Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Mysteries by Laurence Shames and Kathy Hogan Trocheck, Now in eBook Format

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

We've discovered another batch of out-of-print series mysteries that have been newly reissued as ebooks. (To be fair, it looks like some of these may have been out a year or more and we're only now coming across them.)

From 1992 through 2000, Laurence Shames wrote eight "Key West" comic mysteries, the series theme here being the location rather than a recurring character.

In the mid-1990s, Kathy Hogan Trocheck, author of the Callahan Garrity mysteries, wrote two books featuring another character, Truman Kicklighter, an ex-AP reporter. This series is also set in Florida, though a little further up the west coast in the Tampa/St. Pete area.

All eight books are $2.99 each, though Amazon currently has them discounted to $2.51.

Important Note: The titles listed below were available for $2.99 or less as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

— ◊ —

Florida Straits by Laurence ShamesFlorida Straits 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (1st)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Scavenger Reef by Laurence ShamesScavenger Reef 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (2nd)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Sunburn by Laurence ShamesSunburn 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (3rd)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Tropical Depression by Laurence ShamesTropical Depression 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (4th)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Virgin Heat by Laurence ShamesVirgin Heat 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (5th)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Mangrove Squeeze by Laurence ShamesMangrove Squeeze 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (6th)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Welcome to Paradise by Laurence ShamesWelcome to Paradise 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (7th)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

The Naked Detective by Laurence ShamesThe Naked Detective 
Laurence Shames
Series: A "Key West" Mystery (8th)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Lickety-Split by Kathy Hogan TrocheckLickety-Split 
Kathy Hogan Trocheck
Series: A Truman Kicklighter Mystery (1st)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Crash Course by Kathy Hogan TrocheckCrash Course 
Kathy Hogan Trocheck
Series: A Truman Kicklighter Mystery (2nd)

Amazon Kindle Book
Apple iBookKobo eBook

Today's Bestselling Free Kindle MystereBooks (120710)

MysterEbooks: Mystery, Suspense and Thriller eBooks

Here is today's list of the top bestselling free Kindle mysteries, suspense novels and thrillers.

We're using a script to embed an RSS feed from Amazon.com, which is updated hourly, but if you cannot see the box below — or have scripts blocked — you can use this link to see the relevant page on Amazon.com.

Meet the Detectives of Copper

Copper (BBC America, August 2012)

There have been a number of promotional videos for the new BBC America historical crime drama Copper, with this latest one focusing squarely on the cops and the actors, who play them.

"If Corcoran, Maguire and O'Brien were around today doing what they do, they'd be out of jobs quicker than anybody!" says Tom Weston-Jones, who plays Kevin Corcoran, the lead "copper" in the series. "Kevin Corcoran is just like the Super Cop," adds Dylan Taylor, who plays Detective Andrew O'Brien. "In 1864, the Five Points New York, you don't want to be on the end of [Corcoran]'s overhand-right!"

Set in 1860s New York City, Copper follows Corcoran as he struggles to maintain his moral compass in a turbulent world while on an emotional and relentless quest to learn the truth about the disappearance of his wife and the death of his daughter.

Watch the latest video below. You can find more videos on the BBC America YouTube channel.

Michael Connelly Developing TV Crime Drama based on Harry Bosch Mysteries

The Black Echo by Michael Connelly

Crime novelist Michael Connelly has teamed up with Eric Overmyer to bring his "Harry Bosch" mysteries to television. The proposed series will be produced by Fuse Entertainment, the same company behind The Killing and Burn Notice.

"There is so much Bosch material available that I've felt for a long time that the best way to maintain the integrity of the character would be to take him to television where some of the best character stuff is being done right now," said Connelly in a statement. "I love The Killing and I think teaming with Fuse and a writer of the quality and accomplishment of Eric is a fantastic combination."

Hieronymus "Harry" Bosch, a detective with the LAPD, was introduced in the 1992 mystery The Black Echo, which went on to win Connelly an Edgar Award for Best First Novel. Sixteen novels have followed with the 18th in the series, The Black Box, to be published this coming November.

Harry's half-brother, attorney Mickey Haller, was featured in the film adaptation of the first book in another series of crime novels by Connelly, The Lincoln Lawyer. A television series adaptation is currently in development at ABC.

Janet Hannah: Mystery Time (excerpt)

Omnimystery News: Guest Author Post

We are delighted today to feature an excerpt from mystery author Janet Hannah's third Alex Kertész mystery, Mystery Time (Outskirts Press, May 2012 trade paperback and ebook editions). The previous two titles in the series are The Wish to Kill (2002) and Murder with a French Accent (2009).

Alex Kertész is a multi-lingual microbiologist, a research scientist working at the University of Jerusalem. The present novel opens with him attending a conference in Prague.

— ◊ —

From Chapter One …

 "Scheisse!" the blond lady exploded into the microphone. It was German and it meant "shit!" Embarrassed laughter rippled through the audience that filled the main hall of the convention center in Prague.
 Professor Hildegard Kraus was chairperson for this plenary session on the first evening of the International Congress of Molecular Biology. The third speaker had just mounted to the stage, staggering comically on the last of the five steps. He had reached the lectern and Hildegard had stepped toward him to attach the tiny microphone to his lapel. Then he toppled over on her.
 She was a tall, strong woman, but the heavy weight almost knocked her down. Reflexively throwing her arms around him, she felt a suspicious dampness in the middle of his back.
 "Can someone — ?" she said hopefully in the direction of the audience.
 Alex Kertész, scheduled to be the fifth speaker of the evening, was sitting in the second row near the aisle so it took him only a few seconds to reach the stage. As he relieved Hildegard of her burden he noted the dark stain on the back of the man's jacket.
 There was a door on the right, toward the rear of the stage. With Hildegard's help he carried the man into a small store room. It was empty except for one old wooden chair so he laid the body on the floor, using his folded jacket as a pillow. The man who at this moment was lying on the dusty floor instead of presenting a scientific report was a burly middle aged American named Bernard Green.
 Green moved his head fitfully from side to side. "Joe? Joe?" he murmured.
 Alex leaned over him to hear better. "Joe Klein? Did he do this to you?"
 He could barely hear the answer.
 "Purple socks," Green whispered. Those were his last words.
 Hildegard and Alex looked at each other blankly.
 "Purple socks?" Hildegard repeated.
 Alex envisioned remembering those words at odd moments for the rest of his life. There was no way he would ever be able to figure out what Bernie meant, and also no way he would ever be able to forget it.
 Hildegard asked one of the local people who was sitting in the front row to call an ambulance, then went back to the microphone on the lectern to ask for any medical doctor to please present himself. A small, balding German with thick glasses came forward and she led him into the storeroom.
 She and Alex waited in silence while the doctor examined the injured man. After a minute he stood up, dusting his trouser legs.
 "He's dead", he confirmed to Hildegard in German. "Someone stuck a knife in his back, I would say."
 The three of them waited for the ambulance, Hildegard sitting on the chair, Alex sitting on the floor with his back against a wall, and the doctor standing uncomfortably near the door.
 In a room containing Hildegard Alex usually found his glance returning to her, even when there was more choice than at present. She sat very straight with her hands in her lap, shapely legs together, every golden hair in place. She was wearing a tailored white linen suit and a navy blue silk blouse. It didn't sound like anything special, but on her the whole was more than the sum of the parts. There was some silver mixed with the gold in her hair now, but at fifty-one she was still beautiful.
 He knew her exact age because they had submitted three grant applications together in the six years since they first met. Two of the grants had come through, an impressive statistic. The curriculum vita she attached to these proposals said that she had been born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, that she had studied at the University of Frankfurt and received her doctoral degree at Heidelberg. She had done a post-doctoral fellowship at Oxford and was now back at Heidelberg as a full professor.
 She had similar information about him. His résumé said that he had been born thirty-eight years ago in Budapest, Hungary. Actually it was still the Hungarian People's Republic when he was born there, but he never wrote it that way. He had studied at the Sorbonne and the University of Jerusalem and done post-doctoral research at Stanford, in the U.S.A. He was currently an associate professor in Jerusalem.
 You might think that they must know each other very well after six years of working together, but you would be wrong. Most of their cooperation consisted of summaries of experiments e-mailed back and forth. Reports and grant applications were also prepared mostly over the internet, with an occasional phone call to settle some point. They generally met face to face only once a year, at a meeting where they would find some time to sit down with other members of their lab groups for a couple of hours to discuss work.
 There had been only one occasion for a more personal sort of interaction, and that was during the conference in Athens when they met for the first time, when they spent a day sightseeing together.
 That it was just the two of them was accidental, since Hildegard had invited Alex to join her student and herself on the outing so that the three of them could discuss his work, but the student had overindulged in ouzo at the Plaka tavernas the night before and never made it.
 Alex had enjoyed both the sightseeing and Hildegard's company, and they had spent enough time talking shop to outline plans to work together. As it happened, he also learned that the regal German professor could be impulsive enough to drive her big Mercedes into an awkward spot. And Hildegard had an opportunity to note that if she found herself in such a spot, the easy-going young man with the interesting research had steady enough nerves to help her out of it.
 Hildegard wasn't looking at anyone. She was staring at a point on the wall opposite her chair, and might be thinking of nothing. Alex knew that wasn't the case. As one of the organizers of the meeting, she would be working through the necessary steps to be taken as a result of this terrible event.
 In fact, at that moment she was thinking that someone would have to notify Bernie's family. Was he married? Joe Klein would probably know. They had sometimes worked together before they became such bitter enemies. The friendship broke up when Joe told Bernie about a particular experiment he had done. He didn't think the results were interesting. But Bernie thought they were and pursued the line of research to make an important discovery. At least, that was Bernie's version. Joe claimed that Bernie stole the idea from a grant proposal of his that was sent to him for review.
 Alex's eyes rested on Hildegard, but he too was thinking about Bernie, a clever and likable man. Poor fellow, to come all the way to Prague to be murdered. Did he even know anyone in this city? It would be an extreme case of bad luck, to be the random target of a homicidal local criminal after just one day in a strange city. The other possibility was that the murderer had arrived at the same time as Bernie, to attend this meeting.
 By being murdered so far from home Bernie had made it almost too easy for the police – they could rule out jealous husbands, jilted lovers, or anyone who might profit from Bernie's death, unless they were also among the five hundred or so people who were attending the meeting. Of course, there might be a jealous husband or jilted lover among them, though it was hard to see how anyone here would profit from Bernie's death.
 But why beat the bushes for theoretical candidates when they had Joe Klein, who had expressed the wish to kill Bernie with some regularity? The only problem - it was hard to believe that Joe was serious. The whole feud seemed more like an act, with Joe playing to the audience and Bernie pressed into the role of straight man. On the other hand, Bernie's next to last words were, "Joe, Joe". Then, unfortunately, he had said, "purple socks".

— ◊ —

Janet Hannah was born in Toronto and earned a doctorate in biochemistry from Rutgers University. She currently lives in Jerusalem. You can learn more about the author and her books by visiting her website, MurderWithAFrenchAccent.com.

— ◊ —

Mystery Time by Janet Hannah

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition

Barnes&Noble Print Edition and/or Nook Book

About Mystery Time:

In a para-psychological adventure that starts in Prague and ends in Heidelberg, Hungarian born Alex Kertész and his German colleague, Professor Hildegard Kraus, settle into their seats at a scientific congress one evening to listen to an American microbiologist begin his lecture. The man gets up on the stage, but instead of speaking, he drops dead.

While Alex and Hildegard are wondering if one of the other scientists assembled in the hall is the killer, Hildegard discovers her watch, a treasured family keepsake with an intriguing history, has been taken. They conjecture that the murderer is also the thief, and so begins their suspense filled attempt to solve this double mystery.

Film Adaptation of Agatha Christie's Crooked House: Production, Distribution Update

Crooked House by Agatha Christie

The last we heard from the studio developing a film adaptation of Agatha Christie's Crooked House was May 2011, when some of the names in the all-star cast was announced.

We were beginning to think the project had possibly been abandoned … but now we're learning (via The Hollywood Reporter) that it hasn't, and that Sony has picked up the distribution rights for the US and Canada.

Production still hasn't begun, though it is expected to start this fall in London. (Of course, in May 2011 production was supposed to start in Summer 2011.) We have no updated information on the cast.

The storyline follows three generations of Leonides, one big Anglo-Greek family, are living happily in a sprawling, ramshackle mansion. That is until the head of the household, Aristide, is murdered with a fatal barbiturate injection. Suspicion naturally falls on the old man's young widow, fifty years his junior. But the murderer has not reckoned with the tenacity of Charles Hayward, fiancé of Sophia, the late millionaire's granddaughter, who must find the killer before he can marry her.

Neil LaBute will direct the adapted screenplay co-written with Julian Fellowes (Gosford Park) and Tim Rose Price.

Interrupted Aria by Beverle Graves Myers is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Interrupted Aria by Beverle Graves Myers as today's third free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

— ◊ —

Interrupted Aria by Beverle Graves Myers

Interrupted Aria by Beverle Graves Myers
A Tito Amato Mystery
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press

This is the first mystery to feature the sleuthing opera singer.

About Interrupted Aria (from the publisher): Venice, 1731. Opera is the popular entertainment of the day and the castrati are its reigning divas. Tito Amato, mutilated as a boy to preserve his enchanting soprano voice, returns to the city of his birth with his friend Felice, a castrato whose voice has failed.

Disaster strikes Tito's opera premier when the singer loses one beloved friend to poison and another to unjust accusation and arrest. Alarmed that the merchant-aristocrat who owns the theater is pressing the authorities to close the case, Tito races the executioner to find the real killer. The possible suspects could people the cast of one of his operas: a libertine nobleman and his spurned wife, a jealous soprano, an ambitious composer, and a patrician family bent on the theater's ruin.

With carnival gaiety swirling around him and rousing Venetian passions to an ominous crescendo, Tito finds that the most astonishing secrets lurk behind the masks of his own family and friends.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Apple iBook Apple iBook Download Link (via iTunes).

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Waking Lazarus by T. L. Hines is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Waking Lazarus by T. L. Hines as today's second free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

— ◊ —

Waking Lazarus by T. L. Hines

Waking Lazarus by T. L. Hines
Publisher: Bethany House

In the summary of our review for this novel, we said, "There are many literary reasons to pick up a copy of this book. Foremost among them, Hines is a gifted writer and Waking Lazarus is a fine example of inspirational mystery fiction."

About Waking Lazarus (from the publisher): Jude Allman became famous as the man who died and came back to life three times. Now he’s a recluse, hiding from the world in the deep forests of Montana.

But when children around him begin disappearing, his days of hiding are over. Only Jude has the key to stopping the abductions — hidden inside the mysteries of his own deaths. Now he must face the questions that have haunted him. What if his deaths aren’t just accidents? What if there’s a reason behind it all? What if he’s been brought back just for this moment?

Read our review of Waking Lazarus by T. L. Hines.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Kindle Book Amazon Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

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