Wednesday, March 16, 2011

eHarlequin Love Inspired Suspense Titles for April 2011

eHarlequin.com: Save 20% On Your Order

eHarlequin.com has released the list of April 2011 titles in their Love Inspired Suspense series. Love Inspired Suspense books combine suspense, romance, hope and faith to create a unique page-turning series that today’s readers love.

For more information about the book from eHarlequin.com, click on the title or cover; other purchase options are also provided.

— ◊ —

Murder at Granite Falls by Roxanne Rustand
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Murder at Granite Falls by Roxanne Rustand

"Just let it go …"

Everyone in Granite Falls tells Carrie Randall the same thing. Is it a threat, or a warning? Yet even if it endangers her fresh start, Carrie needs to know what secret the town's hiding. There's her troubled student and his disturbing drawings. His fiercely protective father, and the mysterious death of his mother. And Carrie definitely has to find out more about the bad reputation of her standoffish new landlord, Logan Bradley. She wants to trust him, but she's been fooled by charm before. Is the town wrong about him—or is she?

— ◊ —

House of Secrets by Ramona Richards
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

House of Secrets by Ramona Richards

Sheriff Ray Taylor always had a soft spot for the former minister's widow, June Eaton … until he found her standing over the current minister's dead body. She claims she's innocent—and after a string of attacks against Ray and June, he's inclined to believe her. So who is the real killer, and what is he after? Ray knows that the parsonage has to be the key. The old house is hiding a dark secret, something the pastor's murderer is convinced June knows. Something that murderer will do anything to keep buried.

— ◊ —

Point Blank Protector by Stephanie Newton
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Point Blank Protector by Stephanie Newton

With his cover blown, former DEA Agent Tyler Clark has nothing but time on his hands. Time—and orders—to see the police psychologist before taking a new case. Gracie VanDoren's cheerful determination to help him drives Tyler up the wall … right up until a threatening letter has Gracie's sunshiny demeanor giving way to fear. As the threats escalate, both realize someone has an unusually personal vendetta against Gracie. Now Tyler's cover is blown again. Because he's committed to being her point-blank protector—even if it means exposing his heart.

— ◊ —

Trail of Lies by Margaret Daley
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Trail of Lies by Margaret Daley

As the mother of a beautiful daughter and the wife of a wealthy entrepreneur, Melora Hudson seemed happy. No one knew about the secrets hidden behind closed doors—secrets Melora was forced to keep. Now, two years after her husband's disappearance, the truth may be exposed. His body has been found, and everyone has questions. Texas Ranger Daniel Boone Riley comes to find answers, and stays to protect the woman and child who win his heart. But the terror of Melora's past isn't over. Her late husband's old "associates" want her to carry his secrets to her grave.

— ◊ —

Sign up for email newsletters from eHarlequin.com

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 to subscribe for free.

OMN Welcomes Yvonne Eve Walus, Author of the Murder@... Mysteries

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is pleased to welcome Yvonne Eve Walus, whose most recent mystery featuring amateur sleuth Christine Chamberlain is Murder@Play (Echelon Press, March 2010 Kindle Edition).

Today Yvonne writes about how the "Murder@..." series came about.

— ◊ —

Murder @ Play by Yvonne Eve Walus
Photo provided courtesy of Yvonne Eve Walus

I started on poems, short stories and articles. They were just the training tools. Deep inside, I’d always known I wanted to be a Real Writer. (Real Writer, definition: one who writes bestselling novels.)

Because I’m a fan of Agatha Christie and logical puzzles, I chose the cozy mystery genre. The book took a few years to complete. “I have a day job” was my standard excuse, but to be blatantly honest, it was hard work to write 65,000 words all on the same topic ... and it showed!

Nevertheless, it was my book, my very first book, and I was eager to share it with the world.

The world didn’t want it.

“Add more detail,” suggested one of the more helpful agents. I added more detail: descriptions of rooms, the weather, that sort of thing. You know, I simply had no clue!

After two years of approaching every publisher who existed in 1996, I re-read the manuscript. I blushed. I blushed some more. Then I set about correcting the writing style:

• I got rid of all the eyes that were “flying across the room”.
• I did a global search on “ly” and deleted every single adverb.
• I replaced fancy style with simple writing.

By the time I reached the last page, I knew. The book was a dud. Although it read a lot better after the changes, it still lacked sparkle.

I waited a few months and went over the manuscript again. I added some tension, removed the room descriptions, polished the writing style ... And guess what?

It still didn’t work.

So what’s a writer to do? I told myself that at least it had been a learning process, and that fortunately I’m wise enough to know when to quit ... not quit the writing game altogether, just give up on an unusable piece of writing.

(Or so I thought.)

I gritted my teeth and wrote a new book. No, hang on, that sounds a lot easier than it was in reality. Allow me to bullet-point the process:

• I decided that the reason my first manuscript didn’t work, was because I wrote it without an outline, or even the vaguest idea where I was headed. I simply typed “Chapter 1” and waited for inspiration to strike. Of course, this resulted in a lot of going back and forth, changing the twists and merging secondary characters. So for my second book, I decided to write a detailed synopsis before typing “Chapter 1”.

• The detailed synopsis completed, I realised - with horror - that I had no interest in writing the actual book, now that I knew all the high points of the plot and I had solved the who-dun-it part.

• I put the synopsis aside, wrote many more short stories, poems and articles, had a baby, continued to juggle my day job and my family commitments. My life was full to the point of overflowing, yet I was not content. Deep inside, I wanted to be a novelist.

• In the middle of one restless night, with the baby waking up every fifteen minutes, I got up and dusted off the detailed synopsis. Breastfeeding hormones must indeed affect a woman’s brain, for I had absolutely no memory of the book’s plot. Hurray!

• So I wrote the book, in the brief moments free of nappy changes and mashing pumpkin ...

... and this one did get published (“Murder@Work”, Echelon Press).

(I confess, when I got the acceptance letter, I immediately Googled the publisher, convinced it had to be a front for a vanity press. It wasn’t. It was simply a start-up looking for new authors, and I happened to be at the right place at the right time. I couldn’t believe my luck!)

The publication date clashed with the birth of my second child, so I couldn’t make it to the book launch. Nevertheless, the sales were all right, and the publisher asked the all-important question: “Do you have anything else for us?”

Did I? Um, that would be a resounding “no”. Between promoting “Murder@Work”, taking online writing courses and writing short stories, I had yet again forgotten that I was trying to be a novelist, not a short-fictionist. And then there was the day job, of course, and did I mention the baby and the toddler and a needy husband? Darnn!

But wait! There was that old manuscript languishing in the metaphoric drawer. It was my only hope, so I set to work on it once again, employing all the skills I’d learnt over the years. I added emotion, developed the characters into multi-dimensional beings and ensured every page contained tension and at least one power word.

The editor loved it. It didn’t prevent her from going through the contracted manuscript six times ... SIX!!!! ... in the space of three months, ironing out all the gremlins, but she loved reading it every one of those six times, and that must surely say something.

The resulting Murder@Play was published by Echelon Press in August 2009.

The sales were good, but the sad truth about the publishing world today is that you have to generate a buzz about your book until you reach critical mass of sales. After that, it goes viral and everybody rushes to the shop to find out what the hype is all about.

So if you like murder mysteries, please check out mine, and if you enjoy them, tell the world about it! (If you don’t enjoy them, tell the world about it anyway - there is no such thing as bad publicity.) Every reviewer of Murder@Play on Amazon, will get a free copy of Murder@Work.

— ◊ —

Murder @ Play by Yvonne Eve Walus
Kindle Edition

About Murder@Play: In the new free South Africa of 1994, men are still boss, women carry handguns for self-protection, and some mistakes can change your life forever.

When a body is found during their weekend away with friends, Christine Chamberlain must use her brilliant mathematical mind to prove her husband's innocence ...

... whether he's innocent or not.

When it comes to your loved ones, is it possible to know too much?

Murder@Play is available in Kindle Edition at Amazon.com.

Yvonne Eve Walus is a novelist, a mother, a wife, an educator and a project manager. For more information about the author, visit her website or her blog.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Starz to Develop Adaptation of Personal Effects: Dark Art

Personal Effects: Dark Art by J. C. Hutchins and Jordan Weisman
More information about the book

The cable network Starz is developing an original series adapted from the 2009 supernatural thriller Personal Effects: Dark Art by J. C. Hutchins and Jordan Wiesman.

Titled The Brink, the series will follow the extensive notes of art therapist Zach Taylor’s investigation into the life and madness of accused serial killer Martin Grace, a blind audio engineer, who claims to have foreseen, but not caused, his victims’ deaths. Zach’s investigations start with interviews and art sessions, but then take him far from the hospital grounds — and often very far from reality as we know it.

Personal Effects: Dark Art is an "interactive" novel in that readers can interact with the real world. For example, the items among Grace’s personal effects that are the keys to understanding his haunted past, and finding the terrifying truth Grace hoped to keep buried, include a phone number where you can listen to the character's voicemail, look up characters and institutions that have real websites, examine personal artifacts included in the text, and so on.

(Source: Deadline|Hollywood)

Netflix to Acquire House of Cards as its First Original Series

House of Cards by Michael Dobbs

It was just a couple of weeks ago that we reported that Michael Dobbs's political thriller House of Cards was to be adapted for a television series ... though at the time it had not been sold to any network.

Today there's been a surprising development in this project: Netflix -- known primarily for its DVD rental service, and more recently for capturing the lion's share of the online video streaming market -- is set to acquire it as its first original series, besting bids by both HBO and AMC.

House of Cards, published in 1989, is the first in a trilogy of books by Dobbs to feature conservative British politician Francis Urquhart as he schemes to become leader of his party, and ultimately Prime Minister. Kevin Spacey will both executive produce and star, with David Fincher (The Social Network) directing the pilot.

(via Deadline|Hollywood)

Mr. E. Reviews Midsomer Murders Set 17

Midsomer Murders Set 17 (DVD Cover)
Available on
Available on DVDAvailable on Netflix

This collection of four episodes from 2009 offers a glimpse into the mysterious worlds of competitive sport (golf and cricket), world-class art, and high technology, with plenty of motives for murder and opportunities for the Causton CID to solve the crimes. Fans of, and newcomers to, the series will welcome more of the sinister deeds that take place in Midsomer County.

Read the full text of our review at Mr. E. Reviews Midsomer Murders Set 17.

— ◊ —

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

New Red Band Trailer for Blitz, Adapted from the Thriller by Ken Bruen

Blitz (2011)

It's been a while since we've had any news on the film Blitz. Adapted from the thriller by Ken Bruen (also titled Blitz), the fourth in the Tom Brant series, the film stars Jason Statham as Brant, a (according to the tagline) killer-cop on the trail of a cop-killer.

We first learned of the film back in July 2009, and last October posted the international trailer for it. We've now found (via IGN) a red-band trailer (embedded below) that is remarkable for its lack of substance; no lack of violence though. You'd be better off watching the standard trailer to get a sense of what the film is about.

Blitz opens in the UK on May 6th, but there's no word when (or if) the film will be shown in the US.

Pegasus Books Announces New Mystery Imprint, Pegasus Crime

Pegasus Books

Independent publisher Pegasus Books has announced a new imprint dedicated to mysteries, police procedurals, thrillers and suspense novels.

The first title under the Pegasus Crime imprint will be Camilla Läckberg's second mystery to feature Swedish police superintendent Bertil Mellberg, The Preacher, originally published in Sweden in 2004 under the title Predikanten. It will be in bookstores next month.

A mix of 12 hardcovers/trade paperbacks are expected to be published annually. Next up: Holly Luhning’s gothic thriller Quiver in July, and the crime novel Call Me Princess by Sara Blaedel in August.

(via Publishers Weekly)

Harlequin Intrigue Titles for April 2011

eHarlequin.com: Save 20% On Your Order

eHarlequin.com has released the April 2011 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!

For more information about the book from eHarlequin.com, click on the title or cover; other purchase options are also provided.

— ◊ —

Missing by Debra Webb
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Missing by Debra Webb

"I need your help. Please."

And with those words, tough-guy Jonathan Foley melted. It had been years since he'd seen the only woman to climb his wall of solitude…months since he'd joined an elite team of operatives called the Equalizers and hidden away his secrets. But now Melissa Shepherd needed him—and there was no denying her.

Melissa's niece was missing and she knew only Jonathan could see past the lies in her small Alabama hometown and find Polly. Searching alongside the man she'd loved and lost would prove difficult … and downright dangerous. But she'd have to—because for the little girl, time was running out …

— ◊ —

Waterford Point by Alana Matthews
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Waterford Point by Alana Matthews

The perfect getaway was what Rachel Hudson expected, not a real-life mystery that could become her next bestseller. Escaping California for Waterford Point, Maine, was supposed to be all rest and relaxation. But instead of breakfast in bed, Rachel experienced night terrors, and woke to the cries of the Weeping Willow …

Nick Chavaree didn't like two things: chasing ghosts, and out-of-towners snooping around. Rachel didn't want to tangle with the sheriff, but found it hard to stay away. Despite Nick's picture-perfect scowl and reprimands, there was more going on beneath the surface, and it needed further investigation. And what she found was a courageous hero who would give her something better than a storybook ending.

— ◊ —

Hitched and Hunted by Paula Graves
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Hitched and Hunted by Paula Graves

On the day Jake Cooper said "I do" to his beautiful bride, Mariah, their future happiness seemed certain. But Jake always wondered what she wasn't telling him. And what it would take for the truth to come out …

Hoping to build a new life with Jake, Mariah thought she was free of the demons from her past. But when they were kidnapped and held at gunpoint, Mariah knew it was time she came clean—whatever the consequences. Her vow to confess was cut short, though, when bullets started flying and they were forced to run for their lives. Desperate to survive and not fall victim to the man hunting them, Mariah realized just how much she'd gained having Jake in her life. And how much they both had to lose.

— ◊ —

Mountain Ranger Recon by Carol Ericson
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Mountain Ranger Recon by Carol Ericson

Ian Dempsey knew he'd have a lot to answer for when he bumped into Meg, the wife he'd left behind to complete an undercover mission. Nearly three years had passed since he'd last seen her, but she was as beautiful as ever—and as angry. Before he could explain his reasons for temporarily walking away, shots rang out and Ian quickly went from husband to bodyguard. Investigating his enemies would take time. And whether Meg liked it or not, he wouldn't leave her side until he could guarantee her safety. One step back into her life, though, and Ian knew the stakes were even higher. She had a two-year-old son. And he looked exactly like Ian …

— ◊ —

Bulletproof Hearts by Kay Thomas
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

Bulletproof Hearts by Kay Thomas

The discovery that her brother was the victim of a hit-and-run murder leads Abigail Trevor on a deadly hunt for answers—and straight into a killer's web. Her only protection comes from raw instinct, a cryptic video message and a dangerously sexy military bodyguard who seems too good to be true.

Private security specialist Shaun Logan doesn't want to care whether Abby trusts him or not. But in order to protect her, he needs to keep her close—very close. Keeping his hands off the feisty blonde is going to be tough, but he knows it's a line he shouldn't cross. After all, his focus needs to be on the shocking truths he continues to unravel—and the deadly force tracking Abby's every desperate attempt at escape.

— ◊ —

GI Cowboy by Delores Fossen
Amazon.com (print and/or Kindle editions)Barnes & Noble (print and/or NookBook editions)

GI Cowboy by Delores Fossen

Battered ex-soldier Parker McKenna is facing his riskiest mission yet: guarding Bailey Lockhart. Returning to civilian life hasn't been easy, but Parker's new job with Corps Security and Investigations gives him purpose again—if he can keep Bailey alive. The privileged governor's daughter has been receiving threats—and they've just escalated into dangerous territory. Someone close to her wants her dead. Parker can handle any adversary, but handling Bailey proves more difficult—the stubborn, independent beauty stirs the passion Parker had thought long buried. Passion has no place in war, and the enemy is always watching, waiting. Now with desire blurring his objectivity, Parker must face the fact that the greatest danger to Bailey just may be him …

— ◊ —

Sign up for email newsletters from eHarlequin.com

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 to subscribe for free.

Omnimystery Blog Archive

Total Pageviews (last 30 days)

Omnimystery News
Original Content Copyright © 2022 — Omnimystery, a Family of Mystery Websites — All Rights Reserved
Guest Post Content (if present) Copyright © 2022 — Contributing Author — All Rights Reserved