Thursday, March 14, 2013

MystereBooks: Delirious by Daniel Palmer, Now at a Special Price

Delirious by Daniel Palmer

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Delirious by Daniel Palmer, now available at a special price, courtesy of the publisher, Pinnacle.

The ebook format of this title was priced at $2.99 from the listed vendors (below) as of the date and time of this post (03/14/2013 at 12:30 PM ET). 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.

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Delirious by Daniel Palmer

Delirious by Daniel Palmer
Publisher: Pinnacle

Charlie Giles is at the top of his game. An electronics superstar, he's sold his startup to a giant Boston firm, where he's now senior director. He's treated like a VIP everywhere he goes … until everything in Charlie's neatly ordered world starts to go terrifyingly wrong.

Charlie's prestigious job and his inventions are wrenched away from him. His family is targeted, and his former employers are dying gruesomely, picked off one by one. Every shred of evidence points to Charlie as a cold-blooded killer. And soon he is unable to tell whether he's succumbed to the pressures of work and become the architect of his own destruction … or whether he's the victim of a relentless, diabolical attack. Now he must save his own life — all the while realizing that nothing can be trusted, least of all his own fractured mind …

Amazon Kindle Book  Apple iBook

Important Note: This book was listed at the above mentioned price 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.

The Mystery Bookshelf: Gone Missing by Linda Castillo: A Kate Burkholder Mystery

The Mystery Bookshelf: New Mystery,  Suspense and Thriller Books

The Mystery Bookshelf, where you can discover a world of mystery and suspense, is pleased to feature a new crime novel we recently received from the publisher.

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Gone Missing by Linda Castillo

Gone Missing by Linda Castillo
A Kate Burkholder Mystery (4th in series)
Minotaur Books (Trade Paperback)
Publication Date: March 2013
ISBN-13: 978-1-250-02222-6

About Gone Missing (from the publisher): Rumspringa is the time when Amish teens are allowed to experience life without the rules. It's an exciting time of personal discovery and growth before committing to the church. But when a young teen disappears without a trace, the carefree fun comes to an abrupt and sinister end, and fear spreads through the community like a contagion.

A missing child is a nightmare to all parents, and never more so than in the Amish community, where family ties run deep. When the search for the presumed runaway turns up a dead body, the case quickly becomes a murder investigation. And chief of Police Kate Burkholder knows that in order to solve this case she will have to call upon everything she has to give not only as a cop, but as a woman whose own Amish roots run deep.

Kate and state agent, John Tomasetti, delve into the lives of the missing teen and discover links to cold cases that may go back years. But will Kate piece together all the parts of this sinister puzzle in time to save the missing teen and the Amish community from a devastating fate? Or will she find herself locked in a fight to the death with a merciless killer?

Purchase Options for Gone Missing:

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition  Barnes&Noble Print and/or Nook Book edition  iBookstore (iTunes)  Kobo eBooks

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About the author: Linda Castillo lives in Texas with her husband and is currently at work on her next book in this series, also set in Amish Country and featuring Chief of Police Kate Burkholder. The first book in the series, Sworn To Silence, was adapted for a Lifetime Television movie starring Neve Campbell as Kate Burkholder. Visit Linda's website at LindaCastillo.com for more information about the author and her books.

A Conversation with Mystery Author Bruce Wetterau

Omnimystery News: Author Interview
with Bruce Wetterau

We are delighted to welcome novelist Bruce Wetterau to Omnimystery News today.

Bruce's new mystery adventure is Lost Treasure (CreateSpace, December 2012 trade paperback and ebook formats), introducing ex-Army Ranger Clay Cantrell.

We recently had a chance to talk to Bruce about his new series.

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Omnimystery News: Why did you decide to create a series character for Lost Treasure?

Bruce Wetterau
Photo provided courtesy of
Bruce Wetterau

Bruce Wetterau: Yes, it's first in the series and my first novel too, although I've published nonfiction — reference — books before.

I'm a long-time fan of TV detective series and in recent years have gotten hooked on reading series books, like Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch books and Robert B. Parker's Spenser series, as well as historical fiction like Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe series and Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey series.

That made deciding to do a series easy, as did the fact that series books are a staple of mystery book publishing. I suppose a big part of the attraction is that you get comfortable with an author and his or her characters. For me it's something like visiting with friends.

OMN: The cover of your book calls it a "mystery adventure". Do you think it leans more towards a suspense novel or a thriller?

BW: I'm not really sure where the dividing line lies between suspense and thriller novels. So I guess I'd say Lost Treasure is a suspense novel with thriller tendencies. That's probably true of many crime and mystery novels.

OMN: How do you see Clay Cantrell developing over the series?

BW: Book one establishes Clay and his two friends, Mac and Jimmy, as characters who know how to handle themselves in tough spots, who are adventurous and willing to take matters into their own hands to solve a mystery. But I'm looking forward to having them interact and develop as characters in future books (and I hope my readers are too).

The danger with a series, of course, is that the books can become repetitious, stale. Developing Clay and his girlfriend Susan, Mac, and Jimmy as characters as the series progresses will help with that. But I also have plenty of new troubles in mind for them to keep the series fresh from book to book.

OMN: Tell us something about Lost Treasure that isn't mentioned in the synopsis.

BW: Well, a synopsis has to be short, so you can do only so much. I made sure to lead off with the horde of Confederate gold. It's a key element of the book's appeal — I mean who wouldn't want to stumble onto a treasure worth millions of dollars these days? But the historical subplot centered on the fictional Confederate captain and Supply Depot 21 get a lot more play in the book than you might first think.

That's mainly because I wanted to explain why all that gold had been lost in the first place and why it hadn't been found for 150 years. The more I thought about it, the more important the Confederate captain who had charge of the gold became, as well as his perdicament in the last days of the Civil War.

I'm not saying the captain's small command post is an allegorical treatment of the last, traumatic days of the Confederacy. Rather I wanted the captain and his men to be subjected to the same pressures — the confusion and growing realization of impending defeat — confronting the Confederacy at the time and then to let them act accordingly.

By doing that, the Confederate captain and what he did developed into a major theme, a plot line I was able to use as a historical counterpoint to Clay's modern day adventures. That created a strong historical element that I think made for a much better book.

OMN: Tell us about your writing process.

BW: I probably did more preparation for this book than I have for any previous attempt at writing fiction. I believe it's the reason I actually finished this one and it worked out as well as it did.

Over the years I'd made sporadic attempts at writing a novel or play. I'd get an idea for the project and, overtaken by the rush of enthusiasm, would sit down and start banging way on it, figuring the book would develop as I wrote.

That may work for some writers, but inevitably I hit an unforseen problem and couldn't write my way out of it. The end result was a lot of crumpled paper and a piece with a beginning and no end.

Age and the experience of having compiled eleven reference books had something to do with a change in my approach, I'm sure. So did the fact that I'd been reading a lot of good detective novels, historical fiction, and suspense novels. When it came to writing Lost Treasure, I deliberately spent a lot of time thinking about the book, turning over the idea in my mind and just jotting down notes on characters and subplots as new thoughts came to me. At the same time I started researching, reading books on the Civil War and cave exploration, to name two areas.

With the major plotlines blocked in, I next wrote a detailed scene-by-scene outline of the whole book. That took some doing, but a lot of unforseen problems got worked out. That's not to say there weren't any inspired additions or new problems that cropped up when writing the manuscript itself. But with the outline done, I could write each scene knowing what had to happen to get my characters to the book's surprise ending.

And yes, I started this project with the ending in mind and worked backwards from it.

OMN: So … let's assume your book gets optioned for film or television. Who do you see playing the key roles?

BW: Now there's a thought that warms my heart. A movie from my first novel!

As I wrote Lost Treasure I did have a couple of actors in mind in terms of size and screen presence, but like me, they've gotten older or gone ahead of me to that great movie theater in the sky.

If anybody remembers the young Tom Selleck in that long-running series, Magnum PI, that's who provided inspiration for Clay — he's a young good guy with some faults, bigger than average, and very capable of taking care of himself, sort of in the John Wayne mold.

Mac is the really big guy — the good natured bear with a strong sense of loyalty to a comrade. Harp in Cornwell's Sharpe series provided the inspiration for him, but I don't know who would play him in a movie. Earnest Borgnine was burly enough that he might have worked in the part, but he's left this earth. I haven't seen it yet, but I'll bet one of the Navy Seals in Zero Dark Thirty would fit the bill.

Not to date myself, but Susan is a Natalie Woods kind of girl, a classic dark-haired beauty. The sexuality is there, but in a quieter, nice girl way. For Clay's friend Jimmy, I think of Tom Hanks as a good fit (he even played a school teacher turned infantry officer in Saving Private Ryan).

OMN: Speaking of movies, what are your favorite films? Did they contribute to your book?

BW: Jeez, there are so many. It's like opening a box of chocolates. Which one do you eat first?

For pure richness of story and superb acting, I'd have to pick the three Bogart classics, Casablanca, African Queen, and Maltese Falcon as my all time favorites. For a more modern gritty reality, I like Eastwood's Dirty Harry movies, but it was one of his later movies that really grabbed me — Absolute Power. I just love the premise — a jewel thief trapped in the middle of a burglary witnesses a murder involving the president. I mean what do you do? And it only gets more tangled from there.

I like action movies, and up to a point elements of that genre will always find a way into my books. But I also have a definite weak spot for more cerebral sleuthing stories, like the BBC Inspector Morse and Foyle's War TV series, and Hitchcock's really excellent suspense movies. To my mind The DaVinci Code and the two National Treasure movies offered up a really nice blend of intriguing premise, adventure, and mystery.

If I had to pick one movie that inspired me most in writing Lost Treasure, I suppose it would be one or the other of the "National Treasure" movies.

OMN: What can you tell us about the next book in the series?

BW: I've already started work on Killer Fog, the second Clay Cantrell mystery adventure. The book will have the same set up, alternating between Clay's modern day adventures and an entwined historical plotline, this time centered on the World War II years. I want to keep a strong element of historical fiction in each book of the series, and yes, I do plan to come back to the Civil War in a later book.

— ♦ —

Bruce Wetterau, a former free-lance editor and author of eleven reference books, has been buying and renovating old houses in Virginia for over a decade. He lives in Staunton, Virginia, where he writes, pursues his hobbies of hiking and landscape photography, and continues to work on houses.

— ♦ —

Lost Treasure by Bruce Wetterau

Lost Treasure
Bruce Wetterau
A Clay Cantrell Mystery Adventure (1st in series)

Suppose you suddenly found yourself holding the key to finding a lost Civil War treasure worth millions. You'd think that would be a stroke of good luck, wouldn't you? But that's not the way it plays out for contractor Clay Cantrell, an ex-Army Ranger. Soon after his stroke of good luck, he finds himself snared in a web of murder and drugs, even as he and his partners pursue a treasure they can only gamble is really there.

Set in Virginia's picturesque Shenandoah Valley and the Allegheny mountains to the west, Lost Treasure is a tale of three intertwined mysteries and a truck load of adventure. There's the mystery of how, during the Civil War, a Confederate Army captain may have buried the horde of gold coins — along with all the men under his command — in a cave somewhere up on Jack Mountain. Then there's the mystery of who, in modern times, is trying to set up Clay for a murder he didn't commit. And, just for good measure, there's the mystery of how Clay and his partners are going to find the treasure — supposedly somewhere deep inside that cavern in the Allegheny Mountains — if in fact it really exists.

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition  Barnes&Noble Print Edition and/or Nook Book

— ♦ —

Read an excerpt from Chapter 2, below.

 Waiting at a long stop light, Jimmy flip-flopped between the certainty he'd find proof the gold was still there, and the black depression that it was long gone. "Nine million bucks. Three million each. Man, what I could do with all that money!" he said out loud.
 A minute later he pulled into the crowded parking lot at Phil's Restaurant, a popular breakfast spot, and saw Clay's Sting Ray parked toward the back. As Jimmy pulled into an empty spot along-side the Vette, Clay rolled down his window. "My ride or yours?"
 "Let's take yours," Jimmy said grinning with boyish enthusiasm. "I've never ridden in a Sting Ray before." The Vette, with its liftoff hardtop on, was a sculptured beauty, low, sleek, and powerful. The chrome and dark, midnight blue paint job shone in the morning light, looking like the car had just rolled off the assembly line. Jimmy about salivated at the powerful, throaty rumble as Clay started up her big V-8. Jimmy slid into the low-slung black leather bucket seat, the leather, cooled by the car's AC, felt supple and smooth.
 "Waynesboro Library, coming right up," Clay announced as he backed out of the spot and pulled onto the highway.
 "Man this is a beauty," Jimmy said appreciatively. "When did you get it? Until the other day, I don't think I've ever seen you in anything but your pick up."
 "Got it about a year ago. Friend of mine from the Army offered me a deal I just couldn't refuse."
 "I don't blame you. What year is it?"
 "Sixty-seven. It's got the big block 427 with the triple Holley two-barrel carb. The engine's what they nicknamed the 'Tri-Power 427' and the '67 is the one everybody wants."
 "Why's that?"
 "Power, man. It's got real guts off the line." Clay turned onto a two-lane back road leading to Richmond Road, which they would take to Waynesboro. With nobody in front of him and still in second gear, he hit the gas. The big V-8 roared as the rear tires chirped and dug in. Jimmy felt like he'd been slammed back into the seat, and in the blink of an eye they went from 20 to 50 mph. With a curve coming up, Clay tapped the brakes and the Sting Ray obediently came back to a mild mannered 25. "Kind of a kick, isn't it?"
 "Awesome," Jimmy said with a big Cheshire cat grin. "I'm going to add one of these to my garage when we find the gold."
 Clay laughed. "You think it's really there?"
 "I sure hope so. That much money would be a real life changer."
 "Yeah, I guess. You could definitely buy a lot of stuff. You could even quit your job. But then what would you do?"
 "Haven't got that far yet," Jimmy answered, laughing almost gleefully. "I like teaching history. Maybe I'd keep on with it, and do other things as well. How about you? What will you do with the money?"
 Clay looked over at Jimmy and smiled. "Well, we still don't know it's there. I mean a lot could have happened in 150 years. We probably shouldn't get ahead of ourselves on this."
 He was right of course, which stung Jimmy a bit. "Yeah, I see your point, but it's kind of fun to think about it. No harm in that, is there?"
 "No, not at all. Like you said, it would be a life changer."
 "Maybe not for you though, Clay."
 "What? You mean because of my parents?"
 "Well yeah."
 "That's their money, Jimmy, not mine. Sure, I've had some breaks because of it, and from time to time took some crap for having rich parents. But they raised me to stand on my own two feet and make my own way. And that's pretty much what's been happening.
 "I'll tell you something funny, though. I've been driving myself really hard the past five years, building the business with Mac. Pushing hard to make a go of it. Not having much of a life outside of work. A lot of that comes with being in business for yourself, especially when you're starting out. You can't just drive home and forget about it for the weekend, ‘cause it might not be there next week.
 "I've been thinking though, maybe there was more to it than that. My dad came up with the seed money we needed to get C&H Construction up and running — flat out gave me a ton of money. He just said 'Thank you for what you did in Afghanistan.' Funny thing was, I never felt like I was doing anything more than anybody else. We all risked our necks on the missions, but most times we were either bored stiff or having a good time.
 "Believe it or not, I felt like I didn't deserve that money, I suppose because I hadn't worked for it. That only drove me harder, to feel like I deserved it, and to make damn sure I didn't lose it."
 "I suppose I'm going to feel like that," Jimmy said, "if we hit pay dirt."
 "Maybe. You just don't want to fall into the "easy come, easy go" trap. That happens too. I knew a guy who inherited a million bucks and blew it all in about five years, a good chunk of it up his nose. Maybe that's the real gift my father gave me. He taught me to take care of money, respect what it can do, and what it can do to you."
 "And here we are at the moment of truth," Jimmy said idly as Clay pulled his Sting Ray into the Waynesboro Library parking lot. Walking into the library with Clay, Jimmy's stomach roiled with the flip-flopping again. Yes they'd find the answer; no — black, gloomy no — the gold was long gone. He couldn't help it.
 At the main desk, Jimmy signed them in for the Local History Room. He tried taking deep breaths to calm himself as they followed the young librarian to the room where the volumes of War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of Official Records were kept under lock and key. While she fiddled with the keys to the door, the flip-flopping almost overwhelmed Jimmy, until he glanced at Clay, who stood there looking solid and unmoved. That's when Jimmy decided to get a grip, reminding himself that he'd never know the answer until he actually looked in the Official Records.
 The librarian turned on the overhead florescent lights revealing a room lined floor to ceiling with shelves heavy with dark-covered old books. She pointed them to the far wall and then left, closing the door behind her. At last, Jimmy thought, standing there in front of a whole wall of books devoted to just the Official Records. It was an imposing sight indeed, a memorial of sorts to the machinations and maiming of two great armies. Each volume ran to over three inches thick, with faded dark green covers and a thousand pages or so, those pages slowly turning a pale brown with age and the ravages of the sulfur in the paper.
 Turning to Clay, Jimmy said, "This is it. There's got to be an answer in there somewhere."
 "If you say so …"
 "There's two basic parts, if I remember correctly. The first is strictly military records, battle reports, command papers, that kind of thing. The other has papers dealing with military-civilian issues." Jimmy reached over and pulled two volumes off the shelf. "These are the indexes to the two parts. Why don't you check the military-civilian records, while I look in the military records index?
 "Try any variation of Depot 21 you can think of. And Capt. Burns, or Col. Gideon Spencer," Jimmy said as they sat down at the long oak table in the center of the room.
 "Roger that."
 While Jimmy leafed impatiently back and forth in his big index volume, Clay turned pages idly, at first not really looking at the index entries, but just taking in the brittle, browning paper, the slightly acrid smell, and the thousands of names listed in column after column, page after page of this thick tome. Finally getting down to business, he tried Jimmy's suggestion of looking up variations of the depot's name. Supply Depot 21, Depot 21, 22nd Virginia Supply Depot 21, and so on. Nothing turned up.
 Jimmy found some entries for Capt. Chandler Burns, but when he went to appropriate volume, he found only reports from when Burns was stationed in Richmond and Staunton. Nothing for Depot 21, and nothing after. Back at the index again, Jimmy suggested they both try Col. Gideon Spencer.
 "Just dead ends," Jimmy announced after checking out several index entries. "How about you?"
 Clay had been sitting there watching Jimmy work furiously back and forth between his index and the volumes, expecting his friend would have a better shot at hitting the answer than he. Prodded by Jimmy's "How about you," Clay turned to the S's.
 "Hey, I've got one. January 1865. Volume 86, page 689."
 Jimmy jumped up and pulled the book from the shelf. The old, long-undisturbed spine of Volume 86 creaked as Jimmy opened it carefully and turned to page 689 …

The Big Goodbye by Michael Lister is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

The Big Goodbye by Michael Lister

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Big Goodbye by Michael Lister as today's third free mystery ebook (A Jimmy "Soldier" Riley Mystery; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, March 14, 2013 at 7:30 AM ET. 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.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

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The Big Goodbye by Michael Lister

The Big Goodbye
Michael Lister
A Jimmy "Soldier" Riley Mystery
Publisher: Pulpwood Press

Someone is following Lauren Lewis. She ducks into the office of PI Jimmy "Soldier" Riley, not to hire him, but to find out if he's the one following her. Back when they were lovers he told her if he ever decided to, she'd never know he was there.

It's 1940s Panama City, Florida. The world is at war, and the growing panhandle paradise is doing its part. Tyndall Field is training pilots. Wainwright Shipyard is building battleships. The Naval Section Base is protecting vessels in the Gulf. The Dixie Sherman Hotel is hosting celebrities such as Clark Gable. Harry Lewis, a wealthy banker, is running for mayor, unaware his wife is running for her life.

With a secret to hide and a husband running for mayor in a city exploding and expanding like no other time in history, Lauren doesn't want trouble, but she's about to get a double-barrel full of it. Only one man can help her, and though it might destroy him, he doesn't mind. Better to die than be the walking wounded.

Amazon Kindle Book

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.

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

Cutter's Legacy and the Search for Yamashita's Gold by Kit Crumb is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Cutter's Legacy and the Search for Yamashita's Gold by Kit Crumb

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Cutter's Legacy and the Search for Yamashita's Gold by Kit Crumb as today's second free mystery ebook (A Stevie Cutter Mystery Adventure; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, March 14, 2013 at 7:20 AM ET. 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.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

— ♦ —

Cutter's Legacy and the Search for Yamashita's Gold by Kit Crumb

Cutter's Legacy and the Search for Yamashita's Gold
Kit Crumb
A Stevie Cutter Mystery Adventure
Publisher: Hellgate Press

Stevie Cutter, pilot and owner of Cutter and Son Aviation near Anchorage, Alaska receives a package containing a message from the past that will turn her life upside down. Inside, the message and a map promise to solve the mystery of her father's disappearance in the South Pacific twenty years earlier.

Soon, Stevie and her son, Jayden, are running for their lives as they unravel the truth of her father's fate and his discovery of Priceless World War II treasure that must not fall into the hands of the shadowy Japanese Red Brigade.

Amazon Kindle Book

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.

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

Whiskey Sour by J. A. Konrath is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Whiskey Sour by J. A. Konrath

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Whiskey Sour by J. A. Konrath as today's free mystery ebook (A Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels Mystery; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, March 14, 2013 at 7:10 AM ET. 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.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

— ♦ —

Whiskey Sour by J. A. Konrath

Whiskey Sour
J. A. Konrath
A Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels Mystery
Publisher: J. A. Konrath

First published by Hyperion in 2004.

Lieutenant Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels is having a bad week. Her live-in boyfriend has left her for his personal trainer, chronic insomnia has caused her to max out her credit cards with late-night home shopping purchases, and a frightening killer who calls himself "The Gingerbread Man" is dumping mutilated bodies in her district.

While avoiding the FBI and its moronic profiling computer, joining a dating service, mixing it up with street thugs, and parrying the advances of an uncouth PI, Jack and her binge-eating partner, Herb, must catch the maniac before he kills again … and Jack is next on his murder list.

Amazon Kindle Book

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.

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

Placebo by Steven James is Today's Kindle Daily Deal

The Kindle Daily Deal

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Placebo by Steven James as today's Amazon Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $2.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, March 14, 2013.

— ♦ —

Placebo by Steven James

Placebo
Steven James
A Jevin Banks Mystery
Revell

While covertly investigating a controversial neurological research program, exposé filmmaker Jevin Banks is drawn into a far-reaching conspiracy involving one of the world's largest pharmaceutical firms. After giving up his career as an escape artist and illusionist in the wake of his wife and sons' tragic death, Jevin is seeking not only answers about the questionable mind-to-mind communication program, but also answers to why his family suffered as they did.

Amazon Kindle Daily Deal

Important Note: This book was listed at the price mentioned above 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.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Cinemystery: Production Update on Film Adaptation of Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith

Cinemystery: Crime Novels Adapted for Film

Earlier this year we had the lead casting news for the film adaptation of Tom Rob Smith's Cold War thriller Child 44. Today THR is reporting that financing is nearly complete, suggesting production could get underway as early as this June.

Tom Hardy and Noomi Rapace are already on board to star as is Daniel Espinosa, directing an adapted screenplay by Richard Price.

Published in 2008, Smith introduced state security agent Leo Demidov in the novel, which is set in the Soviet Union of the early 1950s. Envisioned as a the first of a trilogy of thrillers, he followed it in 2009 with The Secret Speech and concluded the series with Agent 6 in 2012.

More about the book — which was honored with several awards including the 2008 CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger and the 2009 Thriller Award for Best First Novel — below.

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Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith

Child 44
Tom Rob Smith
A Leo Demidov Mystery

Stalin's Soviet Union strives to be a paradise for its workers, providing for all of their needs. One of its fundamental pillars is that its citizens live free from the fear of ordinary crime and criminals.

But in this society, millions do live in fear … of the State. Death is a whisper away. The mere suspicion of ideological disloyalty — owning a book from the decadent West, the wrong word at the wrong time — sends millions of innocents into the Gulags or to their executions. Defending the system from its citizens is the MGB, the State Security Force. And no MGB officer is more courageous, conscientious, or idealistic than Leo Demidov.

A war hero with a beautiful wife, Leo lives in relative luxury in Moscow, even providing a decent apartment for his parents. His only ambition has been to serve his country. For this greater good, he has arrested and interrogated.

Then the impossible happens. A different kind of criminal — a murderer — is on the loose, killing at will. At the same time, Leo finds himself demoted and denounced by his enemies, his world turned upside down, and every belief he's ever held shattered. The only way to save his life and the lives of his family is to uncover this criminal. But in a society that is officially paradise, it's a crime against the State to suggest that a murderer-much less a serial killer-is in their midst. Exiled from his home, with only his wife, Raisa, remaining at his side, Leo must confront the vast resources and reach of the MBG to find and stop a criminal that the State won't admit even exists.

Winner of the 2008 CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger and 2009 Thriller Award for Best First Novel.

Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith, Amazon Kindle format  Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith, iTune iBook format  Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith, Kobo format

Important Note: Any prices and/or special deals mentioned above were correct 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.

Telemystery: Veronica Mars Movie Project Raises Over $2 Million in Less than a Day

Telemystery Prime Time Crime: Mystery and Suspense on Television

It's been a couple of years since we last reported on a potential film adaptation of the television series Veronica Mars … but today we're learning that a Kickstarter project to demonstrate a fan commitment to the project has met its 30-day goal of raising $2 million — in less than a day.

Warner Bros. — which owns the rights to the character — has never said "no" to making the film; they've just never said "yes" either. When creator Rob Thomas suggested to the studio that if seed money for the film could be raised via crowdfunding, would they agree to help move the project forward. "They were extremely cool about it, as a matter of fact," he writes on the Veronica Mars Movie Project Kickstarter page. "Their reaction was, if you can show there's enough fan interest to warrant a movie, we're on board."

Clearly there is fan interest. When we checked just before posting this, the total raised was over $2.15 million and growing. And it's just the first day.

Veronica Mars aired on The CW for three seasons, from 2004 through 2007. Kristen Bell starred as the titular character, a 17-year-old private investigator solving the toughest mysteries in her coastal community of Neptune, California.

No storyline has yet been developed for the film, but here's what Rob Thomas is considering: "Life has taken Veronica away from Neptune. In the years since spoiling [her father] Keith's chances to be reelected sheriff, Veronica hasn't taken a case. But something big is about to bring her back home and back to her calling."

Telemystery: Foyle's War — The Home Front Files

Foyle's War: The Home Front Files Sets 1-6

Acorn Media re-released all six seasons of Foyle's War this week, including a new 6-season collection of the entire series to date (right; click for more information).

Set during the years of World War II, Michael Kitchen stars as DCI Christopher Foyle, a police officer in the coastal town of Hastings, which would be on the front line of an invasion from Germany … should one occur. Even though he wants to join his brethren on the Continent, his superiors believe he can do more good for the cause by staying right where he is.

Foyle's War was created and written by Anthony Horowitz and — in our opinion — no finer crime drama has ever been produced. It is, simply stated, consistently outstanding. The episodes, which open with the date on which the storyline is set and progressively move chronologically forward over time, typically include some topical event involving the war coupled with a local crime. We've seen each episode at least twice ourselves, some so good, so brilliantly clever, they merit a third or fourth watching.

In 2007, after the fourth season had aired and the fifth commissioned, ITV canceled the series. Horowitz quickly accelerated the time frame of the final episodes so that the series finale would coincide with the end of the war. But the public outcry on the series' cancellation was so loud — and so long — that ITV relented, and commissioned a sixth season, set during the tumultuous period immediately following VE Day. Fans of the series were thrilled when an seventh season was announced, which is currently filming with an air date to be announced.

Though we've seen the entire series, our resident reviewer — Mr. E. — only began publishing reviews starting with fifth season. (We'll ask him to pen reviews of the earlier seasons when he sees them again … as we're sure he will.)

If you've never seen an episode of the series, we encourage you to start with the first, "The German Woman", which takes place in May 1940 and introduces the characters. We're convinced that after you see it, you'll want to follow these characters over the course of five years, through "All Clear" in May 1945 and beyond.

Cinemystery: Marcus Sakey's New Thriller Brilliance Optioned for Film

Cinemystery: Crime Novels Adapted for Film

Legendary Pictures has optioned Marcus Sakey's upcoming thriller Brilliance for film.

The book, which will be published in July 2013 by Thomas & Mercer, is the author's sixth novel … and the fourth to be considered for a screenplay. (The other two may also have been optioned, but we haven't heard.)

More about his new book, below.

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Brilliance by Marcus Sakey

Brilliance
Marcus Sakey

In Wyoming, a little girl reads people's darkest secrets by the way they fold their arms. In New York, a man sensing patterns in the stock market racks up $300 billion. In Chicago, a woman can go invisible by being where no one is looking. They're called "brilliants", and since 1980, one percent of people have been born this way.

Nick Cooper is among them; a federal agent, Cooper has gifts rendering him exceptional at hunting terrorists. His latest target may be the most dangerous man alive, a brilliant drenched in blood and intent on provoking civil war. But to catch him, Cooper will have to violate everything he believes in — and betray his own kind.

Brilliance by Marcus Sakey, Amazon Kindle format

MystereBooks: A Slice of Murder by Chris Cavender, Now at a Special Price

A Slice of Murder by Chris Cavender

MystereBooks is pleased to feature A Slice of Murder by Chris Cavender, now available at a special price, courtesy of the publisher, Kensington.

The ebook format of this title was priced at $1.99 from the listed vendors (below) as of the date and time of this post (03/13/2013 at 2:30 PM ET). 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.

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A Slice of Murder by Chris Cavender

A Slice of Murder by Chris Cavender
An Eleanor Swift, Pizza Lovers Mystery (1st in series)
Publisher: Kensington

Chris Cavender is a pseudonym of Tim Myers.

Not too much happens in the sleepy little town of Timber Ridge, North Carolina — which is fine with pizza-purveyor extraordinaire Eleanor Swift. The spunky owner of A Slice of Delight is trying to mend her broken heart and could use a little quiet time.

But when a late night delivery customer turns up dead, she's in for just the opposite in this delicious mystery series debut.

Amazon Kindle Book  Apple iBook  Kobo eBook

Important Note: This book was listed at the above mentioned price 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.

Review: The Bughouse Affair by Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini

Mysterious Reviews: Reviews of New Mysteries, Novels of Suspense, and Thrillers

A Mysterious Review of …

The Bughouse Affair by Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini. A Carpenter and Quincannon Mystery.

Review summary: Set in 1890s San Francisco, this first in a new series works quite well as a period mystery. The characters are appealing and creatively drawn, the storyline interesting (if also infused with a handful of convenient coincidences). The odd element here is the inclusion of Sherlock Holmes, a not unwelcome character though an unnecessary one. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Bughouse Affair Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini

The Bughouse Affair
Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini
A Carpenter and Quincannon Mystery
Forge Books (January 2013)

Publisher synopsis: This first of a new series of lighthearted historical mysteries set in 1890s San Francisco has former Pinkerton operative Sabina Carpenter and her detective partner, ex-Secret Service agent John Quincannon, undertake what initially appear to be two unrelated investigations.

Sabina's case involves the hunt for a ruthless lady "dip" who uses fiendish means to relieve her victims of their valuables at Chutes Amusement Park and other crowded places. Quincannon, meanwhile, is after a slippery housebreaker who targets the homes of wealthy residents, following a trail that leads him from the infamous Barbary Coast to an oyster pirate's lair to a Tenderloin parlor house known as the Fiddle Dee Dee.

The two cases eventually connect in surprising fashion, but not before two murders and assorted other felonies complicate matters even further. And not before the two sleuths are hindered, assisted, and exasperated by the bughouse Sherlock Holmes.

Available from Amazon.com  Available from iTunes  Available from Kobo

MystereBooks: Killing Castro by Lawrence Block, Available this Month at a Special Price

Amazon Kindle eBooks $3.99 or Less

Every month Amazon releases a new selection of Kindle books priced $3.99 or less.

Today's featured title from the Mystery & Thrillers category is Killing Castro by Lawrence Block. This Kindle book was listed at $2.99 as of the date and time of this post, Wednesday, March 13, 2013 at 1:30 PM ET, and should be available at this price through the end of the month.

More information about the book is below; if other vendors have priced-matched this title, links to their sites are also shown.

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Killing Castro by Lawrence Block

Killing Castro by Lawrence Block
Publisher: Open Road

Turner needs to start a new life and that means he needs cash … fast. So the twenty thousand he's offered for a job sounds pretty good, even if it means killing Cuban dictator Fidel Castro.

And he's not alone.

There are four other men — killers, idealists, mercenaries — all with the same target. Can they band together to overthrow Castro and get Turner his chance at a new life?

Amazon Kindle Book  Kobo eBook

Important Note: 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.

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