Monday, February 10, 2014

Body Slam by Rex Burns, a New 1st in Series Mystery Introducing Jim Raiford and his daughter Julie

Body Slam by Rex Burns, a First in Series Mystery

We are pleased to present you with one of this month's new 1st in Series mysteries: Body Slam by Rex Burns and introducing Jim Raiford and his daughter Julie.

What we know about the characters: Jim Raiford and his daughter Julie are PIs in the Touchstone Agency.

For more information about their first case, see a synopsis of the book, below.

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Body Slam by Rex Burns

Body Slam by Rex Burns
Series: A Touchstone Agency Mystery
Publisher: Mysterious Press
Format(s): Trade Paperback, eBook

Targeted by thugs, a wrestling impresario reaches out to an old friend …

When Otto Lidke got a tryout in pro football, he hired a lawyer friend named Jim Raiford to handle his contract. The negotiations were bungled, forcing both men into a career change. Trying to start a pro wrestling circuit in Denver, Lidke runs afoul of the national federation, which does everything it can — legal and otherwise — to stamp out his new venture. When shady business practices escalate into threats on his life, Lidke calls on Raiford, now a private investigator, to dig up some dirt on the men who are trying to put him out of business.

But instead he gets Raiford's daughter, Julie — a whip-smart sleuth looking to prove she's every bit as savvy as her father. As Julie and her dad dig into the vicious world of small-time wrestling, they find that though the fights may be fixed, the danger is all too real.

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Power Blind, A Graham Gage Thriller by Steven Gore, Now at a Special Price

Power Blind by Steven Gore

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Power Blind by Steven Gore, now available at a special price, courtesy of the publisher, Harper.

The ebook format of this title was priced at $3.99 from the listed vendors (below) as of the date and time of this post (02/10/2014 at 3:00 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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Power Blind by Steven Gore

Power Blind by Steven Gore
A Graham Gage Thriller (3rd in series)
Publisher: Harper

In Washington, Senator Landon Meyer — leading presidential candidate and pivotal voice in a divided senate — imposes his choices to fill two Supreme Court vacancies on the President. In San Francisco, Charlie Palmer — a specialist in burying the crimes of the political and financial elite — lies paralyzed by a gunshot. Linking the two is the senator's all-too-cunning brother — a federal judge secretly managing his campaign.

An hour before his death, Palmer reaches out to private investigator Graham Gage, a man he's both feared and admired, but his words remain choked in his throat. A funeral-day burglary of Palmer's office and a wife's plea for the truth about her husband's misdeeds plunge Gage into a morass of murder, corporate cover-ups, and corrupted justice that masks a political money-laundering scheme threatening to destroy not only our democracy, but all that is dear to Gage …

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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.

After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman, New in Bookstores in February 2014

New Mysteries (

Today's new hardcover mystery title, scheduled to be published during February 2014 by William Morrow, is After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman.

For a list of more new hardcover mysteries published this month, visit our New Mysteries page for February 2014. For new paperback mysteries, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where a selection of February 2014 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers are shelved.

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After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman

After I'm Gone
Laura Lippman

When Felix Brewer meets Bernadette "Bambi" Gottschalk at a Valentine's Dance in 1959, he charms her with wild promises, some of which he actually keeps. Thanks to his lucrative — if not all legal — businesses, she and their three little girls live in luxury. But on the Fourth of July, 1976, Bambi's comfortable world implodes when Felix, newly convicted and facing prison, mysteriously vanishes.

Though Bambi has no idea where her husband — or his money — might be, she suspects one woman does: his mistress, Julie. When Julie disappears ten years to the day that Felix went on the lam, everyone assumes she's left to join her old lover — until her remains are eventually found.

Now, twenty-six years after Julie went missing, Roberto "Sandy" Sanchez, a retired Baltimore detective working cold cases for some extra cash, is investigating her murder. What he discovers is a tangled web stretching over three decades that connects five intriguing women. And at the center is the missing man Felix Brewer.

Somewhere between the secrets and lies connecting past and present, Sandy will find the truth. And when he does, no one will ever be the same.

After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman, Amazon Kindle format  After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman, Nook format  After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman, iTune iBook format  After I'm Gone by Laura Lippman, Kobo format

Telemystery: ITV Orders 8th Season of Inspector Lewis

Telemystery: Mystery and Suspense on Television

ITV has commissioned an eighth season — six one-hour episodes — of Inspector Lewis.

Kevin Whately and Laurence Fox reprise their roles as the detectives who investigate grisly murders against the backdrop of the beautiful university spires of Oxford. But this time it's different …

After an extended break from the Police, Hathaway (Laurence Fox) has been promoted to Inspector. When the chemistry that exists with Lewis eludes Hathaway, retired Lewis (Kevin Whately) is drafted back to renew their partnership. The combination of Robbie Lewis's instinct for tracking murderers and unraveling motives and Cambridge graduate James Hathaway's deep thinking and erudite approach has served the duo well in the past. It's a new dynamic for the detectives, however, but one they'll have to come to terms with quickly if they are to achieve results.

The new season will go into production in March 2014 and once again feature the beautiful locations in and around the city of Oxford, including the Cherwell and Isis rivers and the magnificent university colleges.

Based on characters created by crime novelist Colin Dexter, the author continues his association with Inspector Lewis acting as consultant on all aspects of production.

The Frailty of Flesh, A Nolan, Hart, and Tain Mystery by Sandra Ruttan, at a Special Price during February 2014

The Frailty of Flesh by Sandra Ruttan

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 The Frailty of Flesh by Sandra Ruttan. This Kindle book was listed at $0.99 as of the date and time of this post, Monday, February 10, 2014 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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The Frailty of Flesh by Sandra Ruttan

The Frailty of Flesh by Sandra Ruttan
A Nolan, Hart, and Tain Mystery (2nd in series)
Publisher: Leisure

When a young boy is found murdered in a park, the boy's brother says that his sister was the murderer — but she's nowhere to be found.

Constables Hart and Tain find evidence that the sister is innocent and is actually a potential victim herself. Now they need to find her before she — and the rest of her family — is killed.

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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 Black Mile, A Soho Noir Thriller by Mark Dawson, Now at a Special Price

The Black Mile by Mark Dawson

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Black Mile by Mark Dawson, now available at a special price, courtesy of the publisher, Black Dog Publishing.

The ebook format of this title was priced at $0.99 from the listed vendors (below) as of the date and time of this post (02/10/2014 at 1:00 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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The Black Mile by Mark Dawson

The Black Mile by Mark Dawson
A Soho Noir Thriller (1st in series)
Publisher: Black Dog Publishing

London, 1940: the Luftwaffe blitzes London every night for fifty-seven nights. Houses, shops and entire streets are wiped from the map. The underworld is in flux: the Italian criminals who dominated the West End have been interned and now their rivals are fighting to replace them. Meanwhile, hidden in the shadows, the Black-Out Ripper sharpens his knife and sets to his grisly work.

Henry Irving is a disgraced reporter on a Fleet Street scandal rag. Genius detective sergeant Charlie Murphy is a fresh face in the Metropolitan police, hunting corrupt colleagues but blinkered by ambition and jealousy. His brother, detective inspector Frank Murphy, searches frantically for his runaway daughter, terrified that she will be the killer's next victim.

As the Ripper stalks the terrified streets, the three men discover that his handiwork is not quite what it seems. Conspirators are afoot, taking advantage of the chaos to settle old scores. The murders invade the lives of the victims and victimizers on both sides of the law, as everyone is sucked deeper and deeper into Soho's black heart.

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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.

New from Carina Press: Tempered by Karina Cooper

Carina Press

Carina Press is a digital-first imprint from Harlequin, publishing books in an interesting and diverse selection of genres including contemporary romance, steampunk, gay/lesbian fiction, science-fiction, fantasy, and — but of course — mystery and suspense.

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Tempered by Karina Cooper

Tempered by Karina Cooper
The St. Croix Chronicles
Publisher: Carina Press
Price: $3.99 (as of 02/10/14 12:30 PM ET)

Forced out of London's coal-blackened streets, Cherry St. Croix is faced with her most difficult undertaking yet: sobriety.

At long last, my guardian, the enigmatic Mr. Oliver Ashmore, has revealed himself-and his order is clear: I am to be dried out at once, regardless of my wishes.

I loathe the country estate I am imprisoned within. Footsteps follow me, voices call for me, and my sanity wavers. In my fevered dreams, I am haunted by those I failed, while waking proves no protection from the ghosts of my reckless past. The craving for laudanum plagues me. I require a distraction.

To unravel the alchemical mysteries of my mother's family, I must rely on Ashmore's tutelage. I am lured to the art and drawn by the secrets my guardian possesses. Yet the deeper I delve, the more I believe that something dreadful disturbs these haunted corridors. In my madness, I fear that what it wants most … is me.

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

Telemystery: Sherlock Season 3, New This Week on DVD, Blu-ray Disc, and Instant Video

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

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

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Sherlock: Series Three

Sherlock
Season Three

It's been nearly two years since Sherlock Holmes seemingly fell to his death in the epic second season finale of Sherlock, and since then all anyone has wanted to know is: how did he survive? The question is finally answered when London's greatest consulting detective returns in Sherlock: Season Three.

So … how did Sherlock do it? And how will John take the news that his best friend faked his own death? The first episode of this new series, "The Empty Hearse", picks up two years after the devastating effects of The Reichenbach Fall. Dr. John Watson has got on with his life — a new job, a new romance and a comforting domestic future beckon. But with London under threat of a huge terrorist attack, Sherlock Holmes is about to rise from the grave with all the theatricality that comes so naturally to him. It's what Watson wanted more than anything, but if Sherlock thinks everything will be just as he left it, he's in for a very big surprise …

In the second episode, "The Sign of Three", Sherlock faces his biggest challenge of all — delivering a Best Man's speech on John's wedding day. But all isn't quite as it seems — mortal danger stalks the reception, and someone might not make it to the happy couple's first dance.

And in the final episode of this new season, "His Last Vow", a case of stolen letters leads Sherlock Holmes into a long conflict with Charles Augustus Magnussen, the Napoleon of blackmail, and the one man he truly hates. But how do you tackle a foe who knows the personal weakness of every person of importance in the Western world?

Benedict Cumberbatch stars as Sherlock Holmes with Martin Freeman as Dr. John Watson in these three feature-length episodes.

Sherlock: Series Three on DVD  Sherlock: Series Three on Blu-ray Disc  Sherlock: Series Three on Amazon Instant VOD  Sherlock: Series Three on iTunes

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

A Conversation with Mystery Authors Ron and Janet Benrey

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Ron and Janet Benrey
with Ron and Janet Benrey

We are delighted to welcome mystery authors Ron and Janet Benrey to Omnimystery News today.

Ron and Janet's third Royal Tunbridge Wells mystery is A Jam of a Different Color (Greenbrier Book Company; November 2013 ebook format) … and they're giving one of our readers a chance to win a copy! Details, below.

We recently had a chance to catch up with the authors to talk about their work.

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Omnimystery News: You are the authors of several mystery series. Why did you choose to create recurring characters for your books?

Ron and Janet Benrey
Photo provided courtesy of
Ron and Janet Benrey

Ron and Janet Benrey: Long before we began to write mystery fiction we were avid readers of cozy mysteries — virtually all of them with recurring characters. When we decided to write our first novel (during the early 1990s), it was inevitable that we thought in terms of a mystery series and a recurring character. The question of whether or not to "evolve" a series character is fascinating: readers who enjoy a particular character expect him or her to retain those aspects of personality and thinking that they find entertaining. On the other hand, people change and grow (even fictional sleuths). Consequently we find ourselves walking a fine line: our protagonists do change from book to book, but never in their core values that ultimately shape the way they act and interact with other people.

We learned quite early in our writing that a recurring character had to have a strong enough personality and a distinct enough voice to carry readers through three, four, or more novels. Our current series, the Royal Tunbridge Wells mysteries, has been especially challenging because we have two recurring characters, one female and one male. Because they often "play off" against each another, they must grow and change in tandem.

A Jam of a Different Color, our new Royal Tunbridge Wells Tea Museum mystery, is the third in the series. Felicity (Flick) Adams, Ph.D., the American born chief curator of the museum, has become more "Anglofied" — even uttering the occasional Britishism. Nigel Owen, the museum's London-born managing director, has become more comfortable living in a small city in Kent. Nonetheless, the pair still retain those inherent American and British traits that cause interesting friction when they interact.

OMN: So based on your own interests, would you categorize your books as cozies?

R/JB: Yes. However, if we have the opportunity to go beyond such a tightly defined category, we add that our mysteries lie toward the edgy end of the cozy spectrum. They have suspense-filled passages … they all contain an element of romance … and they tend to have more complex plots than many cozies.

"Labeling" has always been an integral part of the book biz. After all, one needs to put a book on a particular shelf in the library or bookstore — and now, in an online bookshop.

Our only complaint with the "cozy" label is that it is too narrow. Our early novels were called cozies because they had an amateur (non-policeman) sleuth, were set in interesting places, and lacked profanity, in your face violence, and overt sexuality. We think our mysteries are rated PG rather than G, like many true cozies.

OMN: Give us the synopsis of A Jam of a Different Color in a tweet.

R/JB: Who made perfect fakes of pricy antiques and murdered two people? The coppers think Flick and Nigel are guilty. The killer knows better!

OMN: How much of your own personal or professional experience have you included in your books?

R/JB: Our first series — "The Pippa Hunnechurch Mysteries" — features a British-born headhunter living in the Maryland. Well, Janet is a Brit, has worked as an executive recruiter, and was living in Maryland when we wrote the books.

Some of Pippa's characteristics of reflect Janet's personality. But Pippa is not autobiographical. She couldn't be because: 1) Janet has never had to bring several murderers to bay; and 2) Ron made a major contribution to Pippa's worldview and personality.

We invent our characters to tell the fictional stories we want to tell. We've never knowingly based a character on a real person, although we occasionally "meet" one of our characters in the flesh — after a novel is written.

OMN: Tell us about your writing process.

R/JB: We count ourselves among the novelists who are plotters rather than "seat-of-the-pantsers." Because most of our novels have one main plot and four subplots, we have to do considerable advance planning, or else we run the risk of getting lost.

But, we consider our outlines as guides, not fences. We feel free to change most everything as the manuscript develops. We've changed murder victims, the sex of key characters, the number of characters, the importance of secondary characters, the murder victims, and of course the murderer.

We almost never write long, formal biographies of our leading characters; we get to know them as the story progresses. And we really get inside their heads when we deploy them in the second and third novels of a series.

OMN: How do you go about researching the plot points of your stories?

R/JB: We often use the Internet as a research tool — carefully and gingerly. There is lots of incorrect information online. We also consult with experts when needed. For example, while writing A Jam of a Different Color, we spoke on two occasions (via telephone) with a senior police official in England. We wanted to get the details right when Flick and Nigel are arrested and interrogated.

Dead as a Scone, our first Tea Museum novel, posed the challenge of inventing a comprehensive "collection" to fill the museum's galleries and display shelves. We did it with Internet research, library research, visits to museums and several cities. Although our antiquities are imaginary, no one has ever challenged their "possible authenticity."

OMN: If you could travel anywhere in the world, all expenses paid, to do on site research, where would it be?

R/JB: We are planning a mystery set in Oxford, England. A month there would give us time to soak up the local atmosphere — and make the story richer. We plan to use Oxford as one of the novel's "characters," so we need lots of interesting details to make "our Oxford" realistic.

Ron is writing a standalone thriller that takes place during the first century. He would love to spend some time browsing through the ruins of ancient Roman cities (and European museums that specialize in ancient Roman artifacts). Same reason.

OMN: You mentioned that you like to soak up local atmosphere. How true are you to the settings in your book.

R/JB: We have used both fictional and real settings.

Our first series—"The Pippa Hunnechurch Mysteries"—was set in the fictional town of Ryde, Maryland, a small city loosely based on Annapolis, Maryland. We lived in Maryland at the time, and Pippa comes from a corner of England that had much in common with the Chesapeake Bay region of Maryland. Ryde doesn't exist, but we tried to paint it in a way that made readers think it was located where we said it was.

Ryde is important for Pippa. She likes the ambience so much that she decided to set up her business and home there. She comes from a part of England that has a history stretching back more than a thousand years. Ryde isn't that old, but it does date back to the first English settlers in America. (Sorry! We see Ryde as an actual place.)

Our Royal Tunbridge Wells Tea Museum mysteries are set in a real English town — the kind of place that attracts tourists and might have also attracted the imaginary foundation that built our fictional tea museum.

We are as careful as we can be to be true to geography and local environment. We think that's an important part of making up stories seem completely plausible.

OMN: What are some of your outside interests? And have any of these found their way into your books?

R/JB: It's funny, but the majority of our interests — e.g., boating, sailing, skiing, fishing, traveling — haven't yet found their way into our novels. Cooking, tea, and techy gadgets certainly have.

OMN: Have you ever considered writing under a single pen name?

R/JB: We write under our own names: Ron and Janet Benrey. However, we did ask our first publisher to use "Benrey+Benrey" as our byline. They put it on the spine of the book, but not elsewhere. It's not really a pen name, but it does reflect that we work together on novels.

OMN: What is the best advice — and harshest criticism — you've received as authors?

R/JB: Best advice: Learn how to evaluate your own writing.

It was Ernest Hemingway who said, "The most important thing in a writer needs is a built-in, shockproof, manure detector." Ernest used a different word, but the point he made is essential. Writers must learn to evaluate their own fiction. It's all too easy to think you've written something wonderful, and equally easy to think you just cranked out the worst chapter in the history of novelizing. Friends, critique groups, faculty at writers conferences, even a favorite aunt can all be useful evaluators — but ultimately a writer must be able to detect the gold (or the manure) in his or her work.

Harshest criticism: "Your novel doesn't meet our high standards."

This was the heart of one of the nastiest rejection letters we ever received. It barely qualifies as "criticism" because there's nothing useful a writer can take away from this kind of statement. We read it, licked our wounds, and moved on. Two months later we sold our first book to another publisher.

OMN: Complete this sentence for us: "We are mystery authors and thus we are also …"

R/JB: … avid mystery readers, because being the former is impossible without doing the latter.

OMN: As both authors and publishers, how important are titles and book covers?

R/JB: The functions of both book covers and titles have changed in the world of e-books and paper books sold online. The old rules reflected the need to attract the attention of people browsing for novels in a bookstore. Today, we need to attract the attention of readers browsing online. Covers need to be fairly simple, or else the "miniatures" will be impossible to decipher when viewed on a web page. Titles have to be relevant enough — and compelling enough — to encourage a browser to read the book's description. That is the item of "marketing literature" that sells e-books and online-purchased paper books.

The title and cover of our latest novel — A Jam of a Different Color — carry forward the "cozy scheme" of the earlier novels in the series. Because the stories are set in a tea museum, the titles and cover illustrations echo items of food served at typical afternoon teas: scones, crumpets, and jam.

OMN: What kinds of feedback have you received from readers?

R/JB: The one question get asked asked again and again is how do we manage to write together? Most people who ask question seem to assume that it's impossible (or at least very difficult) for two writers to work together. If pressed why they think this, they will usually say something about the ego required to write successfully. We've learned that the question they are really asking is, How can the two of you keep your egos in check long enough to put words on paper?

We actually enjoy answering the question, because our explanation surprises most people. Long before we began to write novels together, we operated a business communications firm. We learned that the only way to satisfy our clients — to meet their sometimes-goofy requirements — was to work closely together and check our egos at the door. Writing to please our readers requires the very same discipline.

OMN: If your current series were to be adapted for television or film, who do you see playing the key roles?

R/JB: Interestingly, our casting changes with each subsequent novel. If A Jam of a Different Color were made into a movie today, we would propose Benedict Cumberbatch for Nigel Owen and Christina Hendricks for Flick Adams.

OMN: What kinds of books did you read when you were young?

R/JB: Janet's childhood reading habits were formed when she discovered a trunk of old books in an attic. Inside was a mishmash of history, biography, fiction, and non-fiction. Later in life Janet developed a taste for mystery — mostly set in England, mostly cozy. Her favorite authors include: Dorothy Sayers, Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle, P. D. James, Elspeth Peters, Elizabeth George, Anne Perry, and Ruth Rendell. In fact, most of the mystery classics, including those written by Daphne Du Maurier.

The first novel Ron read cover-to-cover was the The Bobbsey Twins, or Merry Days Indoors and Out. He subsequently read two-dozen more in the series. He was a science fiction fan while growing up and assiduously avoided mystery novels. That changed in his early twenties when he happened upon Gambit, a "Nero Wolfe" mystery by Rex Stout. He quickly grew attached to the mystery writers who wrote during the middle third of the 20th century: Dashiell Hammett, Edmund Crispin, Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald, John le Carré — even Mickey Spillane.

OMN: And what do you read now for pleasure?

R/JB: Mystery is still number one for both of us, although Janet reads a lot of non-fiction these days and Ron enjoys theology books.

OMN: Do you have any favorite series characters?

R/JB: Not surprisingly, they are the characters created by our favorite mystery authors. Janet especially enjoys Adam Dalgliesh (P. D. James) and Lord Peter Wimsey (Dorothy Sayers). Ron likes Philip Marlowe (Raymond Chandler), Lew Archer (Ross Macdonald), Hercule Poirot (Agatha Christie) — and, of course, Sherlock Holmes.

OMN: Create a Top 5 list for us on any topic.

R/JB: Five Top Teas to Try

• An inexpensive loose tea blend — to prove that even "ordinary" brewed tea is loads better than tea made with a teabag.
• A good quality Oolong tea — the peachy taste and smell will surprise you.
• An estate Darjeeling tea — but be sure it's not a counterfeit!
• A good quality tea blend (our favorite is Upton Tea's Finest Russian Caravan Blend) — it may make you a tea person (even if you're a committed coffee drinker)
• Pu'erh tea — everyone should try it's fermented "earthy" taste once!

OMN: What's next for you both?

R/JB: Writers keep writing. We're working together on the novel set in Oxford, England we mentioned earlier. Ron is moving along with his novel set in the first century.

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Ron and Janet Benrey write cozy mysteries together. They've written "The Pippa Hunnechurch Mysteries" and "The Royal Tunbridge Wells Mysteries" (both series are now published by Greenbrier Book Company), and the "Glory, North Carolina, Mysteries" (published by Harlequin).

Despite their literary togetherness, Ron and Janet have dissimilar backgrounds. Janet has been a literary agent, the editorial director of a small press, an executive recruiter, a book publicist, and—going way back—a professional photographer. Janet earned her degree in Communication (Magna cum Laude) from the University of Pittsburgh.

Ron has been a writer forever — initially on magazines (his first real job was Electronics Editor at Popular Science Magazine), then in corporations (he wrote speeches for senior executives), and then as a novelist. Over the years, Ron has authored ten non-fiction books, including Know Your Rights — a Survival Guide for Non-Lawyers (published by Sterling). Ron holds a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a master's degree in management from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and a juris doctor from the Duquesne University School of Law. He was a member of the Bar of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Late in 2010, the Benreys launched Greenbrier Book Company, an eBook-centric publisher that also publishes some paper books. By the end of 2013, Greenbrier had more than 90 books "in print". Greenbrier's list includes dozens of mysteries and suspense novels.

For more about the authors, visit their website at Benrey.com. To learn more about Greenbrier Book Company, visit its website at GreenbrierBooks.com.

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A Jam of a Different Color by Ron and Janet Benrey

A Jam of a Different Color
Ron and Janet Benrey
The Royal Tunbridge Wells Mysteries

The impossible has happened!

Someone has figured out how to make perfect counterfeits of the Tunbridge Wells Tea Museum's most valuable silver antiques.

Britain's Serious Organized Crime Agency (the British equivalent of America's FBI) thinks that it's an inside job. The Officer in charge of the case has Flick Adams and Nigel Owen — the chief curator and managing director — "in the frame" for the crime. He also has begun to wonder if they could be responsible for the mysterious hit-and-run deaths of the museum's webmaster and her brother.

To make matters much, much worse, Nigel and Flick have just launched a major fundraising drive to repay the humongous debt the museum took on to purchase its collection of antiquities. They know that any bad publicity will scuttle the campaign and turn off the money tap.

Flick and Nigel have only one option: find the "mastermind" who's really responsible for the spate of evildoing. But then, the mastermind sets a lethal booby trap to slow them down. SOCA further complicates their detecting, their money raising, and their evolving personal relationship by arresting both of them.

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The Weredog Whisperer by Susan Abel Sullivan is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

The Weredog Whisperer by Susan Abel Sullivan

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Weredog Whisperer by Susan Abel Sullivan as today's second free mystery ebook (A Cleo Tidwell Paranormal Mystery; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, February 10, 2014 at 6:45 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 Weredog Whisperer by Susan Abel Sullivan

The Weredog Whisperer
Susan Abel Sullivan
A Cleo Tidwell Paranormal Mystery
Publisher: World Weaver Press

The Tidwells are supposed to be on spring break on the Florida Gulf Coast, not up to their eyeballs in paranormal hijinks … again.

Bertram wants a baby, but Cleo isn't real keen on the idea. After all, her sister, Molly, has four of 'em — who needs more? Hoping to throw Bertram off the baby trail, they adopt Luna, a white pit bull terrier, and take her to Florida with them, along with Bertram's mother and Cleo's nieces. Everybody loves Luna, especially the goofy little dog at a tacky tourist trap touting something called a "weredog whisperer", so much so that he puts the moves on Luna and gives her a love bite during the throes of puppy love.

But when Luna shape shifts into a teenage girl on the first night of the full moon, the Tidwells wind up with an instant were-daughter. Poof! Just add moonbeams. A video of Luna's transformation goes viral and the Tidwells are hounded by an array of reporters, sight seers, animal rights kooks, Hot Diggity Dog Pet Foods, a couple of hungry weresharks, a motley crew of weredogs, and AASS — a secret society of shape shifters that considers Luna an abomination and orders her immediate extermination.

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The Flight of the Silvers by Daniel Price is Today's Kobo Daily Deal

Kobo Daily Deal

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Flight of the Silvers by Daniel Price as today's Kobo Daily Deal.

The deal price of $2.99 is valid only for today, Monday, February 10, 2014.

Note: The price has been matched by Amazon.com for today only.

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The Flight of the Silvers by Daniel Price

The Flight of the Silvers
Daniel Price
A Fantasy Thriller
Blue Rider Press

Without warning, the world comes to an end for Hannah and Amanda Given. The sky looms frigid white. The electricity falters. Airplanes everywhere crash to the ground. But the Givens are saved by mysterious strangers, three fearsome and beautiful beings who force a plain silver bracelet onto each sister’s wrist. Within moments, the sky comes down in a crushing sheet of light and everything around them is gone.

Shielded from the devastation by their silver adornments, the Givens suddenly find themselves elsewhere, a strange new Earth where restaurants move through the air like flying saucers and the fabric of time is manipulated by common household appliances.

Soon Hannah and Amanda are joined by four other survivors from their world — a mordant cartoonist, a shy teenage girl, a brilliant young Australian, and a troubled ex-prodigy. Hunted by enemies they never knew they had and afflicted with temporal abilities they never wanted, the sisters and their companions begin a cross-country journey to find the one man who can save them— before time runs out.

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The White Cottage Mystery by Margery Allingham is Today's Nook Daily Find

Nook Daily Find

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The White Cottage Mystery by Margery Allingham as today's Nook Daily Find.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Monday, February 10, 2014.

Note: The price has been matched by Amazon.com for today only.

— ♦ —

The White Cottage Mystery by Margery Allingham

The White Cottage Mystery
Margery Allingham
A Murder Mystery
Bloomsbury

Author's first mystery, a stand-alone published in 1928 a year before she began her series with Albert Campion.

Eric Crowther knew everybody's secrets, so there was no shortage of suspects when he was found shot at the White Cottage. Chief Inspector Challenor and his son Jerry had to look deep into everyone's past — including the dead man's — before they could be sure who had pulled the trigger.

With a country house, blackmail and murder, this story has all the making for a classic cozy mystery.

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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.

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