Thursday, July 16, 2009

MySims Agents Interactive Mystery Case Website Goes Live

MySims Agents

Several months ago we announced that Electronic Arts was developing a mystery-solving adventure game for the Nintendo Wii and DS called MySims Agents. Today, the MySims Agents website went live with an online "case", an interactive game that starts with a mysterious surveillance video and ends with details of a powerful, sinister plot.

The story gives you a glimpse into what it takes to become an agent, introduces you to some key characters like Morcubus, Brandi, Mayor Skip Rogers, Dr. F and Agent Walker, and to the overall plot of the Nightmare Crown. By solving cases, you will receive some exclusive background information on the main mystery in the MySims Agents video game (due to be released in September) as well as access to special downloads and cheat codes. Throughout the interactive experience, you will venture to popular destinations like YouTube, MySpace and Twitter where you’ll search for clues and gather intel.

To start your first case, visit MySimsAgents.com. Clicking on the exclamation point, which helpfully says Start Case 1, you're introduced to Agent Walker. "Welcome to the world of mystery-solving, new recruit! I'm Agent Walker, and I've dedicated my life to preserving justice in the MySims world. But a new threat is surfacing and I need your help now. Do you have what it takes to become a full-fledged agent?"

Watch the teaser trailer below, which, actually, is the surveillance video you watch to start your case:

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First Clues Review: Blood Fever by Charlie Higson

First Clues: Mysteries for Kids

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

Blood Fever by Charlie Higson

Blood Fever by Charlie Higson
The Young Bond Series

Miramax (Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-4231-0029-8 (1423100298)
ISBN-13: 978-1-4231-0029-4 (9781423100294)
Publication Date: March 2007
List Price: $7.99

Review written by Andrew, Age 14, Grade 8. Date of review: July 2009.

Review: A modern day pirate robbing expensive yachts -- thirteen year old young James Bond stumbles into this heist while on a school trip. Blood Fever is about James Bond’s marvelous adventures as he attempts to solve this mystery. This story will keep you at the edge of your seat and has a shocking ending. Blood Fever is the second in a series of five stories with young James Bonds solving the crimes.

Blood Fever takes place in England as well as in Sardinia. Sardinia is a city in Italy, on an island in the Mediterranean Sea. In the very beginning of the book before James Bond comes into the picture, a pirate that goes by the name of Zoltan the Magyar, was given orders to rob a boat called The Siren owned by Sir Cahill Goodenough. Zoltan wanted to take a bronze statue of a Siren from the boat to give to his employer Count Ugo Cornifex. Amy Goodenough who was swimming in the Mediterranean Sea at the time, came onto the boat and stabbed Zoltan in the right shoulder making his right arm useless. Because of this Zoltan killed everyone on the boat except Amy who was taken hostage, and he sunk The Siren. Young James Bond heard about the disaster from Mark Goodenough James Bond’s friend and Cahill Goodenough’s son. James sees one of his teachers acting strange and investigates. Will James be able to solve the crime in time? Will Amy be rescued? Will Zoltan live long enough to deliver the Siren statue that he stole from The Siren?

As the second book in the series, I thought that the book took right off from where the first book Silverfin left off. I was able to figure out who most of the criminals were very early in the book. However, there were two I was wrong about. One person I originally thought was the bad guy, but it was really the other person. James was very well liked by everyone, even Zoltan who befriended him. James met Zoltan while he was investigating why the teachers were acting bizarre. I would rate this book four and a half out of five stars because in the book the line “the name’s Bond, James Bond” was used a little too often, and it got kind of annoying. Other than that I thought the book was perfectly written and the book made me feel like I was actually James Bond.

This book has unfortunately not received any awards.

Buy from Amazon.com

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

is pleased to provide information on over 100 mystery series for children and young adults. Each series is conveniently listed under four different age categories: New Sleuths (ages 4 to 6), Future Sleuths (ages 7 to 10), Sleuths in Training (ages 10 to 12), and Apprentice Sleuths (ages 13 and older). If you have a favorite mystery series you'd like to see added to our site, please contact us.

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

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First Clues, Mysteries for Kids: Bunnicula

Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery

A middle school teacher recently asked us if we were familiar with the Bunnicula series of mysteries for kids by James Howe. We had to admit we weren't, and apparently we were alone in this regard. Millions of books featuring this immensely popular character have been sold to date; we've just added all three of the Bunnicula series to our First Clues: Mysteries for Kids website.

In 1979, Deborah and James Howe published Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery to great acclaim. Since then, Bunnicula has made countless children laugh and carrots quake with terror.

It all begins when the Monroe family goes to see the movie Dracula. At the theater, youngest son Toby finds something on his seat -- a baby rabbit, which the family takes home and names Bunnicula. It proves to be an apt name, at least as far as Chester the cat is concerned. Well-read and observant, Chester soon decides that there is something odd about the newcomer. For one thing, he seems to have fangs. And the odd markings on his back look a bit like a cape. Furthermore, Bunnicula sleeps from sunup to sundown and is only awake at night. And then there are the vegetables ... the white vegetables.

Is Bunnicula really a vampire? Only Bunnicula knows for sure. But the story of Chester's suspicions and their consequences -- as told by his canine pal, Harold -- makes uproarious reading.

A critical and commercial success, Bunnicula was later adapted for an ABC Weekend Special on television and would go on to include 7 books in the original series. Deborah Howe, who co-wrote the first book with her husband James, died of cancer shortly after Bunnicula was published. James Howe continued to write the Bunnicula series, and the spin-offs, after her death.

The second book of the series, Howliday Inn, published in 1982, introduced a new character, Howie, a puppy, to the Monroe family. Twenty years later Howie got his own series, writing the Tales from the House of Bunnicula (but really written by James Howe).

In 2004, Howe reworked the original Bunnicula books into a series of picture books for beginning readers called Bunnicula and Friends. There are currently 6 titles in this series.

Bunnicula also appear in several other books published during the 1990s, including a pop-up adventure book and various activity books for kids.

Many thanks to school teacher Margo for introducing Bunnicula to us!

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Harlequin Intrigue Titles for August 2009

eHarlequin.com has released the August 2009 titles in their Intrigue, breathtaking romantic suspense series. Get these edge-of-your-seat reads today with characters who conquer everything from kidnappings to murder mysteries, only to find themselves irresistibly drawn to one another! To purchase any of the books below, click on the book title. (Previous months titles can be found on the backlist page.)

— ◊ —

Stealing Thunder by Patricia Rosemoor

Stealing Thunder by Patricia Rosemoor (book cover shown)

They were strangers on Lakota land, and although a family curse prevented Tiernan McKenna from finding love, it couldn't stop him from rescuing Ella Thunder. The daughter of a shaman, Ella was fearful of the power within her…and of a killer she'd long thought dead. With the Lakota beauty in mortal danger, Tiernan offered himself up as her protector, insisting they stick together 24/7. Remembering his family history, Tiernan knew acting upon their intense attraction was a dangerous line that would be wrong to cross. Even though the thought of it felt so incredibly right.

— ◊ —

More Than a Man by Rebecca York

For seven centuries Noah Fielding had kept his secret, switching identities, staying one step ahead of those who would exploit him. But a chance meeting with a woman on the run changed everything. Olivia Stapler made Noah feel emotions he'd thought long dead, made him yearn for a chance at real life. He knew taking Olivia back to his secret enclave as his wife would be dangerous. In fact, Noah had given his pursuers the perfect weapon. Using Olivia to get to him, they would stop at nothing to gain the secret of his longevity. Even if they had to harm the only woman he loved to get it.

— ◊ —

Navajo Courage by Aimee Thurlo

Navajo Courage by Aimee Thurlo (book cover shown)

Like a cougar on the hunt, Tribal Officer Luca Nakai was one with the wild—steady, steely and fierce. Nothing like the cops Detective Valerie Jonas was used to. He didn't carry the usual accessories, but he was a more formidable force than she'd ever seen. Not to mention gorgeous.

They were on the trail of a dangerous skinwalker who'd killed twice before and was pursuing another victim. Luca's Navajo ways were invaluable to the investigation and casting a spell over the no-nonsense Valerie, who'd never believed anything but hard facts. So how could the mystery and magic of this quiet man single-handedly be cracking her protective shield right along with the case?

— ◊ —

Familiar Showdown by Caroline Burnes

Good thing I have nine lives…. But it's too bad Stephanie Ryan doesn't have as many lives as me. The humanoid horse gentler is up to her pretty neck in trouble—thanks to drifter cowboy Johnny Kreel. He shows up, and just like that, someone tries to kill her. Stranded on her ranch in Nowhere, South Dakota, she's a sitting duck. I'll just bet my next meal that dark-side Johnny knows more than he's telling. And unless my green eyes deceive me, are those sparks between them? Good thing for Stephanie I'm Familiar, Black Cat Detective. I haven't met a case I couldn't solve … yet.

— ◊ —

Showdown in West Texas by Amanda Stevens

Showdown in West Texas by Amanda Stevens (book cover shown)

Cochise County needed a new deputy and Cage Nichols needed a cover—pronto. Unfortunately, Cage unknowingly assumed the identity of an undercover hit man who'd marked stand-in Sheriff Grace Steele to be murdered.

He was an ex-cop sidelined by a bullet. Now, Cage was embedded in the dusty West Texas border town with no choice but to assume the role of a double agent in order to expose a conspiracy and to protect his own hide. That was the plan. Until he met Grace.

Whether it was the isolation of the no-man's-land town of Jericho Pass or the intense desert heat, he couldn't say, but Cage was fast falling for Grace. He only hoped she wouldn't lock him up after he saved her.

— ◊ —

The Bride's Secrets by Debra Webb

Mission: Find a runaway bride. Expose her true identity.

Target: Eve Mattson, self-described "problem solver" for hire. Has been on the wrong side of the law most of her life. Recently showed signs of putting the past behind her, especially after leaving the wrong guy at the altar.

Investigator: J. T. Baxley, new employee who's mistaken his bride-to-be for an honest woman. Superior investigative skills, emotionally vulnerable, willing to take a bullet in the name of justice. (Extremely handsome!)

Supervisor's Comments: Twists and turns no one saw coming. Attraction again developing between Baxley and Mattson? Neither ever trusted anyone. Reports that the two have been spotted in passionate embraces in the midst of lethal situations!

— ◊ —

If you enjoy the romantic suspense books in this series, you can get 2 free Harlequin Intrigue books plus 2 free gifts just for giving the automatic program a try. Accepting your two free Intrigue books and mystery gifts places you under no obligation to buy anything. You may keep the books and gifts and return the shipping statement marked cancel. If you do not cancel, about two months later, and then every other month, eHarlequin will send you four additional Intrigue books.

Keep up to date by subscribing to eHarlequin.com's free newsletter that contains the latest information about their series of books as well as informing you about subscriber-only special offers and new products. Click on the banner below to subscribe for free:

Sign up for email newsletters from eHarlequin.com

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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

CWA Announces Dagger Award Winners

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

The Crime Writers' Association announced Dagger Award winners today. The CWA Dagger Awards celebrate the very best in crime and thriller writing, and are the longest established literary awards in the UK.

Colin Cotterill won the Dagger in the Library, an award given to the author of crime fiction whose work is currently giving the greatest enjoyment to library users;

Fred Vargas and translator Sîan Reynolds triumphed in the International Dagger for the third time in four years for the first in her series of Adamsberg novels, The Chalk Circle of Man;

Sean Chercover won the Short Story Dagger for his story "One Serving of Bad Luck", originally published in Killer Year edited by Lee Child; and

Catherine O’Keefe the Debut Dagger for her novel The Pathologist.

Congratulations from MBN to the winners!

Visit for more information on over 30 other awards recognizing outstanding mystery fiction.

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BBC Commissions New Programming, including a Crime Drama and a Sherlock Holmes Adventure Series

BBC

In a press release yesterday, the BBC announced that the network has commissioned over 20 hours of original authored drama for BBC One next year, including a crime dramas and an adventure series which features a 21st century Sherlock Holmes.

Luther (working title) is a 6 episode (60 minutes each) psychological crime drama in which John Luther is a detective struggling with his own terrible demons; he might just be as dangerous as the depraved murderers he hunts. Each week, the killer's identity will be known to the audience, making every story both a ticking clock and a psychic duel between hunter and quarry – who have more in common than either would like to think.

Sherlock is a 3 episode (90 minutes each) contemporary take on the classic stories, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as the new Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as his loyal friend, Dr John Watson. Sherlock is a thrilling, funny, fast-paced adventure series set in present-day London.

There's also a 5 episode series called The Deep. From the overview, it's hard to tell if this is a thriller or simply science fiction / horror. Set far below the Arctic ice, the action follows the crew of an oceanographer's submarine as they search the final frontiers of Earth for unknown and remarkable life forms. When inexplicable circumstances cause catastrophe to strike, the crew find themselves stranded with no power, limited oxygen and no communication with the surface. And they are completely alone – or so they think.

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The Trial of Sherlock Holmes, a Comic Book Series

The Trial of Sherlock Holmes (Comic Book Series)

We recently learned of a new comic book series featuring the legendary consulting detective Sherlock Holmes. The third book in the five book series is available online and in stores today.

Called The Trial of Sherlock Holmes, it is a locked room-style mystery in which Holmes appears to be the only possible murder suspect when he is found with a very dead former police commissioner, a man who claimed to have evidence that Holmes himself was the infamous criminal mastermind, Professor Moriarty. The series is written by Leah Moore and John Reppion and illustrated by Aaron Campbell with covers by John Cassaday and Laura Martin; it is published by Dynamite Entertainment.

Though the first issue is sold out by the publisher, it may be available at your local comic book store. The fourth issue publishes next month with the series concluding in September.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

ABC Airs a Year in the Life of J. K. Rowling This Thursday

J. K. Rowling

This Thursday, July 16th, ABC airs J. K. Rowling: A Year in the Life.

The woman who created an imaginary world for millions, J. K. Rowling, allowed cameras extraordinary access during the year before the seventh and final Harry Potter book was published. From the one bedroom apartment in Scotland where it all began to a hotel room where viewers watch her type the last words of the Potter saga, Rowling lets millions of fans into her world. The documentary exposes her childhood sorrows, visits the church where she and her sister worked after school as janitors, and allows people to see her now as both the queen of a magical, alternate universe and an everyday mom. Cameras also travel back to her hometown and discover where many of the characters of Harry Potter originated.

A day after the release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince in theaters, Elizabeth Vargas takes viewers on a journey into the life of the woman who came from "nothing" and created all of her own success. J. K. Rowling: A Year in the Life airs July 16 at 8 PM (ET/PT) on ABC.

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Mystery Book Review: Lords of Corruption by Kyle Mills

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

Lords of Corruption by Kyle Mills

by
Non-series

Vanguard Press (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 1-59315-499-2 (1593154992)
ISBN-13: 978-1-59315-499-8 (9781593154998)
Publication Date: March 2009
List Price: $25.95

Review: A slam-bang action adventure with an extremely plausible scenario about foreign aid, corruption and cover-ups, including murder, Lords of Corruption by Wyoming author Kyle Mills explodes like a karate kick to the solar plexus.

Now in his mid-twenties and with a criminal record staining his resume, Kentuckian Josh Hagarty has just completed an MBA. Frustrated by dead-end job searches, he thinks he’s headed to heaven when the representative of a federally funded charitable organization labelled New Africa offers him employment in Africa to oversee the charity’s “sustainable agricultural projects.” But reality sets in when he realizes he’ll have to leave his 17-year-old step sister behind in an abusive household to travel to a continent he knows nothing about to perform a job for which he’s not really qualified. But the promises of money and the chance to whitewash his blemished cv outweigh his better judgement. So, he’s soon winging his way into an African country with poverty, military control, disease and despair worse than anything he’s ever imagined.

On the job, Josh learns fast. A hard lesson teaches him not to travel alone. He’s quickly made aware of whom he can trust at a fake job site, at other charitable organizations in the vicinity, and in the gated compound where he lives in relative luxury and cleanliness compared to the starkness of the nearby AIDS-ridden villages. He gets to know the lay of the land politically, as well, when he sees and hears about the atrocities and genocide committed by the country’s president, Umboto Mtiti. To further complicate his life, he must deal daily with Mtiti’s brother-in-law, a ruthless sycophant assigned as Josh’s assistant, but whom Josh catches running a black market in goods stolen from the New Africa job site. Josh may have stumbled in the past, but he’s not about to buy into the corruption he unearths at his so-called agricultural project -- in reality, a front for funnelling money for a variety of national and international criminals and crimes. But as he becomes increasingly aware of his employers’ contacts and their illegal activities, Josh finds allies in a cynical American journalist, JB Flannary, and a 26-year-old Scandinavian aid worker, Annika Gritdal, both of whom sign on to help him expose the political and financial corruption around them, and to solve the mystery of a death that is so compellingly detailed in the Prologue to the novel. Annika more than willingly helps him expose his love life, as well.

As the omniscient author, Mills cleverly manipulates his story to gain the maximum in tension and suspense. The family drama with Josh and his beleaguered sister in Kentucky plays out via the uncertainties of international cell phone connections before she is kidnapped to coerce Josh into compliance for the New Africa money-laundering endeavours. Then, there are the well-paced switches from one character’s version of events to another’s, with each change contributing a surprise or a resolution for moving the story forward. In one sadistic scene innocent lives are lost gangland style while in others the depictions of political spin photo-ops for foreign aid could have been ripped straight from the front pages of any of today’s newspapers. The rapid fire action scenes and the often staccato-style dialogue contribute positively to the pacing, too, as the characters race headlong through realistic armoured vehicle chases, rebel uprisings, bloody tribal retributions, and on to the cathartic relief of the novel’s conclusion.

A high-octane thriller about dark deeds on a troubled continent, Lords of Corruption is a rapid-fire, eye-opening read.

Special thanks to M. Wayne Cunningham (mw_cunningham@telus.net) for contributing his review of Lords of Corruption.

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

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Synopsis (from the publisher): When an obscure charity recruits Josh Hagarty to manage their activities in a war-torn region of Africa, he is eager to sign on and atone for a past he regrets. After a lifetime of bad luck, someone is finally giving him a chance. All he has to do now is not blow it.

He tries to lose himself in his new job, but soon the precariousness of his situation becomes impossible to ignore. Gideon, the man assigned to guide him through the dangerous and exotic world he’s been thrust into, is revealed to be a psychotic thug with ties to the country’s genocidal dictator. And Josh’s predecessor didn’t quit as he’d been led to believe, but was found dismembered in the jungle after asking questions no one wanted answered.

When the life of his young sister in the United States is threatened by the organization, Josh is forced to face the fact that his employer may not be the benevolent charity it claims to be. Worse yet, Josh realizes he has become an unwitting player in a billion-dollar conspiracy with tentacles snaking across the globe. Escape is impossible – the only way out is to bring the whole institution down.

With the help of Annika Gritdal, a beautiful Scandinavian aid worker, and journalist JB Flannary, Josh pits himself against an American criminal organization backed by a dictator who is virtually omnipotent within the borders of his own country. As his own survival becomes less and less likely, Josh realizes that his life is just one of thousands – perhaps millions- at stake.

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Blue Toad Murder Files Under Development for PlayStation Network

International Mystery Writers Festival

This news item caught our eye. GamesIndustry.Biz published an interview with the founders of Relentless Software, which is developing a new murder mystery game to be released exclusively over PlayStation Network.

The game is titled Blue Toad Murder Files, which, according to the developers, is a murder mystery game along the lines of Agatha Christie and Midsomer Murders and other murder mystery TV dramas like Sherlock Holmes. "I think it's been done a great deal in TV and books and movies," said David Amor, one of the founders. "[B]ut it hasn't been covered that much in videogames and it's an area we wanted to tackle. It's an interesting genre to try and realise. It will come out towards the end of this year."

A website has been set up that promises "Mysteries Revealed Sept. 2009". You can also follow game development on Twitter.

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New Mysteries: An Interview with Daniel Silva

Called his generation’s finest writer of international intrigue and one of the greatest American spy novelists ever, Daniel Silva writes books that are not only addictive page-turners, but sophisticated stories told with beautiful prose. Most of his novels feature master art restorer and sometime officer of Israeli intelligence Gabriel Allon. The 9th thriller in this series, The Defector, is scheduled to be in stores July 21st.

Barnes & Noble has graciously allowed us to post an interview with author Daniel Silva on our site. Conducted by host Molly Pesce, Silva talks about how The Defector came to be a continuation of the story started in his previous bestseller, Moscow Rules, a thriller we reviewed last year, calling it "remarkably well done" (see Mysterious Reviews: Moscow Rules by Daniel Silva).

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Monday, July 13, 2009

Mystery Book Review: The Case of the Pen Gone Missing / El Caso de la Pluma Perdida by Rene Saldana, Jr.

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of The Case of the Pen Gone Missing / El Caso de la Pluma Perdida by Rene Saldana, Jr. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

The Case of the Pen Gone Missing / El Caso de la Pluma Perdida by Rene Saldana, Jr.

by Rene Saldana, Jr.
A Mickey Rangel Mystery

Pinata Books (Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-55885-555-6 (1558855556)
ISBN-13: 978-1-55885-555-7 (9781558855557)
Publication Date: May 2009
List Price: $9.95

Review: Are you trying to find a book that can settle you down in your favorite couch for a quick read? Then The Case of the Pen Gone Missing by René Saldaña, Jr. is a great book for you. This Mickey Rangel Mystery, the first in a series, is a bi-lingual book. The first half of the book is the English version, and the second half is the same story in Spanish. Mickey Rangel is a 5th grade investigator who is trying to find out the identity of the pen thief. Toots is an innocent girl, possibly the prettiest girl in the school, who is hearing rumors that she stole the pen, but she didn’t. So she turns to Mickey for help.

Toots finds herself in a jam and goes up to Mickey – a boy she has never spoken to before – and asks for his help getting her out of trouble. She tells him the story of the missing pen. This isn’t just an ordinary pen, but instead it is Eddy’s dad’s fancy pen that has the White House logo on it and President Lee Black’s signature. Mickey sits back drinking his Yoo-Hoo and listens to this beautiful girl. As soon as she finishes her story, Mickey sets out to find the thief and clear Toots’ name.

Overall, The Case of the Pen Gone Missing is a good book. The story is interesting and I wasn’t able to figure out the thief’s name too soon. Plus, I like the character Toots. She was funny and added a lot to the story. Mickey also is a good detective who will probably solve many more mysteries. I would have liked the book better, though if it was longer. I was able to read it in one sitting, so it felt more like a short story. I think the author could have had a stronger story and more developed characters if the book had been longer. But, it’s perfect for a quick read. I would recommend the book for elementary school students like myself who love mysteries about school.

Special thanks to Andrea Nauert for contributing her review of The Case of the Pen Gone Missing / El Caso de la Pluma Perdida and to Arte Público Press for providing a copy of the book for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — Andrea Nauert — All Rights Reserved — Reprinted with Permission

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Synopsis (from the publisher): When Toots Rodriguez approaches Mickey on the playground, he knows something is up. Toots, the prettiest girl in the fifth grade, never talks to Mickey, not even when they're assigned to work together on a class project. But Toots has come to Mickey because she's in trouble, and he's a detective. The real deal. He has a badge and a certificate after completing an online course two years ago.

''You have to believe me, Mickey. I didn't take that pen. I didn't.'' When Toots shines her big green eyes on him and insists repeatedly that she's innocent, Mickey's intuition tells him to run fast in the opposite direction. But he's a sucker for a pretty girl, so he takes on the case of the missing pen.

Rumor has it that Toots stole Eddy's pen. It's not just any old pen; it's his dad's pen. It has the White House logo on it. Eddy's father, a senator from South Texas, got the pen from the President of the United States when he visited the White House last year. As Mickey begins his investigation, though, all the clues point to Toots and her newly ex-boyfriend as the primary suspects.

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Mystery Book Review: Parker Takes a Bullet by Lewis Hall

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of Parker Takes a Bullet by Lewis Hall. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

Parker Takes a Bullet by Lewis Hall

by
An Evelyn Parker Mystery

Elevated Lab Press (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-4392-3641-0 (1439236410)
ISBN-13: 978-1-4392-3641-3 (9781439236413)
Publication Date: May 2009
List Price: $14.99

Review: Lewis Hall introduces Evelyn Parker, a 20ish woman who recently lost both her mother, to suicide, and her father, a cop killed by a suspicious fire in his home, in the first of a proposed series, Parker Takes a Bullet.

Evelyn, who just recently moved out on her own and works in an animal shelter, is devastated by her father's death. She's convinced he was murdered, but his own police department isn't so sure. A large cash deposit recently made into his bank account suggests maybe he was a cop on the take in a deal that went bad. Determined to clear his name, Evelyn starts from some notes written by her father related to his most recent case, and a list he made with seemingly unrelated words: computers, big black car, no license, boxster, dead, bacon, baseball cap, Russian. When her investigation leads her to a Russian native who's a computer expert and the owner a Boxster, she knows she's making progress. But then the FBI step in looking for this very same person but for a different reason. Afraid that she'll never solve her father's murder if the FBI take away her best lead, she convinces him to evade the authorities all the while digging for information about her dad.

Parker Takes a Bullet is a fast-paced thriller with a strong, well-developed plot. Its weakest element, and a debatable one at that, is the character of Evelyn Parker, the series lead. Portrayed as an independent, no-nonsense, and otherwise reasonably intelligent young woman, she nevertheless constantly ignores sound advice, disregards direct orders, breaks laws, commits felonies, and endangers not only herself but everyone around her. She often uses a "the means justifies the end" rationale to support her actions. For example, recalling that her father once said, "A judge should focus on the motivation behind a crime, not on the act itself," she provides herself with comfort that stealing her father's files from police headquarters was the proper thing to do. (The frequent use of quotes by her father is actually one of the more appealing aspects of the book. No doubt intended to keep Evelyn grounded, she sometimes, well, rather frequently, twists them to suit her own, at present, needs.) Some readers might view Evelyn as a good triumphing over evil kind of superhero; others may just roll their eyes at some of her actions, from running (unarmed) after a man (armed) who just tried to kill her, to rather easily breaking out of a secure detention center, to shooting out the tires of a jet while standing in its path on an active runway. That the authorities continue to allow her to get away with all this is part of her charm. Or maybe they're just that inept.

Though Evelyn Parker is clearly the center of attention here, like her or not, it's the plot and, admittedly, the non-stop action that pull readers along. In the end there are a few unresolved plot points, but otherwise Parker Takes a Bullet is an entertaining and unforgettable thriller.

Special thanks to Lewis Hall for providing a copy of Parker Takes a Bullet for this review.

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

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Parker Takes a Bullet from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): My dad a drug dealer?

At a time when she should have been thinking about what frothy dress to wear to the senior prom, Evelyn Parker, still reeling from her mother’s suicide, has to face this troubling question. Worse, the fact that her father’s incinerated body is found shortly after a huge cash deposit was made in his bank account leaves his colleagues in the Sheriff’s Department convinced he was on the take.

But, growing up the daughter of a detective, Evelyn learned a few things about police work. When the investigation into her father’s murder grinds to a halt, Evelyn decides to do some sleuthing of her own, determined to exonerate her dad. In the process she plays loose with the law, tails a too-charming suspect, uncovers a worldwide web of international crime, and learns that things are not always how they appear.

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TNT to Launch Online Games with Season Premieres of Leverage and Dark Blue

TNT Television

In a press release TNT announced that the network will launch a pair of online game sites in conjunction with the premieres of the second season of their crime caper Leverage and their new police drama Dark Blue.

In Leverage: Art of the Con, the Leverage team needs game players to recover files, documents and photos on Nate Ford's laptop by completing a series of missions. Those who accomplish each task will be entered in a drawing for a chance to win a multi-city trip to become an expert in the art of the con. One lucky winner will visit Paris, London and New York, sites of some of history’s greatest capers. Games from the first season can be replayed at LeverageHQ.com until the new season starts on 07/15/2009.

At DarkBlueUndercover.com, game players will become members of an elite undercover squad run by Carter Shaw. Each player will get a false identity and weekly missions to bring down a gun-running ring. The challenges will force players to make some of the difficult decisions that undercover cops face. Based on these decisions, players will either get caught by the group they are trying to infiltrate; get “flipped” and become seduced by a life of crime; or go deeper undercover. At the end of 10 weeks, those who have taken the challenge will be entered in a drawing for a chance to win a trip undercover in Los Angeles with VIP access to the hottest clubs and restaurants, a private helicopter tour of the Sunset strip, and a ride with a former undercover LAPD officer. An "undercover test" is currently available on the website that tests your observation skillls.

Leverage premieres Wednesday, July 15th at 9 PM (ET/PT); Dark Blue follows at 10 PM (ET/PT). The first season of Leverage will be available on DVD on 07/14/2009.

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Jason Statham to Star in Film Adaptation of Ken Bruen's Blitz

Blitz, a DS Tom Brant Mystery, by Ken Bruen

Variety is reporting that actor Jason Statham (The Bank Job) is in final negotiations to star in the film adaptation of Ken Bruen's thriller Blitz. It isn't clear from the article which character Statham will play, only that the role is that of a tough, uncompromising cop assigned the task of tracking down a serial killer targeting police officers. Paddy Considine (The Bourne Ultimatum) will play his partner. The film will shoot on location in London beginning next month.

In the book, the fourth in the Detective Sergeant Tom Brant series, DS Brant is in hot water for assaulting a police shrink, Chief Inspector Roberts' wife has died in a horrific car accident, and WPC Falls is still figuring out how to navigate her job as a black female investigator in the notorious unit. When a serial killer takes his show on the road, things get worse for all three. Nicknamed "The Blitz" by the rabid London media, the killer is aiming for tabloid immortality by killing cops in different beats around the city.

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