088-1 (9780670020881)
Publication Date: May 2009
List Price: $26.95

Review: Tom Knox's debut thriller, The Genesis Secret, which combines a historical quest with a modern murder mystery, has a promising start but ultimately disappoints.

Rob Luttrell, a reporter in the Middle East for a British newspaper, is known for accepting the most dangerous assignments. But when his editor asks him to cover an archaeological dig in a remote area of southeastern Turkey he's disappointed. Still, he feels a break from the action may be just what he needs. Not long after his arrival the lead archaeologist on site, Franz Brietner, is murdered, impaled on a pole at the dig. Intrigued by why Brietner was killed, Rob presses forward to get the true story. Back in England, Detective Chief Inspector Mark Forrester has a series of gruesome murders on his hands. His investigation leads him to believe the murders were not committed for the usual reasons, but as random ritualistic killings. He also learns the culprit may not only be sadistic and cruel, but also brilliant and cunning and from one of the country's finest families.

For more than half the book, The Genesis Secret alternates between these two storylines. The archaeological dig in Turkey is based on a real site that has received a fair amount of attention in the news, its location being near the Turkey / Iraq border in the disputed region of Kurdistan. Given the book's title, it probably isn't giving away too much to say the real archaeologists and the fictional ones think they've found the Garden of Eden, a site that is mentioned (in one way or another) in multiple religions, though its significance differs depending on various religious interpretations. This part of the story is interesting in and of itself but isn't really developed much beyond the facts already published. Though information about the site is not known to have been written in any form through the ages, a (fictional) "Black Book" is suspected to hold the key to its existence.

The ritualistic murders in England (and, as it turns out, elsewhere) is initially a far more intriguing foundation for the book, as far as it goes. Unfortunately, the inevitable link between the murders and the archaeological site is a tenuous one at best and is really never credible. The story subsequently morphs into an oddly unimaginative action adventure tale that generates little suspense or interest in the final outcome.

Part of the problem in the final third of the book is that the author frequently takes convenient shortcuts to advance the plot presumably assuming the reader won't notice. One of the most glaring of these is a scholar who has been lashed to a chair, his captors putting "a sweaty gag around his mouth and tied it ferociously tight, making his lips bleed as the gag pressed against his incisors." After having a procedure called the "blood eagle" performed (it's really far too ghastly to say any more here), he's somehow able to grasp a nearby pen in his mouth (still gagged) and write an important clue for Rob and Forrester to follow before he dies. It would be silly if it weren't so horrific and obviously impossible.

In the end, there's little to recommend The Genesis Secret, which is really rather unfortunate since its premise seemingly had so much to offer.

Special thanks to Penguin Group for providing a copy of The Genesis Secret for this review.

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

Buy from Amazon.com

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): A remarkable discovery has been made in the far reaches of Kurdistan. A Western archaeological team has unearthed the oldest human civilization—older than the Pyramids and Stonehenge. Sent to cover the story is war reporter Rob Luttrell. He’s just survived a Baghdad suicide bombing and wants only to return home to his child. What began as a fascinating assignment quickly turns dangerous as the site is sabotaged and someone is murdered.

Meanwhile, a Scotland Yard detective is fast on the trail of a series of grisly killings in the British Isles. As he attempts to unravel these elaborate acts of violence, he discovers there may be a link to the site in Kurdistan. The secret to both is an origin and a bloodline that will challenge everything the modern world knows about the origins of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.

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Friday, July 03, 2009

Mystery Book Review: A Plague of Secrets by John Lescroart

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of A Plague of Secrets by John Lescroart. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

A Plague of Secrets by John Lescroart

by
A Dismas Hardy Mystery

Dutton (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-525-95092-3 (0525950923)
ISBN-13: 978-0-525-95092-9 (9780525950929)
Publication Date: June 2009
List Price: $26.95

Review: San Francisco attorney Dismas Hardy, homicide detective Abe Glitsky, and private investigator Wyatt Hunt work together to solve the mystery of why two college friends of socialite Maya Townsend were murdered in A Plague of Secrets, the 13th thriller in this series by John Lescroart.

Maya Townshend is a mother of two, a business owner, and, oh by the way, the niece of the mayor. She is a silent partner in the popular and up-scale Bay Beans West Coffee Shop where a former beau of hers, Dylan Vogler, is the manager. She agrees to meet him one morning only to find him dead, shot with a gun that turns out to be hers. The murder investigation reveals that Vogler was killed in possession of a knapsack filled with marijuana that he had grown himself, a client list that included some of San Francisco's most prominent names, and a salary from the coffee shop more than double paid by comparable businesses. Soon thereafter, another former college friend of Maya's, Levon Preslee, is found dead, a cleaver in his head and Maya's fingerprints in his apartment. It soon becomes apparent that the two men were blackmailing Maya for something that happened long ago. She had motive and opportunity, but did she put an end to her troubles by killing Vogler and Preslee?

The appeal of A Plague of Secrets rests squarely on the incredibly and exquisitely defined character of Maya Townshend. Is she innocent? If not, is her secret so terrible that even if she is guilty, are the crimes justified? The story is gripping, fast-paced, at times electrifying, always riveting. Even the side stories, which more often than not detract attention in this kind of thriller, add depth and interest here. The legal wrangling is deftly handled and the denouement surprising and satisfying.

A Plague of Secrets combines the best of a legal thriller, a police procedural, and a murder mystery into one terrific novel. It is highly recommended.

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): The first victim is Dylan Vogler, a charming ex-convict who manages the Bay Beans West coffee shop in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district. When his body is found, inspectors discover that his knapsack is filled with high-grade marijuana. It soon becomes clear that San Francisco’s A-list flocked to Bay Beans West not only for their caffeine fix.

But how much did Maya Townshend—the beautiful socialite niece of the city’s mayor, and the absentee owner of the shop—know about what was going on inside her business? And how intimate had she really been with Dylan, her old college friend?

As another of Maya’s acquaintances falls victim to murder, and as the names of the dead men’s celebrity, political, and even law- enforcement customers come to light, tabloid-fueled controversy takes the investigation into the realms of conspiracy and cover-up. Prosecutors close in on Maya, who has a deep secret of her own—a secret she needs to protect at all costs during her very public trial, where not only her future but the entire political landscape of San Francisco hangs in the balance, hostage to an explosive secret that Dismas Hardy is privilege-bound to protect.

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Games of Mystery: Her Interactive Announces Resorting to Danger, a Nancy Drew Dossier Game

Nancy Drew Dossier: Resorting to Danger

In a press release yesterday, Her Interactive, developer of the immensely popular Nancy Drew mystery series games, announced the second title in its Nancy Drew Dossier casual series, Resorting to Danger. The game will be available for download and purchase next month (August 2009).

In Resorting to Danger, players assume the role of Nancy Drew as she sets out to foil a prankster bent on sabotaging the Redondo Spa. The Redondo Spa is a sanctuary to the rich and famous and with clients' retreats in jeopardy, Nancy goes undercover as a general assistant to unearth clues, interview suspects and solve daunting puzzles in order to determine who is planting bombs at the spa. With six alternate endings, players can tackle Resorting to Danger again and again from different approaches and scenarios.

Nancy Drew Dossier is a next-generation casual game series that combines a seek-and-find mechanic with a new level of compelling story-driven gameplay involving detective work, sophisticated interaction with clues and characters, brain-teasing puzzles, and arcade mini-games. Playing from the point of Nancy Drew, players find hidden clues and use their strengths of observation, deduction, and problem-solving to uncover culprits and schemes in a heavily story-driven plot.

In our , the first game in the series, we said, "Lights, Camera, Curses! is a delightfully agreeable game that can be enjoyed by all ages and will provide hours of entertainment." It is available in a boxed version from Amazon.com, Nancy Drew Dossier: Lights, Camera, Curses! (boxed version) or from Big Fish Games as an immediate download, Nancy Drew Dossier: Lights, Camera, Curses! (download version).

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Mystery Bestsellers for July 03, 2009

Mystery Bestsellers

A list of the top 15 for the week ending July 03, 2009 has been posted on the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books website.

No surprise at all to find last week's featured mystery, Finger Lickin' Fifteen by , at the top of the list this week, shifting the other top bestsellers down a notch.

Finger Lickin' Fifteen by Janet Evanovich

New in the top 15 is a book that has just missed the list since its publication two weeks ago, the 9th Joe Pickett mystery Below Zero by . Below Zero begins with an unassuming phone message: “Tell Sherry April called.” But Sherry—Joe Pickett’s oldest daughter, Sheridan—and the Pickett family are shaken to the core. April, Pickett’s foster daughter, was killed in a horrific murder and arson spree six years prior. To Joe, it doesn’t seem even remotely possible that April could have survived the massacre described in Winterkill. He was there. But Sherry starts to believe there’s a chance that April is still alive; the girl on the other end of the phone is able to recall family incidents that only April could know. Joe, however, remains suspicious, especially when he discovers that the calls have been placed from locations where serious crimes have occurred. At the same time, an older man and a much younger girl cross the country. The man is on a mission to repent for the crimes he’s committed against the environment during his lifetime. He ultimately wants to offset each incident until he not only becomes carbon neutral, but actually drops below zero—as if he’s never existed. As the path of these travelers starts to intersect with the Pickett family’s, the question is raised: Is this young girl April—or are Joe and his family the victims of the cruelest of hoaxes? Publishers Weekly calls Below Zero a "relentlessly paced powder keg of a thriller [that] could be Box's best to date."

On our bestseller page, we've added an icon next to every title that is available for immediate download onto the Amazon Kindle. To learn about this wireless reading device, visit the Amazon Kindle page for more information.

The top four mystery bestsellers this week are shown below:

Finger Lickin' Fifteen by Janet EvanovichThe Scarecrow by Michael ConnellyDead and Gone by Charlaine HarrisGone Tomorrow by Lee Child

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, July 02, 2009

Agatha Christie Marple Series 4 Debuts This Sunday on PBS

Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: Series 4

A new face takes on the role of a most familiar spinster sleuth this summer in the fourth series of Agatha Christie: Marple on PBS. Julia McKenzie, best known to Masterpiece audiences for her portrayal of Mrs. Forrester in the acclaimed series Cranford, brings her distinctive style to the role. "I think Julia is a very different character than the other actresses who played Miss Marple recently, and more different than people who played her a long time ago," says Christie's grandson Mathew Prichard. "... I think audiences will love her."

In an adaptation of Christie's A Pocket Full of Rye, which airs this Sunday (July 5th, check your local listings) and is the first of four new episodes to be broadcast, businessman Rex Fortescue drops dead after breakfast, apparently poisoned. The only clue is incomprehensible — grain found in his suit pocket. It's obvious that Fortescue isn't exactly missed. Between his estranged and angry children and a wife who seems to not be at a loss for comfort, the Fortescue house is full of secrets. Inspector Neele is dispatched to investigate, but makes little progress until the arrival of Miss Marple. For Marple, the case is child's play — the killer seems inspired by the rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence." As the murders pile up, Marple discovers a motive as dark as blackbirds.

Agatha Christie's Miss Marple Series 4 will be released on DVD on August 4th.

Watch a video preview of the series below:

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Mystery Savings: Last Weekend for B&N's Buy 2 Get 1 Free DVD and Blu-ray Sale!

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.

This is the final weekend of Barnes&Noble's DVD and Blu-ray Buy 2 Get the 3rd Free promotion! More than 35,000 specially marked titles are included. Simply click on the banner below and when you purchase three (3) or more DVDs or Blu-ray discs with the FREE DVD & BLU-RAY OFFER icon, you get the least expensive DVD or Blu-ray disc for free. Your credit for the least expensive disc will appear at checkout. This offer is valid for one order per individual. This offer may not be combined with any other coupon or any discount promotion. Barnes & Noble Member program discounts will apply. Shipping charges may also apply.

But hurry! This offer ends July 07, 2009 at 2:59 AM ET.

Buy 2 DVDs, Get the 3rd FREE

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New Poster Released for Surrogates with Bruce Willis

Poster: Surrogates with Bruce Willis

In mid-May we posted a trailer for the new futuristic thriller Surrogates starring Bruce Willis as a detective forced to leave his home to investigate a mysterious murder of a college student linked to a techno-terrorist bent on returning society to a time when people lived their lives instead of merely experiencing them.

Now, thanks to ComingSoon.net, we get to see the poster Touchstone Pictures, a division of Disney, has released for the film.

Surrogates is based on the graphic novel The Surrogates by Robert Venditti and Brett Weldele. A special edition hardcover edition of The Surrogates is scheduled for a July 2009 release and is intended as a companion volume to the film.

Bruce Willis ... a mysterious murder ... adapted from a novel that Publishers Weekly said "comes heartily recommended" ... what more could one ask for in a film? Surrogates will be in theaters September 25th.

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Games of Mystery: G.H.O.S.T. Chronicles, Phantom of the Renaissance Faire, New at Big Fish Games

G.H.O.S.T. Chronicles: Phantom of the Renaissance Faire

G.H.O.S.T. Chronicles: Phantom of the Renaissance Faire finds you hot on the trail of a menacing and terrifying ghost. This vengeful ghost has damaged attractions, vandalized shops and has driven away the park patrons. Inspect the park and determine if this is indeed ghostly activity or just a cruel and disastrous hoax. It is up to you to find out who is behind the haunting at the Renaissance Faire in this exciting hidden object adventure game.

G.H.O.S.T. Chronicles: Phantom of the Renaissance Faire may be downloaded and purchased for $6.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. A demonstration version (114.87 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour.

Watch a preview video below:

BBC Films Acquires Rights to William Boyd's Thriller Ordinary Thunderstorms

Ordinary Thunderstorms by William Boyd

Variety is reporting that the film rights to William Boyd's new thriller Ordinary Thunderstorms have been acquired by Origin Pictures and BBC Films. What's rather remarkable is that the book isn't scheduled for publication in the UK until September, and until Janury 2010 in the US.

Boyd will write the screenplay. Two of his previous books were adapted for the screen: A Good Man in Africa as a film in 1994 and Armadillo as a TV series in 2001.

About Ordinary Thunderstorms: Adam Kindred, a young climatologist in London for a job interview, ambles along the Embankment, admiring the view. He is pleasantly surprised to come across a little Italian bistro down a leafy side street. During his meal he strikes up a conversation with a solitary diner at the next table, who leaves soon afterwards. With horrifying speed, this chance encounter leads to a series of malign accidents through which Adam will lose everything -- home, family, friends, job, reputation, passport, credit cards, mobile phone -- never to get them back. The police are searching for him. There is a reward for his capture. A hired killer is stalking him. He is alone and anonymous in a huge, pitiless modern city. Adam has nowhere to go but down - underground. He decides to join that vast army of the disappeared and the missing that throng London's lowest levels as he tries to figure out what to do with his life and struggles to understand the forces that have made it unravel so spectacularly.

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Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Tom Selleck Talks About His Series Character Jesse Stone

Jesse Stone (A Mystery TV Movie)

Doug Nye of the McClatchy-Tribune News Service (and as reported on Silicon Valley MercuryNews.com) recently had a conversation with Tom Selleck, who plays Paradise (MA) police chief Jesse Stone in a series of popular made-for-television movies that have aired on CBS. The movies are based on a character created by mystery author Robert B. Parker. The most recent of these, Thin Ice, was recently released on DVD.

Selleck, who is probably best known playing Thomas Magnum on the long-running series Magnum P.I. wasn't looking to do another character when CBS approached him 5 years ago. "They asked me about doing a movie with them," Selleck said. "I wasn't crazy about the idea because I didn't want to be involved in another one of those movies of the week. They look like TV movies. I told them I would do it if we could do something that looked like a feature film that had been sold to television." The first movie, Stone Cold, which originally aired in February 2005, was a critical and ratings success.

When asked how many Jesse Stone movies there will be, "I don't see an end to it as long as we stay true to the character," Selleck said. "Parker asked us for only two things: to continue Jesse's struggles with his ex-wife and his drinking problem. These are a series of films where the characters are more important than the crime or mystery that is being investigated."

A sixth movie, Jesse Stone: No Remorse, has completed filming but no air date has been set by CBS.

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Mystery Book Review: In the Shadow of Gotham by Stefanie Pintoff

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

In the Shadow of Gotham by Stefanie Pintoff

by
A Simon Ziele Mystery

St. Martin's Minotaur (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-312-54490-1 (0312544901)
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-54490-4 (9780312544904)
Publication Date: April 2009
List Price: $24.95

Review: Stefanie Pintoff introduces young police detective Simon Ziele investigating a brutal murder among New York's upper class in In the Shadow of Gotham, which won the Mystery Writers of America / St. Martin's Minotaur First Crime Novel Award in 2008.

Set in late 1905, Simon Ziele is the new police detective in Dobson, a small community of wealthy residents situated along the Hudson River north of New York City. Murder is all but unheard of here, but the niece of a prominent family, Sarah Wingate, is found stabbed, her face beaten so badly it is nearly unrecognizable, and part of her hair cut off. There are no witnesses and, worse for Ziele and his partner and boss Joe Healy, no motive or suspect. Then an academic researcher from Columbia, where the victim attended graduate school studying Mathematics, one Alistair Sinclair, puts forth an interesting premise: a man he's been studying, Michael Fromley, fits the profile of the killer. Sinclair is even able to provide unpublished details about the murder scene without having visited it. Despite no physical evidence linking Fromley (who, to no one's surprise, has disappeared) to Sarah Wingate, Ziele, working with Sinclair, begins to link together the disparate threads that tie the two together and form the foundation for an arrest and conviction.

In the Shadow of Gotham is a beautifully written, atmospheric novel, replete with historical details that relate to the time and place of the story. But it's also rather flat, lifeless as it were. The story is told from the perspective of Ziele, who is a very analytical person. He's just beginning to use the new science of forensics, and is very detail oriented. So it's probably not unexpected that the narrative is analytical as well. But after a while it gets somewhat monotonous, not necessarily uninteresting, but unexciting. For example, early in the book Ziele says, "Like me, he [crime photographer Peter] attempted to sanitize the horror of this crime by reducing it to base analytical terms. Today, in the midst of so much blood, I had trouble facing up to the Wingate crime scene. But tomorrow I would have no difficulty reviewing and analyzing the autopsy report. It was always far easier to deal with the violence of murder when it was reduced to words and facts on paper." And that's what happens, in large part, in the book: everything is simply reduced to words and facts on paper, well crafted and thought out though they most certainly are. Which would probably be sufficient and satisfactory if Ziele himself were more animated, more interesting in his own right. When asked at one point, "'When you arrest a man for a particularly heinous crime, don't you often wonder why he did it?'", Ziele says to the reader, "I had to confess I did not."

Still, it's hard not to appreciate the writer's skill in creating a probable pathway for Ziele's case all the while deftly inserting clues that ultimately lead in another direction. In the Shadow of Gotham is a fine start to the series, but one wonders how much more memorable it might have been had it been more spirited, more energetic.

Special thanks to Breakthrough Promotions for providing a copy of In the Shadow of Gotham 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 Shadow of Gotham from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): Dobson, New York, 1905.

Detective Simon Ziele lost his fiancée in the General Slocum ferry disaster—a thousand perished on that summer day in 1904 when an onboard fire burned the boat down in the waters of the East River. Still reeling from the tragedy, Ziele transferred to a police department north of New York, to escape the city and all the memories it conjured.

But only a few months into his new life in a quiet country town, he’s faced with the most shocking homicide of his career to date: Young Sarah Wingate has been brutally murdered in her own bedroom in the middle of an otherwise calm and quiet winter afternoon. After just one day of investigation, Simon’s contacted by Columbia University’s noted criminologist Alistair Sinclair, who offers a startling claim about one of his patients, Michael Fromley—that the facts of the murder bear an uncanny resemblance to Fromley’s deranged mutterings.

But what would have led Fromley, with his history of violent behavior and brutal fantasies, to seek out Sarah, a notable mathematics student and a proper young lady who has little in common with his previous targets? Is Fromley really a murderer, or is someone mimicking him?

This is what Simon Ziele must find out, with the help of the brilliant but self-interested Alistair Sinclair—before the killer strikes again.

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ABC to Publish a Castle Tie-In Mystery Novel "Written" by Richard Castle

Castle (A Mystery on TV Series)

The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that ABC television will promote the second season of Castle by publishing a mystery novel "written" by the series lead, Richard Castle (played by Nathan Fillion).

Titled Heat Wave, the first chapter will be available on ABC.com on August 10th. Additional chapters will be posted weekly for 10 weeks. The real author of the book has not been identified.

Castle premiered as a mid-season replacement for the network earlier this year. In the opening episode, a killer is staging murder scenes depicted in Castle's bestselling mysteries. He teams up with Detective Kate Beckett (Stana Katic) to solve the crime. Later episodes have Castle and Beckett continuing to work together and bring a hint of romance between the two series leads.

The first season of Castle will be available on DVD September 22, 2009.

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Firsts on the 1st: New Series Characters Being Introduced in July 2009 Mysteries

The Hidden Staircase Mystery Books recently updated its list of with books scheduled for publication this month. In this post, which we're calling Firsts on the 1st, we're introducing readers to new series characters who will make their debut during July.

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Bait by Nick Brownlee

Title: Bait
Author: Nick Brownlee
Series Characters: Jake Moore and Daniel Jouma

What we know about the characters: Ex-Scotland Yard detective Jake Moore's career was cut short by a bullet 10 years ago; now he runs a game fishing business in the Kenyan city of Mombasa. Daniel Jouma is a police detective in Mombasa, seemingly the only good cop in a city where corruption is king.

Their first case: Daniel asks Jake for his help in solving a baffling murder, and the two men find themselves drawn into a deadly conspiracy involving local hoodlums, murderous ex-pats, and a mysterious and psychopathic kingpin who presides over a sickening trade in innocent human life.

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Wife of the Gods by Kwei Quartey

Title: Wife of the Gods
Author: Kwei Quartey
Series Character: Darko Dawson

What we know about the character: Darko Dawson is a Detective Inspector in Ghana's capital city of Accra.

His first case: Dawson is sent to the small town of Ketanu, where a young woman–a promising med student–has been found dead under suspicious circumstances. Eager to close the case, the local police have arrested a poor, enamored teenage boy and charged him with murder. Needless to say, they are less than thrilled when an outside force arrives from the big city to lead an inquiry into the baffling case.

Additional note: Mysterious Reviews is scheduled to review Wife of the Gods during the month. This post will be updated with a link when the review is available.

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A Deadly Habit by Andrea J. Sisco

Title: A Deadly Habit
Author: Andrea J. Sisco
Series Character: Penelope Santucci

What we know about the character: Penelope "Pen" Santucci is a probation officer in Hennepin County (Minneapolis, Minnesota).

Her first case: When Pen was a child, she dreamt of being a nun. She dressed in bed sheets and roller-skated regularly into the confessional of Father Daniel Kopecky, fabricating sins only an 8-year-old could invent. As a 27-year-old woman, she's doing the same thing, sans the roller skates and bed sheets. Only this time, she isn't inventing stories. She's confessing her involvement in a murder; a murder she didn't commit, but one in which she is the most promising suspect.

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The Innocent Spy by Laura Wilson

Title: The Innocent Spy
Author: Laura Wilson
Series Character: Ted Stratton

What we know about the character: Ted Stratton is a Detective Inspector in Central London. The series is set during the Second World War.

His first case: When the body of silent screen star Mabel Morgan is found impaled on railings in Fitzrovia, the coroner rules her death as suicide, but DI Stratton is not convinced. Despite opposition from his superiors, he starts asking questions, and it becomes clear that Morgan’s fatal fall from a high window may have been the work of one of Soho’s most notorious gangsters.

Additional note: The Innocent Spy (original UK title: Stratton's War) was the winner of the 2008 Ellis Peters Award for Best Historical Crime Novel.

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For a list of more mysteries scheduled for publication during July, please visit our home page. If you're interested in new paperbacks, visit where you can discover a library of new mysteries, also updated with July 2009 releases.

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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