Thursday, March 24, 2016

A Conversation with Suspense Novelist LS Hawker

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with LS Hawker

We are delighted to welcome author LS Hawker to Omnimystery News today.

LS's debut published novel is The Drowning Game (Witness Impulse; November 2015 trade paperback and ebook formats) and we recently had the opportunity to spend some time with her talking about it.

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Omnimystery News: How challenging was it for you to find the right voice for the main character of The Drowning Game?

LS Hawker
Photo provided courtesy of
LS Hawker

LS Hawker: I'm going to twist this question a little, because before The Drowning Game, I had never written a female protag before, except for my first novel, which I wrote at age 14. After that I always wrote from the male perspective. (One of my critique partners coined a new genre for what I wrote: Dick Lit.) So switching to female was a challenge but apparently it works for me.

I started writing from the male viewpoint for one simple reason: I could not seem to take myself out of the stories I was writing. Every single time, my main character turned into a Mary Sue, the worst kind — me, only smarter, cooler, taller, better looking. I just couldn't stop it. So out of desperation I turned to writing men, and what a relief! My characters became deeper, more distinctive and interesting. I was able to take myself out of the stories. And the lasting effect is that I can write female main characters now without Mary Sueing them.

OMN: Which comes first: a book's plot or the main characters?

LSH: Plot comes first. My husband and I usually sit on our backyard deck, pour some alcoholic beverages, light up some cigars, and what-if to our heart's delight. The characters are then shaped by their circumstances in ways I couldn't have imagined before starting to write.

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

LSH: I've been extremely fortunate in my life to experience a lot of crazy things, so many of my own experiences find their way into my novels. I often base characters on real people — usually people I like. But I have a specific antagonist who's based on a friend's ex-boyfriend who was so vile I reveled in turning him into a villain (he didn't need much help).

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

LSH: In the past, I've let the story develop as I write, but since getting my three-book contract with HarperCollins Witness Impulse, I've had to alter my process. The novel that got me my agent and three-book contract was already finished and polished to a high sheen before I submitted it. But I had about four months to write the second one.

Before my contract, I would let my characters wander, hang out, and talk for hours with each other, discovering who they were so I could. When I was writing The Drowning Game, I wrote about 170,000 words to get to the final 89,000. So many scenes never made it to the final cut, because Petty and Dekker had a lot of living to do before I could nail down the highlights. With the second one, I had to be more disciplined in my approach, but I still wrote at least 50,000 additional words that didn't make it into the final version.

OMN: Where do you most often find yourself writing?

LSH: My office for many years kind of looked like a nineteen-year-old boy's dorm room (minus the piles of dirty clothes and old pizza boxes). It had mismatched bookshelves, piles of paper everywhere, and a kitschy desk. Early last year (just before I got my agent and book contract — coincidence? I think not!) I bought a white bookcase that covers the back wall, which now holds all my beloved books, as well as my rhinestone tiara, Dali clock, wax lips, plague doctor mask, and other treasures.

My walls are covered with brightly colored art and a few treasured record album covers (David Bowie's Diamond Dogs, Talking Heads' Speaking in Tongues, the B52s' Wild Planet, the Rolling Stones' Some Girls, Elvis Costello's Armed Forces, and Little Feat's Down on the Farm). Paintings by both my friend Lori Elliott-Bartle and my late grandmother are on display, and a border covering the perimeter of the room includes thumbnails of about 500 of my record album covers. Unfortunately, there's not enough space to display them all (about 4500). My ceiling is covered in Christmas lights, and my desk has an electric lift so that I can sit or stand to write (I wrote most of my second contracted novel, Body and Bone, standing up). There are two guitars, pillows on a bright-red area rug, and candles everywhere. I love my office with an almost overwhelming passion. It truly is where the magic happens.

OMN: What are some of your outside interests?

LSH: In case you couldn't tell from my office décor, I am a music lover. I worked in radio for a while in my twenties, and one of the stations that employed me played '30s, '40s, and '50s music, which was a fabulous education. I have a large collection of vinyl record albums, and my digital collection has over 160,000 songs, just like Body and Bone's main character. She has a satellite radio show, and I got to live vicariously through her during the writing. I love technology a little too much — I never met a piece of software or app that I didn't like.

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

LSH: The best advice I received was from a best-selling critique partner. I came from a literary background — workshops in college, and I'd gotten it in my mind that the only worthwhile writing was literary writing. He told me I could let that go. He told me I should write what I want to read, and what others want to read. That there was no shame in commercial fiction. It changed my life. After hearing that, I started writing suspense, and I've never looked back.

The harshest criticism I ever received was back in college at one of these high-tone workshops. I'd written a short story that prompted another student to write in her critique, "This person's mind is so small she probably likes Norman Rockwell." It makes me laugh now, how this critique had nothing whatsoever to do with my writing and everything to do with her smug, hipstery assessment of my personal character. As far as harsh writing criticism goes, I had one editor tell me my characters were one-dimensional. A contest judge said that he couldn't imagine anyone but stoners who live in their parents' basements wanting to read anything I wrote. That was pretty harsh.

One of the lessons I learned from the best-selling author didn't sink in until many years later. I struggled for a long time to get published. I won all kinds of contests and competitions, kept coming this close to getting an agent or contract, my critique group at the time couldn't explain why I couldn't get published. I collected — and this is no exaggeration — more than 100 rejection letters from the manuscript I wrote before my big break.

My husband Andy asked me one day, "So are you going to start taking this writing thing seriously, or what?" I was stung by this — I was nothing if not deadly serious about it, but his question stimulated an internal inventory, and I had an epiphany.

What follows shames me to admit, but by outing myself I hope it will help other writers. For years I relied on one thing: my "talent." I was a good writer and I knew it. I lounged on this talent pillow, lamenting, stubbornly clinging to the ridiculous notion that the publishing industry was too obtuse to recognize my brilliance, the bastards.

The epiphany was this: I (bizarrely) expected the publishing industry to conform to me instead of the other way around. Underlying that was my real problem: I was lazy. I didn't work on my craft. I didn't follow the standards of the various genres I was writing in. I didn't build my scenes and chapters with an arc. I read plenty of books and took workshops, but I didn't apply what I'd learned.

It was like — yeah, I can cook. I throw some ingredients in a pot, and it usually turns out pretty well because I have a sense what tastes good. But I didn't measure precisely, I substituted incompatible ingredients, I let things cook too long. But it was good enough, so why work at it? Because the guests I served food to didn't like it. It didn't taste like it was supposed to.

If you want to get published, you are writing for other people, people who have expectations. They want their coq au vin not to taste like Chateaubriand, no matter how good it is. So I started following recipes, watching the technique of other excellent, successful cooks, doing things the right way and suddenly, it all came together. So my advice is listen to the editors and agents. Listen to the experts. Study how they do things. Deconstruct how they put sentences, paragraphs, and scenes together and study why they make your heart pound, or make you cry, or make you laugh. It's competitive out there, and it takes hard work to break in.

OMN: How did your books come to be titled?

LSH: This has been a hard lesson for me. Another shame-faced confession: I have always titled my novels after Neil Young song titles. I'm a huge fan, obviously, and it felt like a theme for me, a calling card. But when I sold what came to be called The Drowning Game, I found out that it was not to be. The original title was Deep Forbidden Lake, after a song from 1976's Decade. I loved that title. But my publisher did not. Too romancey, they said, because of the word "forbidden". Oh, how I kicked and screamed (not literally — I'm not completely stupid), but my publisher wants titles that are similar in tone to what they consider my comp authors. Again, not stupid, so I gave in. They definitely know what they're doing!

With my second book, I didn't even bother with a hard title, because I knew I'd get attached to it and be sad when they nixed it. The marketing team came up with a title that I absolutely HATED, which threw me into a panic. I'm crap with titles that aren't based on song titles, so I asked my critique group for help. Based on the themes in the book, one of my critique partners came up with Body and Bone, from The Three Billy Goats Gruff. HarperCollins went for it, thank God.

OMN: What's next for you?

LSH: My second novel, Body and Bone (available for pre-order now), comes out on May 3. I'm at work on my third which will come out early in 2017.

— ♦ —

LS Hawker grew up in suburban Denver, indulging her worrisome obsession with true-crime books, and writing stories about anthropomorphic fruit and juvenile delinquents. She wrote her first novel at 14.

Armed with a B.S. in journalism from the University of Kansas, she had a radio show called "People Are So Stupid," edited a trade magazine, and worked as a traveling Kmart portrait photographer, but never lost her passion for fiction writing.

She's got a hilarious, supportive husband, two brilliant daughters, and a massive music collection. She lives in Colorado but considers Kansas her spiritual homeland.

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

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The Drowning Game by LS Hawker

The Drowning Game by LS Hawker

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Witness Impulse

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

Petty Moshen spent eighteen years of her life as a prisoner in her own home, training with military precision for everything, ready for anything. She can disarm, dismember, and kill — and now, for the first time ever, she is free.

Her paranoid father is dead, his extreme dominance and rules a thing of the past, but his influence remains as strong as ever. When his final will reveals a future more terrible than her captive past, Petty knows she must escape — by whatever means necessary.

But when Petty learns the truth behind her father's madness — and her own family — the reality is worse than anything she could have imagined. On the road and in over her head, Petty's fight for her life has just begun.

The Drowning Game by LS Hawker. Click here to take a Look Inside the book.

Today's Selection of Daily Deals for Thursday, March 24, 2016

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of today's Daily Deals found on Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 7:30 AM ET …

No Cure For Death by Max Allan Collins

All five mysteries in the Mallory series by Max Allan Collins for $1.99 each is a Kindle Daily Deal. We're featuring the first in the series in this post.

No Cure For Death by Max Allan Collins

A Mallory Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

Kindle Daily Deal Price: $1.99

No Cure For Death by Max Allan Collins, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside No Cure For Death.

What kind of drama could happen in a small-town Iowa bus station? If you're a guy like Mallory, it's the kind that involves sidestepping trouble between a pretty, frightened blonde and a pretty frightening, two-fisted, one-eyed goon. With the help of a handy Pepsi bottle, Mallory saves the lady from the menacing lout, shares a heartfelt moment, and sees her safely off, wistfully wondering if they'll ever meet again. End of story? Not a chance.

Even though it's Mallory's best buddy, John, who's visiting on leave from combat in Vietnam, it's Mallory who has a nasty flashback — when that same sweet blonde drops back into his life after losing hers. But how did she go from a bus out of town to a car at the bottom of a cliff? Why is her "accident" a dead ringer for the one that killed a scandal-scarred senator? And is local lawman Sheriff Brennan helping to hush things up?

The questions are good ones, and Mallory wants answers — bad. But if he crosses the wrong people, things could get ugly …

No Cure For Death by Max Allan Collins

Something Missing by Matthew Dicks

Something Missing by Matthew Dicks

A Humorous Mystery

Publisher: Broadway Books

Nook Daily Find Price: $1.99

Something Missing by Matthew Dicks, Amazon Kindle formatSomething Missing by Matthew Dicks, Nook format

Click here to take a Look Inside Something Missing.

A career criminal with OCD tendencies and a savant-like genius for bringing order to his crime scenes, Martin considers himself one of the best in the biz. After all, he's been able to steal from the same people for years on end — virtually undetected. Of course, this could also be attributed to his unique business model — he takes only items that will go unnoticed by the homeowner. After all, who in their right mind would miss a roll of toilet paper here, a half-used bottle of maple syrup there, or even a rarely used piece of china buried deep within a dusty cabinet?

Even though he's never met these homeowners, he's spent hours in their houses, looking through their photo albums and reading their journals. In essence, Martin has developed a friendship of sorts with them and as such, he decides to interfere more in their lives — playing the part of a rather odd guardian angel — even though it means breaking many of his twitchy neurotic rules.

Along the way Martin not only improves the lives of others, but he also discovers love and finds that his own life is much better lived on the edge (at least some of the time) in this hilarious, suspenseful and often profound novel about a man used to planning every second of his life, suddenly forced to confront chaos and spontaneity.

Something Missing by Matthew Dicks

The Scribe by Matthew Guinn

The Scribe by Matthew Guinn

A Historical Mystery

Publisher: Blackstone Audio

Audible Daily Deal Price: $2.95

The Scribe by Matthew Guinn, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Scribe.

After leaving Atlanta in disgrace three years before, detective Thomas Canby is called back to the city on the eve of Atlanta's 1881 International Cotton Exposition to partner with Atlanta's first African American police officer, Cyrus Underwood. The case they're assigned is chilling: a serial murderer who seems to be violently targeting Atlanta's wealthiest black entrepreneurs. The killer's method is both strange and unusually gruesome. On each victim's mutilated body is inscribed a letter of the alphabet, beginning with "M." The oligarchy of Atlanta's most prominent white businessmen — the same men who ran Canby out of town, known more openly before Reconstruction as "the Ring" — is anxious to solve the murders before they lose the money they've invested in both the exposition and the city's industrialization, even if resolution comes at the expense of justice.

After Canby's arrival the murders become increasingly disturbing and unpredictable, and his interference threatens to send the investigation spinning off in the wrong direction. As the toll of innocent victims rises, Canby must face down enduring racism, and his own prejudices, to see clearly the source of these bloody crimes. Meanwhile, if he can restore his reputation, he might win back the woman he loves.

The Scribe by Matthew Guinn

For more deals that may have been found after this post was created, see our Daily Deals page on Omnimystery News for an updated list.

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

Today's Selection of Free MystereBooks for Thursday, March 24, 2016

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of Free MystereBooks found on Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 7:00 AM ET …

Any Means Necessary by Jack Mars

Any Means Necessary by Jack Mars

A Luke Stone Thriller

Publisher: Jack Mars

Price: FREE!

Any Means Necessary by Jack Mars, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Any Means Necessary.

Strawberry Cream Murder by Susan Gillard

Strawberry Cream Murder by Susan Gillard

A Donut Hole Cozy Mystery

Publisher: Guardian Publishing

Price: FREE!

Strawberry Cream Murder by Susan Gillard, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Strawberry Cream Murder.

That Man of Blood by Bruce Jones

That Man of Blood by Bruce Jones

A Crime Novel

Publisher: Bruce Jones

Price: FREE!

That Man of Blood by Bruce Jones, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside That Man of Blood.

Truth Lies Waiting by Emma Salisbury

Truth Lies Waiting by Emma Salisbury

A Davy Johnson Mystery

Publisher: Emma Salisbury

Price: FREE!

Truth Lies Waiting by Emma Salisbury, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Truth Lies Waiting.

Lotto: Blood Money by Ric K. Hill

Lotto: Blood Money by Ric K. Hill

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Ric K. Hill

Price: FREE!

Lotto: Blood Money by Ric K. Hill, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Lotto: Blood Money.

The Killing King of Gratis by Jay Jackson

The Killing King of Gratis by Jay Jackson

A Crime Novel

Publisher: Jay Jackson

Price: FREE!

The Killing King of Gratis by Jay Jackson, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Killing King of Gratis.

Magnolia Gods by Thomas Hollyday

Magnolia Gods by Thomas Hollyday

A River Sunday Romance Mystery

Publisher: Solar Sipper Publishing

Price: FREE!

Magnolia Gods by Thomas Hollyday, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Magnolia Gods.

Counter Assault by Michael Stephen Fuchs

Counter Assault by Michael Stephen Fuchs

A D-Boys Thriller

Publisher: Complete & Total Asskicking Books

Price: FREE!

Counter Assault by Michael Stephen Fuchs, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Counter Assault.

A Dragon's Ransom by Mike Smart

A Dragon's Ransom by Mike Smart

A Max Thatcher Mystery

Publisher: Mike Smart

Price: FREE!

A Dragon's Ransom by Mike Smart, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside A Dragon's Ransom.

A Thief in the Night by E. W. Hornung

A Thief in the Night by E. W. Hornung

A Raffles Novel

Publisher: Xist Classics

Price: FREE!

A Thief in the Night by E. W. Hornung, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside A Thief in the Night.

For a summary of all of today's titles, plus any that may have been added since this post was created, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

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

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Blood of Cain, A Sean O'Brien Mystery by Tom Lowe, Now Available at a Special Price

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.)

Blood of Cain by Tom Lowe

Blood of Cain by Tom Lowe

A Sean O'Brien Mystery (5th in series)

Publisher: Kingsbridge Entertainment

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/23/2016 at 8:00 PM ET).

Blood of Cain by Tom Lowe, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Blood of Cain.

When Courtney Burke appears at Ponce Marina on a humid summer morning, she leaves Sean O'Brien with a haunting tale. Her story could lead O'Brien down a path that began with a brutal crime forty years earlier and hidden family secrets spawned from the desecration of the innocent. O'Brien learns that Courtney is linked to a series of carnival murders. Police are convinced she's a serial killer, and all of her victims are men. But like the illusions found in the carnival's House of Mirrors, nothing is as it appears. Just beyond the looking glass is where evil watches from a one-way mirror.

When Courtney faces a conviction for murder, O'Brien remembers something she told him, something so strange he'd originally dismissed it. To alter the future, to save Courtney's life, O'Brien must penetrate dark deeds that began in a church forty years earlier.

Blood of Cain by Tom Lowe

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

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.

Review: Presumed Puzzled by Parnell Hall

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

A Mysterious Review of Presumed Puzzled by Parnell Hall. A Cora Felton, Puzzle Lady Mystery.

Review summary: This is an entertaining entry in this long-running series. As is typical with books in this series, there are several crossword and sudoku puzzles that act as clues to the solution of the crime. Not a great mystery in the grand scheme of things, but an enjoyable one nonetheless. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 3 of 5 stars

Presumed Puzzled Parnell Hall

Presumed Puzzled
Parnell Hall
A Cora Felton, Puzzle Lady Mystery
Minotaur Books (January 2016)

Available from Amazon.comAvailable from Barnes & NobleAvailable from iTunesAvailable from Kobo

Publisher synopsis: A shocking crime of passion has Bakerhaven buzzing!

The Puzzle Lady gets more than she bargained for when she's hired to track down Paula Martindale's straying husband. She finds him, all right―hacked to pieces on his living room rug, while his blood-drenched wife haunts the crime scene clutching a butcher knife.

It's a tough spot for attractive young attorney Becky Baldwin. Paula is presumed innocent until proven guilty, but try to find one juror who's going to think so.

It's up to Cora to find the evidence to save the day. She has just two problems: She's a witness for the prosecution, and every bit of evidence she finds in Paula's favor, from crossword puzzles to Sudoku to alibi witnesses, tends to indicate that Cora herself is the killer!

The Jennifer Marsh Mysteries, Books 1-3 by Judy Fitzwater, Now Available at a Special Price

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 author …

The Jennifer Marsh Mysteries by Judy Fitzwater

The Jennifer Marsh Mysteries by Judy Fitzwater

Books 1-3

Publisher: Judy Fitzwater

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/23/2016 at 7:00 PM ET).

The Jennifer Marsh Mysteries by Judy Fitzwater, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Jennifer Marsh Mysteries.

The first three books in the popular, funny, cozy Jennifer Marsh Mystery Series are collected, for the first time, in one volume: Dying to Get Published, Dying to Get Even, and Dying for a Clue. Follow the adventures of aspiring mystery writer Jennifer Marsh as she solves her first crimes.

Dying to Get Published, an Agatha Award nominee, introduces Jennifer, a writer so desperate to get published she finds herself in a twisted tale of how deadly the publishing business can be. Her second adventure lands her as the key witness for the prosecution of a dear friend accused of murdering her husband. The third involves an adopted college student desperate to find her true identity and people willing to kill to keep it secret.

On hand to help are Jennifer's wacky writer friends, a rich and possibly demented old lady who prefers solving crimes to her weekly bridge games, and investigative newspaper reporter Sam Culpepper who's as attracted to Jennifer as much as he is to the crimes she's embroiled in. And, of course, there's Muffy, Jennifer's faithful greyhound offering love and support.

The Jennifer Marsh Mysteries by Judy Fitzwater

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

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.

New This Week: The Atlantis Stone, The Project Series by Alex Lukeman

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 March 2016 and priced $4.99 or less …

The Atlantis Stone by Alex Lukeman

The Atlantis Stone by Alex Lukeman

The Project Series (12th in series)

Publisher: Alex Lukeman

Price: $4.99 (as of 03/23/2016 at 6:30 PM ET).

The Atlantis Stone by Alex Lukeman, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Atlantis Stone.

A photograph forgotten for a hundred years holds the key to finding the legendary lost civilization of Atlantis and an ancient artifact of mysterious power. When a letter with the photograph and a faded map of Egypt shows up in the mail, the Project is launched into a search that takes them from the depths of the Atlantic to the sands of Egypt and places unseen for thousands of years.

Elizabeth Harker's Project team is caught up in a power struggle between two of Russia's vast intelligence services. As the trail to Atlantis emerges from the mists of the past, the team is stalked by agents of a man who will stop at nothing to gain another rung on the ladder of his ambition.

Whoever succeeds will gain knowledge to benefit the world or destroy it. The stakes don't get any higher …

Can the Project keep the secrets of Atlantis out of the wrong hands?

The Atlantis Stone by Alex Lukeman

See all twelve titles in the Project Series for $4.99 each on Kindle. The 1st book in the series, White Jade, is currently FREE!

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

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.

Murder in Mind, A Sloane Monroe Mystery by Cheryl Bradshaw, Now Available at a Special Price

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, Pixie Publishing …

Murder in Mind by Cheryl Bradshaw

Murder in Mind by Cheryl Bradshaw

A Sloane Monroe Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Pixie Publishing

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/23/2016 at 6:00 PM ET).

Murder in Mind by Cheryl Bradshaw, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Murder in Mind.

If you were given a second chance to catch your sister's killer — would a lifetime behind bars be justice enough, or would you make him pay, with his life?

Private Investigator Sloane Monroe has solved every case that's come across her desk with the exception of one — the brutal murder of her sister Gabrielle.

Three years have passed without a trace of the killer until today, when a young woman's body is discovered in front of the local supermarket. Now Sloane is faced with the most difficult challenge of her life — finding a man who's a master at concealing his identity before he kills again.

Murder in Mind by Cheryl Bradshaw

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

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.

New This Week: The 11:05 Murders, An Inspector Sheehan Mystery by Brian O'Hare

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 March 2016 and priced $4.99 or less …

The 11:05 Murders by Brian O'Hare

The 11:05 Murders by Brian O'Hare

An Inspector Sheehan Mystery (2nd in series)

Publisher: Crimson Cloak Publishing

Price: $3.99 (as of 03/23/2016 at 5:30 PM ET).

The 11:05 Murders by Brian O'Hare, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The 11:05 Murders.

Three people are murdered on separate Tuesday evenings at precisely 11.05. Random clues point to random suspects, but too many questions remain unanswered. Why 11.05pm for each killing? Is there any connection between these deaths and a rape that occurred at Queen's university twelve years before? What is the connection between the killings and Sergeant Stewart's mystery informant? Who is the violent stalker who twice nearly kills Detective Allen? What is his connection, if any, to the murders?

When one of his team is kidnapped, Inspector Sheehan has literally only minutes to make sense of these questions if he is to save his colleague's life.

The 11:05 Murders by Brian O'Hare

See also the first mystery in this series, The Doom Murders, for $3.99 on Kindle.

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

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 at La Fenice, A Commissario Brunetti Mystery by Donna Leon, Now Available at a Special Price

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, Grove Press …

Death at La Fenice by Donna Leon

Death at La Fenice by Donna Leon

A Commissario Brunetti Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Grove Press

Price: $1.99 (as of 03/23/2016 at 5:00 PM ET).

Death at La Fenice by Donna Leon, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Death at La Fenice.

During intermission at the famed La Fenice opera house in Venice, a notoriously difficult conductor is poisoned, and suspects abound.

Guido Brunetti, a native Venetian, sets out to unravel the mystery behind the high-profile murder. To do so, he he calls on his knowledge of Venice, its culture, and its dirty politics. Revenge, corruption, and even Italian cuisine play a role.

Death at La Fenice by Donna Leon

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

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.

New This Week: Frosted Bait, A Bison Creek Mystery by A. Gardner

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 March 2016 and priced $4.99 or less …

Frosted Bait by A. Gardner

Frosted Bait by A. Gardner

A Bison Creek Mystery (3rd in series)

Publisher: A. Gardner

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/23/2016 at 4:30 PM ET).

Frosted Bait by A. Gardner, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Frosted Bait.

Springtime in Bison Creek means mountain blossoms, berry pies, and … a dead body …

The Hummingbird Inn Bed & Breakfast is the last place Essie Stratter expects to find a crime scene. And with the grand opening just around the corner, Essie joins in the hunt for the killer. With an energetic spaniel at her side, Essie discovers that to find the murderer she must solve one of the town's oldest mysteries — the curse of the Weston house.

But after a book club feud, a string of gift shop robberies, and an impromptu wedding, Essie realizes her time is up. Now, her only hope at stopping a killer is to offer herself up as bait.

Frosted Bait by A. Gardner

See all three mysteries in the Bison Creek Series for $2.99 or less each on Kindle.

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