Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Bored to Death Series Premiere Now Available Online

Bored to Death (HBO)

HBO has made available for viewing the series premiere of Bored to Death, its new "noir-otic comedy", nearly a week before its air date this Sunday, September 20th, at 9:30 PM (ET/PT). Titled "Stockholm Syndrome", writer Jonathan Ames (Jason Schwartzman) places an ad offering his unlicensed services as a private investigator. The HBO website says it can be seen on HBOOnDemand or iTunes, but we found it on Fancast, an embedded version of which can be viewed below.

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About Bored to Death: Jonathan Ames, a young Brooklyn writer, is feeling lost. He's just gone through a painful break-up, thanks in part to his drinking, can't write his second novel, and carouses too much with his magazine editor. Rather than face reality, Jonathan turns instead to his fantasies — moonlighting as a private detective — because he wants to be a hero and a man of action.

Created by Jonathan Ames (author of several books, including the acclaimed graphic novel The Alcoholic, the series follows the misadventures of a fictional Jonathan Ames as he pursues his quixotic dream of emulating his heroes from classic private detective novels.

Bored to Death stars Jason Schwartzman as Jonathan Ames; Ted Danson as George Christopher, a high-profile magazine editor and Jonathan's boss; and Zach Galifianakis as comic book illustrator Ray Hueston, Jonathan's confidant.

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Monday, September 14, 2009

Mystery Book Review: Gold of Kings by Davis Bunn

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

Gold of Kings by Davis Bunn

by
A Storm Syrrell and Harry Bennett Mystery

Howard Books (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 1-4165-5631-1 (1416556311)
ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-5631-2 (9781416556312)
Publication Date: June 2009
List Price: $24.00

Review: Author Davis Bunn’s sterling reputation precedes him. With more than six million copies of his several books in print in sixteen languages, he’s won three Christy Awards for the excellence of his work. His books are characterized by attention to detail, strong plots, meticulous research, and mesmerising entertainment. Now, with its blend of action, international settings, mystery, history, romance, and “six murders in four countries,” Gold of Kings is cut from the same top-quality cloth, and is a highly-recommended read.

When 25-year-old Storm Tyrrell is fired from her curator’s job at Tyrells by her beloved grandfather Sean, the art and antique company’s founder, she is devastated. And when her elderly but healthy relative suddenly dies of an unexpected heart attack, she is beside herself with grief for him and concern for the future of the firm. What the reader knows and Storm is led to find out is that Sean has fired her to protect her from the enemy who has silently poisoned him with “a quiet hiss, accompanied by a puff of air on his cheek.” Sean has provided added protection for her by arranging to have his long-time friend and jailed treasure hunter, 39-year-old Harry Bennett released from a Barbados prison. Harry, the rogue with a heart of gold and a lost treasure to match, is to become Storm’s bodyguard during a quest that Sean had secretly laid out earlier for finding a cache of Mid-East wealth known as the Second Temple treasure. Sean has left the itinerary and the clues for Harry and Storm to follow. They are soon joined on their trek by Emma Webb, a 35-year-old federal agent with ties to various departments and Interpol, and an asp-like “little tan man” with the substance of a sylph who keeps turning up as corpses turn over. Complicating the lives of the Storm-Harry-Emma trio are the agents and officials who work at cross purposes against them, except for Emma’s Interpol boss who helps out at all the right places. Then, there’s an international criminal intent on turning the art and antiques world into his private domain for forgery, money-laundering and ponzi-scheme inflation. Even Storm’s aunt and her Dad turn up to get their fair share of finger pointing as possible suspects in the piece.

An action-thriller that rockets ahead in high gear, Bunn’s story involves a range of activities from car chases to mountain-top rappelling to jet skiing to a jail break with a huge dump-truck that “drove like a well-padded tank.” In between there’s an abundance of interesting historical bits, everything from how assassins got their name to the site of the “museum for the oldest boat ever recovered,” to the 1600-year-old “most famous church in Cyprus,” the country where most of the treasure hunt occurs amid the military and political tensions between the north and the south. There’s plenty of tension, too, when Emma has to confront her boss and subsequently the entire FBI while simultaneously working for Interpol and helping to expose a worldwide art scam. And as the action rages around them, she and Harry steal the occasional moments of romantic bliss before the novel reaches its crashing conclusion with knives flashing, guns firing and bodies flying everywhere.

Perfectly paced, the novel races when it should and slows down to smell the roses as needed or in this case, “the odors of roasting lamb and diesel and charcoal and mountains of spices and baking bread.” Other images are equally striking such as the one of the ferry, “an ancient vessel whose ulcerous wounds wept rust.” And characters can be summed up in a New York minute as “an angry stump of a woman,” an amateur pianist who “did not play the keys so much as box with the music,” or “a skinny black gnome” of an elderly lawyer “with hands wrapped in skin like burnt parchment.” Even “the rain pelting Seventh Avenue tasted of diesel and big city friction.” And there are plenty more where those came from in Davis Bunn’s excellent adventure, Gold of Kings.

Special thanks to M. Wayne Cunningham (mw_cunningham@telus.net) for contributing his review of Gold of Kings and to Simon & Schuster for providing an ARC of the book for this review.

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

Buy from Amazon.com

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): After Storm Syrrell’s grandfather is murdered she discovers that he served as a trusted go-between for those in the highest ranks of business and government around the world – and that his last act was to free treasure hunter Harry Bennett from a Caribbean jail.

As Storm and Harry travel to far-flung locations, a series of ominous events unfolds. Could Sean Syrrell’s search for the Second Temple treasure have alerted an international adversary? Are Storm and Harry destined to meet the same deadly fate?

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Mysteries on TV: CSI Miami, Season DVD New This Week

Mysteries on TV

, your source for the most complete selection of detective, amateur sleuth, private investigator, and suspense television mystery series now available or coming soon to DVD, is profiling one series that has a season DVD being released this week.

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Join lead criminalist Horatio Caine (David Caruso) and his state-of-the-art forensics team as they investigate hot and steamy Miami crimes using cold hard facts in .

The evidence leads into seedy nightclubs, privileged suburbs, and explosive family secrets. The stakes are higher than ever before, because this time it's personal. Guest stars this season include: Elizabeth Berkley, Lucy Lawless, and former CSI: Miami cast member Khandi Alexander.

The CSI: Miami: Season Seven DVD set of 7 discs contain the 25 episodes that aired on CBS from September 2008 through May 2009.

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Visit the Mysteries on TV website to discover more currently available on DVD.

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Mystery Godoku Puzzle for September 14, 2009

A new has been created by the editors of the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books and is now available on our website.

Godoku is similar to Sudoku, but uses letters instead of numbers. To give you a headstart, we provide you a mystery clue to fill in a complete row or column (if you choose to use it!).

Mystery Godoku Puzzle for September 14, 2009

This week's letters and mystery clue:

A C F H I L N P U

He is the author of the Sherlock Holmes pastiche "The Mystery of the Hanged Man’s Puzzle" (9 letters).

We now have two weeks of our puzzles on one page in PDF format for easier printing. Print this week's puzzle here.

Previous puzzles are stored in the Mystery Godoku Archives.

Enjoy the weekly Mystery Godoku Puzzle from the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, and Thanks for visiting our website!

   

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

Mystery Book Review: The Magician's Death by P. C. Doherty

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

The Magician's Death by P. C. Doherty

by
A Hugh Corbett Medieval Mystery

St. Martin's Minotaur (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-312-56562-3 (0312565623)
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-56562-6 (9780312565626)
Publication Date: July 2009
List Price: $24.99

Review: Murder, intrigue, conspiracy … these are the hallmarks of the Hugh Corbett mysteries by P. C. Doherty, and all are on brilliant display in The Magician's Death, the 14th medieval mystery in this series.

A previously unknown literary masterpiece, Secretus Secretorum, the Secret of Secrets, by Roger Bacon, has been discovered in France. Thought to contain all the knowledge of the ancients, it is coveted by both the English and French monarchs but is written in a cryptic language. Hugh Corbett, a confidant of Edward I, arranges for the manuscript to be shipped to England where a group of academics will attempt to decipher it. Sequestered in Corfe Castle along the Devonshire coast, the English and French scholars are soon the targets of an unknown assassin. It isn't clear whether their deaths are associated with other crimes that have been committed at the castle, or involve the manuscript, or are unrelated entirely. Corbett must navigate treacherous waters in determining what is going on and why.

Much of the appeal of The Magician's Death lies in the way the intricate plot develops. Corbett can't be sure (nor can the reader) whether everyone is who they claim to be, and whether the deaths of several young women, and later, three of the French scholars, are connected. And what of the mysterious ships that patrol just offshore? The remote setting, and the blinding winter storm that batters the castle, add to the seductive nature of an obscure entity whose purpose is elusive and uncertain. Set in 1304, his historical mystery, with political overtones that resonate even today, is one of the best of its genre, and is highly recommended.

Special thanks to St. Martin's Minotaur for providing a copy of The Magician's Death for this review.

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

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If you are interested in purchasing The Magician's Death from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): The monk and scholar Roger Bacon claimed to have seen many marvels of nature and science and concealed these in a book written in an unbreakable code. Sir Hugh Corbett has been instructed to organise agents in Paris to steal this Book of Secrets. They do so but pay a violent price and the French King Philip IV now wishes a meeting between the scholars of England and France to discuss breaking the code. Edward I has no choice but to allow the meeting to take place at Corfe Castle, which becomes a place of murder and mayhem. Young women from the castle are being slain whilst horrific things are witnessed in the nearby forest. The situation becomes more serious when two of the French scholars die in sinister circumstances. Corbett and Ranulf-atte-Newgate have to thread this maze of malevolent murder whilst trying to decipher the great secrets of one of England's most outstanding scholars.

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The New York Times Publishes Early Review of The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown

The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown

For those who simply cannot wait until Tuesday, The New York Times has broken an embargo imposed by Doubleday and today published a review of The Lost Symbol, the third thriller in the Robert Langdon series by Dan Brown.

Little is officially known about the book, and we're not going to summarize any of the Times' review here. But the publisher has disclosed that the book’s narrative takes place in a twelve-hour period, and from the first page, readers will feel the thrill of discovery as they follow Robert Langdon through a masterful and unexpected new landscape.

The first two books in the series, Angels & Demons and The Da Vinci Code, were runaway bestsellers, and have both been adapted for the screen, with Tom Hanks starring as Robert Langdon.

The Lost Symbol is in bookstores on Tuesday, and is available for pre-order.

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Mystery Book Review: Dead Ball by Michael Balkind

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

Dead Ball by Michael Balkind

by
A Deadly Sports Mystery

Pero Thrillers (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-56315-453-6 (1563154536)
ISBN-13: 978-1-56315-453-9 (9781563154539)
Publication Date: July 2009
List Price: $14.95

Review: Michael Balkind's second Deadly Sports mystery, Dead Ball, has the AllSport investigators seeking the killer of the complex's Chief Financial Officer.

Bob Thomas was golfing legend Reid Clark's best friend, and one of the driving forces behind the success of AllSport, a vast sporting complex in the Catskills dedicated to mentoring inner-city youth in a variety of sports as well as providing first class training facilities for the country's top athletes. His battered body is found while Reid is giving a tour of the facility to the President and First Lady. The facility is quickly locked down until it can be ascertained that there is no imminent threat to anyone else. Reid had previously been the target of an assassin, so it's immediately assumed that Bob's death has something to do with Reid himself. To make sure everything is being done to solve his friend's murder, Reid calls in his friend and agent, Buck Green, and AllSport's private investigator, Jay Scott, to work in parallel to the local authorities to determine who might have wanted Bob dead ... and why.

Dead Ball is probably best described as a cozy for guys. There's a little bit of sports, a little bit of business, a little bit of action, and a little bit of mystery. One can readily imagine the towel-snapping and back-slapping that takes place off camera, as it were. Reid Clark is a revered Arnold Palmer-type character, and though he acts as a focal point in the story, he participates little in the investigation of his friend's murder; rather, he's the person to whom Buck Green and Jay Scott report. These latter two do most of the investigating, though to be fair, there isn't much to investigate. Whodunit is obvious from the start (at least to the reader), and there aren't a lot of suspects anyway, so it's the howdunit that drives much of the mystery here. The plot itself isn't as tightly constructed as it could have been, tending to wander a bit (all sorts of sports analogies come to mind here). Still, taken for what it is, Dead Ball is generally entertaining, and will appeal to (primarily male) readers who enjoy a mystery set in the world of finance and sports.

Special thanks to Michael Balkind for providing a copy of Dead Ball for this review.

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

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): The action starts at the professional and Olympic sports training camp AllSport. AllSport is a part of the Inner City Sports Foundation (ICSF), run by Reid Clark and Buck Green. As Reid is giving a tour of the camp to the President and First Lady of the United States, the lead secret service golf cart screeches to a halt as the agents spot a dead body in the shrubs surrounding the basketball dome. The body belongs to AllSport's CFO and Reid's best friend Bob Thomas. As the President and First Lady are whisked away, the investigation begins. The investigation takes the reader through various areas of New York, the woods of Pennsylvania, nightclubs in Caracas and Mt. Everest.

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Mystery Book Review: How to Lose a Job by Becky A. Bartness

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of How to Lose a Job by Becky A. Bartness. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

How to Lose a Job by Becky A. Bartness

by
A Kate Williams Mystery

iUniverse (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-595-49709-8 (0595497098)
ISBN-13: 978-0-595-49709-6 (9780595497096)
Publication Date: February 2009
List Price: $21.95

Review: Kate Williams so much enjoyed her time in Arizona (the setting for the first mystery in this series) that she decides to move there, quitting her high-stress job in Chicago for a presumably more tranquil routine in How to Lose a Job, the second mystery in this series by Becky A. Bartness.

After working 14 years as a successful criminal law attorney, Kate accepts a position with the Maricopa County (Phoenix) Attorney's Office. It doesn't pay nearly as well, but the quality of life is better. Getting settled in means reviewing current cases before the county, and what she sees is puzzling. Cases that should have been classified as misdemeanors are entered as felonies. Cases that should have been dismissed for lack of evidence are still active. As Kate and her assistants delve deeper, she runs the risk of antagonizing her supervisor, Stan Rantwist, a religious fanatic with his own agenda: ridding the county of sin and using a "higher authority" as both his spiritual and legal guide. Kate enlists the help of the deputy sheriff, and together they discover an extensive drug trafficking ring that may have links to the County Attorney's Office. But can Kate sort all this out before she's given her walking papers and loses her new job ... or worse?

How to Lose a Job is filled with delightfully quirky characters, especially Kate's assistants, the heavily tattooed and pieced MJ and the obsessive/compulsive clean freak Sam. Kate, herself, is quick and witty, and her new dog Ralph always brightens the narrative whenever he's present. The story is light and breezy, and fits well with the characters and setting. How to Lose a Job is an entertaining mystery and makes for a pleasant way to spend a lazy Saturday afternoon.

Special thanks to guest reviewer Betty of The Betz Review for contributing her review of How to Lose a Job and to Becky A. Bartness 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 How to Lose a Job from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): After working fourteen years as a successful criminal law attorney in Chicago, Kate Williams leaves her job looking for a more stress-free lifestyle. A recent vacation at an Arizona dude ranch entices her to the state, and she accepts a position as a deputy county attorney in Phoenix.

Within weeks of beginning her new position, Kate realizes that the Maricopa County Attorney's Office is not the employee haven she'd hoped it would be. Not only does her supervisor, County Attorney Stan Rantwist, claim he receives his orders from a higher power, but his sneaky assistant Alan White seems to have made it his life's work to spy on Kate's professional and personal activities. Worst of all, it looks like something illegal may be going on in the office. Kate enlists the help of her oddball assistants-the tattooed and pierced MJ Polowski and the germaphobic Marcus John Martinez-O'Reilly Ramirez, otherwise known as Sam-to help her investigate a series of grossly overcharged criminal cases.

When investigation of the improper charges leads Kate and her crew to the discovery of more serious, widespread corruption Kate faces the difficult decision of who to trust. Can she be sure that the handsome Deputy Sheriff Bryan Turner is on her side when he offers to assist? One misstep and it could be more than her career at stake.

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Games of Mystery: Women's Murder Club in Games of Passion, New for Nintendo DS

Games of Mystery

, your source for mystery-themed electronic and board games, parties for kids and adults, and getaway vacations including murder mystery weekends, is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery game for the Nintendo DS. More mystery games for this platforms are available on our recently updated webpage.

Women's Murder Club: Games of Passion

Women's Murder Club: Games of Passion is the first game in this franchise based on the bestselling mysteries by James Patterson to be available for the Nintendo DS. Two titles are also available for Windows PCs, with a third scheduled for release later this month.

In Women’s Murder Club: Games of Passion, players step into the investigative shoes of the Women’s Murder Club members, Lindsay, Claire and Cindy, where they investigate a string of seemingly unrelated murders as they unfold. Beautiful women go missing and turn up dead around every corner, and the clues point to the least likely of suspects.

With engrossing, story-driven gameplay and thought-provoking mini-games, Women’s Murder Club: Games of Passion lets players immerse themselves in a classic Patterson mystery as they examine locations for clues, and interrogate witnesses and suspects alike. A distinct mix of hidden object and puzzle gameplay, Women’s Murder Club: Games of Passion lets players become a part of the Women’s Murder Club. Additionally, a unique DSi feature allows fans to create their own mystery by utilizing the DSi camera!

Women's Murder Club: Games of Passion is currently scheduled for release for the Nintendo DS on September 15th, 2009, and is available to pre-order.

Watch a game trailer for Women's Murder Club: Games of Passion below:

Don't forget to visit for all types of mysterious fun!

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Saturday, September 12, 2009

Mystery Author Lyn Hamilton Dies

The Chinese Alchemist by Lyn Hamilton

The CBC is reporting that mystery author Lyn Hamilton has died of cancer. She was just 65.

Hamilton was the author of the Lara McClintoch archaeological mysteries, a series she started when she was 50. Lara McClintoch is a Toronto antiques dealer who solves murders while traveling the world.

Hamilton was twice nominated for an Arthus Ellis Award, for her debut mystery The Xibalba Murders and for the 8th book in her series, The Magyar Venus. The 4th book in the series, The Celtic Riddle, was the basis for a 2003 Murder, She Wrote movie starring Angela Lansbury as Jessica Fletcher.

In 2008, Hamilton wrote on her website that The Chinese Alchemist would be the final book in her archaeological series. She added that "my plans are to retire from the mystery business, although I reserve the right to change my mind. Last fall, I had the pleasure of teaching mystery and suspense writing at the University of Toronto's School for Continuing Studies' Creative Writing Program. Lara, I believe, is renovating a casita in a little town north of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. So far not a single body has been uncovered."

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BBC Orders Two Additional Series of Crime Drama New Tricks

New Tricks (BBC Crime Drama)

One of the most popular crime dramas in the UK is one we've never heard of, but one we're looking forward to learning more about!

Broadcast is reporting that BBC has ordered two additional series of New Tricks. The 7th series of 8 episodes is expected to air in 2010, with the 8th in 2011. The most recent series aired during the summer of 2008.

New Tricks stars Amanda Redman as Detective Superintendent Sandra Pullman, who leads the office of the Unsolved Crime and Open Case Squad (UCOS), which is made up of retired police officers who have been recruited to reinvestigate unsolved crimes.

New Tricks began as a single episode that aired in March 2003. It was so popular that BBC ordered an additional 6 episodes, which subsequently aired during the spring of 2004. These 7 episodes came out on DVD last month (something else we missed) as New Tricks Series One.

The description off the DVD reads, A motley crew of retired police officers re-opens troublesome cases that were never laid to rest. From the discovery of a new motive in the killing of a college lecturer, to the tracing of a missing child, the team finds a way through the detail that eluded the original officers. But they are finding a surprising incidence of cover-up and conspiracy in their new investigations. Are their superiors about to close ranks? Or is someone feeding them particular files? Either way, the suspicion that they are being manipulated is high -- and the team is determined to get to the bottom of it. These old dogs won't roll over too easily.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

Mystery Book Review: Drawn in Blood by Andrea Kane

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

Drawn in Blood by Andrea Kane

by
A Sloane Burbank Mystery

William Morrow (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-06-123680-2 (0061236802)
ISBN-13: 978-0-06-123680-8 (9780061236808)
Publication Date: September 2009
List Price: $24.99

Review: Drawn in Blood by Andrea Kane marks the return of attorney and former Federal agent Sloane Burbank and her lover, FBI Special Agent Derek Parker. And her current case is personal: her parent's apartment has been broken into and a valuable painting stolen.

Sloane's father, Matthew, and four good friends from college are highly respected art dealers, buying and selling notable paintings and becoming wealthy in the process. After a Monet hanging in her parent's apartment is taken, Matthew's convinced the incident isn't about stealing art, but leaving a message. He reveals an incident to Sloane (as both a father and a client) that happened over a decade ago in Hong Kong, where he and his friends witnessed a murder during the theft of a painting. And they could identify the killer. At the time they, unwisely, agreed to keep silent and forget about it. Now it looks like the past is turning into the present. The FBI is involved in the theft of the Monet and will certainly want to know the details of what happened 10 years ago. But Sloane, in her capacity as her father's lawyer, cannot tell them. She also wants to prevent Derek from being assigned to the case, believing it will damage their relationship. But then Matthew's friends and associates are killed, one by one, and Matthew knows he's next on the list. What personal and professional compromises must Sloane make to save her father?

Kane packs a lot of action and adventure into Drawn in Blood. The highly profitable transaction in forged artwork is only one of the subplots here that also include the organization of Albanian and Chinese gangs dealing in other illicit trades. Retaliation and revenge, and truth and justice, are key elements too. But the heart of the story, as it were, is the relationships between Sloane and her father, and between Sloane and Derek. It's sensitively and thoughtfully handled, especially within the midst of an exciting suspense thriller.

Special thanks to guest reviewer Betty of The Betz Review for contributing her review of Drawn in Blood and to Book Trends for providing an ARC of the book for this review.

Buy from Amazon.com

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): Former FBI Special Agent Sloane Burbank has seen her share of danger. She's faced down a serial killer and survived life-threatening injuries ... but she never expected that danger to invade the lives of her family.

Then her mother is viciously attacked in the posh Manhattan apartment her parents share and it quickly becomes clear that this is no ordinary robbery. The thieves were too clever, too knowledgeable, and so obviously after something of her father's. But what could a respected art dealer have done to merit such violence? When a mysterious message is left for him, Sloane knows her father's in over his head. Determined to find out the truth, Sloane discovers a deadly secret buried in his past that has made him the target of a power-hungry mobster with a lethal agenda and nothing to lose.

Sloane is desperate to save her father, but to do so she must hold on to secrets of her own—especially from FBI Special Agent Derek Parker, the man she has grown to love deeply. She knows she must tell him everything, but how can she betray her father's confidence? Can a couple who's faced so much survive this ultimate test of trust? Will they survive at all?

As the decades-old secret claims the lives of her father's oldest friends and the killer closes in on him, Sloane finds herself in foreign territory: alone, facing escalating personal danger, and hunting a moving target in a world where memories are long and loyalties are drawn in blood.

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Mystery Book Review: The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson

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

The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson

by
Non-series

Anchor Books (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 0-307-38867-0 (0307388670)
ISBN-13: 978-0-307-38867-4 (9780307388674)
Publication Date: August 2009
List Price: $15.00

Review: Andrew Davidson's debut novel, The Gargoyle, will likely elicit strong reactions from readers, some of whom will love it, others not so much. Impossible to categorize, it's best described as cross-genre, a paranormal psychological romantic thriller, but unique in its own way.

The narrator is an unnamed man living in an unnamed city (though for many reasons, Los Angeles comes to mind when reading it). He's been in a horrific car accident of his own doing—he was high on cocaine and drunk on bourbon at the time—resulting in severe burns over most of his body. He survives, but just barely. He proceeds to address the reader directly, initially relating in alternating passages, his life story, his recovery from the accident, and his plans to kill himself once he leaves the hospital. A strange woman then comes to visit him, Marianne Engel, who tells him they were together in a previous life, in medieval Germany, and their lives today are eerily similar to what they were in the 13th century. Of course he doesn't believe her, but the over months of his recovery he's attracted to her, and comes to accept, even embrace, her story, even if he doesn't think it to be true.

There's a sense here that The Gargoyle was not written by a single author, but by a number of people in some sort of non-linear fashion, as if they were given an outline of a scene and asked to fill in the details without knowing what the movie was about. Some are writing the narrator's past, some the present. Some take the role of the narrator's intellect, others write Marianne's past and present lives. Still more write tales that occur in other times and places. All these stories, many of which are stylistically different from each other, are then interweaved with little attempt to add logical transitions, relationships, or cohesion. Then there are the numerous platitudes, some of which are groan-worthy: "Your skin was the emblem of your identity, the image that you presented to the world. But it was never who you really are. Being burned doesn't make you any less—or more—human. It only makes you burnt." A long way of saying, "beauty is only skin deep".

The Gargoyle really can't be said to be good or bad, it simply is. Like some modern art, many will find it brilliant, insightful, introspective, provocative; others will say it's just a black dot on a white background.

Special thanks to Random House for providing a trade paperback edition of The Gargoyle for this review.

Buy from Amazon.com

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

Synopsis (from the publisher): The narrator of The Gargoyle is a very contemporary cynic, physically beautiful and sexually adept, who dwells in the moral vacuum that is modern life. As the book opens, he is driving along a dark road when he is distracted by what seems to be a flight of arrows. He crashes into a ravine and suffers horrible burns over much of his body. As he recovers in a burn ward, undergoing the tortures of the damned, he awaits the day when he can leave the hospital and commit carefully planned suicide—for he is now a monster in appearance as well as in soul.

A beautiful and compelling, but clearly unhinged, sculptress of gargoyles by the name of Marianne Engel appears at the foot of his bed and insists that they were once lovers in medieval Germany. In her telling, he was a badly injured mercenary and she was a nun and scribe in the famed monastery of Engelthal who nursed him back to health. As she spins their tale in Scheherazade fashion and relates equally mesmerizing stories of deathless love in Japan, Iceland, Italy, and England, he finds himself drawn back to life—and, finally, in love. He is released into Marianne's care and takes up residence in her huge stone house. But all is not well. For one thing, the pull of his past sins becomes ever more powerful as the morphine he is prescribed becomes ever more addictive. For another, Marianne receives word from God that she has only twenty-seven sculptures left to complete—and her time on earth will be finished.

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Games of Mystery: Steve the Sheriff in The Case of the Missing Thing, New at Big Fish Games

Games of Mystery

, your source for mystery-themed electronic and board games, parties for kids and adults, and mystery getaway vacations, is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery game from Big Fish Games released today. You can find out more about these games by visiting our page or by clicking on the links provided below.

Steve the Sheriff 2: the Case of the Missing Thing
Download →Steve the Sheriff 2: the Case of the Missing Thing

Steve the Sheriff is back in an all new case in Neptuneville. The Mona Medusa is missing and it's up to you to help Steve the Sheriff track down the thief. Use your hidden object skills to scour a multitude of screens. Find key objects within the scene to solve fun adventure-style puzzles. Follow Steve and his lovable family in this entertaining seque to the original Steve the Sheriff.

Also available: Steve the Sheriff 2 Strategy Guide and a Steve the Sheriff 2 Game Walkthrough.

Steve the Sheriff 2: the Case of the Missing Thing, a Big Fish Game Club Exclusive, may be downloaded and purchased for $6.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. A demonstration version (152.29 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour.

Watch a preview video below:

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Other popular games on our page include several and games, games in the series and in particular the latest, Mystery Case Files: Return to Ravenhearst, Adventure Chronicles: The Search for Lost Treasure, Enlightenus, Cate West: The Vanishing Files, Return to Mysterious Island 2: Mina's Fate, and Nick Chase: A Detective Story.

Read our new game reviews by Ms. Terri: , , , and .

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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And don't forget to visit for all kinds of mysterious fun!

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Mystery Bestsellers for September 11, 2009

Mystery Bestsellers

A list of the top 15 for the week ending September 11, 2009 has been posted on the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books website.

A fairly quiet late summer week on the mystery bestseller list this week with no new titles entering the top 15. But that will all change next week when Dan Brown's third Robert Langdon thriller, The Lost Symbol, is in bookstores next Tuesday.

The top four mystery bestsellers this week are shown below:

The Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg LarssonAlex Cross's Trial by James PattersonDead and Gone by Charlaine Harris206 Bones by Kathy Reichs

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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