Thursday, December 04, 2014

Disclosures by Bill James, New in Bookstores during December 2014

Disclosures by Bill James

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

Disclosures by Bill James, a Harpur and Iles Mystery (31st in series)

Publisher: Severn House

Disclosures by Bill James, Amazon Kindle format  Disclosures by Bill James, Nook format  Disclosures by Bill James, Kobo format

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

More about our featured title, below …

Panicking Ralph is a big-time villain — but he's a local villain — and when his life is threatened, policemen Harpur and Iles are straight on the case …

Detective Chief Superintendent Colin Harpur and his boss, Assistant Chief Constable Desmond Iles, worry about the safety of one of the big-time crooks on their ground, Ralph Ember, sometimes known as Panicking Ralph. Yes, Ralph is a villain, but he's a local villain, and Harpur and Iles feel a kind of bizarre affection for him. And in any case, Ralph helps Iles keep the city reasonably peaceful. But now some awkward repercussions from Ralph's lawless past seem to bring danger.

Ralph is aware of this new peril and has installed a bulletproof steel barrier to protect himself in the club he owns — but will this be enough to keep him safe? Harpur thinks not. Surely the upcoming party at the club will provide the perfect moment for a gunman to do for Ralph? The only way Harpur can be sure of protecting Ralph is to attend the party himself …

Disclosures by Bill James

First Teaser Poster for the Next James Bond Film, Spectre

James Bond in Spectre (November 2015)

The first teaser poster for the next James Bond film — Spectre — has been released by the studio (right; click for larger image). The film's title was announced earlier this morning by the director, Sam Mendes, who also directed Skyfall.

"Those of you have some knowledge of the Bond franchise and the legend of Bond will probably have some idea of what that [title] refers to, but I couldn't possibly comment," Mendes said.

Daniel Craig returns as 007 in a screenplay by John Logan with Neal Purvis and Robert Wade.

Spectre opens in theaters November 6th, 2015.

The Chihuahua Always Sniffs Twice by Waverly Curtis, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during December 2014

The Chihuahua Always Sniffs Twice by Waverly Curtis

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during December 2014 …

The Chihuahua Always Sniffs Twice by Waverly Curtis

A Geri Sullivan and Pepe, Barking Detective Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Kensington

The Chihuahua Always Sniffs Twice by Waverly Curtis, Amazon Kindle format

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

More about our featured title, below …

Aspiring P.I. Geri Sullivan's new case has got her talking Chihuahua, Pepe, hot under the collar. Wealthy widow Lucille Carpenter left her entire fortune to her beloved dogs, and someone is trying to poison them. Anyone who would hurt a perro is lower than a cucaracha in Pepe's book. But when Geri and Pepe investigate, they discover that it's not just the coddled canines who are in danger. Now there are human targets too.

At the lavish Carpenter manor, Pepe digs for clues among the pampered pooches, bitter relatives, suspicious staff, and larcenous lawyers. But there's only one diminutive detective smart enough to save the day — and the dogs …

The Chihuahua Always Sniffs Twice by Waverly Curtis

New This Week: A Crime of Passion, A Joe Dillard Mystery by Scott Pratt

A Crime of Passion by Scott Pratt

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during December 2014 and priced $4.99 or less …

A Crime of Passion by Scott Pratt

A Joe Dillard Mystery (7th in series)

Publisher: Phoenix Flying

Price: $3.99 (as of 12/04/2014 at 12:30 PM ET).

A Crime of Passion by Scott Pratt, Amazon Kindle format

Find more newly released mystery, suspense and thriller titles on the Omnimystery News Facebook page.

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.

Joe Dillard is hired to travel to Tennessee's capital city to defend Paul Milius, a record company baron accused of strangling Kasey Cartwright, his label's young star. Dillard navigates Nashville's unfamiliar legal system and the world of country music in search of the truth, but he soon finds himself confronted with a web of lies so masterfully woven that he fears he may never find any answers.

As the trial begins and the tension mounts, Dillard fears that not only will his client be wrongfully convicted, but that Dillard himself may not survive.

A Crime of Passion by Scott Pratt

An Excerpt from Tokyo Kill, a Thriller by Barry Lancet

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Barry Lancet
Tokyo Kill by Barry Lancet

We are delighted to welcome author Barry Lancet to Omnimystery News today.

Barry was recently honored by the editorial staff of Deadly Pleasures with the 2014 Barry Award for Best First Novel for his debut thriller Japantown, and now the second in series to feature antiques dealer-turned-P.I. Jim Brodie Tokyo Kill (Simon & Schuster; September 2014 hardcover, audio and ebook formats) has recently been published. We are pleased to introduce you to it with an excerpt, the first two chapters. And you can enter to win a copy of the book by visiting this page. Entry period ends Monday, December 8th, 2014 at 11:59 AM; prize provided courtesy of Simon & Schuster.

— ♦ —

Tokyo Kill by Barry Lancet

CHAPTER 1
Tokyo, 2:36 P.M.

EIGHT PEOPLE HAD ALREADY DIED BY the time Akira Miura showed up at our door fearing for his life.
  When the commotion broke out I'd been on a long-distance call to London trying to track down an original ink painting by Sengai, the renowned Japanese painter-monk of Circle, Triangle, and Square fame. The rumor had come out of the United Kingdom, so I was plying channels to nail down the potential gem for a client in San Francisco who would kill to get it, and kill me if I didn't.
  People killed for a lot less. I learned this anew with each day spent at Brodie Security, the detective agency and personal protection firm established by my father in the Japanese capital more than forty years ago.
  Had I been sitting in my antiques shop in San Francisco instead of behind my father's battered pine desk in Tokyo, I wouldn't have given the shouting match in the front office a second thought, but in Japan a loud altercation constituted a serious breach of decorum.
  If not more.
  Mari Kawasaki tapped on my door. "Brodie-san, I think you should
  get out here."
  All of twenty-three but looking more like sixteen, Mari was the office tech whiz. When I came to town, she lent me a hand. We were a small operation and people wore multiple hats.
   "Could I call you back later today?" I asked my London connection. "Something urgent has come up."
  He said certainly and I jotted down his schedule, bid a polite goodbye, and stepped out onto the main floor.
  Mari pointed across the room to where three hardened Brodie Security ops had herded a fourth man against a wall. The man cast indignant glares at them, and when my people didn't wither and fall back, he pelted the trio with the exasperated sighs middle-management salarymen usually fling at underlings.
  That didn't work either.
  Mari rolled her eyes. "He charged in here demanding to speak with you and refused to explain himself or wait at reception."
  When the unexpected reared up at Brodie Security, containment came before all else. Our work brought us into contact with every manner of fringe character. Old-timers still talk about the right-wing lunatic who sprang from the elevator with short sword drawn and put two of the staff in the hospital.
  "Calm down," one of the three men cooed. "If you would just return to the reception area …"
  The salaryman was irate. "But it's urgent. My father is a sick man. Can't you see that?" He saw me and yelled across the expanse in Japanese, "Are you Jim Brodie?"
  Since I was the only Caucasian in a sea of Asian faces, it wasn't a brilliant deduction. Our unannounced guest was handsome in the unassuming way Japanese men can be. He was in his fifties and sheathed in the requisite business suit — dark blue in his case — with a white dress shirt and a perfectly knotted red silk tie. The tie had set him back some. What looked like platinum cuff links sparkled at his wrists. His attire was flawless, and under normal circumstances he'd be considered nonthreatening. But his expression was frayed, as if he were unraveling from the inside.
  "That's me," I said in his native language.
  He drew himself up. His eyes grew watery. "Kindly allow my father to intrude. He is not well."
  All eyes shifted toward the paternal figure waiting patiently at Reception. He had a full crown of silver-gray hair and the same unassuming good looks: sculpted cheekbones, a firm chin, and the deep brown eyes women habitually swoon over.
  He waved a wooden walking staff in salute, then began a tremulous foray around the unmanned half-counter that passed for Reception in our no-frills office. With singular determination he shuffled forward. His hands trembled. The cane shook. He wheezed with each step. And yet, there was something noble in the effort.
  He had dressed for the trip into town. A brown hand-tailored suit that had gone out of style maybe three decades ago. As he drew closer the smell of mothballs suggested his attire had been plucked from a dusty clothes rack expressly for this visit.
  Three feet away, he stopped. He squinted up at me with unflinching brown eyes. "Are you the gaijin the papers said caught the Japantown killers in San Francisco?"
  Gaijin means "foreigner," literally "outside person."
  "Guilty as charged."
  "And tackled the Japanese mafia before that?"
  "Guilty again."
  For better or worse, the overseas murders and my run-in with the Tokyo thugs had made headlines in Japan.
  "Then you're my man. Got notches on your belt."
  I smiled and his son, who had sidled up on the other side, whispered in my ear. "That's his meds talking. Makes him emotional. Sometimes delusional. I only mentioned coming here to calm him. I never thought he'd actually do it."
  His father frowned. He hadn't heard what was said, but he was astute enough to guess the content. "My son thinks I've toppled off the train because I've put on a few years. Well, I'm ninety-three, and until last December I could walk three miles a day without a damn stick."
  "A few years? You're ninety-six, Dad. You shouldn't be charging around town like this."
  The old man waved the cane under his son's nose. "You call this charging? There are tombstones in Aoyama Cemetery that move faster than I do, but upstairs my train's still running on straight tracks. Besides, when a man my age no longer wants to shave off a couple years to impress the ladies, then he's done for."
  I was going to like this guy.
  I said, "Why don't we step into my office? It's quiet there. Mari, would you show these gentlemen the way? I'll be there in a minute."
  "Follow me, please," she said.
  Once Mari had shut them in, I turned to a pale-faced detective nearest the entrance. "Anything else besides their showing up without an appointment?"
  "Only the last name. Miura."
  "Okay, thanks. Do you know where Noda is?"
  Kunio Noda was our head detective and the main reason I came away from the Japantown case in one piece.
  "He's out on the kidnapping case in Asakusa but supposed to be back shortly."
  "Send him in as soon as he arrives, okay?"
  "Will do."
  I headed back to my office, where I exchanged cards and the customary bows with the new arrivals. The father's name was Akira Miura and he'd once been senior vice president of a major Japanese trading company.
  The son with the pricey tie was a fuku bucho, or assistant section chief, at Kobo Electronics. His company was equally impressive but his position was not, especially for a Japanese salaryman in his fifties. You didn't start making good money until you hit bucho, the next step up for Yoji Miura, so either he was spending beyond his means or there was money trickling in from another source.
  Taking my seat I said, "So, gentlemen, how can I help?"
  Before they could respond, Mari knocked and entered. On a tray she carried green tea in decorated porcelain cups with lids. Guest chinaware. In Japan, courtesy rules.
  "I was in the war, Mr. Brodie," Akira Miura said after Mari departed.
  When a Japanese mentions the war, he or she means World War II. And only the youngest soldiers — now the oldest surviving veterans — were around today. Japan fought no further battles after the big Double Two.
  "I see," I said.
  Miura Senior's eyes zeroed in on me. "How much do you know about Japanese history, Mr. Brodie?"
   "Quite a bit, actually."
  My endeavors in the field of Japanese art made knowledge of the country's history, culture, and traditions mandatory.
  "Did you know that in the old Japanese army you followed orders without question, or your commanding officer put a bullet in your head?"
  "Yes."
  "Good. Then you probably also know that my country conquered part of Manchuria and set up a puppet state."
  I did, and he seemed pleased.
  Japan had entered China aggressively in the early 1900s, then cemented its grasp by laying railroads, bringing in settlers, and setting up branches of its large conglomerates. In 1932 it famously resurrected the rule of China's twelfth and final Qing Dynasty ruler, Pu Yi, canonized in popular culture as the Last Emperor.
  Miura said, "I was sent to the Manchurian front in 1940 as an officer. My men and I fought many battles. Then new orders shifted us to a frontier outpost called Anli-dong. Our assignment was to stabilize the region, and I became the de facto mayor of Anli and the surrounding area.
  "We were outnumbered two hundred to one, but by that time the Japanese military had a reputation so fierce we retained control without incident. Although I preached nonviolence and it held, my predecessor had been ruthless. Any Chinese male offender faced a firing squad or worse, and his women became the spoils of war. Which is why I need you."
  "For something that happened more than seventy years ago?"
  "You've heard about the recent home invasions in Tokyo?"
  "Sure. Two families slaughtered within six days of each other. Eight people were killed."
  "You saw the police suspect Triads?"
  "Of course."
  "They're right."
  Inwardly I cringed at the mention of the blade-wielding Chinese gangs. I'd run into them in San Francisco once when I lived out in the Mission. It hadn't ended well.
  "How can you be so sure?"
  Miura's handsome brown eyes flooded with fear. "In Anli-dong they told me they would come after us. Now they have."


CHAPTER 2

He had my attention. "How can you be so sure the Triads are targeting you after all this time?"
  "Because I know what was not in the papers."
  "Which is?"
  "Two of my men are dead all of a sudden."
  My men. "And you told this to the police?"
  "Uma no mimi ni nembutsu," he said with undisguised disdain.
  Might as well read sutras to horses. Meaning the Japanese police were too dense to understand.
  "But you did tell them?"
  He shrugged. "They insisted the killings couldn't possibly be motivated by 'ancient history.'"
  During the war years, the Japanese police became an organ of terror at home almost as much as the armed forces did abroad. After the surrender, the police were emasculated. A heavy-handed bureaucracy filled the vacuum, and to this day a cautious mind-set colors their every action, which leaves a lot of territory for the likes of Brodie Security.
  "And you think otherwise because?"
  "My gut."
  His son smiled apologetically.
  I ignored Miura the Younger but could no longer dismiss his earlier comments about his father's instability. "And what is your gut telling you?"
  "That two of my men killed so close together is no coincidence."
  I said, "Even assuming that what you say is true, how would Brodie Security be able to help?"
   "Guard my house."
  His son wanted me to humor him, so I said, "That we can do. But security takes men, in teams, and doesn't come cheap. Are you sure?"
  "I'm sure."
  I looked at his son, who nodded reluctantly.
  "Okay," I said, "we'll put some men on you for a few days."
  "I also want you to find out who butchered my friends."
  "The murders landed on the front page. You can bet the police have made them a top priority."
  He shook his head. "The police are idiots. I gave them a connection and they didn't even bother to check it. Both men served together because they grew up in the same neighborhood. The same place they were killed. It is not a gang of thieves targeting the neighborhood, as the police think, but Anli-dong Triads targeting my men."
  There was a knock, then Noda barreled in without waiting for a reply. The chief detective was short and stout and built like a bulldog — broad shoulders, a thick chest, and a flat humorless face. His most distinctive feature was a slash across his eyebrow where a yakuza bladehad left its mark. Noda's return swipe left a deeper mark.
  I made introductions and brought Noda up-to-date. He grunted when I mentioned the Triads.
  "What? You think Triads are a possibility?" I said, pushing the habitually laconic detective for a more revealing response.
  Chinese gangs had been in Japan for decades. They could trace their roots back to the end of the Ming Dynasty in China, where they started as a political group aiding the government against the invading Manchus, and were hailed as heroes. Over time the glory faded. But the beast needed feeding. Triad leaders looked elsewhere to buttress their dwindling support and found the easy money — protection, extortion, loan sharking, prostitution, and drugs. First at home and, inevitably, overseas. In Tokyo, gangs inhabited the darker corners of Shinjuku, Ueno, and other enclaves. Yokohama Chinatown, thirty minutes by train, was a major operational base.
  Noda shrugged. "Could be."
  "And?"
  "Tricky."
  Frustratingly curt as usual.
  Miura looked from Noda to me. "So you'll take the case?"
  "Noda?"
  He shrugged. "It's what we do."
  Meaning Brodie Security had handled Triad cases before. That was the question I'd really been asking. I was still new to my father's outfit, having inherited half of the firm just eleven months ago. But showing my ignorance in front of a client was not an option.
  "Okay," I said. "We can look into it. My father's people are very good at what they do."
  "They'll need to be," Miura said, his eyes lingering on Noda with vague apprehension.
  "How many men from your old squad are left?"
  "Twenty-eight of us survived the war but most died long ago. Only seven showed up at our last get-together. Then Mitsumoto died of a brain aneurysm, and Yanaguchi caught the bird flu on a visit back to Anli last year. Before the home invasions there were five of us."
  So only three remained.
  "Where are the other two?"
  "One left for a friend's vacation home in Kyushu. He won't tell me where. The other went to stay with his son in the countryside."
  Noda and I exchanged a look. That the remaining members of Miura's troop had fled Tokyo — and one to the farthest western island of mainland Japan — bolstered the old soldier's claim.
  I had a last question:
  "If you ruled Anli-dong with an even hand, then why would someone want you and your men dead after all this time?"
  He sighed. "It's the dirt. Whenever higher-ups came through they expected to be entertained. They invariably ordered us to 'weed out traitors' and 'set up inspections.' The first consisted of lining up any villagers in jail for target practice. The second involved examining local beauties in private. These were orders we couldn't refuse or they'd — "
  "— put a bullet in your head."
  Miura's shoulders sagged under an old guilt. "Without a second thought."
  "I see."
   "After the first VIP visit, the Triads threatened me. I told them I could only control those under my command, not above. They were unconvinced. 'If you wear the master's uniform, you can bleed for him too.' They didn't act then because they knew more villagers would suffer if any soldiers were attacked. But they told me they would come one day.
  "Years later, when China finally allowed Japanese tourists into the country, a handful of us went back. We looked up the families we knew. We were shocked to see how poor they were, and still are today. We've returned many times, bringing them money and modern appliances like Japanese rice cookers. We ate together and drank together. We did what we could to make amends. But we couldn't help everyone. I think our trips triggered an old resentment. We gave out our addresses freely.
  That may have been a mistake."
  Noda grunted. "Revenge slayings."
  Miura concurred with a nod. "My future killer is in Tokyo, Brodiesan. I can feel it."


A team of six men escorted Akira Miura home.
  Once they arrived, two would canvass the neighborhood, then the local shops. Two others would secure the residence. Windows, doors, and other exterior access points would be sealed, then house, garage, and yard scanned for listening, tracking, and incendiary devices. The last pair would work with Miura on safety protocol, including an emergency evacuation plan, after which they would spend the next twelve hours with their charge until two rested operatives replaced them.
  However, before the team left Brodie Security, they gathered in the conference room with the Miuras to discuss procedure. Sometime during the proceedings, the son slipped away and cornered Noda and me in my office.
  "Thank you for indulging the old man," he said. "The murders haverattled him, but to be frank, we are seeing signs of senility lately, and mild paranoia."
  "Has he gone overboard before?" I asked.
  "No, but the doctors told us to expect a slow degeneration."
  Noda and I traded a glance.
  "Noted," I said. "But we'll want to treat the threat seriously until we can prove otherwise."
  Yoji Miura remained skeptical. "Your presence will comfort my father, so what could it hurt? But between us, you'll be babysitting."
  Noda scowled. "Two men murdered is beyond babysitting."
  The head detective's voice was low and menacing. Yoji looked startled until he noticed that Noda's rage was not directed at him but at what might or might not be out there, lying in wait. Even so, when the younger Miura left my office, he gave Noda a wide berth. The detective himself followed a minute later, mumbling about clueless offspring.
  Alone, I leaned back in my chair and stared at the ceiling. Deep down, something primal stirred, disturbed by the undertow of Miura Senior's fears. I liked the old veteran a lot. Pulling out his musty suit for the visit. Habitually shaving three years off his age so he could still attract "the ladies."
  What I didn't like was his fellow veterans abandoning Tokyo for safer grounds. Nor the triple threat — home invasions, Triads, and old war atrocities. I'd been through a lot in my life. Seen a lot. Had learned the hard way to give any early sign of danger its due.
  This could be the world's wildest goose chase, or the beginning of something very nasty.

Excerpted from Tokyo Kill by Barry Lancet. Copyright © 2014 by Barry Lancet. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster, Inc, NY.

— ♦ —

Barry Lancet
Photo provided courtesy of
Barry Lancet

Barry Lancet has lived in Japan for more than twenty-five years. His inside access to the inner circles in traditional and business circles most outsiders are never granted informs his writing. The first book in his Jim Brodie series, Japantown is being developed for a television series by J. J. Abrams' Bad Robot Productions, in association with Warner Bros.

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

— ♦ —

Tokyo Kill by Barry Lancet

Tokyo Kill
Barry Lancet
A Jim Brodie Thriller

When an elderly World War II veteran shows up unannounced at Brodie Security begging for protection, the staff thinks he's just a paranoid old man. He offers up a story connected to the war and to Chinese Triads operating in present-day Tokyo, insisting that he and his few surviving army buddies are in danger.

Fresh off his involvement in solving San Francisco's Japantown murders, antiques dealer Jim Brodie had returned to Tokyo for some R&R, and to hunt down a rare ink painting by the legendary Japanese Zen master Sengai for one of his clients — not to take on another case with his late father's P.I. firm. But out of respect for the old soldier, Brodie agrees to provide a security detail, thinking it'll be an easy job and end when the man comes to his senses.

Instead, an unexpected, brutal murder rocks Brodie and his crew, sending them deep into the realm of the Triads, Chinese spies, kendo warriors, and an elusive group of killers whose treachery spans centuries — and who will stop at nothing to complete their mission.

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

A Conversation with Thriller Writer Mike Pace

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Mike Pace
with Mike Pace

We are delighted to welcome author Mike Pace to Omnimystery News today.

Mike's new suspense thriller, One To Go (Oceanview Publishing; December 2014 hardcover and ebook formats), has a most intriguing premise, and we recently had the opportunity to talk more about it with him.

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Omnimystery News: Tell us a little more about Tom Booker, the lead character in One To Go.

Mike Pace
Photo provided courtesy of
Mike Pace

Mike Pace: Tom Booker is the protagonist of One To Go. Tom is 30ish and grew up in a safe leafy suburb of Washington D.C.. After college Tom worked as an inner-city schoolteacher and loved the job. However, after being pressured to do so by his wife's family he attended Georgetown Law and now is on the fast track to partnership in a prestigious Washington law firm. He divorced his wife when he found out she was having an affair with their pediatrician. They have a seven year-old daughter named Janie. Tom drinks a lot but won't consider the possibility he has a problem. Tom has never held much less fired a weapon.

OMN: One To Go is a stand-alone thriller. Did you consider making it the first of a series?

MP: I'm a big fan of Hitchcock. His formula of inserting an ordinary guy into an extraordinary situation appeals to me because, hopefully, the reader might more easily identify with an ordinary protagonist compared to a detective or a secret agent. That said, my protagonists are all related — cousins with the same last name — and will make cameo appearances in subsequent novels. I'm certainly not against writing a series in the future and I'm a big fan of Harry Bosch, Jack Reacher and Gabriel Allon to name a few.

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

MP: So far my protagonists have all been male like me. However, my books always include a substantial love interest so your question is one I've considered. When writing a female voice, the challenge for a man is to avoid clichés, i.e. "all women are more sensitive so all women characters have to show more emotion." The best female characters are those who, like male characters, are multi-layered and go against type, e.g. the insensitive, unemotional female detective who can kick your ass. I make sure my wife and daughter perform a deep scrub on all of my female characters before sending a manuscript to my agent and they've been very helpful.

OMN: Into which fiction category would you place the book?

MP: One To Go is a crime thriller with just a dash of paranormal. I suppose that's a cross-over.

OMN: Tell us something about One To Go that isn't mentioned in the publisher's synopsis.

MP: The small kernel of the idea came from a PSA on TV warning against the dangers of texting while driving. From that kernel sprang a crazy bunch of unrelated ideas, some focused, most very fuzzy. What if by texting you caused an accident? Let's make it more dramatic. The accident occurs on a bridge and it involves a school bus. No, a school bus has too many victims, so how about a minivan. Wait! And to really ratchet it up, what if we put the driver's kid inside? And then, instead of tipping over into the river below, what if time stood still, freezing the van on two wheels? And … and … how about this? The driver's given a chance at a re-wind! And then what if …? I changed the protagonist from a cop to a young lawyer. I also wanted to explore how a normal guy would react to an extraordinary situation. (Shades of Hitchcock.) Tom Booker is not troubled, was not raised in an at-risk environment and has no parent issues. He grew up in suburbia with two loving parents, got a good education and never shot a gun in his life. So how would this kind of normal American guy handle having to become a serial killer to save his daughter? I couldn't wait to get to my desk every morning to see how he was doing.

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

MP: When a young lawyer accidently causes the death of 5 innocents, including his own daughter, he's given a chance for a "rewind." All he has to do is kill 5 random strangers instead.

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

MP: We all write what we know to some extent. Like Tom, I was an inner-city schoolteacher before I went to law school, worked in a big firm, and served in the criminal justice system. Like Tom and all parents, I always assumed I would do anything to save my child, so the question posed by the book — would you really do anything? — is one that I find very chilling.

OMN: Tell us a little more about your writing process.

MP: I start off with a ten-fifteen page treatment to establish the main characters, the principal plot and subplots. I begin writing a "pre-draft" (usually about 60,000 words). There I develop characters, add characters, cut characters and flesh out the story. I begin the pre-draft with the expectation large chunks of it will be changed or dumped. While in the pre-draft I name all characters, even minor ones, while in subsequent drafts I'll drop many names so as not to confuse the reader. After the pre-draft I'll write a new "first" draft. I keep a yellow-pad next to the computer and as I write if a problem arises I jot it down on the pad rather than stopping and losing my rhythm. Thereafter, I print a copy and "drawer it" — put the manuscript in a drawer for a period of at least two weeks. When I pull it out and read it I'm always amazed at how much more work needs to be done. After a number of drafts I'll send out the manuscript to an outside professional editor for feedback. Then it's polish, polish, polish.

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

MP: Internet, consulting experts and my own experience serve as the main research sources. I found researching the catwalk around the top of the Capitol Rotunda challenging. You have to be accompanied by a congressman to gain access. I found a Congressman to volunteer; however, two days before out appointment the Architect of the Capitol closed the catwalk for up to two years to perform needed repairs, so I had to rely on photos and interviews of people who'd been there.

OMN: How true are you to the setting of One To Go?

MP: My book takes place in Washington and since I know the town well, I've tried to be as true to real life as possible with only a few geographic deviations. I believe if you're using a real place a writer owes it to his readers to be as accurate as possible.

OMN: If we could send you anywhere in the world at our expense to research the setting for a book, where would it be?

MP: I'm tempted to say any Caribbean island where after a morning of writing I could lounge the afternoons away on the beach sipping an adult beverage. But probably I'd pick a boat trip up the Amazon River. The colorful characters, the breathtaking setting, add in a few crocodiles and a swarm of piranha — the book would write itself.

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

MP: Skiing, golf and independent film. (I'm on the board of the Annapolis Film Festival.) So far, none of these activities have made their way into a book, but I'm working on a new treatment that would combine two of the three.

OMN: What is the best advice you've received as an author? And what might you say to an aspiring writer?

MP: As a member of the International Thriller Writers and the Mystery Writers of America I've benefitted from invaluable advice from fellow authors writing in the same genre. I remember Catherine Coulter telling me once, "At the end of the day, there are no rules."

I have been fortunate in that the criticism I've received has been uniformly constructive.

The best advice I can give a new writer is, It's not ready yet. Throughout years of schooling we're conditioned to the "turn it in" experience. That is, you do your homework or complete a test or write a term paper and you turn it in. Shortly thereafter, you get it back with a grade. When you write your first manuscript there's a compelling desire to turn it in. You've been working months and months. You've completed a number of drafts. Your family and friends, including your girlfriend who's an English major, love it. Okay, an agent or publisher might have a few tweaks here and there, after all that's their job, but all in all what you've completed is great. Sorry, but it's not. You must arrange for one or preferably more outside edits, even if you have to pay for it. In fact, I'd say especially if you have to pay for it. A professional editor will not worry about your feelings (although I've found they've developed a certain expertise in informing you that a chapter of your manuscript is crap in a nice way) and their advice will be invaluable. Also, drawer the manuscript for at least two weeks. (If memory serves, Stephen King drawers his manuscript for six weeks.) You'll be astonished how much more you'll see after staying away for a couple of weeks.

OMN: Complete this sentence for us: "I am a thriller writer and thus …"

MP: If you're a male thriller writer you picture yourself saying, "If you are a thriller writer you like your women crazy and your coffee black," but in real life you feel blessed to have a wonderful wife who's stable and supportive, and you prefer your coffee with crème and sugar.

OMN: How did One To Go come to be titled? And were you involved in any way with the cover design?

MP: The title came about rather easily, but to go into detail would require a spoiler alert, so I'll just say when you read the book the title will make sense.

Oceanview Publishing uses George Foster to design their covers, and George did an amazing job. (He was selected to design Pope Francis's book cover.) We went through a number of iterations, but in the end George came up with an ingenious design that portrayed the Washington setting and the key role of the protagonist's cell phone, then "jiggled'" the image to convey a paranormal element. The red, white and black colors make the cover pop. I love it.

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

MP: I love all feedback because it means a reader is engaged. The most common question (as is likely the case for all authors) is "where did you get the idea?" As noted above, the germ of the idea came from a PSA about texting while driving. Also, like me anyone who's a parent has at some point said they'd do anything to save their child. I wanted to push the envelope and come up with a situation where that conviction is truly tested.

OMN: Suppose One To Go were to be adapted for television or film. Who do you see playing Tom Booker?

MP: Charlie Hunnam from Sons of Anarchy. Leonardo DiCaprio was once asked to identify his toughest role, and he surprised many by saying Titanic because he had to play someone who was normal. The actor who plays Tom would have to establish him as a normal guy, but I think Charlie would be up to the challenge.

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

MP: I've always loved mysteries, thrillers and smart horror, and have read them since I was very young. (Sometimes I'd have to read them under the covers with a flashlight because my mother was afraid they would give me nightmares, but they never did.)

OMN: And what do you read today for pleasure?

MP: I love so many series writers I hesitate to single anyone out. I love Preston and Childs' Pendergast, Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch, Lee Child's Jack Reacher, Dan Silva's Gabriel Allon, early Jason Bourne, early Jack Ryan, Patricia Gussin's Laura Nelson, and Ward Larsen's David Slaton, just to name a very few. Stephen King's a master. (Much to many of his fans' chagrin critics have tagged his later books with that dirty word, "literary.") David Balducci and Gayle Lynds are great, and David Morrell's Murder as Fine Art is a masterpiece. Steve Berry's works are not only thrilling, but after finishing you feel like you should receive credit toward a masters in history.

I'd been warned that one of the downsides of being an author is I would find myself reading as a critic and struggle to escape into a book as a normal reader. Thankfully, most of the time I'm able to successful immerse myself in the world created by the writer due to the many talented authors out there.

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

MP: Channeling my inner curmudgeon, here's the top five words or phrases that bug me:

1. Exact same. What's the difference between two things that are the same, and two things that are the exact same?

2. Teenage singing contestants who refer to their life's "journey." You're only fifteen, you haven't had time for a journey!

3. Awesome. Awe means an overwhelming feeling of reverence, a powerful, jaw-dropping sense of wonder. The Grand Canyon is awesome, the Northern Lights are awesome. A double cheeseburger is not awesome.

4. Reality TV. It's not reality.

5. Sports interviewers who rely on the leading "how" question: "How exciting is it to be in the playoffs?" "How disappointed are you that you suffered a knee injury?" First, the question presumes the interviewee is indeed excited, disappointed, concerned, etc. Then the interviewer asks for a measurement. "How concerned are you?" Compared to what? Using what measurement? Zero to fifty with zero being completely unconcerned, not disappointed, completely unexcited, to fifty being I'm as concerned as I would be if a nuclear bomb was about to drop? Just once I'd love to see an interviewee respond with a simple number. "Forty-two." Let the girl with the microphone in her hand figure it out.

OMN: What's next for you?

MP: A medical thriller, and, inspired by Steve Berry and David Morrell, a historical thriller. A feature film script I wrote a number of years ago has just been optioned by a major producer, so I'll be involved in advancing that project as well. Also, hopefully this summer my wife and I will finally be able to find time to take a long-planned trip to Scandinavia.

— ♦ —

Mike Pace was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He attended the University of Illinois on an art scholarship, and graduated with a BFA degree.

He taught public school in Washington D.C.'s inner city, while attending law school at Georgetown University. At Georgetown he was selected to the editorial board of Georgetown's law review. Upon graduation, he clerked for a federal judge in Washington. Thereafter, he was appointed to serve as an Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Columbia. In that position he prosecuted numerous cases, including those involving murder and rape.

He left government service to join a large Washington law firm where he specialized in commercial litigation. He subsequently took a position as general counsel to a national environmental services company headquartered in Annapolis, MD. After several years, he resigned in order to practice law part time, thereby allowing him the time to devote to his first love, creative writing. He lives on the Chesapeake Bay with his wife and two dogs, Blueberry and Scout.

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

— ♦ —

One To Go by Mike Pace

One To Go
Mike Pace
A Suspense Thriller

Tom Booker is a new attorney at a powerful Washington law firm. Texting while driving across Memorial Bridge, he loses control and crashes into an oncoming minivan carrying his own daughter and three of her friends. The minivan tips up on two wheels, about to flip over into the Potomac. Time freezes, he's alone on the bridge. A young couple approaches and offers him a re-wind. The crash would be averted, the children saved. All he must do is kill someone every two weeks — anyone — a "soul exchange." A moment later, Tom is back in his spinning car, but averts the deadly crash. He laughs about the hallucination, attributing it to bumping his head on the steering wheel when his car came to an abrupt stop.

But his encounter wasn't a hallucination. Two weeks later, the minivan driver is brutally murdered. Tom receives a text: one down, four to go. He has never shot — much less owned — a gun in his life, and now must turn himself into a serial killer or his daughter and her friends will die.

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

Ting-a-Ling by Mike Faricy is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Ting-a-Ling by Mike Faricy

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Ting-a-Ling by Mike Faricy

A Dev Haskell, Private Investigator Mystery

Publisher: Credit River Publishing

… as today's second free mystery ebook.

Ting-a-Ling by Mike Faricy, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of December 04, 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.

In Hitchcockian fashion, the telephone rings at two in the morning. PI Dev Haskell answers, half-asleep, to a giggling woman named Danielle. It seems she's found his phone number on a bathroom stall. She's called Dev "for a good time," but what she really wants is for him to deliver a simple message to her former business partner.

It's all fun and games (not to mention funny) til someone goes missing. Next thing he knows, our fair but bumbling hero can't find his client or her business partner, which turns out to be the least of his problems when he finds himself on the hook for murder, and suddenly haunted by a multitude of childhood secrets.

Ting-a-Ling by Mike Faricy

Dubai PI by Peter Anthony is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Dubai PI by Peter Anthony

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Dubai PI by Peter Anthony

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Wild Wolf Publishing

… as today's free mystery ebook.

Dubai PI by Peter Anthony, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of December 04, 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.

A woman goes missing in one of the most glamorous cities in the world. Dubai is a transient place where the ultra rich live in close proximity to abject poverty, where East meets West, where people come to find a dream or escape a nightmare.

People disappear all the time and for any number of reasons. Ruben Duke is a private detective who works illegally in the city and he has been tasked with finding Ukrainian model, Olga Verasova. His investigations take him into a world of seedy entitlement where money buys anything and anyone, into a world where poor young women trade on their looks to make a better life for themselves, into a world of sexual violence and murder. And all the time Ruben Duke must stay one step ahead of the local police, who don't want him poking his nose into things he shouldn't. The possibility of violence, jail and deportation are very real.

In a city where the sand shifts constantly, Ruben Duke doggedly hunts his quarry and the hope of justice. Sometimes he wins. Sometimes not.

Dubai PI by Peter Anthony

What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault is Today's Kobo Daily Deal

What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault as today's Kobo Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, December 04, 2014, and has been price-matched by Amazon.

What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: William Morrow

Price: $1.99 (as of 12/04/2014 at 6:40 AM ET).

What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault, Amazon Kindle format  What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault, Kobo format

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

The Battle siblings are used to disappointment. Seven years after starting her PhD program — one marriage, one divorce, three cats and a dog later — Theresa Battle still hasn't finished her dissertation. Instead of a degree, she's got a houseful of adoring pets and a dead-end copywriting job for a local candle company.

Jeff, her so-called genius older brother, doesn't have it together, either. Creative and loyal, he's also aimless, in both work and love. But his new girlfriend, Kim, a pretty waitress in her twenties, appears smitten. When Theresa agrees to dog-sit Kim's puggle for a weekend, she has no idea it will be the beginning of a terrifying nightmare that will shatter her quiet academic world.

Soon Kim's body is found in the woods, and Jeff becomes the prime suspect.

Though the evidence is overwhelming, Theresa knows that her brother is not a murderer. As she investigates Kim's past, she uncovers a treacherous secret involving politics, murder, and scandal — and becomes entangled in a potentially dangerous romance. But the deeper she falls into this troubling case, the more it becomes clear that, in trying to save her brother's life, she may be sacrificing her own.

What Strange Creatures by Emily Arsenault

Slice by William Patterson is Today's Nook Daily Find

Slice by William Patterson

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Slice by William Patterson as today's Nook Daily Find.

The deal price of $2.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, December 04, 2014, and has been price-matched by Amazon.

Slice by William Patterson

A Suspense Thriller

Publisher: Pinnacle Books

Price: $2.99 (as of 12/04/2014 at 6:30 AM ET).

Slice by William Patterson, Amazon Kindle format  Slice by William Patterson, Nook 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.

When Jessie Clarkson left Sayer's Brook, Connecticut, she was pregnant, terrified, and married to a psychopath. She knew Emil would do anything to prevent her incriminating him — if he ever found her. Staying alive for the sake of her child was all that mattered.

Five years later, Emil is dead and Jessie is ready to stop running. With her daughter Abby starting school, going home to be among friends and family makes sense. Until the murders start. All the victims are viciously stabbed and slashed across the throat. And each of them has a connection to Jessie.

Is Emil still alive, tracking her down — or do the answers lie elsewhere in her troubled past? One horrifying crime at a time, a killer is making his intentions clear. Jessie may have escaped Sayer's Brook once. But someone is making sure she never leaves again …

Slice by William Patterson

Blackbriar by William Sleator is Today's Teen Kindle Daily Deal

Blackbriar by William Sleator

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Blackbriar by William Sleator as today's Teen Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, December 04, 2014.

Blackbriar by William Sleator

A YA Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Skyscape

Price: $1.99 (as of 12/04/2014 at 6:20 AM ET).

Blackbriar by William Sleator, 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.

Danny can feel something sinister about his new home, Blackbriar, an old, abandoned cottage in the English countryside. The residents of a nearby town refuse to speak of the house and can barely look Danny in the eyes. Then Danny begins to have strange dreams of fire and witches, and awakes to shrieks of laughter that seem to come from another time and place.

With help from his friend, Lark, Danny begins to unravel the mysteries of Blackbriar and its frightening past, through the discovery of an ancient doll and a chilling list of names and dates carved on the cellar door. But what might be most terrifying of all is the mystery that does not lie in the past but in the here and now …

Blackbriar by William Sleator

Two Crime Novels by William Lashner is Today's Kindle Daily Deal

The Barkeep by William Lashner

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Two Crime Novels by William Lashner as today's Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 each is valid only for today, Thursday, December 04, 2014. We're highlighting one of the titles in this post.

The Barkeep by William Lashner

A Crime Novel

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

Price: $1.99 (as of 12/04/2014 at 6:10 AM ET).

The Barkeep by William Lashner, 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.

Justin Chase is the perfect barkeep, tending bar as he lives his life, in a state of Zen serenity. At least until Birdie Grackle, a yellow-haired, foul-mouthed alcoholic from Texas, walks into his bar, orders a Mojito, and makes a startling confession.

Six years ago Justin's life was ripped apart when he discovered his mother's bludgeoned corpse in the foyer of the family home. Now Justin's father is serving a life sentence and Justin, after a stint in the asylum, drowns his emotions in a pool of inner peace. But when Birdie Grackle claims to be the hit man who murdered Justin's mother for the money, Justin is hurled back to the emotions, back to the past, and, most frighteningly of all, back to the father he has tried to leave behind.

Who hired Birdie Grackle to kill Justin's mother? As Justin pieces together the truth, a merciless killing machine begins stalking the barkeep, leaving a trail of dead in his wake. Someone wants to bury the truth, and maybe Justin, too. As the terror closes in, Justin had better find some answers and find them fast, because the stakes have been raised, his life is on the line, and murder is so not Zen.

The Barkeep by William Lashner

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (141204)

Big Fish Games

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

• Our Featured Title is Lara Gates: The Lost Talisman.

• The Daily Deal is Crystals of Time, just $2.99 today only!

• The current Catch of the Week is Azada: Elementa, just $2.99 through Sunday, December 07, 2014 only.

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

— ♦ —

Lara Gates: The Lost Talisman

Our Featured Title is Lara Gates: The Lost Talisman

Pieces of an ancient talisman have been separated, and now it’s up to you bring them back together before it is too late! Protect Banderville College and figure out who is behind this dastardly plan. Help Lara with your Hidden Object skills and get to the bottom of this intriguing mystery!

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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Crystals of Time

Today's Daily Deal is Crystals of Time

Ashley, a professional thief, has inherited this vocation from her father. When her father suddenly goes missing one night while trying to sneak into the Three Oak Mansion, Ashley finds herself standing before the vast deserted estate with only a mysterious crystal to aid her in the recovery of her father. Using her crystal, Ashley must navigate through time and space to find the clues that will lead her to her missing father and help her solve the mystery of Three Oak Mansion. Join Ashley on an epic adventure!

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

— ♦ —

Azada: Elementa

The current Catch of the Week is Azada: Elementa

Journey to amazing worlds as this whimsical saga continues! After its precious elements are stolen, Azada chooses you to find the elemental mages who can save this special world. But bad-guy Panoptes is waiting around every corner to stop you at any cost — or is he? Nothing in Azada is as it seems …

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

Also available for this game:

Wednesday, December 03, 2014

The Murders of Richard III, A Jacqueline Kirby Mystery by Elizabeth Peters, Now Available at a Special Price

The Murders of Richard III by Elizabeth Peters

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, HarperCollins …

The Murders of Richard III by Elizabeth Peters

A Jacqueline Kirby Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: HarperCollins

Price: $3.99 (as of 12/03/2014 at 6:00 PM ET).

The Murders of Richard III by Elizabeth Peters, Amazon Kindle format

Find more discounted mystery, suspense and thriller titles on the Omnimystery News Facebook page.

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.

In a remote English manor house, modern admirersof the much-maligned King Richard III — one of Shakespeare's most extraordinary villains — are gathered for a grand weekend of dress-up and make-believe murder.

But the fun ends when the masquerade turns more sinister … and deadly. Jacqueline Kirby, an American librarian on hand for the festivities, suddenly finds herself in the center of strange, dark doings … and racing to untangle a murderous puzzle before history repeats itself in exceptionally macabre ways.

The Murders of Richard III by Elizabeth Peters

New This Week: Death at the Voyager Hotel, A YA Murder Mystery by Kwei Jones-Quartey

Death at the Voyager Hotel by Kwei Jones-Quartey

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during December 2014 and priced $4.99 or less …

Death at the Voyager Hotel by Kwei Jones-Quartey

A YA Murder Mystery

Publisher: Afram Publications

Price: $3.99 (as of 12/03/2014 at 5:30 PM ET).

Death at the Voyager Hotel by Kwei Jones-Quartey, Amazon Kindle format

Find more newly released mystery, suspense and thriller titles on the Omnimystery News Facebook page.

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.

In the city of Accra, the Voyager Hotel is widely known as a well-run lodging perfectly suited to cash-strapped tourists. But one early March morning guest Heather Peterson, a beautiful young Oregonian teacher, is found dead at the bottom of the pool.

Death at the Voyager Hotel by Kwei Jones-Quartey

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