Tuesday, October 28, 2014

The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly, New in Bookstores during October 2014

The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly

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

The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly, a Charlie "Bird" Parker Mystery (13th in series)

Publisher: Atria Books

The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly, Amazon Kindle format  The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly, Nook format  The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly, iTune iBook format  The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly, 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 …

The community of Prosperous, Maine has always thrived when others have suffered. Its inhabitants are wealthy, its children's future secure. It shuns outsiders. It guards its own. And at the heart of Prosperous lie the ruins of an ancient church, transported stone by stone from England centuries earlier by the founders of the town …

But the death of a homeless man and the disappearance of his daughter draw the haunted, lethal private investigator Charlie Parker to Prosperous. Parker is a dangerous man, driven by compassion, by rage, and by the desire for vengeance. In him the town and its protectors sense a threat graver than any they have faced in their long history, and in the comfortable, sheltered inhabitants of a small Maine town, Parker will encounter his most vicious opponents yet.

Charlie Parker has been marked to die so that Prosperous may survive.

Prosperous, and the secret that it hides beneath its ruins …

The Wolf in Winter by John Connolly

Crossword Mysteries by Nero Blanc, Now Available as eBooks from Open Road

Open Road Media

Earlier this month Open Road reissued all the mysteries and short stories in the Crossword series by Nero Blanc. Originally published by Berkley between 1999 and 2006, readers help solve the crimes — and the puzzles — in this cozy mystery series. Wordplay's the thing as crossword editor Belle Graham and cop-turned-PI Rosco Polycrates team up to fill in the blanks of cases that baffle the local police.

But as Belle and Rosco discover, nothing is black and white — whether they're racing to unravel a cryptic crossword that could save someone lost at sea; ferreting out the clues to the identity of a killer in an acrostic from Belize; in Philly to help the Feds solve a mobster's last puzzle and testament; or on a crossword treasure hunt in Las Vegas. And when violence rocks their peaceful New England town, not even their canine bodyguards, Kit and Gabby, may be able to keep them off the grid of a killer determined to bury them six feet down — and three across.

Use the link above or click on the graphic below to see all 12 books in the series, which includes two short-story collections (of five tales each).

Crossword Mysteries by Nero Blanc

Thoreau on Wolf Hill by B. B. Oak, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during October 2014

Thoreau on Wolf Hill by B. B. Oak

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during October 2014 …

Thoreau on Wolf Hill by B. B. Oak

A Henry David Thoreau Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Kensington

Thoreau on Wolf Hill by B. B. Oak, 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 …

Far from the tranquility of Walden Pond, Henry David Thoreau confronts the chilling reality of an epidemic … as well as cold-blooded murder …

The winter of 1847 has brought a consumption epidemic which is devastating the village of Plumford, Massachusetts. In an atmosphere of increasing hysteria and superstition, country doctor Adam Walker and philosopher Henry David Thoreau seem the only voices of reason.

The winter also brings two visitors to Plumford. Solomon Wiley hails from Rhode Island and offers his services as a vampyre hunter, insisting that the scourge is supernatural in origin. At the same time, Adam's cousin Julia has returned home from France, mysteriously without her new husband.

When a former student of Thoreau's is found mutilated and drained of blood in the woods, Wiley insists that a legendary Indian vampyre has arisen. Dismissing the blustering fearmonger, Thoreau and Adam follow clues to the backstage world of a Boston theater, the smoky decadence of an opium den, and an Indian burial ground. Both men will need to keep their wits about them — or risk ending up in coffins of their own …

Thoreau on Wolf Hill by B. B. Oak

Plum Deadly, A Maggie Grady, Pie in the Sky Mystery by Ellie Grant, Now Available at a Special Price

Plum Deadly by Ellie Grant

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, Gallery Books …

Plum Deadly by Ellie Grant

A Maggie Grady, Pie in the Sky Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Gallery Books

Price: $3.99 (as of 10/28/2014 at 1:00 PM ET).

Plum Deadly by Ellie Grant, 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 could resist such pies? Who would even want to resist the pie shop that makes them? Certainly not the residents of Durham, North Carolina, and the little bakery and café called Pie in the Sky is one of the most popular meet-up places in town.

Unjustly accused of cooking the books, Maggie Grady is forced to retreat from her high-flying New York financial career to the town where she grew up. Her aunt Clara greets her with open arms and a job at the family-owned business that has baked the best pies in the South for over forty years. Unfortunately, while Maggie is determined to return to banking, her reputation there seems permanently in the pits. That is, until her old boss, Lou, visits with news that he's found the real crook. Before he can reveal the details, though, Maggie finds his body right behind the pie shop.

With only her own word that Lou planned to exonerate her, Maggie is in the spotlight. The police seem to suspect that Aunt Clara's damson pie may not be just dangerously delectable, but downright deadly. Maggie doesn't just have her own name to clear; she has to make sure that her aunt's beloved business isn't harmed, either. Yummy local reporter Ryan Summerour appears eager to help, and Maggie can't help hoping that it's not just the police who find her a person of interest — but Ryan, as well. She'd thought it challenging to make the perfect pie crust that Aunt Clara demands, but that turns out to be nothing compared with finding a murderer …

Plum Deadly by Ellie Grant

New This Week: Star of the East, A Lady Emily Christmas Story by Tasha Alexander

Star of the East by Tasha Alexander

Tasha Alexander, author of the Lady Emily mysteries, has written a holiday story that will enchant readers and keep them guesing until the very last page.

Star of the East by Tasha Alexander

A Lady Emily Christmas Story

Publisher: Minotaur Books

Price: $1.99 (as of 10/28/2014 at 12:30 PM ET).

Star of the East by Tasha Alexander, 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.

Emily and Colin Hargreaves make it a rule to spend as little time as possible with her parents in Kent, but are unable to refuse Lady Catherine Bromley's invitation to join them for a pre-Christmas party that includes the family of Ala Kapur Singh, a powerful Punjabi maharaja who has come to England after receiving the Order of the Star of India.

Lady Bromley, quite taken with the exotic beauty and spectacular jewels of the maharani and her daughter, Sunita, throws herself with abandon into her own version of Indian culture, planning a feast she is certain will be more spectacular than any seen on the sub-continent. When a priceless diamond maang tika and a simple gold bangle disappear from Sunita's room, a diplomatic incident seems imminent, particularly after the maang tika turns up in Emily's possession.

Emily may have what appears to be the more valuable of the two pieces, but the maang tika cannot be worn without the bangle, upon which is engraved the words necessary to ward off a curse placed on the set five hundred years ago by a princess forced to forsake the man she loved. Sunita must wear the maang tika at her wedding but cannot do so without the bangle. Can Emily convince the maharaja that she is not a thief? And, more important, can she and Colin find the bangle?

Star of the East by Tasha Alexander

An Excerpt from Detective Lessons, a Crime Novel by Bill Larkin

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Bill Larkin
Detective Lessons
by Bill Larkin

We are delighted to welcome author Bill Larkin to Omnimystery News.

Bill is the author of several short stories and a novella, with his first full-length crime novel, Detective Lessons, being published last month by Spyglass Press.

We are pleased to introduce you to his new book today with an excerpt.

— ♦ —

Detective Lessons by Bill Larkin

I GRABBED THE DOOR KEY FROM THE envelope, but before I stuck it in the lock, I knocked. No answer. As I reached to insert the key, the door swung open.
  The girl who filled the doorway was striking. My bet was she'd left behind a debris field of men, whoever she was. I guessed her age as early forties but it was always a little hard to tell in Newport Beach. Her long hair was the color of honey and her lips were glossy and just about perfect. She was dressed in jeans and a yellow blouse, and big hoop earrings dangled brightly. I couldn't decide if she was more professional looking or playful looking. She held a cell phone in her hand and gave me an intent stare through pretty green eyes.
  I said, "I'm looking for Jimmy Whelan. Is he here?"
  "You're Schmitty? Megan McCann. Pleased to meet you," she said in a velvety voice.
  She shook my hand then turned and left the door open as she walked inside with a purpose. She was making call on her cell and ignoring me as she poked around the kitchen drawers. Faint perfume lingered in the air and I liked the scent. She was too old be to Jimmy's girlfriend.
  She raised the phone to her ear and said, "We're on it."
  She ended the call and gave me a look that seemed to say, what are you doing here? I was about to ask her who she was when my cell vibrated.
  "Schmitty?"
  I recognized Mac Whelan's voice. "Mr. Whelan. I'm at Jimmy's."
  "I know. You just met Megan McCann, also known as M Squared. She's going to work with you."
  "Doing what?"
  "She's a private investigator I know. Extremely good at what she does. You're a cop who knows Jimmy. I have no doubt you'll find him working together."
  So life had been mocking me for a while, and now I was wondering if Mac Whelan was too.
  "Private investigator? You told me you didn't have anybody else to help."
  "Be a team player, Schmitty. And I get to pick the team. Keep me posted." He disconnected.
  I stared at the phone a moment then slid it into my pocket and smiled at her. "M Squared? That's cute."
  "Not as cute as a Harbor Patrol cop tagging along with me. Triple A on the water with a gun. Are you going to be useful or just full of bullshit?"
  I spread my hands. "Resourceful is my middle name."
  She smiled. "So mostly bullshit. Don't stand around. Let's turn this place and find something. It would brighten my life considerably."

— ♦ —

Bill Larkin
Photo provided courtesy of
Bill Larkin

Bill Larkin previously served as a Reserve Deputy with the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, then the Los Angeles Police Department where he last worked in a detective assignment. Bill is a member of the Mystery Writers of America and International Thriller Writers. He lives in Orange County, California.

For more information about the author, please visit his website at Bill-Larkin.com.

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Detective Lessons by Bill Larkin

Detective Lessons
Bill Larkin
A Crime Novel

When a wealthy real estate developer convinces Orange County Sheriff's Deputy Kevin Schmidt to search for his missing son, Schmitty senses trouble. It's not the fact that it's a prohibited side job, it's the fact that he has to team up with Megan McCann, an attractive private investigator with her own set of rules.

Finding a body in the trunk of a BMW sends Schmitty and Megan on an adrenalized trail through Southern California unraveling a sophisticated real estate scam. A run-in with the LAPD and some hardcore gang members opens new perspectives on the case, and they begin to glimpse a shocking web of greed and corruption.

The situation suddenly becomes more complex — and personal — when the billionaire takes matters into his own hands and Schmitty's own department gets involved. When Schmitty and Megan go to Catalina Island to track down the one man who may know everything, they uncover a secret that could make or break the billionaire. And when Schmitty miscalculates the man, it could get them killed. Before all this, Schmitty had been unfairly outcast in his department. Now he's here to protect and serve. To make justice prevail and figure out who to bring down.

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)

A Conversation with Novelist Rick Skwiot, Author of the Crime Thriller Fail

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Rick Skwiot
with Rick Skwiot

We are delighted to welcome author Rick Skwiot to Omnimystery News today.

Rick's new crime thriller is Fail (Blank Slate Press; October 2014 trade paperback) and we recently had the chance to talk with him a little more about it.

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Omnimystery News: Introduce us to the principal character in Fail. And what is it about him that appeals to you as a writer?

Rick Skwiot
Photo provided courtesy of
Rick Skwiot

Rick Skwiot: Fail's major protagonist is a tough, wisecracking Mexican- and African-American cop, Lt. Carlo Gabriel, who has been exiled to the city's unruly North Side for beating a prisoner who had killed one of his men. Divorced, 54, a former basketball player for Saint Louis University and a lapsed Catholic, he gets called in on a missing person case by his former partner Angelo Cira, now the mayor, with a chance to redeem himself.

I like Carlo because is human, that is, a man with weaknesses: somewhat corruptible, a sensualist, always on a diet. In fact, at one time or another in the novel he practices all the Seven Deadly Sins — wrath, greed, lust, pride, sloth, envy, and gluttony. Also, he is somewhat of a mystery himself, hard to figure, and the reader can't be sure on what side of the law — and right and wrong — he will land until the end.

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

RS: In the pre-Internet days I dreaded doing the research for my journalism and fiction writing — long hours in libraries, endless phone calls, poring through the numerous reference books on my shelves. While I still get help over the phone, I get most of what I need over the Internet. For example, in Fail there's a scene where my protagonist, exiled St. Louis cop Carlo Gabriel, meets the mayor in his city hall office. Though I had once been in the mayor's office, it was thirty years ago, and I wasn't sure what was visible through the high windows. No problem — even though I was writing the novel from Key West, Florida. Using Google Earth and its Street View function, I was able to zoom down the north side of St. Louis City Hall, where I knew the mayor's office to be, and gaze out across the park to the World War I Memorial and the Central Library. So I rely heavily on the Internet to check facts and dig out info, but I also rely on experts — such as the director of the St. Louis Police Academy, who spent an hour on the phone with me filling me in on an array of procedures, policies and equipment. I've also learned over the years to do the research early rather than filling it in later, as factual details can change everything — including the plot, the characters and their motivations.

OMN: The action in Fail takes place in St. Louis. How important is setting to the story?

RS: Setting is crucial, as setting determines character and character determines plot. So I work to nail the setting — the sense of place, the weather, the geography, the architecture, all the telling physical details — in order to create a fictional world that feels real. The job here is to pull your readers into this created world and allow them to live there along with your characters, to feel a part of the drama. So any physical detail that doesn't square with the reader's knowledge or experience breaks that dream and undermines the desired effect. This is also true of affected prose — which makes the reader conscious of the words, keeping him or her on the surface of things rather than immersed in the story. I try to make the words on the page disappear for the reader, so the reader can see, feel and live the fictional moment in a realistic environment.

OMN: If we could send you anywhere in the world, all expenses on us, to research the setting for a book, where would it be?

RS: Book me a ticket to London and nice hotel near Leicester Square. I've started work on a book set there — though in 1973, when the Provisional Irish Republican Army was planting bombs about town. I would love to dig in for a month or two to add a contemporary perspective for the narrator, who is telling how he murdered his young, faithless wife there 40 years earlier. (FYI, nothing autobiographical here.) I don't believe I can think of a more costly research locale. Thank you for the generous offer, which I assume includes theatre tickets and a box at Wimbledon if I happen to go there in June.

OMN: But of course! Back to the real world, as it were … what is the best advice you've received as an author?

RS: Years ago, when I was living in Mexico trying to figure out how to be a writer, I got some great advice from an expatriate Canadian film director over a bottle of tequila: "Dig deep into yourself to develop your own unique vision, Rick, grasp it with all your heart and might, and shove it up their (***)!" — all accompanied by appropriate gestures. Though a bit profane, his advice was apt: be original, trust yourself, and don't worry about what others are doing or try to write for the market — make the market. Write for a reader, write for yourself. Follow your heart. And one more crucial piece of advice, this from a Cuban refugee, a friend who fought his way to international success as a prosecutor and high-stakes attorney. It is an admonition he had received from his mother as a child: "Dream large, work hard, and never, ever give up." I pass it along to aspiring authors or anyone who wants to fulfill himself or herself — or die trying.

OMN: How did Fail come to be titled? And tell us more about the cover design?

RS: My working title for Fail was "Professor Stone Vanishes," after the wonderful psychological novel Monsieur Monde Vanishes by the late Belgian writer Georges Simenon (creator of the equally wonderful Inspector Maigret mysteries). In fact, the early scene where Lt. Gabriel interviews the wife of the missing Professor Stone draws somewhat on the opening scene of Simenon's novel … But soon, as the novel started evolving and growing and began to delve into the corruption and malfeasance in St. Louis city government and its public schools, the title migrated to "F," that is, a failing grade. Finally, at the suggestion of a colleague (and later underscored by my publisher), we called the book Fail — which is less ambiguous.

The nighttime cover image of the St. Louis riverfront depicts the setting of a key scene, and shows the dark, relentless movement of the Mississippi River — and important element in my mystery.

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

RS: As a child I devoured biographies — mostly of famous Americans. Today I still read biographies — now mostly those of writers, spies and other nefarious sorts. Then as now I was intrigued by people's journeys, their life stories, how they become who they are meant to become — or how they fail. Fiction often does the same thing, and in the process likewise expands the bounds of human sympathy. We could not have known Charles Dickens or what it was like to be a boy in 19th century England, but when we read David Copperfield and Great Expectations we begin to understand. Similarly, most of us don't know what it is like to be a disgraced African-American St. Louis cop fighting to regain his self-respect, or a humiliated English professor struggling to do the right thing, but when we read Fail we perhaps begin to get an idea — at least I hope so.

OMN: Have any specific authors influenced how and what you write today?

RS: I mentioned Georges Simenon when I talked about the title. He has probably influenced my approach to writing more than any other single writer. He in turn, got some timely advice from the French novelist Colette: cut, cut, cut. Anything that is there just for effect or because you think it clever or whatever, cut it. Pare things down to the bones so the reader can feel the story and judge for himself or herself — don't lecture or lead. Just give the story and setting without explanation and trust the reader to see it and understand and draw his or her own conclusions. Simenon called himself a pointillist, after the French impressionist painters such as Georges Seurat who painted discrete dots of color which, when viewed from a distance, created a harmonious and understandable picture that blended in the viewer's eye. Similarly, in Simenon you find few if any transitions, dialogue tags, or explanations. What you get are short sentences and short paragraphs without ostentation; you get the direct, unfiltered thoughts, words and deeds of the characters that you, the reader, blend into understanding.

— ♦ —

Former journalist Rick Skwiot is the author of three previous novels—the Hemingway First Novel Award winner Death in Mexico, the Willa Cather Fiction Prize finalist Sleeping With Pancho Villa, and Key West Story—as well as two memoirs. He also works as a feature writer, book doctor and editor. From St. Louis, he currently resides in Key West.

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

— ♦ —

Fail by Rick Skwiot

Fail
Rick Skwiot
A Crime Thriller

Disgraced African American St. Louis Police Lieutenant Carlo Gabriel wants fiercely to return to the headquarters hierarchy from which he has been exiled to the city's tough North Side. All he needs do is track down the missing husband of the mayor's vivacious press secretary. Instead he unwittingly and unwillingly unearths a morass of corruption, educational malpractice and greed that consigns thousands of at-risk youths to the mean streets of America's erstwhile murder capital. Worse, it's the kind of information that could get a cop killed.

Fighting for life and his honor, Gabriel makes chilling discoveries that ultimately lead to a life-threatening and life-changing decision — a choice that could affect not only his own future but also that of the city and its top leaders.

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

Divorced, Desperate and Delicious by Christie Craig is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Divorced, Desperate and Delicious by Christie Craig

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Divorced, Desperate and Delicious by Christie Craig

A Divorced and Desparate Mystery

Publisher: Love Spell

… as today's second free mystery ebook.

Divorced, Desperate and Delicious by Christie Craig, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 28, 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.

Ever since photographer Lacy Maguire caught her ex playing Pin the Secretary to the Elevator Wall, she's been content with her dog Fabio, her three cats, and a vow of chastity. But all of that changes when the reindeer-antlered Fabio drags in a very desperate, on-the-run detective who decides to take refuge in her house — a house filled with twinkling lights and a decorated tree. (Okay, so it's February, but she has a broken heart to mend, a Christmas-card shoot to do, and a six-times divorced, match-making mother to appease.)

For the first time in a looooong while, Lacy reconsiders her vow. Because sexy Chase Kelly, wounded soul that he may be, would be an oh-so-delicious way of breaking her fast.

Now, if she can just keep them both alive and him out of jail …

Divorced, Desperate and Delicious by Christie Craig

Those of the Margin by T. Patrick Phelps is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Those of the Margin by T. Patrick Phelps

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Those of the Margin by T. Patrick Phelps

A Derek Cole Suspense Thriller

Publisher: Jabby House Publications

… as today's free mystery ebook.

Those of the Margin by T. Patrick Phelps, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 28, 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.

Private Investigator Derek Cole is used to working challenging and dangerous cases, but when Cole is hired by Maggie Bryant, whose son is convinced that a ghost is visiting him, Cole is thrown into a world of unexplainable paranormal events, complete with a 20-year-old murder mystery, which is at the heart of his case.

Forming an unlikely investigative team consisting of a priest and a stay at home mother, Cole's team unravels the mysteries of both his client's hauntings and the 20 year old murder case. And when an elderly ghost hunter is found murdered, Cole and his team face a danger that none of them knew even existed.

But not all ghosts are created equal. Some have unlocked the mysteries of the after life and prove to be more than just spirits.

Those of the Margin by T. Patrick Phelps

Every Dead Thing by John Connolly is Today's Kobo Daily Deal

Every Dead Thing by John Connolly

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Every Dead Thing by John Connolly as today's Kobo Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Tuesday, October 28, 2014, and has been price-matched by Amazon.com.

Every Dead Thing by John Connolly

A Charlie Parker Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Pocket Books

Price: $1.99 (as of 10/28/2014 at 6:40 AM ET).

Winner of the 2000 Shamus Award for Best First P.I. Novel.

Every Dead Thing by John Connolly, Amazon Kindle format  Every Dead Thing by John Connolly, 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.

Haunted by the unsolved slayings of his wife and young daughter, and tormented by his sense of guilt, former NYPD detective Charlie Parker is a man consumed by violence, regret and the desire for revenge.

But when his ex-partner asks him to track down a missing girl, Parker embarks on an odyssey that is to lead him to the heart of organized crime; to an old black woman who dwells by a Louisiana swamp and hears the voices of the dead; to cellars of torture and murder; and to a serial killer unlike any other, an artist who uses the human body as his canvas and takes faces as his prize, the killer known only as the Traveling Man.

Every Dead Thing by John Connolly

Untraceable by Laura Griffin is Today's Romantic Suspense Kindle Daily Deal

Untraceable by Laura Griffin

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Untraceable by Laura Griffin as today's Romantic Suspense Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Tuesday, October 28, 2014.

Untraceable by Laura Griffin

The Tracers Series (1st in series)

Publisher: Pocket Books

Price: $1.99 (as of 10/28/2014 at 6:20 AM ET).

Untraceable by Laura Griffin, 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.

Alex Lovell makes people disappear. Turns out, she's not the only one …

Private investigator Alexandra Lovell uses computer skills and cunning to help clients drop off the radar and begin new lives in safety. Melanie Bess, desperate to escape her abusive cop husband, was one of those clients. But when Melanie vanishes for real, Alex fears the worst, and sets out to discover what happened. Using every resource she can get her hands on — including an elite team of forensic scientists known as the Tracers, and a jaded, sexy Austin PD detective — Alex embarks on a mission to uncover the truth.

As far as homicide cop Nathan Deveraux is concerned, no body means no case. But as much as he wants to believe that Alex's hunch about Melanie's murder is wrong, his instincts — and their visceral attraction — won't let him walk away. As a grim picture of what really happened begins to emerge, Nathan realizes this investigation runs deeper than they could ever have guessed. And each step nearer the truth puts Alex in danger of being the next to disappear …

Untraceable by Laura Griffin

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (141028)

Big Fish Games

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

• Our Featured Title is Redemption Cemetery: Curse of the Raven.

• The current Catch of the Week is Silent Scream II: The Bride, just $2.99 through Sunday, November 02, 2014 only.

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

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Redemption Cemetery: Curse of the Raven

Our Featured Title is Redemption Cemetery: Curse of the Raven

After getting into a car accident, you wander into a mysterious graveyard while searching for help. The doors slam shut behind you and you realize that you are trapped! Escape from the eerie Redemption Cemetery by helping trapped spirits save their loved ones, and free their souls! Use your Hidden Object skills to help these ghosts and escape!

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

Also available for this game:

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Silent Scream II: The Bride

The current Catch of the Week is Silent Scream II: The Bride

Jessica would never imagine that her big day would turn out to be a nightmare; they had an accident and Jonathan McNealy, her husband, is missing. Things just got more and more bizarre when she encountered a mysterious girl who seemed to be leading her to Jonathan. Jessica had a feeling that the girl was connected to Jonathan. Did she cause the car accident in the first place? Return to the abandoned mansion and search for clues.

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

Monday, October 27, 2014

Review: A Distance To Death by Holly Menino

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

A Mysterious Review of A Distance To Death by Holly Menino. A Tink Elledge Mystery.

Review summary: The murder mystery here is a little thin, though the characters are generally interesting and the mountain setting nearly ideal. However, without a compelling crime plot to draw readers in and keep them engaged, this is an easy book to put down and possibly forget to pick back up again. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 3 of 5 stars

A Distance To Death Holly Menino

A Distance To Death
Holly Menino
A Tink Elledge Mystery
Minotaur Books (August 2014)

Publisher synopsis: Tink Elledge is a woman who doesn't take well to sitting still — not when it comes to husbands, not when it comes to looking after her stepson Stephen, and certainly not when it comes to horses. So when she gets the chance to ride in a competition again — even on a trail as grueling as the steep twists and turns of the legendary Tevis endurance trail ride — she jumps at it. In the Sierra mountain wilderness, she and her friend Isabel — an avid horsewoman and Darwin devotee — will race across one hundred miles of spectacular gorges and cross heart-stopping fords.

Meanwhile, Stephen and Tink's husband, Charlie, are nearby working on a new partnership with the brilliant but secretive scientist James Grant-Worthington. When Grant-Worthington suddenly dies of not-so-natural causes, the entire deal is thrown into question. Eager to help, Tink begins searching for clues, starting with Josh Untemeyer, the PR manager for the institute Grant-Worthington founded to promote the theory of intelligent design, who has also been pursuing Isabel. As Tink and Isabel join the pack of elite riders and their horses scramble up the vertiginous, narrow trail, Josh goes missing. Tink must sort through the secrets and lies in a race against time to cross the finish line and save the two people she cares for.

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Poison Blonde, An Amos Walker Mystery by Loren D. Estleman, Now Available at a Special Price

Poison Blonde by Loren D. Estleman

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, Forge Books …

Poison Blonde by Loren D. Estleman

An Amos Walker Mystery (16th in series)

Publisher: Forge Books

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/27/2014 at 5:00 PM ET).

Poison Blonde by Loren D. Estleman, 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 sizzling Latina singer spells murder for Detroit's best P.I.

Who is Gilia Cristobal?

She's simply one of the hottest of hot Latina singers. Nothing in her life, however, is simple. In her native land she was involved with people the government didn't like, and she barely escaped with her life to start fresh in the United States. In her wake she left behind accusations about a former lover, about violence, and about blackmail. Now she's in Detroit to make music and wants Amos Walker to protect her from those who have threatened her life. She also wants him to investigate someone from the darkest chapter of her former life. When Walker realizes that Gilia's main man, recently out of prison, doesn't regret the time he nearly killed Walker, what first seemed like an easy payday starts looking more and more like a losing proposition. Latin heat, indeed.

Poison Blonde by Loren D. Estleman

Taste of Treason, The Tudor Enigma Series by April Taylor, New This Week from Carina Press

Taste of Treason by April Taylor

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.

We've selected one of their recently published titles to feature here today …

Taste of Treason by April Taylor

The Tudor Enigma Series (2nd in series)

Publisher: Carina Press

Price: $2.99 (as of 10/27/2014 at 4:30 PM ET).

Taste of Treason by April Taylor, 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.

Blood, frogs and a deadly threat to the firstborn …

Luke Ballard, Dominus Elemancer and Privy Inquirer into Divers Mischiefs and Grievances, has grown his magical powers since his last encounter with the Sunderers, dark sorcerers who will stop at nothing — including partnering with England's mortal enemies — to destroy the throne. But is he skilled enough to protect his own and prevent tragedy from reaching the royal family?

The continuation of Tudor rule and the future of England's true religion rest with King Henry IX's new bride, Queen Madeline of Scotland. Pregnant with a possible heir, she's nearly killed — twice — in incidents that bizarrely mimic the Plagues of Egypt. And she is not alone. All of Hampton Court, it seems, has been surrounded by a dark cloud of otherworldly danger.

Fearful for his wife and unborn child, King Henry can only turn to one man.

Taste of Treason by April Taylor

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