Tuesday, October 14, 2014

A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet, New in Bookstores during October 2014

A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet

Today's featured new hardcover mystery, suspense, or thriller title scheduled to be published during October 2014 is …

A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet, a Max Tudor Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Minotaur Books

A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet, Amazon Kindle format  A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet, Nook format  A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet, iTune iBook format  A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet, Kobo format

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

More about our featured title, below …

Someone has been trying to poison the 15th Earl of Lislelivet. Since Lord Lislelivet has a gift for making enemies, no one — particularly his wife — finds this too surprising. What is surprising is that the poison was discovered in a fruitcake made and sold by the Handmaids of St. Lucy of Monkbury Abbey. Max Tudor, vicar of Nether Monkslip and former MI5 agent, is asked to investigate.

But just as Max comes to believe the poisoning was accidental, a body is discovered in the cloister well.

A Demon Summer by G. M. Malliet

Trick or Deadly Treat by Livia J. Washburn, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during October 2014

Trick or Deadly Treat by Livia J. Washburn

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during October 2014 …

Trick or Deadly Treat by Livia J. Washburn

A Phyllis Newsom, Fresh Baked Mystery (9th in series)

Publisher: NAL Trade

Trick or Deadly Treat by Livia J. Washburn, Amazon Kindle format

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for October 2014. For new hardcover mysteries, visit New Mysteries where for a list of October 2014 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

More about our featured title, below …

It's Halloween in Weatherford, Texas — which means Phyllis Newsom is baking up a storm of yummy seasonal treats … but she's about to get even busier unmasking a killer …

While Phyllis and her friend Carolyn are preparing for a baking contest, her housemate Sam adopts Buck, an adorable Dalmatian who was hit by a car. To thank local veterinarian Hank Baxter for helping the dog, Phyllis and Carolyn bake a batch of doggie treats for his other four-legged patients.

But when they arrive at the clinic, the vet is in the process of being arrested — for the murder of his wife! Convinced that the police are barking up the wrong tree and that someone's been burying evidence, Sam begs Phyllis to help find the real killer. Joined by Buck, the friends engage in a dogged pursuit of the murderer, who will stop at nothing to muzzle them … permanently.

Trick or Deadly Treat by Livia J. Washburn

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart, A Novel of Suspense by Peter Swanson, Now Available at a Special Price

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart by Peter Swanson

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, William Morrow …

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart by Peter Swanson

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: William Morrow

Price: $1.99 (as of 10/14/2014 at 1:00 PM ET).

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart by Peter Swanson, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

A man is swept into a vortex of irresistible passion and murder when an old love mysteriously reappears …

On an ordinary Friday evening at his favorite Boston tavern, George Foss's comfortable, predictable life is shattered when a beautiful woman sits down at the bar, a woman who vanished without a trace twenty years ago.

Liana Dector isn't just an ex-girlfriend, the first love George couldn't quite forget. She's also a dangerous enigma and quite possibly a cold-blooded killer wanted by the police. Suddenly, she's back — and she needs George's help. Ruthless men believe she stole some money … and they will do whatever it takes to get it back.

George knows Liana is trouble. But he can't say no — he never could — so he makes a choice that will plunge him into a terrifying whirlpool of lies, secrets, betrayal, and murder from which there is no sure escape.

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart by Peter Swanson

Time of Death, A John Carlyle Mystery by James Craig, New This Week from Witness Impulse

Time of Death by James Craig

Every week, Witness Impulse — an imprint of William Morrow — releases new suspense and thriller digital originals, typically priced at just $2.99 each.

Omnimystery News is pleased to present you with one of this week's titles …

Time of Death by James Craig

A John Carlyle Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Witness Impulse

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/14/2014 at 12:30 PM ET).

First published in the UK as Never Apologise, Never Explain.

Time of Death by James Craig, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

The worst murders occur closest to home …

When Agatha Mills is killed in her own apartment in the shadow of the British Museum, there is only one suspect — her husband, Henry. For Inspector Carlyle, it seems like an open-and-shut case. But much to Carlyle's chagrin, Henry refuses to confess. Worse, he comes up with an alternative version of events that is nearly impossible to investigate.

Carlyle just wants to put the murder to bed, but when a distraught Henry kills himself on the way to prison, doubts begin to surface. The mounting evidence indicates he may have been telling the truth. In which case, the murderer is still at large …

Time of Death by James Craig

An Excerpt from Treasure Coast, a Crime Novel by Tom Kakonis

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Tom Kakonis
Treasure Coast
by Tom Kakonis

We are delighted to welcome novelist Tom Kakonis to Omnimystery News today.

Tom's new caper is titled Treasure Coast and is published by Brash Books, a new company created by Lee Goldberg and Joel Goldman to publish "the best crime novels in existence."

We are please to introduce you to it with an excerpt from the first chapter.

— ♦ —

Treasure Coast by Tom Kakonis

LIKE MOST MEN CLOSING IN ON THE benchmark forty, Jim Merriman made far more promises — to others mainly, a dwindling few yet to himself — than he knew, heart of hearts, he ever intended to keep. It was a habit by now so deeply entrenched, so much a part of him, that he wore it like a second skin: Generate an earnest pledge today; effortlessly shuck it off tomorrow. Mostly it was harmless, this habitual shortfall between oath and execution, deed and good intention. A commonplace human failing, to his thinking, small and forgivable.
  A way of getting by in this sorry world. But the vow exacted from him by a dying sister — that now was giving him serious pause. Better make that acute discomfort. (If he were going to be honest with himself, for a switch, figuring — trying to figure — how to squirrel out of this one. Very unsettling.)
  From across the continent, he'd been summoned to her bed of pain, where eventually, floating up out of a narcotized fog, she found the strength to peel back crusted eyelids, fix him with a fluttery gaze, and in a voice fainter than a whisper, feebler than a gasp, murmur, "Jim? That you?"
  "None other," he affirmed, putting some of that fraudulent deathwatch heartiness into it.
  "You came."
  "Said I would."
  "Been here long?"
  "Not long," he lied. In fact he'd been sitting there for the better part of the afternoon, studying her sleep, marveling at the relentless progress of this formidable malady, its curious manifestations. Her face, in sleep, was sunken, sallow with a greenish tint, the color of mold-infested cheese. The sockets of the eyes, hollow and dark, looked to be rimmed with a dusting of soot. A limp hand, its flesh withered and veined as a dry leaf, seemed to sprout from a forearm grotesquely swollen to Popeye proportions and out of which coiled an IV vine that leaked some colorless, powerless anodyne into her blood. Now that hand moved in an effort at a sweeping gesture. "No, here, I mean. Florida."
  "I got in this morning. Leon picked me up at the airport."
  "Leon?"
  "Yes."
  "Where is he?"
  "Your place. I told him to go back and crash. He looked pretty wasted."
  "It's been hard for him," she said.
  "He'll be OK."
  "You think so?"
  "Sure."
  "I wonder."
  "How about you?" he asked. "They treating you right here?"
  "They do what they can."
  "Well, you need anything, you just let me know," he said, more confidently than he felt — as if he had a direct hotline to the nerve center of the AMA and could make the quacks jump at his barked command. Hotline to nowhere was what he had. She nodded dismally, said nothing.
  To put something into the oppressive silence, he launched a wandering monologue, picking his topics cautiously, from the security of the distant past mostly, skirting that phantom third presence in the room, Lord Death, with his constrictive time horizons. "Remember that time … " he'd begin a tale, lifted from their shared heartland childhood, and through the malleable prism of inventive memory, he'd mutate some perfectly ordinary incident into an adventure antic. Outrageously the tales grew in the telling, spinning the sunny Leave It to Beaver mythology of a tight, joyous, loving family life. Pure fabrication of course. All of it. The sorry truth was that, apart from the accident of birth, they'd never had much in common, never been particularly close. Nevertheless he wore on, mouth running tirelessly, until at last the grab bag of hilarious anecdotes was depleted, the memory-lane tour exhausted, and again a desolate silence settled over the room. Thee somber interval lengthened. After a while she filled it.
  "Jim?"
  "Yeah?" Eyes tearing over, she said, not as a question, "There's not much time left, is there."
  "Oh, I don't know about that. Nurse out there says you're holding your own."
  "Will you do something for me?" she asked, ignoring the blatant falsehood. "Whatever I can."
  "It's Leon. He's all alone now. So helpless. Like a child. Will you watch out for him?"
  "Sure, I'll give the kid a hand" is what he told her. Another in that legion of empty pledges. Slippery, purposely vague. The kind of thing you search for to say. Should have been enough. Except she couldn't leave it alone. "Promise?"
  "Hey, you can count on me," he said lightly, conscious of the sickly smile tacked on his face.
  "Need to hear you say it, Jim."
  "Uh, what's that?" he asked, stalling, averting his eyes from that pleading, miseried gaze, unblinking now, insistent.
  "You promise."
  So, cornered, he heard his voice utter that one too, the "p" word, figuring, Why not? What's the damage? Whatever it took to help her exit gracefully, or as graceful as anyone riddled by outlaw cells, wildly multiplying even as they spoke, could ever exit. It was only words. Nothing lost, no one really hurt.
  His first mistake. First of many. Ten minutes later he stood outside the entrance to the Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center, idly puffing a cigarette. A nurse, briskly efficient, professionally cheery, her smile as starched as her uniform, had appeared only a moment after the vow-taking ceremony (nice timing, those mercy angels) and shooed him out of the room, chirping something about "Time for meds" and whatever other ghoulish things they did to keep the croakee wheezing and earn their pay. OK by him. Welcome break from the white world of the hospital and its clash of pungent perfumes, its soiled bedsheets, lemony cleansing solutions, acrid antiseptics, hothouse flowers, rank festering flesh.
  The slanting rays of the sun, still fierce on an immense slate of bleached sky, steamed the hospital lawn, glued the parking-lot tar. The dank air resonated with the atonal hum of insect energy. Symphony of famished worms, he thought ruefully, gathering for the feast waiting just on the other side of this door.
  A sudden mournful ache, hollow and unfocused, overtook him. But whom did he really mourn? An expiring sister in there, seldom seen, scarcely known, barely recognizable anymore, soon to be floating out of herself? No, it was himself he sorrowed for, himself, a couple of weeks short of a milestone birthday, half a lifetime squandered, pissed away, and dying just as surely as she, only daily, increment by increment, puff by puff. Conducting his own requiem in advance, dirge supplied courtesy of an invisible swarm of bugs. What they're doing, these crusading nicotine zealots, by banishing us from their haloed presence, he further reflected, dourly now, is creating a breed of solitary, morbid philosophers. Seekers of occult mystery in wisps of smoke.
  His cigarette had grown a tail of ash. He ground it under a heel, defiantly lit another. And just as he put a flame to it, a most handsome woman clad in a satiny blouse and designer jeans came through the door, paused, the shed a pack of Capris from a Gucci bag slung over her shoulder, and shook one loose. The flame in his hand still flickered, and so in that wordless bond that links a renegade fraternity, he offered it to her. She favored him with a small smile and ever so lightly touched his hand in a steadying gesture. Fetching gesture, fetching smile. Up close this way, he could see she wasn't young but not yet old either, a ripened thirtyish somewhere; by his best estimate, forty tops. Around a plume of smoke, she said, "Another second-class citizen?"
  "Afraid so."
  "They're turning us into a bunch of sneaks."
  "Or worse yet, wimps. Where's Bogie when we need him?"
  "Who?" she asked.
  "Humphrey Bogart. Remember him? Tough as nails, and he always had a weed stuck in his face."
  "How about Bette Davis? Nobody crossed her."
  "There you are."
  One thing you had to give your habit — it was an instant icebreaker. Something to be said for that, particularly when your commiserator comes equipped with a dizzying cascade of platinum curls; good bone geometry; skin lacquered to a high sheen; a generous crimson-glossed mouth; eyes a cool blue but with a glint of worldly mischief in them; and pliant, slightly plumpish curves under a fashion-statement outfit. Like this one did. All of which he assimilated in a sly sidelong glance, as he no longer pondered his own mortality but rather the enduring quality of lust, how it occasionally nods but never really sleeps. "You visiting somebody?" she asked him, turning the talk elsewhere, extending it. Promising signal.
  "A sister," Jim said. "Is it serious?"
  "It's cancer."
  "Bad?"
  "Terminal variety."
  "That's a shame."
  He shrugged. "Yeah, well, cancer always wins." She took a long, meditative pull on her Capri. the third finger of the cigarette-bearing hand, he noticed, was bedecked with a gaudy rock the size of a boulder. Generally — though not absolutely, in his experience — a bad signal. In a stagy, breathy voice, she said, "I'm real sorry."
  "No need to be," he said with mock solemnity. "Doctors determined it wasn't your fault."
  For a sliver of an instant, she looked perplexed. Then, as she got it, her smile widened, displaying an abundance of teeth, dazzling as neon and much too perfect to be anything but orthodontist enhanced. Jim gave her back his player smile, oblique, distant, hint of evasiveness in it. Dueling grins.
  Hers departed first, displaced by an earnest expression. "Is she centered?"
  "Centered?"
  "Centered," she repeated, as though the echo explained itself. "Afraid I don't follow," he said, baffled by the corkscrew twist in the conversation and wondering if maybe this time the joke wasn't on him.
  "Like, in tune with her spiritual center." Evidently no joke. "Well," he said, "we've never been what you'd call God-fearing people. She taught math, some community college down here. Numbers are — were — her religion."
  "Got nothing to do with religion," she declared, a little impatiently. "No? What then?"
  "Energy. Strictly energy. See, I read this book by this Indian guy — from India, I mean, not your American kind — where he shows how we're all a part of this one big spirit. Only he calls it energy. Cosmic energy. And it's, like, steady. Never changes, never dies. What we call 'dying' is just trading energies."
   "That's a comfort."
  "And what you got to do," she plowed on, voice elevating urgently, "when your body's ready to pass, is zero in on it, your place in this energy field. That's what centering is. Sort of like finding your way home."
  "Interesting theory," Jim allowed, thinking they all have to come with some wart, physical or otherwise. Even the best of them, like this dumpling of sex here, with the loopy-energy hair up her sweet apple ass. Too bad. Terrible waste. "Changed my life, I can tell you."
  "Bet it did at that."
  "What I do now," she said, "is try and help people get in touch with it. Their energy center. That's why I'm here. My best girlfriend's mother — she's about to pass too."
  Sounded to him like some spiritual fart cutting, with her being the therapeutic Gas-X. But what he said was, "Sounds sort of like volunteer work."
  "Guess you could call it that. See, growing up, I wanted to be a nurse. Never did make it, so this is the next best thing."
  "You? A nurse?"
  "I always wanted to help people."
  Yeah, right. "I see," he said cautiously, radar suddenly alert for a scam coming on.
  "So you think she's centered yet?"
  "Who's that?"
  "Who we're talking about here … your sis."
  "You got me."
  "If you want, I could speak to her."
  Finally the pitch. Everybody peddling something. Pretty prosperous clip too, by the looks of that stone weighting her finger. Unless, of course, it was fake. "Appreciate the offer," Jim said, "but I don't think she'd be very receptive." Figured that'd be the end of it. Any good fleecer knows when it's time to book.
  Figured wrong. "OK," she said breezily and, in yet another of those bootleg turns, added, "You're not from around here, are you?"
  "How could you tell?"
  "Wild guess."
  "You guessed right."
  "Whereabouts then?"
  "Nevada."
  "Vegas?"
  "Reno."
  "Reno, Vegas — they're like Florida," she said. "Nobody's from there."
  "Right again."
  "So? Originally where?"
  "South Dakota."
  "No kidding!" she exclaimed. "Me too. I'm from Bismark."
  "That's in North Dakota."
  "Same thing."
  "I expect maybe it is. There's not all that many of us, either province."
  "Hey, don't I know? That's why we got to stick together. What I always say is, 'When you're from Dakota, you got to be good.' " Jim regarded her narrowly. A corner of her wide mouth was lifted once again in a suggestion of a smile, artful, provocative, faintly amused. The naughty mischief he'd seen earlier, thought he'd seen, all but given up on during the energy drone, shimmered behind her eyes. "By that," he said, choosing his words carefully (for if four decades had taught him any lesson at all, it was that a man never knew when he was going to get lucky), "do you mean 'nice good'? Or oh, say, 'skillful good,' 'accomplished'?" Before she could reply, a sleek silver Porsche swung into the lot and lurched to an idling stop twenty or so yards from where they stood. A head — male, jowly, squinty eyed, round, and hairless as a billiard ball — poked out of the driver's-side window like a wary turtle emerging from its shell. She gave it a high-handed wave, a big theatrical welcoming grin, calling, "Hi, honey. Be right with you." To Jim she stage-whispered, "Thee big doolie arrives."
  "Doolie?"
  "The worse half."
  "Oh."
  She lowered the waving hand, abruptly thrust it at him. "Been real nice talking to you." Jim took the offered hand. Grip was surprisingly firm; the shake snappy, businesslike. "Same here," he said. "My name's Billie. Billie Swett."
  "Swett?"
  "You got it. Like in the perspiration, only with an 'e' and two 't's. Cute, huh?"
  "Well, everybody's got to be named something."
  "And you are?"
  "Jim Merriman."
  "Merriman," she repeated, the tantalizing shimmer not quite gone out of her eyes. "You don't look so merry to me."
  "Inside I'm laughing."
  "Listen, you change your mind — about your sister, I mean — I'll be at the hospital here. Next couple days anyway. Ask around. They know me in there."
  "I'll be watching." The Porsche's horn bleated. The turtle head squawked, "C'mon, honey. We're runnin' late."
  "I'm coming, hon," she called back sweetly, but under her breath, softly, though not so soft as to be inaudible, she muttered, "Asshole."
  Across lawn and lot, she sauntered, loose easy stride, studied sway in the shapely hips. Into the Porsche she climbed, pecked the turtle on the cheek, checked her reflection in the rearview, patted and primped the cotton candy ringlets. And with that the two honeys were gone, sped away, leaving Jim to speculate now on the quirky nature of luck, which, he suspected, like gold, was where you found it.

Excerpted from the book Treasure Coast by Tom Kakonis.
Copyright © 2014 by Tom Kakonis.
Reprinted with permission of Brash Books. All rights reserved.

— ♦ —

Treasure Coast by Tom Kakonis

Treasure Coast
Tom Kakonis
A Crime Novel

A compulsive gambler goes to his sister's funeral on Florida's Treasure Coast and gets saddled with her loser-son, who is deep in debt to a vicious loan shark who sends a pair of sociopathic thugs to collect on the loan.

But things go horribly awry … and soon the gambler finds himself in the center of an outrageous kidnapping plot involving a conman selling mail-order tombstones, a psychic who channels the dead and the erotically super-charged wife of a wealthy businessman.

As if that wasn't bad enough, a killer hurricane is looming …

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)

A Conversation with Novelist Adrian Churchward

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Adrian Churchward
with Adrian Churchward

We are delighted to welcome novelist Adrian Churchward to Omnimystery News today.

Adrian's first book in The Puppet Meisters trilogy dealing with state abuse of power, Moscow Bound, was published earlier this year by SilverWood Books, and we recently had the opportunity to talk more about it with him.

— ♦ —

Omnimystery News: Moscow Bound is the first in a trilogy. Introduce us to the lead characters and how you see them developing over the series.

Adrian Churchward
Photo provided courtesy of
Adrian Churchward

Adrian Churchward: The main protagonists are Scott Mitchell and General Pravda. Scott is an English human rights lawyer based in Moscow. He crusades against injustices and abuses of power committed by the political elite (everywhere, not just in Russia), who pay lip service to transparency. As the story proceeds he learns to be more pragmatic.

General Pravda of Russian military intelligence is devoted to his Motherland, but realises that things must change in the way Russia treats its people, if it is to become a transparent society.

Scott will remain the principal character throughout the trilogy. I suspect that General Pravda will come and go.

OMN: Tell us something about Moscow Bound that isn't mentioned in the publisher's synopsis.

AC: The story is about the plight of those captured US GIs, classified as MIAs, in the Vietnam War who are believed to have become the "Moscow Bounds", when North Vietnam traded them with the Soviet Union in exchange for technical support.

OMN: How would you tweet a summary of the book?

AC: An edgy psychological thriller set in 2013 Moscow, uniting Cold War and contemporary events in Russia, the USA and Vietnam.

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

AC: I lived and worked (as a commercial lawyer) in the USSR/Russia for 14 years. Prior to that, I spent a year or so working in Los Angeles. During these periods I met, and sometimes befriended, all sorts of "colourful characters." Several of the characters in my book are composites of people I have met.

As far as my research shows, the details about the Soviet closed nuclear city, Arzamas/Sarov, and the "Butcher of Grozny" (though he was never posted to Arzamas) are correct; as is the general information about the missing US GIs and Operation Phoenix.

OMN: In addition to your personal knowledge, how do you go about researching the plot points of your stories?

AC: Internet research and consulting with experts and/or people with first-hand experience e.g. the information about the historical and continuing animosity between the KGB/FSB and the GRU (military intelligence).

The most challenging topic to research was the information about Arzamas/Sarov. There is much on the internet, but it's a question of trying to sort fact from fiction.

The most "exciting" (a better word would be "heart-breaking") was the discovery that the Soviets had taken the GIs in the first place and, as equally disturbing, the fact that successive US governments have apparently left it to families, charities and Veterans Associations to "bring the boys home". Many of their relatives feel abandoned by their government.

OMN: How true are you to the setting?

AC: The setting had to be Moscow — especially as it's a city of which I have/had intimate knowledge, both as to the principal characters and the plot.

I have tried to be true to the geography and local environment of Moscow, Suzdal and Arzamas. The only exceptions are that the Tutti Frutti bar on Pushkin Square is a fiction, as are the Monte Cristo club on Komosomolskaya Square, the Lenin's Tomb bar on Delegatskaya Street and the abandoned multi-storey car park behind the Renaissance Penta Hotel (now renamed Azimut Moscow Olympic hotel).

OMN: What is the best advice — and harshest criticism — you've received as an author? And what might you say to aspiring writers?

AC: Best advice = write, then rewrite …

I haven't received any "harsh" criticism, only constructive criticism. My editor advised me not to let my personal views (usually political rants against the establishment) invade my characters. Sound advice.

I believe I am a better writer, having taken the above advice.

My advice to aspiring writers is "never give up".

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

AC: The feedback has been almost 100% positive and tremendously encouraging. Many people are now pressing for book 2 in the trilogy, as Moscow Bound has left the story on a cliff-hanger and these readers are desperate for a resolution.

I have been asked more than once if I was a spy. My friends and colleagues now call me James Bond — but at a height of 5'8" I find it hard to suspend my disbelief.

OMN: What's next for you?

AC: I am writing Book 2 in the trilogy, with an intended publishing date of October/November 2015, and I'm working on the storyline for Book 3. I hope to retire to a mobile home stationed on the DreamWorks' parking lot.

— ♦ —

Between 1984 and 1998 Adrian Churchward lived and worked in Moscow, Budapest and Prague as an East-West trade lawyer, representing British, American, and German corporations. During this period he became fluent in Russian, and proficient in translating Russian commercial and legal texts into English. He was one of the few Western lawyers working in the day-to-day arena of President Gorbachev's liberalization process of perestroika and glasnost, and which ultimately resulted in the collapse of communism and disintegration of the Soviet Union. In 1991, he witnessed the abortive coup against Gorbachev, and in 1993, he was again present in Moscow when Yeltsin ordered the shelling of the Russian parliament building, aka the "The Russian White House." He now lives in London, has two daughters, three grandsons and a cat that eats furniture.

For more information about the author, please visit his website at AdrianChurchward.com and his author page on Goodreads, or find him on Facebook and Twitter.

— ♦ —

Moscow Bound by Adrian Churchward

Moscow Bound
Adrian Churchward
The Puppet Meisters Trilogy

Ekaterina Romanova, the estranged wife of Russia's wealthiest oligarch Konstantin Gravchenko, asks Scott Mitchell, an idealistic young English human rights lawyer who is being intimidated by the authorities, to find the father she's never met. She believes he's been languishing for decades without trial in the Gulag system. Meanwhile, General Pravda of military intelligence, though an advocate of transparency, is determined to protect a covert operation that he's been running for years.

General Pravda hinders Ekaterina and Scott at every turn and lawyer and client are forced to go on the run for a murder they didn't commit. As they descend into the Hades that is the world of international realpolitik Scott is compelled to reconsider his own values, and Pravda's life's work disintegrates, when Scott uncovers a 50 year-old Cold War secret, which both the Russian and US governments are still trying to hide from the public domain.

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)  BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)  iTunes iBook Format

The Thinking Machine by Jacques Futrelle is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

The Thinking Machine by Jacques Futrelle

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

The Thinking Machine by Jacques Futrelle

A Short Story Collection

Publisher: Open Road

… as today's third free mystery ebook.

The Thinking Machine by Jacques Futrelle, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 14, 2014 at 7:20 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the 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.

More on today's free book, below.

For the world's most brilliant criminologist, every mystery has a solution …

His name is Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, but to the newspapers he is known as "The Thinking Machine." Slender, stooped, his appearance dominated by his large forehead and perpetual squint, Van Dusen spends his days in the laboratory and his nights puzzling over the details of extraordinary crimes. What seems beyond comprehension to the police is mere amusement to the professor. All things that start must go somewhere, he firmly believes, and with the application of logic, all problems can be solved.

Whether unraveling a perfect murder, investigating a case of corporate espionage, or reasoning his way out of an inescapable prison cell, Van Dusen lets no detail elude his brilliant mind. In this highly entertaining collection, featuring many of the stories that made The Thinking Machine a national sensation, ingenious criminals and ruthless villains are no match for an egghead scientist.

The Thinking Machine by Jacques Futrelle

Finding Nina by Stephen Hazlett is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Finding Nina by Stephen Hazlett

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Finding Nina by Stephen Hazlett

A City Different Mystery

Publisher: Stephen Hazlett

… as today's second free mystery ebook.

Finding Nina by Stephen Hazlett, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 14, 2014 at 7:10 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the 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.

More on today's free book, below.

A small-time burglar and a disgraced ex-cop share more than time inside Santa Fe's county lockup. With little in common, they share one thing: an obsession with a beautiful woman named Nina Kelly.

After the two men are released from jail, their obsession turns into a deadly rivalry. Nina is on the run from her old life. Finding her is the name of the game. But do both men stand to lose Nina?

Finding Nina by Stephen Hazlett

The Dream Jumper's Secret by Kim Hornsby is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

The Dream Jumper's Secret by Kim Hornsby

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

The Dream Jumper's Secret by Kim Hornsby

A Dream Jumper Mystery

Publisher: Top Ten Press

… as today's free mystery ebook.

The Dream Jumper's Secret by Kim Hornsby, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 14, 2014 at 7:00 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the 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.

More on today's free book, below.

Tina has finally found a person she can trust. Or can she? Jamey might have secrets but are they only the ones he must keep as part of Sixth Force in the military? When Jamey leaves Maui for Seattle to visit his daughters, Tina worries that he'll return to the war in Afghanistan. Circumstances soon lead her back to Mercer Island, to help with a family emergency.

An uncovered secret has Tina doubting Jamey's commitment to their relationship and when the military comes for Jamey, their relationship takes a strange turn. A series of events have the two trying to save each other's lives in dire circumstances.

But just when happiness looms, Jamey has a final secret that must be told to save Tina from Jamey's worst nightmare.

The Dream Jumper's Secret by Kim Hornsby

Unspoken by Lisa Jackson is Today's Kobo Daily Deal

Unspoken by Lisa Jackson

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Unspoken by Lisa Jackson as today's Kobo Daily Deal.

The deal price of $2.99 is valid only for today, Tuesday, October 14, 2014, and has been price-matched by Amazon.com.

Unspoken by Lisa Jackson

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Zebra Books

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/14/2014 at 6:40 AM ET).

Unspoken by Lisa Jackson, Amazon Kindle format  Unspoken by Lisa Jackson, Kobo format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

The more you know … The more you tell … The more there is to fear …

The envelope delivered to Shelby Cole's Seattle home contains no return address, just a photograph of a little girl. Shelby knows at once that this is the daughter she was told died at birth. And in that moment, Shelby knows something else: she needs to go back to Bad Luck, Texas.

She's not the only one coming home. A long-ago killing is in the news again following recanted testimony. A violent nightmare from Shelby's past has been set free. And she can't shake a suspicion that someone is baiting her, luring her back here for their own ends.

Shelby's search for answers is met with stonewalling and hostility. Her only ally is a figure from her past — someone she has every reason not to trust. And in the midst of dark family revelations she uncovers a terrifying scheme of revenge. Because some secrets, once spoken, can never be forgotten — or forgiven …

Unspoken by Lisa Jackson

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (141014)

Big Fish Games

Here is today's mystery and suspense update from Big Fish Games …

• The New Release is Criminal Investigation Agents: Petrodollars.

• The current Catch of the Week is Dark Canvas: A Brush With Death, just $2.99 through Sunday, October 19, 2014 only.

Visit the Omnimystery Entertainment Network for more games of mystery and suspense!

— ♦ —

Criminal Investigation Agents: Petrodollars

The New Release is Criminal Investigation Agents: Petrodollars

Step into the shoes of investigator Frances Keegan and track down a tax evader suspected of murder! Frances is relentlessly pursuing Klaus Fredricks, who has been under constant surveillance ever since he was suspected of murdering one of the agents' colleagues and friends, Eric Ward. As a specialist in the oil industry responsible for tracking down tax evaders in three-piece suits, you know the financial world, spy techniques and on-site investigations like the back of your hand.

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. Also available for  Mac.

— ♦ —

Dark Canvas: A Brush With Death

The current Catch of the Week is Dark Canvas: A Brush With Death



A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. Also available for  Mac.

Also available for this game:

Monday, October 13, 2014

Crimson China, A Novel of Suspense by Betsy Tobin, New This Week from Accent Press

Crimson China by Betsy Tobin

Accent Press is a dynamic publishing company, and produces a wide range of fiction and non-fiction titles.

We've selected one of their recently published mystery, suspense, thriller or crime titles to feature here today …

Crimson China by Betsy Tobin

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Accent Press

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/13/2014 at 5:30 PM ET).

Crimson China by Betsy Tobin, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

On a freezing night in February, a woman wades into the waters of Morecambe Bay in a drunken bid to commit suicide. Braced for death, she finds herself instead saving a man's life: a young Chinese cockle picker, one of the only survivors of a tragic mass drowning. For Wen — now missing, presumed dead — Angie provides an unexpected sanctuary. They share neither language nor experience, but she agrees to let him stay with her and 'disappear'. Soon their unlikely pairing blossoms into something darkly passionate.

But Wen's past soon catches up with him, for he is still in debt to the snakeheads who brought him out of China.

Crimson China by Betsy Tobin

Too Many Cooks, A Bartlett and Boase Mystery by Marina Pascoe, New This Week from Accent Press

Too Many Cooks by Marina Pascoe

Accent Press is a dynamic publishing company, and produces a wide range of fiction and non-fiction titles.

We've selected one of their recently published mystery, suspense, thriller or crime titles to feature here today …

Too Many Cooks by Marina Pascoe

A Bartlett and Boase Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Accent Press

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/13/2014 at 4:30 PM ET).

Too Many Cooks by Marina Pascoe, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Who would imagine a little gold ring could lead to kidnap, torture and even murder? How could the curse of the Pharaohs come to Falmouth?

The year is 1923. When a young Cockney woman appears in Falmouth, Inspector George Bartlett and Constable Archibald Boase think she's harmless enough — until she and they are caught up in a seemingly endless cycle of mayhem and deceit. Unsure exactly how this woman fits into their enquiries, at various turns they are investigating her, searching for her, and worrying about her safety — and still can't decide if she is all she seems.

With death on their doorstep, a strange visitor to the town who claims to be a relative of the tragically-murdered Russian royal family, and a killer still on the loose, Bartlett and Boase have little time left to prevent further murders as their superintendent looms large in the background waiting to take them off the case …

Too Many Cooks by Marina Pascoe

Hostage in Havana, The Alexandra LaDuca, Cuban Trilogy by Noel Hynd, Now Available at a Special Price

Hostage in Havana by Noel Hynd

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Zondervan …

Hostage in Havana by Noel Hynd

The Alexandra LaDuca, Cuban Trilogy (1st in series)

Publisher: Zondervan

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/13/2014 at 4:00 PM ET).

Hostage in Havana by Noel Hynd, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

U.S. Treasury Agent Alexandra LaDuca leaves her Manhattan home on an illegal mission to Cuba that could cost her everything. Accompanying her is the attractive but dangerous Paul Guarneri, a Cuban-born exile who lives in the gray areas of the law. Together, they plunge into subterfuge and danger.

Without the support of the United States, Alex must navigate Cuban police, saboteurs, pro-Castro security forces, and an assassin who follows her from New York. Bullets fly as allies become traitors and enemies become unexpected friends.

Hostage in Havana by Noel Hynd

The Question of the Missing Head by E. J. Copperman and Jeff Cohen, a New 1st in Series Mystery Introducing Samuel Hoening

The Question of the Missing Head by E. J. Copperman and Jeff Cohen

Omnimystery News is pleased to present you with one of this month's new 1st in Series titles, a mystery, thriller or suspense novel that introduces a recurring character (or characters) …

The Question of the Missing Head by E. J. Copperman and Jeff Cohen

A Samuel Hoenig, Asperger's Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Midnight Ink

The Question of the Missing Head by E. J. Copperman and Jeff Cohen, Amazon Kindle format

What we know about the character: Samuel Hoenig is a borderline genius with an Autism Spectrum Disorder. For more information about his first murder, see a synopsis of the book, below.

Samuel Hoenig answers questions for a living. And as a man with Asperger's Syndrome, his unique personality helps him ferret out almost any answer there is. But his latest question is a rather odd one — who stole a preserved head from the Garden State Cryonics Institute?

Arriving at the scene of the crime accompanied by his new colleague, Ms. Washburn, Samuel finds that what started out as a theft has escalated to murder. With suspects and motives emerging at a rapid rate, one final question remains — can Samuel's powers of deduction uncover a killer in the face of overwhelming odds?

The Question of the Missing Head by E. J. Copperman and Jeff Cohen

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