Thursday, July 18, 2013

A Conversation with Author Sarah Kennedy

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Sarah Kennedy
with Sarah Kennedy

We are delighted to welcome novelist Sarah Kennedy to Omnimystery News today.

Sarah's first in a series featuring Catherine Havens, a young nun in Tudor England, is The Altarpiece (Knox Robinson Publishing; March 2013 trade paperback and ebook formats), and we recently had the opportunity to chat with her about the book.

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Omnimystery News: Tell us why you chose to feature Catherine Havens as a series character.

Sarah Kennedy
Photo provided courtesy of
Sarah Kennedy

Sarah Kennedy: When I began writing the book that would become The Altarpiece, I didn't think of Catherine Havens as a recurring character. She was just a young nun who found herself in increasingly complicated and difficult circumstances. This was the first novel I had attempted, after writing seven books of poems and just the idea of writing about the same character for more than a few dozen lines was daunting enough! As I wrote, however, I found out more and more about Catherine's dreams and disappointments, and I discovered that she had more growing to do. Of course the era in which she lives, Tudor England, is seeing rapid changes in both the government and the church, and there is still much for Catherine to experience. I do expect her to develop. She will age and grow. She will have to either adapt to the altered state of affairs in England or find herself in constant danger. She will likely do some of both!

OMN: Did you base Catherine — or any of the characters in the book — on your own personal or professional experience?

SK: A writer's experiences often come as much from reading as from life outside of fiction. For me, reading medieval and Renaissance literature, legal papers, and letters has created an entire "second life." Sometimes I feel as though my friendships with the Tudor poet Thomas Wyatt and the fourteenth-century mystic Margery Kempe are almost as real as my relationships with living people. That said, I also know that my own interests in herbs and gardening, as well as my mother's life-long hobbies of painting and illustrating, contribute largely to the interests of my main characters.

I honestly don't know where some of my characters have come from. Ann Smith, for example, doesn't really resemble anyone I know — or maybe she does and I'm just not aware of it. She came into the books fully-formed, and I love her dearly (as does my main character, Catherine) because she's practical and sensible and mostly forgiving of folks who aren't actively trying to hurt someone else. She doesn't think much of the Henrician reforms, but she doesn't much care for the rites and hierarchies of Roman Catholicism, either. She's trying to make her way as well as she can. Sometimes I think Ann Smith is the person I wish I could have been.

OMN: What is the best advice you've received as an author?

SK: The best advice I've ever received was also the harshest criticism: stop writing like a poet. It took me a long time to learn that a novel has to have a plot that moves ahead, that scenes need not only to set tone and build character but to move events along. A poem, even a narrative poem, can linger on metaphors and it can move on character alone. Character revelation, in fact, might be the main reason for any plot at all. Not so with a novel, as I finally learned! Move it along, please!

OMN: How does your writing process allow you to, as you put it, "move it along"?

SK: I usually begin with a scene, and it's difficult for me to get rolling without a clear place and event in my imagination. With The Altarpiece, that scene was Catherine Havens standing in the room over the church porch and peering through the window down the road, where the soldiers are approaching Mount Grace. That's not the opening scene of the novel, but it's what got me started writing. The scene that begins The City of Ladies, book two in the Cross and the Crown series, is currently still the opening scene.

I do try to let the story develop as I draft, adding characters when they appear of their own volition or seem needed for plot or setting. In draft stage, then, the cast of characters expands. In revising, I tend to cut characters, though if there is someone I've grown attached to, I may put her to sleep in a separate file until I figure out when to revive her!

The synopsis usually comes after the first completed draft, which may seem odd, but I use a synopsis to plot-check myself: is there a clear conflict? Do the secondary conflicts work with or against the main plot? Are there characters or events that are left hanging or unresolved? Are there contradictions? A synopsis really helps me clarify and refine what I have done — but I do need to have done something.

OMN: Tell us about the setting for the book.

SK: The Altarpiece is set in Mount Grace, which was a real monastery, but I have made it into a convent because I was interested in English nuns rather than the monks. This interest came from my scholarly research, which showed that we don't know very much about what happened to the nuns under Henry VIII, though we do know quite a lot about the monks. The village in my book is also called Mount Grace, which is a fictional name, for clarity and continuity. The characters are all fictional, as well, though the monastery at Mount Grace did own one of the few copies of Margery Kempe's biography, and I have kept that detail because Margery was an interesting medieval mystic, and I have always been fascinated with records of mystical experiences. The stately home nearby is fictional, too though my conception of it is based on many visits to such houses in England.

I decided on a setting that's far from London because there are many novels about the Tudor court itself, and I became interested in how the changes wrought by Henry and his ministers affected the whole country of England. Yorkshire is in many ways a different culture than the south of England, and I want to explore how this relatively small number of people changed the lives of an entire people.

OMN: What's next for you?

SK: When I'm not working in my garden or bird-watching, I am currently hard at work on books two and three of the Cross and the Crown series! As Catherine develops, she will find herself in places that are historically well-known, such as Hatfield House, where Elizabeth Tudor spent a great deal of her childhood, and Richmond Palace, where Anne of Cleves lived after her divorce from Henry VIII. She will always come back to Yorkshire, however, which is where she was born and raised — and where her greatest conflicts and triumphs will always be centered.

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Sarah Kennedy was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. After completing a Ph.D. in Renaissance poetry, she took a position at Mary Baldwin College in Staunton, Virginia, where she currently teaches and heads the English Department. When she also completed an M.F.A. in Poetry Writing, Sarah began writing historical poetry.

Seven books of poems later, Sarah has turned her scholarly interests in Tudor England and her poetic skills in description to fiction. When she's not researching, teaching, or working on her next book, Sarah spends her time gardening, cooking, and watching the birds — and sometimes bears — that visit her yard in Virginia.

To learn more about the author and her work, please visit her website.

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The Altarpiece by Sarah Kennedy

The Altarpiece
Sarah Kennedy
Book One of The Cross and the Crown Series

It is 1535, and in the tumultuous years of King Henry VIII's break from Rome, the religious houses of England are being seized by force. Twenty-year-old Catherine Havens is a foundling and the adopted daughter of the prioress of the Priory of Mount Grace in a small Yorkshire village.

Catherine, like her adoptive mother, has a gift for healing, and she is widely sought and admired for her knowledge. Catherine's hopes for a place at court have been dashed by the king's divorce, and she has reluctantly taken the veil.

When the priory's costly altarpiece goes missing, Catherine and her friend Ann Smith find themselves under increased suspicion. King Henry VIII's soldiers have not had their fill of destruction, and when they return to Mount Grace to destroy the priory, Catherine must choose between the sacred calling of her past and the man who may represent her country's future.

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The Cuckoo's Nest by Gordon Reid is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

The Cuckoo's Nest by Gordon Reid

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Cuckoo's Nest by Gordon Reid as today's free mystery ebook (A Victorian Murder Mystery; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, July 18, 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.

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The Cuckoo's Nest by Gordon Reid

The Cuckoo's Nest
Gordon Reid
A Victorian Murder Mystery
Publisher: Gordon Reid

It is the hot, sultry summer of 1896. A man has been murdered, one of the thousands of Irish navvies helping to build the great chain of dams that would create a reservoir out of the Elan Valley in Radnorshire and provide clean drinking water for the crowded city of Birmingham. But the man carried a secret, and now Detective Sergeant Thomas Jones is sent from London to investigate.

As he delves deeper into the heart of the mystery Jones uncovers a trail of corruption and embezzlement, and passions deep as a mountain stream. His search for the truth takes him high into the mountains and out to the astonishing shanty town where the army of navvies live and work, to the vast building site where the dams are being built, and inside the local workhouse; and to the Cuckoo's Nest itself, the dark and mysterious hollow where the man was killed.

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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.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

MystereBooks: What It Was by George Pelecanos, 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 What It Was by George Pelecanos. This Kindle book was listed at $2.99 as of the date and time of this post, Wednesday, July 17, 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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What It Was by George Pelecanos

What It Was by George Pelecanos
A Derek Strange Mystery
Publisher: Little, Brown

Washington, D.C., 1972. Derek Strange has left the police department and set up shop as a private investigator. His former partner, Frank "Hound Dog" Vaughn, is still on the force. When a young woman comes to Strange asking for his help recovering a cheap ring she claims has sentimental value, the case leads him onto Vaughn's turf, where a local drug addict's been murdered, shot point-blank in his apartment. Soon both men are on the trail of a ruthless killer: Red Fury, so called for his looks and the car his girlfriend drives, but a name that fits his personality all too well.

Red Fury doesn't have a retirement plan, as Vaughn points out — he doesn't care who he has to cross, or kill, to get what he wants. As the violence escalates and the stakes get higher, Strange and Vaughn know the only way to catch their man is to do it their own way.

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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.

Review: Graveland by Alan Glynn

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

A Mysterious Review of Graveland by Alan Glynn.

Review summary: This is a complex story, told from multiple perspectives involved in multiple storylines … which, to be sure, contributes to the complexity. Though solidly written with strongly developed characters, there's a sense that there might be too much going on here for one book, that the sum of the parts is, indeed, greater than that of the whole. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 3 of 5 stars

Graveland Alan Glynn

Graveland
Alan Glynn
Picador (May 2013)

Publisher synopsis: On a bright Saturday morning, a Wall Street investment banker is shot dead while jogging in Central Park. Hours later, one of New York City's savviest hedge-fund managers is gunned down outside a restaurant. Are these killings a coordinated terrorist attack, or just a coincidence?

Investigative journalist Ellen Dorsey has a hunch they're neither, and when an attempt is made on the life of another CEO, her theory is confirmed. The story blows wide open, and as Ellen races to stay ahead of the curve, her path collides with that of a recession-hit architect, Frank Bishop, whose daughter's disappearance may be tied to the murders.

Available from Amazon.com  Available from iTunes  Available from Kobo

Telemystery: ABC Announces Fall 2013 Schedule

Telemystery Prime Time Crime: Mystery and Suspense on Television

ABC has finally announced its Fall 2013 series and season premiere dates. We're presenting here those shows that we follow as Telemystery. (All times below are ET/PT.)

Betrayal: Sunday, September 29th at 10 PM (New series).

Castle: Monday, September 23rd at 10 PM (6th season).

Once Upon a Time: Sunday, September 29th at 8 PM (3rd season).

Once Upon a Time in Wonderland: Thursday, October 10th at 8 PM (New series).

Revenge: Sunday, September 29th at 9 PM (3rd season).

Keep up to date on the status of your favorite mystery and suspense television with our Telemystery Scoresheet. We've updated it with today's news.

Please Welcome Author Steven Donkin

Omnimystery News: Guest Post by Steven Donkin
with Steven Donkin

We are thrilled to welcome novelist Steven Donkin to Omnimystery News.

Steven's new mystery is the 1950s whodunit The Skeleton Speaks (CreateSpace; May 2013 trade paperback and ebook formats).

Steven tells us in his guest post today why he chose this time period for his books, in "An Appreciation of Golden Age Mysteries".

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Steven Donkin
Photo provided courtesy of
Steven Donkin

I believe it was W. Somerset Maugham who said the wide appeal of mystery fiction is its guarantee to the reader that here is a novel that, at the very least, tells an actual story. By definition, a mystery novel, particularly one in the vintage cozy tradition, requires a narrative that begins with a crime, follows with an investigation of clues, and ends with a solution that, hopefully, surprises and delights the reader with its unpredictability and cleverness. It's been a reliable formula for quality entertainment for nearly two hundred years.

But what is it, I wonder, about the vintage cozy mysteries of the Golden Age (and by this term, I mean generally the period from 1920 to 1950) that continues to appeal to readers in our overly modern, technologically saturated era? I can only speak for myself, but I will suggest that one answer may be mere nostalgia for a simpler age — an age that predates my own lifetime, and probably that of most modern readers with whom I share may this passion for old mysteries. To be sure, it is our lack of direct experience with earlier times that enhances our romanticized (and perhaps not entirely accurate) visions of them. In my own case, I am admittedly a bit of a luddite — I don't have a cell phone, a tablet or an e-reader, I prefer biking or walking to driving a car, and prefer train travel to travel by air. The old days just seemed to me much less complicated and cluttered by mindless distractions.

Nostalgic yearning perhaps explains part of the appeal of all historical fiction in general. But within the sub-genre of vintage cozy mysteries, there is another attraction to me, not only as a mystery reader but also as a writer of mysteries. It has to do with the practical methods employed in the art of crime solving, in particular, how the changes that have occurred in this field over the past decades have influenced the mystery novel's role as an intellectually stimulating puzzle challenge for readers. The vintage detectives really had to use their wits and skills regarding what Poe called "ratiocination" to solve the crime, and the reader was likewise invited to do the same. But the fact is that most of the crimes that were committed in the old novels would be easily solved today using standard technology, with little exercise of Hercule Poirot's beloved "little grey cells" being necessary.

Fortunately for real crime solvers, but unfortunately for fans of detective fiction, modern CSI technology has taken much of the sparkle out of detective work. For instance, gone are the days when a little post-murder treatment upon the body could render a victim unidentifiable and thereby baffle the authorities. The unidentified or misidentified corpse was a common device in Golden Age mysteries, examples being Dorothy L. Sayers' The Nine Tailors, wherein the victim's hands were cut off and the face mutilated beyond recognition, or in Ellery Queen's The Egyptian Cross Mystery, wherein the victims were decapitated to prevent identification (although I could never figure out why fingerprint identification did not arise in this latter example). Now, however, there are numerous methods available to ID corpses, made possible by DNA technology, easily searchable nationwide databases, and protocols for employing reconstructive techniques that can create a reasonable image of the victim in life, followed by wide dissemination of the image across the country or the world via the internet. The classic case of mistaken identity, or its equally revered cousin, the old "switcheroo" of one character's identity for that of another, will never be the same.

Likewise, pinning the crime on a particular suspect seems much more straightforward now. Certainly, the deceit and conniving of the suspects can still be played to good use in well-written modern narratives, but I've always found the characters and their intrigues much more interesting in the novels of the Golden Age masters. And the process of nabbing the perpetrator has been rendered much more run-of-the-mill in our modern era. Nowadays, all that is often necessary is to obtain a small biological sample from the scene of the crime — blood, skin, or even a single hair — isolate a trace amount of DNA, run it through a PCR (polymerase chain reaction) machine to amplify the sample, then analyze and compare the results with DNA samples taken from each of the suspects. How dull! In such standardized investigative protocol, what is left for the tasks involved in piecing together seemingly disconnected events, dissecting the characters' individual testimonies and discerning the truth from lies, or chasing down red herrings and separating the evidential wheat from the chaff in order to arrive at the correct solution?

I've set my two mystery novels, The Beast from the Sky and The Skeleton Speaks, in the early 1950s primarily for these reasons. No cell phones, DNA analysis, searchable databases or hyper-resolved digital imaging; just good old wearing down of shoe leather, psychological cat-and-mouse play, and inspired deductive reasoning. My other novel, Honest Faces, is set in modern times, but it's a mystery of a much different sort — not so much a whodunit as a "why-did-they-do-it." But my love for the simple pleasures of the Golden Age mysteries will always remain. There are no writers today that I know of who rival the likes of S. S. Van Dine, Ngaio Marsh, Josephine Tey, Ellery Queen, Nicholas Blake, Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, and John Dickson Carr. It is thus under their giant shadows that I now cower at my keyboard, humbly trying to craft my little contributions which, if nothing else, might hopefully make them smile down at me in kindly appreciation, and hopefully please a few readers as well.

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Steven Donkin is a writer, musician, scientist, painter, activist, educator and a former Statehood Green Party candidate for Mayor of Washington, D.C. He and his wife Julia live in Silver Spring, Maryland.

For more information about the author and his books, visit his website at StevenDonkin.com.

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The Skeleton Speaks by Steven Donkin

The Skeleton Speaks
Steven Donkin

Gert O'Connell and her amateur sleuthing friends, Judith and Henry Geeth, find themselves once again in the middle of a baffling murder case, this time at a sinister ancient Irish castle during the ghoulish season of Samhain. It is Hallowe'en night in 1953, and the eccentric owner of the Castle Bronmore, Colin Keeley, is throwing a costume party for some friends and relatives, but all is not fun and games. It soon becomes clear that Colin has plans to indulge a longstanding grudge against some of the party guests in a most macabre fashion — plans that include the skeleton of an old Irish patriot in the dungeon who has an unsettling tendency to spring to life and speak truths that some may not wish to be revealed.

As tempers flare and political ideologies clash, the party quickly disintegrates into chaos, culminating in a gruesome murder. Now Gert and her friends, themselves considered suspects by the police, set about disentangling the clues to find the killer and, in the process, discover the truth behind the mysterious talking skeleton of Castle Bronmore.

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The House's Money by Owen Sullivan is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

The House's Money by Owen Sullivan

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The House's Money by Owen Sullivan as today's second free mystery ebook (A Financial Thriller; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, July 17, 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.

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The House's Money by Owen Sullivan

The House's Money
Owen Sullivan
A Financial Thriller
Publisher: Authority Publishing

Passionate, idealistic, young Matt Whiteside has just landed the job of his dreams. Dressed to kill and running on pure ambition, he enters the ranks of mortgage-backed securities traders twice his age for one of the most prestigious firms in San Francisco.

Life couldn't be sweeter.

But the roller coaster has only just begun.

When he meets a beautiful woman also on the upward move, his dreams appear to be unstoppable. But unbridled love too often hides the truth in its shadow and not everything is as it appears.

As he discovers the world of mortgage-backed securities, experiencing a soaring financial wave never seen before, Matt is welcomed with open arms into a seductive arena almost too good to be true. When insatiable greed raises its ugly head, jealousy and betrayal follow quickly behind. In a moment of brutal clarity, his world shatters with the realization he is merely a pawn in someone's wicked game. Just as quickly as it all began, his dreams slip through his fingers as he struggles to hold on to a world that never really existed.

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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.

Stolen in Paradise by Toby Neal is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Stolen in Paradise by Toby Neal

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Stolen in Paradise by Toby Neal as today's free mystery ebook (A Lei Crime Companion Mystery; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, July 17, 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.

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Stolen in Paradise by Toby Neal

Stolen in Paradise
Toby Neal
A Lei Crime Companion Mystery
Publisher: Toby Neal

One betta fish, two dead biologists, three trysts, four suspects and thirty-five pairs of shoes add up to complicated days in paradise for Special Agent Marcella Scott.

Marcella gets into sand way over her Manolos investigating the death of a prominent scientist washed up on a Waikiki beach with a bullet hole between the eyes. BioGreen, a genetically-engineered algae that could solve the world fuel crisis, has been stolen from the development lab — a hotbed of intrigue where everyone on the project has something to hide.

Marcella also has a secret vice, more dangerous than expensive shoes — and it leads her into arms that are too close for comfort.

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.

The Bone Triangle by B. V. Larson is Today's Kindle Daily Deal

The Kindle Daily Deal

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Bone Triangle by B. V. Larson as today's Amazon Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $0.99 is valid only for today, Wednesday, July 17, 2013.

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The Bone Triangle by B. V. Larson

The Bone Triangle
B. V. Larson
An Unspeakable Things Novel
47North

When twenty something Jacqueline Swanson mysteriously goes missing in Las Vegas, supernatural crime investigator Quentin Draith is hired to investigate. Determined, Draith immerses himself in the darkest corners of the city's underworld, unveiling a string secrets and bizarre deaths.

The deeper he digs, the more otherworldly his assignment gets. Assassins, human and otherwise, put a target on Draith's head. An old foe ignites a storm of mad science. And a ravenous beast rampages through the city.

The clues point Draith to Sin City's infamous "Bone Triangle", a neighborhood marked for its dark happenings and disappearances. And when Draith finds that the daughter's disappearance may be linked to an alien plot against the city, he goes all in to make a final high-stakes play to save the city he loves.

Amazon Kindle Daily Deal

Amazon Whispersync OfferClick on the Amazon button to see also the special Whispersync offer associated with this title.

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.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Cinemystery: Dan Brown's Inferno to be Next Book in Series to be Adapted for Film

Cinemystery: Crime Novels Adapted for Film

Sony Pictures announced today that the next "Robert Langdon" thriller to be adapted for film will be the most recent written by Dan Brown, Inferno … keeping their track record intact of filming the books in the series out of order. (The Da Vinci Code, the second in the series, was the first to be filmed.)

David Koepp, who adapted Angels & Demons, will write the screenplay. Tom Hanks is on board to reprise his role as the Harvard symbologist caught up in yet another conspiracy.

Ron Howard directed the first two films in the series, but will not direct this third one. No director has yet been announced.

Inferno is expected to be in theaters in December 2015.

(Source: LA Times.)

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Inferno by Dan Brown

Inferno
Dan Brown
A Robert Langdon Thriller

In the heart of Italy, Harvard professor of symbology Robert Langdon is drawn into a harrowing world centered on one of history's most enduring and mysterious literary masterpieces … Dante's Inferno.

gainst this backdrop, Langdon battles a chilling adversary and grapples with an ingenious riddle that pulls him into a landscape of classic art, secret passageways, and futuristic science. Drawing from Dante's dark epic poem, Langdon races to find answers and decide whom to trust … before the world is irrevocably altered.

Inferno by Dan Brown, Amazon Kindle format  Inferno by Dan Brown, iTune iBook format  Inferno by Dan Brown, Kobo format

New Book Trailer for Strong Rain Falling by Jon Land

Strong Rain Falling by Jon Land

A new book trailer for …

Strong Rain Falling
Jon Land
A Caitlin Strong Mystery
Forge Books (August 2013)

Mexico, 1919: The birth of the Mexican drug trade begins with opium being smuggled across the U.S. border, igniting an all-out battle with American law enforcement in general and the Texas Rangers in particular.

The Present: Fifth Generation Texas Ranger Caitlin Strong and her lover Cort Wesley Masters both survive terrifying gun battles. But this time, it turns out, the actual targets were not them, but Masters' teenage sons.

That sets Caitlin and Cort Wesley off on a trail winding through the past and present with nothing less than the future of the United States hanging in the balance. Along the way they will confront terrible truths dating all the way back to the Mexican Revolution and the dogged battle Caitlin's own grandfather and great-grandfather fought against the first generation of Mexican drug dealers.

At the heart of the storm soon to sweep away America as we know it, lies a mastermind whose abundant power is equaled only by her thirst for vengeance. Ana Callas Guajardo, the last surviving member of the family that founded the Mexican drug trade, has dedicated all of her vast resources to a plot aimed at the U.S.'s technological heart.

This time out, sabotage proves to be as deadly a weapon as bombs in a battle Caitlin must win in cyberspace as well. Her only chance to prevail is to short-circuit a complex plan based as much on microchips as bullets. Because there's a strong rain coming and only Caitlin and Cort Wesley can stop the fall before it's too late.

Strong Rain Falling by Jon Land, Amazon Kindle format  Strong Rain Falling by Jon Land, iTune iBook format

New Book Trailer for Murder as a Fine Art by David Morrell

Murder as a Fine Art by David Morrell

A new book trailer for …

Murder as a Fine Art
David Morrell
Mulholland Books (May 2013)

There's no such thing as forgetting  …

Thomas De Quincey, infamous for his memoir Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, is the major suspect in a series of ferocious mass murders identical to ones that terrorized London forty-three years earlier.

The blueprint for the killings seems to be De Quincey's essay "On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts." Desperate to clear his name but crippled by opium addiction, De Quincey is aided by his devoted daughter Emily and a pair of determined Scotland Yard detectives.

Fogbound streets become a battleground between a literary star and a brilliant murderer, whose lives are linked by secrets long buried but never forgotten.

Murder as a Fine Art by David Morrell, Amazon Kindle format  Murder as a Fine Art by David Morrell, iTune iBook format  Murder as a Fine Art by David Morrell, Kobo format

Cinemystery: Universal Options Suspense Thriller Weaponized for Film

Cinemystery: Crime Novels Adapted for Film

Universal Pictures has optioned the soon-to-be-published suspense thriller Weaponized for film.

Co-author David Guggenheim, who wrote the screenplays for the thrillers Safe House and Stolen, will adapt the book.

(Source: Deadline)

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Weaponized by Nicholas Mennuti and David Guggenheim

Weaponized
Nicholas Mennuti and David Guggenheim
A Suspense Thriller

Kyle West is a wanted man. Having fled the country to escape the false charges filed against himself and his former boss, billionaire government contractor Christopher Chandler, Kyle's hiding in Cambodia, living on borrowed time and finding more and more reasons to be paranoid.

When a mysterious stranger named Julian Robinson walks into Kyle's favorite café and offers to swap passports with Kyle, Kyle can't believe his luck. Robinson looks so much like Kyle it's almost unreal, and seems in every way the yin to Kyle's yang — self-assured, charismatic and wealthy beyond measure. Traveling on business, Robinson needs Kyle's passport to get to Africa, where a lucrative deal awaits. Kyle needs Robinson's passport to safely flee Cambodia. The swap seems almost too good to be true. Unfortunately for Kyle, it is.

This one decision plunges Kyle into a Pandora's Box of intrigue that threatens to swallow him whole. Suddenly he finds himself being pursued by Russian oligarchs, Chinese operatives, the CIA, and a beautiful woman trained to kill; because Robinson certainly isn't who he seemed. And time is running out for Kyle to discover who he is.

Weaponized by Nicholas Mennuti and David Guggenheim, Amazon Kindle format  Weaponized by Nicholas Mennuti and David Guggenheim, iTune iBook format  Weaponized by Nicholas Mennuti and David Guggenheim, Kobo format

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