Tuesday, June 14, 2011

OMN Welcomes Clark Lohr, Author of the Crime Novel Devil's Kitchen

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is pleased to welcome Clark Lohr, whose debut mystery, Devil's Kitchen (Dark Oak Mysteries, June 2011 Trade Paperback, 978-1-61009-012-4), introduces Arizona detective Manual Aguilar.

Today, Clark writes about the border environment in which he has set his book.

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Devil's Kitchen by Clark Lohr
Photo provided courtesy of
Clark Lohr

Manuel Aguilar, my detective hero in Devil’s Kitchen, is, ethnically, what is sometimes called a Mexican-American — a misnomer, considering that most of his ancestors have lived in Arizona, not Mexico, far longer than any Anglo-American. Aguilar would not care to be singled out for his ethnicity, nor does he spend any time worrying about it. He is a middle-class person. He thinks like the American detective that he is — and yet he has a disowned part of his psyche into which only Reina, his passionate, intuitive lover, can guide him.

Manuel Aguilar’s story begins with what he thinks is a routine murder investigation, a human head found in a Pima County landfill. This investigation will lead Manuel Aguilar to the doorsteps of powerful men, lords of the border, who expand their fortunes and protect themselves from consequences by purchasing politicians and police, enslaving other human beings, and destroying those who oppose them.

I began the process of writing Devil’s Kitchen after reading about a human head found in a Pima County landfill, left there by a killer who hoped to get the victim’s retirement checks. A decapitation — an unusual news story at the time. Not now, though. Not in the 21st Century world of the US-Mexico border, where, on the Mexican border and in Mexico itself, there have been some 40,000 drug related murders over a five year period. Mutilations accompanied many of these murders.

In fiction, Place is Character and the Arizona-Mexico borderlands answer to that dictum. Southern Arizona is a landscape of deserts and mountains and it is famous for the Saguaro Cactus. In southwestern Arizona, where elevations go below 1,000 feet, the ground temperature can hit 130 degrees in summer. In south-central and southeastern Arizona, mountain ranges called Sky Islands rise 10,000 feet above the hostile desert floor and are so isolated from each other that animal species, unique to only one sky island, sometimes appear. If you live in an Arizona city like Tucson or Phoenix, you may never know any of this — but you will know the crime that moves from these borderlands to your cities.

In the totality of this environment, we have a war. Casualties include not just US law enforcement officers and drug and human smugglers, but so-called “crossers”, people walking into the US to get work. The Coalicion de Derechos Humanos currently lists over 2,192 “recovered remains” found in the Arizona borderlands since the year 2000. Robert Krentz, whose family has ranched the borderlands for a hundred years, was a recent American victim, shot on his own land by an unknown person. The killer’s tracks led into Mexico. Opinions vary about who is to blame for this war. Either way, it’s brutal, Americans are largely unaware of it, and there’s no end in sight.

This is the milieu in which my heroes operate. Manny Aguilar, the detective; Reina, a whip smart, wisecracking paralegal; Jeff Goldman, a ponytailed criminal defense attorney whose cynical manner belies his outrage at corruption and injustice; and Johnny Oaks, a Cherokee private investigator who knows his way around a sniper rifle. Together, they take on the bad guys, unravel a complex conspiracy, and ride to a border showdown in Arizona’s remote Skeleton Canyon.

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Clark Lohr comes from a Montana farm and ranch background. He attended a one-room school through the eighth grade. Most of his friends were old men who told good stories. He is a Vietnam vet and a member of Veterans for Peace. Lohr has drifted considerably in his life, working a variety of dead end jobs. He has traveled in Asia, Europe and Central America, and is trained as a photographer.

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Devil's Kitchen by Clark Lohr

About Devil's Kitchen: Pima County Sheriff's Detective Manuel Aguilar investigates an apparently routine murder and soon finds himself in the middle of a hellish conspiracy spanning both sides of the border.

Devil's Kitchen is published as a Trade Paperback.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Tom Cruise to Play Jack Reacher?

One Shot by Lee Child

We typically don't report on what might happen in Hollywood; after all, what is confirmed so frequently changes that it's hard to keep up!

Still, this bit of potential (emphasize potential) casting news has us intrigued.

Tom Cruise may play the role of Jack Reacher in the film adaptation of Lee Child's One Shot, the fifth thriller to feature the ex-military investigator. Noting that Cruise is nothing physically like the man depicted in the books, Child said, when supporting the actor for the role, "Reacher's size in the books is a metaphor for an unstoppable force, which Cruise portrays in his own way."

Christopher McQuarrie is on board to direct his own screenplay adaptation, which is set to film in Pittsburgh.

About One Shot: Six shots. Five dead. One heartland city thrown into a state of terror. But within hours the cops have it solved: a slam-dunk case. Except for one thing. The accused man says: You got the wrong guy. Then he says: Get Reacher for me.

And sure enough, Jack Reacher is coming. He knows this shooter — a trained military sniper who never should have missed a shot. Reacher is certain something is not right — and soon the slam-dunk case explodes.

Now Reacher is teamed with a beautiful young defense lawyer, moving closer to the unseen enemy who is pulling the strings. Reacher knows that no two opponents are created equal. This one has come to the heartland from his own kind of hell. And Reacher knows that the only way to take him down is to match his ruthlessness and cunning — and then beat him shot for shot.

(Source: Deadline|New York.)

Telemystery: Pretty Little Liars Returns for a Second Season Tuesday, June 14th on ABC Family

Telemystery: Mystery and Suspense on Television

Also premiering tomorrow, Tuesday June 14th, is the second season of Pretty Little Liars on ABC Family (8 PM ET/PT).

Rosewood is such a perfect little town that you'd never guess it holds so many secrets. Some of the ugliest ones belong to the prettiest girls in town — Aria, Spencer, Hanna and Emily — four estranged friends whose darkest secrets are about to unravel.

One year ago, their friend Alison disappeared and the girls swore they'd never tell what really happened that night. They thought their secrets would bond them together, but just the opposite happened. Then again, who's to say what the truth is in Rosewood. It seems everyone in town is lying about something.

Now, as the mystery surrounding Alison's disappearance resurfaces, the girls are getting messages from "A," saying — and threatening — things only Alison would know. But it couldn't be Alison. Could it? Whoever it is, they seem to know all the girls' secrets, and seem to be watching their every move. The girls are friends again, but will they be there for each other if their dark secrets come to light?

In the second season opener, titled "It's Alive", Aria, Emily, Hanna and Spencer have a lot of explaining to do when Spencer's brother-in-law Ian goes missing and the entire town of Rosewood is questioning what exactly happened the night before at the church. But with the police and their parents not quite sure what to believe, the girls' parents rally together to try and help the four out with the assistance of a therapist. Now being forced to talk out their problems, Aria, Emily, Hanna and Spencer feel more alone than ever. Even with a reassurance that everything they discuss won't leave the therapist's office, is this the person the Liars can finally tell about "A?"

Telemystery: Second Season of Memphis Beat Premieres Tuesday, June 14th, on TNT

Telemystery: Mystery and Suspense on Television

The second season of Memphis Beat premieres tomorrow, Tuesday June 14th, on TNT.

Jason Lee stars as Memphis police detective Dwight Hendricks, a southern gentleman who is protective of his fellow citizens, reverential of the city's history, and deeply rooted in its blues music scene.

In the second-season opener, titled "At the River", the squad is plunged into a case involving the death of an admired police officer who may have been involved with a white supremacist group. The case hits home for Dwight, who relates to the son of the officer left behind. It also introduces Dwight to Claire Ryan (guest star Beau Garrett), a tough investigator from Internal Affairs. Meanwhile, Lt. Tanya Rice (Alfre Woodard) starts riding Charlie "Whitehead" White (Sam Hennings) about taking the lieutenant's exam, but her reasons for wanting him to pass aren't exactly a vote of confidence.

Watch a recap of the first season below.

AMC Renews The Killing for a Second Season

The Killing (AMC)

With just one episode remaining in its stellar first season, AMC has -- finally -- renewed its murder mystery series The Killing for a second season.

The series, based on the Danish crime drama Forbrydelsen, which is producing its third season, stars Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman as Seattle homicide detectives investigating the murder of a teenage girl.

"The suspense of the investigation in each episode, and the emotional intensity of the characters over the season give this show a visceral quality that makes for incredibly powerful television," said Joel Stillerman, AMC Senior Vice-President of Original Programming, Production and Digital Content. "A lot of loyal fans made a huge investment in this show this season, and we are thrilled to be able to bring it back next season for all involved."

The Killing airs its thrilling conclusion this coming Sunday, June 19th, on AMC.

(Source: The Hollywood Reporter.)

Winner of the 2011 CWA Young Crime Writers Competition Announced

Crime Writers Association

National Crime Writing Week is underway in the UK and started with the announcement of the winner of the 2011 CWA Young Crime Writers Competition: 16-year-old Claudia Hyde for her story "A Cushion Out of Place", which you can read online. Congratulations!

For more information about the events going on this week all across the UK, visit the organization's website.

Telemystery: The Glades and Sergeant Cribb, New This Week on DVD

Telemystery, the most complete selection of detective, amateur sleuth, private investigator, and suspense television mystery series now available or coming soon to DVD

Telemystery, your source for one of the most comprehensive listings of crime drama, amateur sleuth, private investigator, mystery and suspense television series, mini-series and made-for-television movies, now available on or coming soon to DVD or Blu-ray disc, is profiling two series being released this week.

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The Glades: Season One, a Mystery TV Series
The Glades: Season One on DVD The Glades: Season One on VOD (Video on Demand) The Glades: Season One on itunes

It's sunny with a chance of homicide in The Glades.

Matt Passmore stars as Jim Longworth, an attractive, brilliant, yet hard to get along with homicide detective from Chicago who is forced into exile after being wrongfully accused of sleeping with his former captain's wife. Longworth relocates to the sleepy, middle-of-nowhere town of Palm Glade, Florida, where the sunshine and golf are plentiful and crime is seemingly at a minimum. But this town outside the Florida Everglades isn't quite as idyllic as he thought, as he finds people keep turning up murdered. Each case pulls Longworth off the golf course and reluctantly into his element as one of the sharpest homicide detectives in the field.

The Glades: Season One is available on DVD, Amazon Instant, and iTunes (click on the icons above for more details), and consists of 13 episodes that aired on A&E from July through October 2010.

The series' second season is currently airing on Sundays on the cable network.

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Sergeant Cribb: The Complete Series, a Mystery TV Series
Sergeant Cribb: The Complete Series on DVD

Based on a character created by crime novelist Peter Lovesey, Sergeant Cribb stars Alan Dobie as the titular character, a Victorian England-era detective with the newly formed Scotland Yard CID.

Wearing his trademark bowler hat and squeaky boots, and with little support of his efforts from his superiors, Cribb relies on his own shrewdness and the plodding assistance of Constable Thackeray (played by William Simons) to expose the vile deeds of London's criminals.

Sergeant Cribb: The Complete Series is available on DVD (click on the icon above for more details), and consists of 14 episodes -- some of which were adapted directly from Lovesey's mysteries -- that originally aired in the UK during 1980 and 1981 under the title Cribb.

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Visit the Telemystery website to discover more television mystery series currently available on and coming soon to DVD, Blu-ray disc, or video on demand.

Mystery Godoku Puzzle for June 13, 2011

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!).

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Mystery Godoku Puzzle for June 13, 2011

This week's letters and mystery clue:

A E F I R S T V W

James R. Benn’s second Billy Boyle WWII mystery has this title (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!

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Review: Felicity's Gate by Julian Cole

Felicity's Gate by Julian Cole

Felicity's Gate by Julian Cole. A Rounder Brothers Mystery. Minotaur Books Hardcover, May 2011.

There's a potentially interesting cat-and-mouse dynamic buried within the pages of this novel -- a murder mystery it really isn't -- but it's completely overshadowed by lengthy discourses on interpersonal relationships and a substantial subplot involving infidelity.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: Felicity's Gate by Julian Cole.

Purchase Options: Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition | Barnes&Noble Print and/or Nook Book Edition | Apple iTunes/iBooks Edition | Kobo eBook

Read the first chapter(s) of Felicity's Gate below. Use the Aa settings button to adjust text size, line spacing, and word density.

Fire and Ice by Dana Stabenow is Today's Featured Free iBook Mystery

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature a mystery title that is currently available as an Apple iBook for free from iTunes. We don't know how long it will be offered at this special price (typically only until a certain number of downloads have been completed), so download it today!

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Fire and Ice by Dana Stabenow
More Information About Fire and Ice by Dana Stabenow

Fire and Ice by Dana Stabenow
A Liam Campbell Mystery (1st in series)
Dutton (iBook)
Download Link

About Fire and Ice (from the publisher): Alaska State Trooper Liam Campbell, demoted and reassigned to the remote bush town of Newenham, literally steps off the plane into a murder scene. Dealing with death is never simple, but when the woman leaning over the body proves to be Liam's old flame, it’s evident that his new job is about to become much more complicated. Of course, small town tensions tend to simmer just beneath the surface, and murder, once done, has a tendency to happen again ...

Friday, June 10, 2011

Risk, the Classic Board Game, being Adapted for Film

Risk (game)

Risk, the classic game of global domination from Parker Brothers, is being adapted into a theatrical film. Columbia Pictures is developing an action thriller based on the game and has hired John Hlavin to write the screenplay.

Risk was originally released as a board game in 1957 as La Conquête du Monde ("The Conquest of the World") in France by Albert Lamorisse -- ironically, a filmmaker himself -- reaching the US two years later. Since then multiple variations have been released, including several electronic, the most recent probably being an app for the iPad.

We've spent many an hour playing Risk in days gone by, and are most interested in how a film adaption would play out (as it were).

(Source: The Hollywood Reporter)

Mystery Bestsellers for the Week Ending June 10th, 2011

Bestselling Hardcover Mystery Books

A list of the top 15 mystery hardcover bestsellers for the week ending June 10th, 2011 has been posted by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books.

Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris remains in the top spot ... and, indeed, there were actually no changes in the top 10 this week, save for some minor shuffling in the order.

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Hell Is Empty by Craig Johnson
More information about the book

Though not a part of the top 15, our usual cut-off for featured new titles, Hell Is Empty, the 7th Walt Longmire mystery by Craig Johnson, is the highest placing new title at number 19.

Well-read and world-weary, Sheriff Walt Longmire has been maintaining order in Wyoming's Absaroka County for more than thirty years, but he is now pushed to his limits.

Raynaud Shade, an adopted Crow Indian, has just confessed to murdering a boy ten years ago and burying him deep within the Big Horn Mountains. After transporting Shade and a group of other convicted murderers through a snowstorm, Walt is informed by the FBI that the body is buried in his jurisdiction-and the victim's name is White Buffalo. Guided only by Indian mysticism and a battered paperback of Dante's Inferno, Walt pursues Shade and his fellow escapees into the icy hell of the Cloud Peak Wilderness Area, cheating death to ensure that justice-both civil and spiritual-is served.

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For more mystery books news, please visit the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, where we are committed to providing readers and collectors of mystery books with the best and most current information about their favorite authors, titles, and series.

Thursday, June 09, 2011

Nominees for the 2011 Nero Award Announced

Mystery Book Awards

The nominees for the 2011 Nero Award have been announced by the Nero Wolfe Society, recognizing excellence in the mystery genre. The winner of the award will be announced at the Black Orchid Banquet, which is traditionally held on the first Saturday in December in New York City.

The nominees are ...

Ice Cold by Tess Gerritsen Review of Ice Cold by Tess Gerritsen (Ballantine)
The Book of Spies by Gayle Lynds (St. Martin's Press)
Bury Your Dead by Louise Penny (Minotaur Books)
The Midnight Show Murders by Al Roker (Delacorte Press)
Think of a Number by John Verdon (Crown Books)

Mysterious Reviews indicates a review is available from Mysterious Reviews.

(Hat tip to The Rap Sheet.)

Paul Levine to Donate Proceeds from Sale of Legal Thriller to Children's Cancer Fund

Flesh & Bones by Paul Levine

We were delighted to receive an e-mail from crime novelist Paul Levine letting us know that he is once again providing the royalties from the sale one of his legal thrillers to the Four Diamonds Fund, which supports cancer treatment for kids at the Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital.

For a limited time, the 7th book in his Jake Lassiter series, Flesh & Bones, is available for just 99 cents. And by purchasing and downloading it, you're helping fund pediatric cancer research and treatment.

You can use these links to purchase the book: Kindle edition from Amazon.com, Nook Book edition from Barnes & Noble, or multiple ebook formats from Smashwords.

Last year, according to Paul, thousands of dollars were raised for the fund from the sale of To Speak for the Dead, the first book in the Jake Lassiter series. We were happy to support that effort as well, and are so pleased to know that it was such a success.

About Flesh & Bones: "I was sitting at the end of the bar sipping single-malt Scotch when I spotted the tall blond woman with the large green eyes and the small gray gun."

The next thing Jake Lassiter knows, the woman pumps three bullets into the man on the next barstool.

And Jake, the linebacker-turned-lawyer, has a new client.

She's stunning model Chrissy Bernhardt, and the dead man is her wealthy father. The defense? Chrissy claims that she's recently recovered repressed memories of having been sexually abused by her father. Jake wants to believe her but suspects that the memories were either implanted by a shady psychiatrist or fabricated by Chrissy herself. Complicating the situation, Jake falls for his client, clouding his judgment.

Is she an anguished victim or a cold-blooded killer? And what about her brother, who stands to inherit a fortune if Chrissy goes to prison? Jake wades into a quagmire of dirty water deals, big money, and family corruption, all leading to an explosive finale.

Review: Hit or Missus by Gayle Carline

Hit or Missus by Gayle Carline

Hit or Missus by Gayle Carline. A Peri Minneopa Mystery. CreateSpace Trade Paperback, May 2011.

This multi-genre mystery blends a straight PI investigation with a little chick lit and a touch of cozy, and features an appealing, 50-something sleuth whose life experience provides her with an eye for detail and an edge in knowing where to find the skeletons in family closets.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: Hit or Missus by Gayle Carline.

Purchase Options: Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition | Barnes&Noble Print and/or Nook Book Edition

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