Friday, November 07, 2014

A Conversation with Mystery Author Nanci Rathbun

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Nanci Rathbun
with Nanci Rathbun

We are delighted to welcome author Nanci Rathbun to Omnimystery News today.

Nanci's second mystery to feature librarian-turned-private investigator Angelina Bonaparte is Cash Kills (Cozy Cat Press; November 2014 trade paperback and ebook formats) and we recently had the opportunity to talk with her more about it.

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Omnimystery News: Introduce us to Angelina Bonaparte. What is it about her that appeals to you as a writer?

Nanci Rathbun
Photo provided courtesy of
Nanci Rathbun

Nanci Rathbun: Angelina Bonaparte is a 50-something private investigator, living and working in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. On the outside, she is stylish and fit, but underneath her professional clothes, Angie's wearing undies that make her man's jaw drop. Think June Cleaver in a thong!

Her character developed from the realization, in my own life, of the freedom from social constraints that aging can bring. As Angie noted in Truth Kills, the first mystery in the series, "The beauty of being a woman, as the French say, 'of a certain age,' is that I can be invisible. Young people, both men and women, look right through me, unless I make the effort to be noticed. Older men look past me, too, to gaze upon the tight, toned, tanned bodies that they wish they could possess. Only older women seem to notice me, because they're judging me against some invisible standard and wondering how I measure up compared to them. It's not usually malicious, it's just how we were raised. Believe me, I do it myself."

OMN: How do you expect to develop the character over the series?

NR: Static characters are no fun! I believe that, unless we change and grow, we're dying inside, so I want my characters to evolve from the experiences they have in the stories. For example, Angie has trust issues, both from her unfaithful ex's behavior and from what she observes as a private detective. But she begins to lay the groundwork for a romantic relationship with Detective Ted Wukowski in Truth Kills, and that relationship moves forward in Cash Kills, where Angie and Wukowski finally say the L word to each other. We'll have to see where things stand between them as I write the third in the series, Deception Kills. I'm constantly amazed at how my characters make their own demands of me as the writer.

OMN: Should readers assume that the books in this series are cozies?

NR: Although I write for Cozy Cat Press, I can't call this series a cozy. For one thing, my lead character is a professional investigator, which breaks one of the cardinal rules of cozies. Finding the right label is not easy. Reviewers have compared Angie to Sue Grafton's Kinsey Milhone and to Janet Evanovitch's Stephanie Plum — and that's awesome company to be in! Another reviewer called Cash Kills "a first-rate mystery that combines police procedural with private detection." In my mind, it's a softer edged hard-boiled series — with very limited use of cursing and no graphic sex or violence.

OMN: Give us a summary of Cash Kills in a tweet.

NR: How did Adriana's deceased parents get all that cash? Angie Bonaparte is on the case and murder won't stop her from finding out. #mystery

OMN: Where do you usually find yourself most often writing?

NR: I write on a laptop, which gives me the freedom to move my "office" at will. I prefer quiet for my writing, but quite often a song will run through my head as I'm preparing to write. In Truth Kills, it was Billy Joel's "Honesty." In Cash Kills, it was The Beatles' version of "Money (That's What I Want)." Now that I'm writing Deception Kills, Hank Williams' "Your Cheating Heart" keeps playing in my head! Other than that idiosyncrasy, I'm pretty fluid with my writing environment.

OMN: How true are you to the settings of your books?

NR: The Angelina Bonaparte series is set in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. I use a lot of local landmarks (The Domes, The Pfister Hotel, Ma Fisher's, the Third Ward, among others) in the stories, for a reason — Angie is a creature of that environment and the setting enriches the mystery, in my opinion. When I mention a real place, I stay true to the reality of that place. I did take one liberty in Cash Kills, when I relocated the downtown tunnels to the Third Ward. After all, I do write fiction!

OMN: Complete this sentence for us: "I am a mystery author and thus I am also …".

NR: I am a mystery author and thus I am also constantly evaluating situations for the possibility of foul play. During a fire evacuation at a hotel in Boston (it was a series of false alarms), the thought came to mind that this would be the perfect way to murder someone in his/her room — no one would have a reliable alibi and all the doors were open! Either slip in and do the deed, leaving a dead body, or tamper with the person's medications or make-up and wait for the inevitable demise.

OMN: Suppose your series were to be adapted for television or film. Who do you see playing the key roles?

NR: I mention in Truth Kills that Wukowski, the homicide detective and Angie's eventual love interest, resembles actor Dana Andrews in the film noir classic, Laura. Since he is deceased, maybe Tom Selleck could play the role — I love his gritty Jesse Stone persona. As for Angie, maybe Helen Mirren. She's got the body and the attitude!

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

NR: Top 5 Films I Want To Live In:

1. Pride and Prejudice — because Elizabeth Bennett is so darned good at deflating pretension;
2. Laura — because Gene Tierney is a take-charge woman who gets her man;
3. To Kill a Mockingbird — so I could applaud Atticus Finch, too;
4. Lord of the Rings, The Two Towers — to be a bit player in an epic battle for right; and
5. Blade Runner — to confront the challenge of what makes us uniquely human.

OMN: What's next for you?

NR: I'm planning an Old West mystery series next, with a strong female protagonist. Can you tell that I gravitate toward women of character and strength?

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Nanci Rathbun is a lifelong reader of mysteries — historical, contemporary, futuristic, paranormal, hard-boiled, cozy … you can find them all on her bookshelves. She brings logic and planning to her writing from a background as an IT project manager, and attention to characters and dialog from her second career as a Congregationalist minister.

Nanci is a longtime Wisconsin resident who relocated to Tennessee to be closer to her granddaughters — oh, and their parents — and is planning an upcoming move to the West Coast for the same reason. No matter where she lives, she will always be a Packers fan.

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

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Cash Kills by Nanci Rathbun

Cash Kills
Nanci Rathbun
An Angelina Bonaparte Mystery

When her office mate, accountant Susan Neh, brings Angelina Bonaparte a client named Adriana Johnson, the PI wonders how she can help this bedraggled young woman. Adriana's parents, immigrants from the former Yugoslavia, were murdered only a week earlier, in a robbery at their small hardware store. Now she has discovered that, despite living like the working poor, they were actually quite wealthy — with numerous large bank accounts located around the world. Adriana is suspicious about her newfound status and hires Angie to discover the nature of her deceased parents' wealth. When Angie arrives to interview with the parents' attorney, Herman Petrovitch, he is missing, but his secretary Dragana is there — lying dead on the office floor, with her head blown off. Homicide detective — and Angie's own boyfriend — Ted Wukowski, cautions her against getting involved in the murder investigation. Of course, Angie pays little heed to his warning.

Angie realizes immediately that Adriana's concerns about her parents' money are probably well- founded and, even worse, that the young woman may be in great danger herself. She secures the assistance of her father's rotund attorney, Bart Matthews, who quickly arranges for protection for Angie's young client, while Angie begins to look into Adriana's parents' background. In their family home, she discovers some strange artifacts in the attic, along with what appear to be Serbian military uniforms and an ethnic wedding dress. Her investigation soon leads her to suspect a connection between Adriana's parents, Attorney Petrovitch, and the Bosnian War of the 1980s. How or why are they linked? Angie doesn't know, but she's as determined to find out as others are determined to prevent her from doing so. So she'd better watch her back, because someone knows about the money in those bank accounts and they don't intend to let Adriana inherit it.

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

Fashion, Lies, and Murder by Sibel Hodge is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Fashion, Lies, and Murder by Sibel Hodge

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Fashion, Lies, and Murder by Sibel Hodge

An Amber Fox Mystery

Publisher: Gemma Halliday

… as today's free mystery ebook.

Fashion, Lies, and Murder by Sibel Hodge, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of November 07, 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.

First published under the title The Fashion Police.

Amber Fox has been making too many mistakes, and something's got to give …

For starters, Amber accidentally shoots Chief Inspector Janice Skipper and gets thrown off the police force. Oops! Then, she accepts a job as an insurance investigator from her ex-fiancé, Brad Beckett. Only Brad thinks they've still got unfinished business in the romance department, making for a steamier working environment than Amber counted on. And when fashion designer, Umberto Fandango, goes missing, Amber's investigative skills are put to the ultimate test. Nothing about the case is what it seems, and to make matters worse Amber's arch-enemy, Chief Inspector Skipper, is also investigating the disappearance. If Amber wants her old job back, she's in a race against time to solve the mystery before Skipper does … all the while dodging her ex-fiancé, her own mixed up feelings, and a couple of crazy mobsters.

Who is Umberto Fandango? Is he dead? And can Amber stay one step ahead to stay alive?

Fashion, Lies, and Murder by Sibel Hodge

Tears in Rain by Rosa Montero is Today's Sci-Fi Thriller Kindle Daily Deal

Tears in Rain by Rosa Montero

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Tears in Rain by Rosa Montero as today's Sci-Fi Thriller Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Friday, November 07, 2014.

Tears in Rain by Rosa Montero

A Techno-Thriller

Publisher: AmazonCrossing

Price: $1.99 (as of 11/07/2014 at 6:10 AM ET).

Tears in Rain by Rosa Montero, 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.

Death is inevitable. Especially when you have an expiration date.

As a replicant, or "techno-human," Detective Bruna Husky knows two things: humans bioengineered her to perform dangerous, undesirable tasks; and she has just ten years on the United States of Earth before her body automatically self-destructs. But with "anti-techno" rage on the rise and a rash of premature deaths striking her fellow replicants, she may have even less time than she originally thought.

Investigating the mysterious deaths, Bruna delves into the fractious, violent history shared by humans and replicants, and struggles to engage the society that fails to understand her — yet created her. The deeper she gets, the deadlier her work becomes as she uncovers a vast, terrifying conspiracy bent on changing the very course of the world. But even as the darkness of her reality closes in, Bruna clings fiercely to life.

Tears in Rain by Rosa Montero

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (141107)

Big Fish Games

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

• The New Release is Grim Tales: Color of Fright (Collector's Edition).

• The Daily Deal is Greed: The Mad Scientist, just $2.99 today only!

• The current Catch of the Week is Surface: The Soaring City, just $2.99 through Sunday, November 09, 2014 only.

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

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Grim Tales: Color of Fright (Collector's Edition)

The New Release is Grim Tales: Color of Fright (Collector's Edition)

It wasn't bad enough that your train was running late, but now a mysterious note warns that this Gray family dinner will be the last! Inside the Gray family castle, everything is in chaos, with your family nowhere to be found. The walls are graffitied with the scribbles of a madman as his laughter echoes through the halls. Armed with a magical paint set, you are the only one who can save them. Reunite with previous Grim Tales characters, including Luisa, Elizabeth, James McGray, and even your niece, Jackie! Can you unmask the kidnapper and beat him at his own game? Find out in this mysterious Hidden Object Puzzle Adventure game!

This is a special Collector's Edition release full of exclusive extras you won't find in the standard version, including: Can the past be rewritten? Play the bonus chapter to find out; Score soundtracks, screen-savers, and concept art; Check out your achievements and collections; and an Available Strategy Guide.

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

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Greed: The Mad Scientist

Today's Daily Deal is Greed: The Mad Scientist

A world famous scientist Dr. Ralph Goodwin promises to unveil a miracle drug able to cure almost all types of diseases. But just one day before his press conference a mysterious explosion destroys his research laboratory. With the lab destroyed, the cure seems lost forever. You have to investigate the case with the help of a young girl named Sara. As Sara searches through the lab, she unravels the dark events of her own past. Among mad scientists and ruthless assassins will you ever be able to find the cure?

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

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Surface: The Soaring City

The current Catch of the Week is Surface: The Soaring City

Search for your brother, Jeremy, in a beautiful world where the sky is as wide as your imagination! Jeremy was a great inventor who discovered a magnificent land soaring in the sky. He created wings for the people, making them free. The new citizens were happy … until one day Jeremy was kidnapped and blamed for conducting inhumane experiments. It's up to you to save your brother from imprisonment and redeem his good name.

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

Also available for this game:

Thursday, November 06, 2014

Malice Aforethought, A Lambert and Hook Mystery by J. M. Gregson, New This Week from Endeavour Press

Malice Aforethought by J. M. Gregson

Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent digital publisher, promoting and selling ebook editions of works by new authors as well as bringing out ebook editions of out of print books.

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

Malice Aforethought by J. M. Gregson

A Lambert and Hook Mystery (12th in series)

Publisher: Endeavour Press

Price: $3.99 (as of 11/06/2014 at 5:30 PM ET).

Malice Aforethought by J. M. Gregson, 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 body is found in Broughton Ash churchyard. Male, middle-aged, well-dressed, but with no identification. Only one fact is certain — he was murdered.

Superintendent John Lambert and Detective Sergeant Bert Hook must set about identifying their un-named victim. To their surprise, they find he is Ted Giles — a well liked chemistry teacher at the local school. Beginning their questioning, the pair find that Giles had a secret life, one that he was desperate to hide. A wealth of female visitors, and an influx of tens of thousands of pounds, lead them to the Rendezvous club. An escort service that provided Giles with a string of new women — and the police with a wealth of new suspects.

Sue Giles, his ex-wife, from whom he had refused to divorce. Constance Elson, a divorcée who frequently employed Giles's services. And Zoe Ross, the lover who he promised to give up his sideline work for.

Each woman has their own motive, but who committed the crime?

Malice Aforethought by J. M. Gregson

The Red Book of Primrose House, A Pru Parke, Potting Shed Mystery by Marty Wingate, New This Week from Alibi

The Red Book of Primrose House by Marty Wingate

Alibi is a digital-only imprint of Random House dedicated to publishing mystery and thriller books.

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

The Red Book of Primrose House by Marty Wingate

A Pru Parke, Potting Shed Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Alibi

Price: $2.99 (as of 11/06/2014 at 4:30 PM ET).

The Red Book of Primrose House by Marty Wingate, 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.

Pru Parke's restoration of a historic landscape in England is uprooted by an ax murderer …

Pru Parke has her dream job: head gardener at an eighteenth-century manor house in Sussex. The landscape for Primrose House was laid out in 1806 by renowned designer Humphry Repton in one of his meticulously illustrated Red Books, and the new owners want Pru to restore the estate to its former glory — quickly, as they're planning to showcase it in less than a year at a summer party.

But life gets in the way of the best laid plans: When not being happily distracted by the romantic attentions of the handsome Inspector Christopher Pearse, Pru is digging into the mystery of her own British roots. Still, she manages to make considerable progress on the vast grounds — until vandals wreak havoc on each of her projects. Then, to her horror, one of her workers is found murdered among the yews. The police have a suspect, but Pru is certain they're wrong. Once again, Pru finds herself entangled in a thicket of evil intentions — and her, without a hatchet.

The Red Book of Primrose House by Marty Wingate

A High-End Finish by Kate Carlisle, a New 1st in Series Mystery Introducing Shannon Hammer

A High-End Finish by Kate Carlisle

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) …

A High-End Finish by Kate Carlisle

A Shannon Hammer, Fixer-Upper Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Signet

A High-End Finish by Kate Carlisle, Amazon Kindle format

What we know about the character: Shannon Hammer is a contractor in the seaside town of Lighthouse Cove in northern California. For more information about her first murder, see a synopsis of the book, below.

In the seaside town of Lighthouse Cove in northern California, everyone knows the best man for the job is actually a woman — contractor Shannon Hammer. But while Shannon can do wonders with a power drill and a little elbow grease, she's about to discover that some problems aren't so easily fixed …

Shannon's home-renovation and repair business is booming, but her love life needs work. On a blind date with real estate agent Jerry Saxton, she has to whip out a pair of pliers to keep Jerry from getting too hands on. Shannon is happy to put her rotten date behind her, but when Jerry's found dead in a run-down Victorian home that she's been hired to restore, the town's attractive new police chief suspects that her threats may have laid the foundation for murder.

Determined to clear her name, Shannon conducts her own investigation — with the help of her four best friends, her eccentric father, a nosy neighbor or two, and a handsome crime writer who's just moved to town. But as they get closer to prying out the murderer's identity, Shannon is viciously attacked. Now she'll have to nail down the truth — or end up in permanent foreclosure …

A High-End Finish by Kate Carlisle

No Man Standing, A Munch Mancini Mystery by Barbara Seranella, Now Available at a Special Price

No Man Standing by Barbara Seranella

Amazon Kindle Countdown Deals are limited-time discounts on Kindle-exclusive books.

Omnimystery News is pleased to present you with one of today's titles … but take advantage of this deal now as the price will go up to its digital list price soon! (See the countdown clock on the book product page to see how much time remains on this deal.)

No Man Standing by Barbara Seranella

A Munch Mancini Mystery (5th in series)

Publisher: Diversion Books

Price: $0.99 (as of 11/06/2014 at 3:00 PM ET).

No Man Standing by Barbara Seranella, 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.

Munch Mancini is on a mission to save an old friend, before her old life catches up to her …

Miranda "Munch" Mancini has transformed her life, from low-life junkie to high-class mechanic, respected businesswoman, and mother. But life hasn't been as forgiving for her old friend Ellen Summers. Munch and Ellen were an inseparable pair in their youth, but when Munch went straight, Ellen went to prison.

One day before she's to be released from prison, Ellen's mother and stepfather are murdered. When the killer threatens Ellen, she turns to Munch as the only person she can trust. While Munch questions some of her friend's story, the danger she is in proves to be all too real. Munch is determined to find the murderer and save her friend one last time — before the killer ends her crime solving days for good.

No Man Standing by Barbara Seranella

The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl, New in Bookstores during November 2014

The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl

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

The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl, a Lee McKinney, Chocoholic Mystery (14th in series)

Publisher: NAL Hardcover

The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl, Amazon Kindle format  The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl, Nook format  The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl, iTune iBook format  The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl, Kobo format

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

More about our featured title, below …

Everyone who knew the bozo wanted him dead. Odd, then, that a complete stranger was accused of bursting Moe Davidson's balloons. But it's been a month since the miserable shop owner of Clowning Around was killed, and everybody's moving on, including Lee Woodyard. Her chocolate shop, TenHuis Chocolade, is next door to Moe's shuttered tourist trap, and it's giving her delicious ideas to expand. But over whose dead body?

Moe's widow, Emma, and her two stepchildren list the property for sale, but when Lee tours the building, she finds Emma unconscious. Now Lee wonders whether Moe's real killer is still at large and is taking care of unfinished business. Unfortunately, since the town is celebrating Clown Week, there are so many potential suspects in grease paint and floppy shoes it's not even funny.

For Lee, protecting Emma, freeing an innocent man, and rolling out hundreds of her clown-themed chocolates is a pretty tall order. But so is staying alive long enough to find out which one of her neighbors is a killer in disguise.

The Chocolate Clown Corpse by JoAnna Carl

No Mallets Intended by Victoria Hamilton, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during November 2014

No Mallets Intended by Victoria Hamilton

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during November 2014 …

No Mallets Intended by Victoria Hamilton

A Jaymie Leighton, Vintage Kitchen Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Berkley

No Mallets Intended by Victoria Hamilton, Amazon Kindle format

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

More about our featured title, below …

The Queensville Heritage Society is restoring the once-grand Dumpe Manor. While Dumpe relatives and society members use the occasion to dust off old grudges, Jaymie Leighton prefers to adorn the kitchen with authentic Depression Era furnishings. A collection of vintage wooden mallets found in the house is a perfect addition to her display, but one also offers a late-night intruder the perfect weapon to knock Jaymie unconscious before escaping.

Though the attack has everyone on edge, nothing is missing from the house. Perhaps it was merely a vagrant who thought the place was still abandoned. But when Dumpe Manor's resident historian is murdered with a mallet from the same collection, it's time for Jaymie to turn up the heat on the investigation before someone else becomes history.

No Mallets Intended by Victoria Hamilton

The Fifth Assassin, A Culper Ring Series Thriller by Brad Meltzer, Now Available at a Special Price

The Fifth Assassin by Brad Meltzer

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, Grand Central …

The Fifth Assassin by Brad Meltzer

A Culper Ring Series Thriller (2nd in series)

Publisher: Grand Central

Price: $2.99 (as of 11/06/2014 at 1:00 PM ET).

The Fifth Assassin by Brad Meltzer, 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.

From John Wilkes Booth to Lee Harvey Oswald, there have been more than two dozen assassination attempts on the President of the United States. Four have been successful.

But now, Beecher White discovers a killer in Washington, D.C., who's meticulously re-creating the crimes of these four men. Historians have branded them as four lone wolves. But what if they were wrong?

Beecher is about to discover the truth: that during the course of a hundred years, all four assassins were secretly working together. What was their purpose? For whom do they really work? And why are they planning to kill the current President?

Beecher's about to find out. And most terrifyingly, he's about to come face-to-face with the fifth assassin.

The Fifth Assassin by Brad Meltzer

Blackstone and the Stage of Death, A Sam Blackstone Mystery by Sally Spencer, New This Week from Endeavour Press

Blackstone and the Stage of Death by Sally Spencer

Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent digital publisher, promoting and selling ebook editions of works by new authors as well as bringing out ebook editions of out of print books.

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

Blackstone and the Stage of Death by Sally Spencer

A Sam Blackstone Mystery (5th in series)

Publisher: Endeavour Press

Price: $3.99 (as of 11/06/2014 at 12:30 PM ET).

First published in 2006 by Severn House with the title Blackstone and the Balloon of Death.

Blackstone and the Stage of Death by Sally Spencer, 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.

Five hundred people saw the murder — but no one knows who did it! On the face of it, this is the simplest murder Blackstone has ever had to solve. The entire audience at the George Theatre saw Charlotte Devaraux stab William Kirkpatrick with a fake dagger. They gasped as he fell. But they gasped even more when they realized this would be his final curtain call. How did the murderer manage to exchange the fake dagger for a real one?

With the help of the brilliant Dr Ellie Carr, a career driven scientist, Blackstone is able to determine that this dagger had not only been exchanged for a real one but had been laced with a most deadly poison. But what is the source of this exotic poison? And who is the mysterious little old man who keeps appearing on the edges of the investigation?

Assisted by the amiable Sergeant Patterson, Blackstone follows the trail of the killer from the theatre to the world of the Victorian freak show and into the depths of a lunatic asylum. And though he does not know it, another murder is now brewing. Will he find this killer in time? With a cast of unusual suspects, all of which have the motive and the wherewithal to commit the crime, Blackstone struggles to find which is truth and which is merely part of the act.

Blackstone and the Stage of Death by Sally Spencer

A Conversation with Mystery Author Patricia Wynn

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Patricia Wynn
with Patricia Wynn

We are delighted to welcome author Patricia Wynn to Omnimystery News today.

Patricia's fifth book in her Blue Satan and Mrs. Kean series, Acts of Faith (Pemberley Press; October 2014 hardcover) deals with the risks Roman Catholics were driven to take under the punishing laws against them.

We recently had the chance to talk to Patricia a little more about her series.

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Omnimystery News: Introduce us to the principal characters of your series.

Patricia Wynn
Photo provided courtesy of
Patricia Wynn

Patricia Wynn: The two detectives in my Blue Satan series are Gideon Fitzsimmons, Viscount St. Mars, and Mistress Hester Kean, waiting woman to her cousin the Countess of Hawkhurst. Gideon is accused of a murder he did not commit, but English justice being what it was in 1715, he can mount no defense, so he engineers an escape to avoid being hanged. He is declared outlaw and by a curious set of circumstances he is mistaken for a highwayman and given the name Blue Satan.

Mrs. Kean (spoken as Mistress Kean) is a young lady whose father has died with no money, leaving her dependent on her manipulative Aunt Mayfield and empty-headed cousin Isabella. Like other unmarried women in her day, she must work as a servant to her relatives or face life on the street. There were no jobs for women outside the home. She has to balance her gratitude and loyalty to Isabella against her own honesty and integrity.

Aside from his groom, Hester is the only person who believes Gideon innocent. Over the course of the first book, they pair up to solve the mystery, and as their friendship deepens, they go on to solve others.

I got it stuck in my head that I wanted a highwayman for my main character, but having an outlaw for a detective poses obvious problems. Gideon can do a certain amount of sleuthing in disguise since the dress of the day included shoulder-length wigs, face paint, and patches, and people would wear masks to some evening events, but he cannot show himself at Court where he would quickly be recognized. He needed a partner who could detect from within society. Mrs. Kean does most of her work by day and he usually does his at night.

Gideon is a young, athletic man with energy and grace. I enjoy coming up with adventurous schemes for him and scenes in which he finds himself in physical danger. Hester is an intelligent listener. People talk to her. Having been a clergyman's daughter and housekeeper, she is wise and capable beyond her years. What the two share are their senses of justice and humor. The better they get to know each other, they more they can drop their pretenses and have fun.

OMN: How have these characters changed over the course of five books?

PW: My series follows a definite timeline, according to the passage of real events in the reign of George I. The characters are not static like Miss Marple, who goes on being her gentlewomanly self from book to book, but in all fairness to Miss Marple, by her age, most of us have done our "growing." My characters are young and experience huge changes in their lives, so they do learn and grow. Both are vulnerable to mistakes of all kinds. Gideon — Blue Satan — is passionate and has to learn to control his temper. Like many young men, he's fearless when it comes to physical danger, and since he's been robbed of his place in society, he feels he has nothing else to lose. These feelings get him into trouble, and if he did not learn from his experiences, he'd be just plain stupid. He also has to learn whom to trust and what is important in life.

Hester is a realist, but she encounters many circumstances for the first time and occasionally is faced with difficult choices with no one she can trust for advice. She has to rely on her basic decency, but she can be deceived. With each mystery, she learns more about the things that motivate people.

On top of this, the series itself has two plots: Will Gideon ever be exonerated and regain the title that should have been his? and Will Hester and Gideon become lovers and/or marry? Their relationships with other ongoing characters also change over the series. I have plenty to work with to help them grow.

OMN: How did you go about finding the right voices for your characters?

PW: Obviously, I have one character with my gender, Hester, and one without, Blue Satan. Before writing this series, I published 10 romance novels and in all of them I split the viewpoint between the hero and heroine. That's just what has always come naturally to me. I've heard one author explain this choice as wanting to experience all the cool things guys get to do. Certainly, if I confined myself to Hester's point of view in this time period, it would be a completely different series, minus the adventure, because women were extremely confined. I was a bit of a tomboy as a child, played lots of sports and rode horses. I've always loved adventure classics and films and TV. It's fun for me to write Gideon's scenes because I get to fight with a sword, climb trees, ride and run, etc.

As to making my male characters believable, I did grow up playing alongside boys. I also did some research of the Mars vs. Venus variety to do a workshop on writing from the male point of view, which was a bestselling tape for a while. When I write dialogue for Gideon, I always go back and cut out as many words as possible, since on average women use 11 words for every 1 a man will use. I also take out conciliatory phrases, such as "Don't you think that …" or "Would you rather …" — phrases women use to persuade when men are more likely just to give commands.

Two things have pleased me very much. One is that a reviewer once said that I write with energy. The other is that men seem to be my biggest fans. That tells me that I've got Gideon right.

OMN: Into which mystery subgenre would you place this series?

PW: My books are historical mysteries, but I always have to go beyond that phrase to describe them. They combine history, mystery, romance and adventure. The history is factual and chronologically tied to the events of the period, more so than nearly any other series, I believe. The description does help to get me some readers from two genres, historicals and mysteries, and we all need a way to try to reach our niche. With so many novels on the market, I can't come up with a better way to do that.

OMN: Tell us something about Acts of Faith that isn't mentioned in the publisher's synopsis.

PW: I can give you two things in Acts of Faith that are not in the publisher's synopsis: 1) in the time of George I, under the laws of England, Catholic households were limited to one horse and one gun. This was so they would not have the resources to mount a rebellion. 2) Finally (partially in answer to some readers' pleas) Mrs. Kean and Blue Satan do get together — I won't say how far.

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

PW: Very little of my books is based on my own experience other than things like what it feels like to ride a horse or pet a dog. I do put myself inside Mrs. Kean's and Blue Satan's heads and have them respond or act as I think they would, so naturally both express facets of my character.

I have modeled a few characters on people I know, traits of theirs taken to extremes. A person with a complex personality or contrasting traits, abrasive but generous, gentle but obstinate, for instance, makes a good model for a character in any period. But most of my characters have been inspired by people I have read about in my research since this is what inspires my plots. I use the description I've found, change the person's name, and build a character to suit my needs. I also have my characters interact with real historical figures, but I try not to make the historical figures say or do anything they weren't known to have said or done — except for interacting with my fictional creations, of course.

I love to come across a historical event, like the Frost Fair on the Thames, for instance, or the first attempt to walk underwater using a breathing apparatus, and use it to stage a scene. In Acts of Faith, the murder plot was taken from something I read that Catholics in the period practiced.

OMN: Describe your writing process for us.

PW: The only outline I work with is a timeline of historical events, usually about three to six months per book, so I can weave my story through them. I do not outline my plot. I need the process of the writing to inspire connections and revelations that naturally grow out of the story. To me, outlining stifles that process, plus when I tried to outline first, going back to write from the outline bored me. The greatest pleasure I get from writing is making discoveries as I go along. It's true what some other authors have said — your mind really will plant things in your novel whose relevance becomes obvious later. That said, I've never started a story without having the major characters drafted in my head. I know who will be murdered by whom and how. I don't know how Blue Satan and Mrs. Kean are going to prove it, however, until just before they do.

OMN: How do you go about researching the plot points of your stories? Have you come across any particularly challenging topics?

PW: Believe it or not, the most challenging for me was early on discovering whether the English had sash windows in 1715. It necessitated a trip to England and a tour to Kensington Palace to find this out. Of course, later, I must have read the fact a million times, but at the moment, it was very frustrating and I could not get a scene written until I could envision the windows.

I started this series before the internet had much useful information on it, so I accumulated my own research library. I use the OED, historical dictionaries of slang, dialect, and phrases, as well as literature from the period to create believable voice, dialogue, etc. I have a set of the 11th Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, THE collectors' edition, and hundreds of books from biographies to books on crime and punishment, laws, scandals, superstitions, dress, customs, etc. I used the amazing collection on English history at the University of Texas libraries, including the daily newssheets from 1714-1716.

I've been to England quite a few times in the past 10 years and am a card-carrying member of the British Library. For Acts of Faith, I spent a week in Yorkshire touring historical houses and churches and getting the lie of the land, but I also found what I needed about Church history in the Borthwick Papers online. I can now find facsimiles of old books on line that I used to have to read in reading rooms in libraries.

I love to do research. For me, it's like solving a puzzle or a mystery. It's exciting to find what I've been looking for, especially if it turns out to add interest to my story.

OMN: How true are you to the settings of the books?

PW: By now, you've probably figured it out that I'm obsessive about accuracy. For Acts of Faith, even after visiting Coxwold in Yorkshire and taking my own pictures, I spent hours on Google Earth, trying to walk where my characters were going. I do similar things with the books set in London. I have old maps and books on the streets of London in 1715, architecture, art, etc. For Acts of Faith, I did have to make up four country houses and estates. I modeled them on 16th, 17th, and early 18th century National Trust houses that I visited, but I did have to take over a large area for my characters' lands. I apologize to the actual owners.

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

PW: I've always wanted to write a big, sweeping historical novel set in Africa, so I'd see everything from the Congo to Kenya.

OMN: What are some of your outside interests?

PW: Reading is my biggest hobby. With that and writing, I have to exercise regularly to keep healthy. I do like to hike and walk, use the gym, and cycle. My biggest interests are travel and animals. I've studied modern languages all my life, am fluent in three, and have a smattering of another five or so. Wherever I go, I try to study the history, culture and language. My travels and languages do contribute to my books.

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

PW: The best advice I ever got was to find a setting and make it mine. That led me to think about what distinguishes one author from another and to realize that none of the bestselling authors were writing "like" anyone else, as so many authors are promoted on covers. To stand out, an author has to invent or at least claim her own world, even if the setting she chooses has been written about before. In my case, I wanted to set a mystery series in 18th century England. Several mystery authors were working in that period, but no one I could find had set their novels in the earliest years of George I. When I started researching those years, I found a wealth of material that no one else was mining, including espionage, rebellion, a German court, rampant sin and corruption — perfect for a mystery series — and I've loved learning about it.

The harshest criticism I ever received was in an Amazon review on my last romance that started, "B-O-R-I-N-G!" and went downhill from there. Fortunately the reviews after that one were universally good, but as someone who had never had a mean review, I was pretty flattened by that one. I'd either made an enemy somewhere or caught a mean person on a very bad day.

What genuine criticism I've ever received has been welcome. As long as it is delivered in a helpful spirit, I can take it. I advise aspiring authors to get into a critique group, preferably with at least one published author, and to learn from criticism and from the mistakes other writers make. One of my critique partners told me that I was too cerebral, meaning that I dealt with facts more than emotions. Since then I've worked harder to engage readers in the emotions my characters experience, and my writing and my reviews have improved. A big point, though, set up a critiquing pattern in which your partners say what's good about your chapter before they start in on what could make it better. It's always easier to take criticism after hearing what's good.

OMN: How did Acts of Faith come to be titled? And were you involved with the cover design?

PW: The title Acts of Faith refers to the methods Roman Catholics used to practice their religion in secret and to evade the harsh laws against them. It also refers to the change in the relationship between Blue Satan and Mrs. Kean.

I am particularly excited by the artwork on the cover. It is a painting I saw when touring Dyrham Park outside Bath. As soon as I saw it, I thought it would be perfect for the cover, and Pemberley Press was able to license its use from the National Trust.

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

PW: It's all good! It tells me that somebody is reading my books and likes them, since in my experience those are the only people who take the trouble to email me.

OMN: Suppose your series were to be adapted for television or film. Who do you see playing the key roles?

PW: If I had only written this earlier, maybe Charles Dance could have played Blue Satan. Maybe Viggo Mortenson or a younger version thereof? It would have to be an action hero with blue eyes and charm. Failing the blue eyes, Hugh Jackman could do it. For Mrs. Kean, gee, I don't know. Maybe Joanna Vanderham, who is starring in The Paradise on Masterpiece Theatre. She has the right combination of youth, innocence and gravity.

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

PW: My parents' house was full of Edwardian and Southern romances, and Golden Era British mysteries, all of which I devoured. I loved biographies, especially of adventurous people like Francis Marion, the Swamp Fox, and Mary Kingsley, African explorer. Looking back, I realize I had a thing about heroes who were either masked or had a second identity, in books and films: highwaymen, Tarzan, the Prisoner of Zenda, the Scarlet Pimpernel, the Count of Monte Cristo, etc. Later, I discovered romance through Georgette Heyer's Regency and 18th century novels. Blue Satan was actually inspired by a character of hers in The Black Moth, and the opening scene of The Birth of Blue Satan is a tribute to it. I love social satire and Jane Austen is my favorite author. I've read all her books several times.

OMN: What do you read now for pleasure?

PW: Mostly mysteries, preferably British or the English tradition. About two per week. I also listen to them on tape when I'm exercising. I read non-fiction about my period, and occasionally a history about something that interests me, like Africa. I still work in an occasional classic or literary novel if it grabs me. I shy away from serial killer thrillers and women-in-danger books. I've always identified too deeply with the characters in my reading, and I don't like to be scared too much. That said, I do read some darker mysteries and like Jan Burke and Robert Crais. I guess I like them because I find their detectives sympathetic. Plot and characterization are excellent. Their books pull me along.

OMN: Give us a Top 5 list on any topic.

PW: Top 5 places to visit in England:

1. Sir John Soane's Museum, London;
2. St. Bartholomew the Great Church, London;
3. The Yorkshire Dales;
4. The Cotswolds;
5. The Close of Salisbury Cathedral.

OMN: What's next for you?

PW: A bike tour of Southern Spain, a trip to somewhere in the North of Great Britain, and finding a plot for my next Blue Satan mystery. Preferably the last one first.

— ♦ —

Patricia Wynn was born in Houston, Texas. She has a B.A. in History from Rice University and a Masters from the American Graduate School of International Management (Thunderbird). She lives in Southern California with her husband and a little mutt named Puppet.

For more information about the author, please visit her website at PatriciaWynn.com and her author page on Goodreads, or find her on Facebook.

— ♦ —

Acts of Faith by Patricia Wynn

Acts of Faith
Patricia Wynn
A Blue Satan and Mrs. Kean Mystery

Convinced that she will never see the outlawed Viscount St. Mars again, and nursing a broken heart, Hester Kean is not sorry when her relatives send her alone into Yorkshire to prepare her cousin Mary for life at the English court. Travelling on the stage, she befriends a reserved young gentleman, returning home after many years, whose mysterious behaviour is due to his fear of being arrested for receiving an illegal Roman Catholic education in France.

When the young man arrives home to learn that his father has been murdered, Hester wants to help, but her efforts are stymied by the secrets the young man and his family are forced to keep. Encountering degrees of prejudice against "papists" on all sides, Hester cannot blame them for their clandestine lives, but was it that very secrecy that led to the murder?

Hester has an affair of her own to keep private, for Gideon has tracked her north in disguise, determined to win her. Elated to know at last that he loves her, she still has to discover whether he wants her for a mistress or a wife. Somehow, they must hide their intimacy from Hester's cousins, while stealing the moments alone they need to resolve their future together.

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)

Adjusted To Death by Jaqueline Girdner is Today's Open Road Daily Deal

Adjusted To Death by Jaqueline Girdner

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Adjusted To Death by Jaqueline Girdner as today's Open Road Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, November 06, 2014.

Adjusted To Death by Jaqueline Girdner

A Kate Jasper Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Open Road

Price: $1.99 (as of 11/06/2014 at 7:50 AM ET).

Adjusted To Death by Jaqueline Girdner, 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.

Kate Jasper visits her chiropractor for a simple spinal adjustment, but instead finds a dead man on one of the tables … dead of a broken neck. And it seems everyone in the chiropractor's office knew the victim, Scott Younger, in one way or another, except for Kate herself.

Maggie, Kate's friend and chiropractor, has known Scott for years, as has her staff. Her receptionist, Renee, even dated him. Devi knew Scott from college. Guru-follower Valerie accuses Scott of being a drug pusher! And Wayne, Scott's now unnecessary bodyguard, a shy, homely man who almost makes Kate forget her husband has left her, knew him the best of all.

But Kate can't forget murder, especially since Wayne is the main suspect. And there is the pesky matter of Kate's fingerprints on the metal bar that broke Scott Younger's neck …

Adjusted To Death by Jaqueline Girdner

The Dead Celeb by Michele Scott is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

The Dead Celeb by Michele Scott

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

The Dead Celeb by Michele Scott

An Evie Preston Mystery

Publisher: Michele Scott

… as today's third free mystery ebook.

The Dead Celeb by Michele Scott, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of November 06, 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.

What happens when a small town girl moves to Hollywood to pursue her dreams and winds up smack dab in the middle of a murder investigation, haunted by famous dead celebs, and working for the biggest pop star in the music industry?

Introducing Evie Preston: Small-town girl and under-the-radar healer, currently trapped in a po-dunk Texas town but yearning for something more. When fate gives her the opportunity to move to Hollywood to follow her dreams, Evie finds herself navigating through the land of glitz and glamour, and the realm of (dead) celebrities …

Raised in Brady, Texas by her minister father and her beauty shop-owner mother, Evie has been trying to get out of town for years. When an old family friend gives her an unexpected gift on her birthday, Evie finally gets the chance to start fresh out west. Against her father's wishes, she packs up her guitar, her dog, Mama Cass, and heads for California.

Once in L.A., Evie finds a singing gig at a local dive bar where she meets a slew of interesting characters including the owner himself, a former child star with a hidden past. She also scores a day job doing make-up for a famous and foul-mouthed pop diva. One of the job perks includes house sitting at a Hollywood Hills mansion. But what Evie doesn't know is the house is also home to some famous celebrity spirits, including the essence of former Grunge rocker, Lucas Minx.

As if things weren't complicated enough, Evie finds herself in the middle of a murder mystery and discovers she's being targeted by some nasty spirits. And to top things off, she's developed a Texas-sized crush on her hot, but very dead, roommate, Lucas.

Maybe her dad was right and the City of Angels really is the City of Devils — all of them after her.

This book was previously titled The Grey Tier.

The Dead Celeb by Michele Scott

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