Thursday, May 18, 2017

Today's Selection of Free MystereBooks for Thursday, May 18, 2017

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of Free MystereBooks found on Thursday, May 18, 2017 at 7:00 AM ET …

Deadly Intent by Kate Allenton

Deadly Intent by Kate Allenton

A Linked Inc. Mystery

Publisher: Coastal Exchange Publishing

Price: FREE!

Deadly Intent by Kate Allenton, Amazon Kindle format

The Edge of Alone by Sean Black

The Edge of Alone by Sean Black

A Ryan Lock Thriller

Publisher: Sean Black

Price: FREE!

The Edge of Alone by Sean Black, Amazon Kindle format

Lipstick, Lies & Dead Guys by Jennifer Fischetto

Lipstick, Lies & Dead Guys by Jennifer Fischetto

A Gianna Mancini Mystery

Publisher: Gemma Halliday Publishing

Price: FREE!

Lipstick, Lies & Dead Guys by Jennifer Fischetto, Amazon Kindle format

Kama'aina Revenge by Kay Hadashi

Kama'aina Revenge by Kay Hadashi

The Honolulu Thriller Series

Publisher: Kay Hadashi

Price: FREE!

Kama'aina Revenge by Kay Hadashi, Amazon Kindle format

Dark of the Mind by C. S. McMillian

Dark of the Mind by C. S. McMillian

The Dark of the Mind Trilogy

Publisher: C. S. McMillian

Price: FREE!

Dark of the Mind by C. S. McMillian, Amazon Kindle format

Grey Matter by C. S. McMillian

Grey Matter by C. S. McMillian

The Dark of the Mind Trilogy

Publisher: C. S. McMillian

Price: FREE!

Grey Matter by C. S. McMillian, Amazon Kindle format

Distortion by C. S. McMillian

Distortion by C. S. McMillian

The Dark of the Mind Trilogy

Publisher: C. S. McMillian

Price: FREE!

Distortion by C. S. McMillian, Amazon Kindle format

Haunted by Douglas Misquita

Haunted by Douglas Misquita

A Kirk Ingram Action Thriller

Publisher: Pronoun

Price: FREE!

Haunted by Douglas Misquita, Amazon Kindle format

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, May 17, 2017

A Negro and an Ofay by Danny Gardner, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017 …

A Negro and an Ofay by Danny Gardner

A Negro and an Ofay by Danny Gardner, An Elliot Caprice Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Down & Out Books

A Negro and an Ofay by Danny Gardner, Amazon Kindle format

In 1952, after a year on the run, disgraced Chicago Police Officer Elliot Caprice wakes up in a jailhouse in St. Louis. His friends from his hometown secure his release and he returns to find the family farm in foreclosure and the man who raised him dying in a flophouse. Desperate for money, he accepts a straight job as a process server and eventually crosses paths with a powerful family from Chicago's North Shore. A captain of industry is dead, the key to his estate disappeared with the chauffeur, and soon Elliot is in up to his neck. The mixed-race son of Illinois farm country must return to the Windy City with the Chicago Police on his heels and the Syndicate at his throat.

Good thing he's had a lifetime of playing both sides to the middle.

A Negro and an Ofay by Danny Gardner

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for May 2017. For new hardcover titles, visit New Mysteries where for a list of May 2017 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

Price of Duty by Dale Brown, New in Bookstores during May 2017

Today's featured new hardcover mystery, suspense, or thriller title scheduled to be published during May 2017 is …

Price of Duty by Dale Brown

Price of Duty by Dale Brown, a Patrick McLanahan Mystery (21st in series)

Publisher: Willliam Morrow

Price of Duty by Dale Brown, Amazon Kindle format

In a top-secret location deep in the Ural Mountains, Russian President Gennadiy Gryzlov has built his nation's most dangerous weapon since the atomic bomb — a fearsome tool to gain superiority in Russia's long-running battle with the West. From inside Perun Aerie — an intricate network of underground tunnels and chambers that is the heart of the Russian cyber warfare program — he is launching a carefully plotted series of attacks on an unsuspecting U.S. and its European allies.

The first strike targets Warsaw, Poland, where Russian malware wipes out the records of nearly every Polish bank account, imploding the country's financial system and panicking the rest of Europe. When Stacy Anne Barbeau, the besieged American president, fails to effectively combat the Russian threat, Brad McLanahan, on some well-earned R&R with his new Polish girlfriend, Major Nadia Rozek, is called back to duty.

As the Russians' deadly tactics escalate — including full-scale assaults on Europe's power grid and the remote hijacking of a commercial airliner that kills hundreds of civilians — McLanahan and his Scion team kick into gear, arming themselves with the most advanced technological weaponry for the epic struggle ahead. A patriot in the mold of his father, the late general Patrick McLanahan, Brad knows firsthand the price of freedom.

With the world's fate hanging in the balance, will Scion succeed in turning back Gryzlov before he can realize his terrifying ambition to conquer the globe? And what will the toll of victory be?

Price of Duty by Dale Brown

For a list of more new hardcover titles to be published this month, visit our New Mysteries page for May 2017. For new paperback titles, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where a selection of May 2017 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers are shelved.

Hard Way by J. B. Turner, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017 …

Hard Way by J. B. Turner

Hard Way by J. B. Turner, A Jon Reznick Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

Hard Way by J. B. Turner, Amazon Kindle format

Jon Reznick has never played by the rules, a trait that has brought him into conflict with FBI Assistant Director Martha Meyerstein in the past. But now Meyerstein has been taken by a shadowy gang, and the renegade black-ops specialist may be her only hope for rescue.

The FBI are reluctant to let Reznick anywhere near the case, but he's not in the habit of seeking their permission — especially once his covert investigation leads him straight to the head of the Russian mob. And it soon becomes clear that it's not only Meyerstein who's in danger: her abduction is just the start of a campaign to undermine American law and order.

With Meyerstein's whereabouts unknown, and the CIA and FBI seemingly operating at cross-purposes, it falls to Reznick to go it alone. Can he get to Meyerstein before the mob get to him?

Hard Way by J. B. Turner

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for May 2017. For new hardcover titles, visit New Mysteries where for a list of May 2017 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

An Excerpt from Bum Luck by Paul Levine

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Paul Levine

We are delighted to welcome back author Paul Levine to Omnimystery News today.

Paul's tenth legal thriller to feature Jake Lassiter — and which includes an appearance by his other series characters, attorneys Solomon and Lord — is Bum Luck (Thomas & Mercer; March 2017 trade paperback, audiobook and ebook formats) and we are thrilled to introduce you to the book with an excerpt, the first two chapters.

— ♦ —

Dead Lawyer Walking

THIRTY SECONDS AFTER THE JURY ANNOUNCED its verdict, I decided to kill my client.
  Or maybe it was quicker than that. Maybe there was an instantaneous firing of neurons and synapses, or whatever ignites sparks in my bourbon-pickled brain.
  Did I mention the pounding headache? The thud of a pile driver ramming caissons into my cranium? I could barely hear the judge over the echoes.
  “Has the jury reached a verdict?”
  “We have, Your Honor.”
  “The clerk will publish the verdict.”
  “We, the jury, find the defendant, Marcus Thurston, not guilty of murder in the second degree.”
  Yeah, him. Marcus “Thunder” Thurston, All-Pro running back for the Miami Dolphins. Charged with pumping five bullets into his wife. Now free to carry a football … and a nine-millimeter Glock, if he so desired. Hearing the verdict, and perhaps a chorus of cheerleaders singing, Thurston clopped me on the shoulder. An affectionate but hearty clop you might use for chopping wood. If I didn’t tip the scales at 240 pounds, I might have toppled face-first onto the defense table.
  “Way to go, bro!” Thunder smacked me again. “Don’t ‘bro’ me, and don’t touch me.” “Whassup with that, Jake?”
  “I don’t mind getting my hands dirty. I just need a minute to get the stains out.”
  “Hey, lose the ’tude, dude.”
  My headache was approaching the red line. On a scale of one to ten, we’re going to need more digits. The thud-thud-thud of the pile driver subsided just long enough for an ice pick to stab deep into my skull.
  “You’re a narcissist, Thunder. With a Hall of Fame ego and a total lack of empathy.”
  A storm cloud hooded his eyes, and for the briefest moment, there was the same fearsome look Eva Thurston must have seen in the last seconds of her life. Then Thunder barked out a laugh and grinned. It was the thousand-watt smile he flashed on cue for his Nike commercial. The one where he jitterbugs the length of the football field, dodging mammoth defenders, then sprouts wings and soars skyward.
  Like a god.
  Or a demon.
  I wanted to rip off those wings, watch him fall to earth. Splat.
  Bones splintered, organs crushed, arteries spurting.
  Killing my client would be an act of justice, I told myself. Justice rooted in truth and fairness. Not justice bought and sold, bartered and compromised. A courtroom should be a holy place, our secular church. A palace of integrity and morality. But the palace has been sacked by the Huns.
  Call me Attila.
  Already reporters spilled out of the gallery and crowded the bar, firing questions.
  “Thunder, will the NFL lift your suspension?”
  “If you had it to do over again, would you still shoot your wife?” “Lassiter, did you trick the jury with the Stand Your Ground law?”
  I hadn’t expected to win. And now that I had, victory tasted like swill. “Head straight to your limo,” I ordered Thurston. “No talking to the press.”
  “Why not, bro? We won. Nothing I say can mess that up.”
  My eyes squinted through the pain, interfering with my ability to pack my trial bag, much less plan a murder. I could kill Thurston right now. Grab my fountain pen—a Montblanc Skeleton, a gift from an ex-lover whose name escaped me—and jam it straight through his left eye and into his brain. Sure, I could easily kill him. I just needed to figure out how to get away with it … the way Thurston did.
  Of course, he had a damn good lawyer.
  Me.
  Jake Lassiter. Defender of the Bill of Rights, or at least a few of them. Purveyor of justice, or a reasonable facsimile thereof. Last bastion between freedom and forty years in a steel cage. In other words, the guy you call when you’re guilty as hell.
  I never intended to be a hero … and I succeeded. But all the trickery, all the gamesmanship had caught up with me. Thurston was the tipping point. How far had I fallen? Surely not from the mountaintop. More like the curb to the gutter.
  Back in night law school, they taught us right from wrong, black from white. But they didn’t teach us shades of gray. For twenty years I’ve made my living in the gray. Now I felt blanketed by a poisonous fog, a shroud that protected the guilty and shielded evil and cruelty from view.
  A deep baritone startled me. “Gonna kill you, Thurston! Kill you hard and slow.”
  I turned to find Clyde Garner waving a thick index finger under my client’s nose. A ruddy-faced man in his sixties, built like an oil drum, Garner owned a tree farm in Homestead. His daughter, Eva, had been a Junior Orange Bowl Princess, then Citrus Queen, and more recently the wife of Thunder Thurston. A thousand people attended her funeral, but Thunder wasn’t one of them.
  “Back off, old man.” Thurston glared at Garner, menace in his eyes. “Only did what I had to do.”
  “Feed you to the wood chipper,” Garner said, “one leg at a time.” So now there were at least two of us who wanted Thurston dead.
  If I didn’t leave my business card at the murder scene, maybe I could get away with it. Who knows how many folks in Miami—other than Dolphins season-ticket holders—thought Thurston should be chopped into bite-size pieces?
  “Mr. Garner,” I said. “Please don’t make things worse.”
  He swiveled toward me, his neck overflowing the collar of his white dress shirt. “Worse, shyster? What do you know about worse?”
  “When I look at you, Mr. Garner, I see a good man.” “Don’t kiss up to me, sleazebag.”
  “Please don’t do anything that will come back to haunt you.” “You have no idea what haunts me, shyster.” His eyes narrowed; his cheeks flushed. His hatred washed over me, a toxic tide. He leaned closer, gave me a whiff of boozy breath. “Gonna kill you, too. Maybe first, I dunno.”
  “The last thing Eva would want would be for you to—” “Don’t you mention her name, bloodsucker!”
  His burning anger had shifted to me. “All I’m saying, Mr. Garner—”
  “You had your say! You know what you are, Lassiter?”
  I didn’t, though the words shyster, sleazebag, and bloodsucker still hung in the air.
  “Dead lawyer walking. That’s what you are. You’re a dead lawyer walking.”

Vigilante Justice Is an Oxymoron

MY FIRST SHOT WAS HIGH AND to the left, just above his ear. I adjusted my aim, relaxed my shoulders, tightened my two-hand grip, eased the barrel of the Beretta a smidgen to the right, and squeezed off another round.
  The gunshot plunked just below his collarbone. The third shot caught him squarely between the eyes.
  “You nailed him!” Steve Solomon whooped just as the horn beeped. “Die, Thurston, die,” I whispered.
  “Cease all fire,” a voice announced over the speakers. “Place your weapons down and move behind the red line.”
  We were outdoors at the Glades Trail Range on the edge of the Everglades. It was another day of steam-room, shirt-sticky, withering heat. Summer in Miami. The only relief would be the afternoon thunderstorms that slicked the highways and caused multicar collisions, often with roadside gun battles. Already smoky-gray storm clouds had gathered to the west over the shallow slough. If it rained in hell, the place might be mistaken for Miami.
  I was with Steve Solomon and Victoria Lord. Law partners and lovers, they shared a house on Kumquat in Coconut Grove. You could almost toss a mango from their yard and hit my little coral rock house on Poinciana. Solomon and Lord were my pals and competitors for clients, those presumably innocent souls—cue the laughter—who could pay handsome fees.
  Solomon and Lord were each in their midthirties. Even though I’m fifteen years older, somehow the three of us became best buds. Every few weeks we take target practice. Handguns at twenty-five yards. Loser buys lunch and accepts all manner of insults.
  They were shooting at conventional bull’s-eye targets. Ten points in the middle, declining values toward the outside of the circle. I had a different target. An assistant range master was a former client—he’d been arrested for toting a concealed firearm to church—and let me use police perp targets. You know the ones, silhouettes of bad guys. Anonymous on paper, but Thunder Thurston in my brain.
  “Victoria wins,” Solomon said as we took seats on the bench behind the firing line and removed our ear protectors. “I’m second. Jake, you’re last, so you’re buying lunch, and not at a taco stand.”
  “Vic always wins,” I complained.
  “Women make the best snipers,” Solomon said.
  I nodded my agreement. “In my experience, that’s a fact.” “Is that a sexist remark, Jake?” Victoria demanded.
  “Only if I were talking about women in general, but I mean the ones in my life,” I said.
  Solomon punched me on the shoulder. “Smooth recovery, pal.” “Experts at kill shots,” I continued. “Break a man’s heart at a hundred yards.”
  “Quit while you’re ahead!” Solomon warned.
  Steve Solomon was a wiry, dark-haired guy who had played some baseball at the University of Miami. Lousy hitter, lazy fielder, savvy base stealer. Victoria was tall, slender, blonde. Perfect posture. Poised and proper and Ivy League smart. They squabbled a bit, and at first I thought they made an odd couple. But there’s something about opposites attracting. In court Solomon could be reckless and unprepared, always shooting from the hip. Victoria’s files were cross indexed and color coded, and her research was updated daily. Together they made a formidable team.
  And me, Jake Lassiter? Before I started earning my living stomping back and forth in front of the judge’s bench, I was warming the bench for the Miami Dolphins. I played a little linebacker when a starter was hurt, but more often, I only got my uniform dirty on the suicide squads, banging heads and making (or missing) tackles on the kickoff and punt teams.
  After a few years, the NFL decided it could sell beer without me. The Saskatchewan Roughriders of the CFL offered me a contract at essentially minimum wage, but instead I enrolled in law school at the University of Miami, night division, where I proudly graduated, no cum laude, top half of the bottom third of my class.
  For the past twenty years, I’ve been stalking the halls of Miami’s comically named Justice Building. It should be called “the Law Factory,” the place we grind the cheap meat, jam it into hog intestines, and sell it to the public as tasty treats. Truth be told, the relationship of “law” to “justice” is roughly that of roadkill possum to filet mignon.
  During these two decades, I’ve won some cases, lost a bunch more, occasionally spending a night in jail for arguing too vigorously with judges. My shaggy hair, once the color of Everglades saw grass bleached by the sun, is going gray. Not the distinctive silver-fox gray of those handsome, crinkly-eyed dudes in Viagra commercials. More like cigar-ash gray. My face, now as craggy as Mount Rushmore, had once attracted fishnet-stockinged groupies in low-end cities of the AFC, primarily Cleveland and Buffalo. I’ve never been married, and with slim prospects these days, I sleep alone.
  The horn blared over the speakers. The range master announced that shooters could retrieve their targets, and no one was allowed at the shooting stands. We stayed put on the bench. No need for souvenirs.
  “This is the worst you’ve ever shot,” Solomon reminded me, in case I’d forgotten.
  “I’ve had a headache for a couple days.”
  Victoria fixed me with a concerned look. “Are you taking anything for it?”
  “The usual. Aspirin and tequila.”
  “You were squinting as you shot,” she said. “The target was moving on me a little bit.”
  Victoria the Nurturer pursed her lips with even more concern. “Double vision, Jake?”
  “It’ll go away.”
  “So this has happened before?”
  “Jeez, Vic. No more cross-exam. Let’s have lunch. Calle Ocho. Palomilla and guava shakes.”
  She was trying to make eye contact, but I busied myself slipping nine-millimeter shells into a magazine. It requires some dexterity, especially when your hands are the size of catchers’ mitts. I was having trouble, and Victoria noticed.
  “Jake, what’s going on?”
  I took a second. At the adjacent skeet and trap range, shotgun blasts echoed like distant thunder. “Thunder Thurston was guilty.”
  “Aren’t they all?” Solomon asked.
  That was quite nearly true. I usually assume my clients are guilty. It saves time. But not a lawyer’s soul. With Thurston, I had violated my own rule. Hoping he was innocent, I’d dropped my skepticism, and, for a while, I believed his story.
  “Thurston’s worse than most,” I said. “He’s a cold-blooded, heartless murderer. Probably a sociopath. And he got away with killing his wife, thanks to me.”
  Victoria said, “You were just doing your job.”
  “Which happens to be trying cases,” Solomon said. “Not seeking justice.”
  “I hate that tired old excuse. It makes me want to tear down the pillars of the courthouse.”
  “Jake, my friend,” Solomon said. “Your job is to jiggle the pinball machine, hit the flippers, and drop the ball into the hole without lighting up the ‘Tilt’ button.”
  I pressed my knuckles into my forehead, trying to knead away the pain. “What the hell’s that mean?”
  “It’s all a game.”
  “You might have a different point of view if I’d lost your trial.” “What if you had, big guy?” Solomon said, in a mocking tone that always aggravated me. “Would you have busted me out of jail to do justice?”
  “Hell, no. I would have sent you a card every year on your birthday and spent as much time as possible soothing your fiancée’s broken heart.”
  Solomon laughed. “Truth! My best man speaks the truth.”
  Best man. That would be me.
  Technically, Solomon and Lord were engaged, but neither seemed in a hurry to walk down the aisle. There had been a moment in the past when Victoria had taken a fleeting interest in me, but equal quantities of whiskey and angst had been involved.
  Victoria clasped one of my hands with both of her own. “Your client’s wife attacked him with a knife.”
  “Sliced him open!” Solomon joined in.
  “So maybe you shouldn’t second-guess the jury,” Victoria added. “Your client stood his ground under Florida law,” Solomon piled on after the whistle, just like the Dolphins’ Ndamukong Suh. “Blame the legislature for passing the statute. Or the governor for signing it. But you didn’t do anything wrong.”
  Overhead the gray clouds grew darker and heavier. To the west, over the Everglades, lightning flashed.
  “That knife wound,” I said, barely above a whisper. “What about it?”
  I bought a moment of time by exhaling a long breath. “It might have been self-inflicted. After the shooting.”
  “What!” Victoria’s eyes went wide. “Thurston admitted that?”
  I shook my head. “If he had, I wouldn’t have put him on the stand to say Eva stabbed him. I’ve never knowingly used perjured testimony. But this time I came close.”
  They waited for me to tell more, so I did.
  “I asked Doc Riggs to study photos of the wound, the blood splatter, the ER report. He said he couldn’t be certain, but given the size and shape of the blade, the superficial nature of the wound, and its location, it seemed likely that Thurston stabbed himself.”
  “Holy … ,” Solomon said. “Moley,” Victoria said.
  Sometimes the kids are so damn cute.
  “I confronted Thurston,” I said. “Told him I wanted to work out a manslaughter plea before the state blew his defense out of the water. He stuck to his story. Eva came at him like a ninja. He feared for his life and shot her in self-defense.”
  “Five times,” Victoria said, as if I didn’t know.
  “Thurston said I could either quit the case or take it to trial and put him on the stand. The state never questioned the knife wound. The jury bought his story, and here we are.”
  They were both silent a moment. Then Solomon said, “That doesn’t change anything. You did nothing wrong.”
  “The result was wrong. But I could right it.”
  They both waited for me to continue. The storm clouds had turned angry. A jagged lightning bolt creased the sky, and thunder clapped in the distance.
  Finally Victoria said, “How could you right it, Jake?” “I could kill the bastard.”
  Solomon cackled. “Good marketing plan, Jake. I can picture your TV commercials. ‘If I lose your case, you go to jail. If I win, I kill you.’”
  “Rough justice is better than none. So is vigilante justice.” “Vigilante justice is an oxymoron,” Victoria said. “You can’t kill a client.”
  “She’s right,” Solomon said. “You gotta hire someone to do it.” “Steve!” Victoria shot her partner a look somewhere between scolding and skinning alive.
  “I could get away with it,” I said. “Who knows more about evidence and proof than we do?”
  Victoria wrinkled her forehead. “We?” “I might need alibi witnesses.”
  “That’s not happening,” Victoria shot back.
  “I think you played football too long without a helmet,” Solomon added.
  “Jake, I’ve never known you to be so consumed with talk of violence.” Victoria again. “Are you feeling okay?”
  “Just peachy.”
  “How do you go twenty years being a respectable lawyer—” “That’s a stretch,” Solomon chimed in.
  “And suddenly become an agent of vengeance?” Victoria continued. “Agent of justice,” I said. “It’s not like this would be my maiden voyage.”
  They both looked at me dubiously. “Before your time,” I said.
  “You killed a client?” Solomon asked.
  “Nope. If I’d killed him, there wouldn’t have been anyone to file a complaint with the Florida Bar.”
  In unison the cute kids said, “What complaint?” So I told them.

Excerpted from Bum Luck
Copyright © 2017 by Nittany Valley Productions, Inc.
Reprinted with permission. All Rights Reserved.

— ♦ —

Paul Levine
Photo provided courtesy of
Paul Levine

The author of 20 novels, Paul Levine won the John D. MacDonald fiction award and was nominated for the Edgar, Macavity, International Thriller, Shamus and James Thurber prizes.

A former trial lawyer, he wrote twenty-one episodes of the CBS military drama “JAG” and co-created the Supreme Court drama “First Monday” starring James Garner and Joe Mantegna. “To Speak for the Dead” was his first novel and is still in print 27 years after publication. He is also the author of the “Solomon vs. Lord” series and several stand-alone thrillers.

A graduate of Penn State and the University of Miami Law School, Paul divides his time between Miami, Florida and Santa Barbara, California.

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

— ♦ —

Bum Luck by Paul Levine

Bum Luck by Paul Levine

A Jake Lassiter Legal Thriller

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

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

Thirty seconds after the jury announced its verdict, I decided to kill my client.

Second-string linebacker turned trial lawyer Jake Lassiter squares off against his toughest, most unpredictable adversary yet: himself.

The downward spiral begins when Jake's client, NFL superstar Thunder Thurston, is cleared of murdering his wife. Jake didn't expect to win, didn't want to win, since he is sure his client is guilty. When Thurston walks free, Lassiter vows to seek his own kind of justice. Street justice. Vigilante justice.

Law partners Steve Solomon and Victoria Lord can't believe their friend has become so inexplicably obsessed with killing his client. Convinced Jake's unhinged behavior is due to repeated concussions suffered during his pro football career, they beg him to seek treatment. But as Lassiter's raging fixation on vengeance grows, Solomon and Lord wonder if they're too late to help. Is it game over for Jake's career … and his life?

Bum Luck by Paul Levine

Today's Selection of Free MystereBooks for Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of Free MystereBooks found on Wednesday, May 17, 2017 at 7:00 AM ET …

The Mad Game by Adil Aijaz

The Mad Game by Adil Aijaz

A Detective Costello Mystery Short

Publisher: Adil Aijaz

Price: FREE!

The Mad Game by Adil Aijaz, Amazon Kindle format

Second Sight by Toryn Chapman

Second Sight by Toryn Chapman

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Toryn Chapman

Price: FREE!

Second Sight by Toryn Chapman, Amazon Kindle format

Right to Investigate by R. Sims and K. Elliot

Right to Investigate by R. Sims and K. Elliot

A Private Eye Thriller

Publisher: Thriller Scenarios

Price: FREE!

Right to Investigate by R. Sims and K. Elliot, Amazon Kindle format

Beyond Secrets by D. B. Jones

Beyond Secrets by D. B. Jones

A Madison Hart Mystery

Publisher: D. B. Jones

Price: FREE!

Beyond Secrets by D. B. Jones, Amazon Kindle format

Impulse Spy by Carrie Ann Knox

Impulse Spy by Carrie Ann Knox

A Sonic Sleuths Mystery

Publisher: Xotolithic Press

Price: FREE!

Impulse Spy by Carrie Ann Knox, Amazon Kindle format

One Tequila by Tricia O'Malley

One Tequila by Tricia O'Malley

An Althea rose Mystery

Publisher: Lovewrite Publishing

Price: FREE!

One Tequila by Tricia O'Malley, Amazon Kindle format

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.

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Review: Hope's Peak by Tony Healey

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

A Mysterious Review of Hope's Peak by Tony Healey. A Harper and Lane Mystery.

Review summary: The murder mystery storyline has the potential to be an intriguing investigation despite a rather weak cast of characters. But it all seems to develop and proceed formulaically. This isn’t a bad mystery by any means, but it’s not the compelling one it could have been. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 3 of 5 stars

Hope's Peak Tony Healey

Hope's Peak
Tony Healey
A Harper and Lane Mystery
Thomas & Mercer (January 2017)

Available from Amazon.comAvailable from Barnes & Noble

Publisher synopsis: Beyond the shores of Hope's Peak, North Carolina, evil waits as his next victim approaches. He'll make her a princess like the others …

Detective Jane Harper can't shake the image of the young woman discovered in a field — eyes closed, a crown of woven vines on her head. She expects macabre murders like this in her native San Francisco, not here. Jane and her partner, Stu, vow to catch the killer, but in this town, that's easier said than done. The police department is in the grips of a wide-reaching scandal that could topple the entire force, and Jane and Stu face a series of dead ends. Until they meet Ida Lane.

Ida knows too well the evil that lurks in the cornfields. Tortured by her mother's murder years before, Ida is paralyzed by the fear that she could be next. As the killer grows bolder, Jane must persuade Ida to use her remarkable gifts to help in the investigation. It's a decision that brings them closer to the killer … maybe too close.

Today's Selection of New or Newly Released Indie MystereBooks

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a selection of newly published and recently released mystery, suspense and thriller titles — mostly from independent publishers — for Tuesday, May 16, 2017.

Twisted Trees by Tony Berry

Twisted Trees by Tony Berry

A Bromo Perkins Mystery (4th in series)

Published: 05/14/17 by Endeavour Press

Edition(s): eBook only

eBook Price: $3.99

Twisted Trees by Tony Berry

Chocolate Chip Custard Murder by Susan Gillard

Chocolate Chip Custard Murder by Susan Gillard

A Donut Hole Cozy Mystery (46th in series)

Published: 05/14/17 by Guardian Publishing

Edition(s): eBook only

eBook Price: 99¢

Chocolate Chip Custard Murder by Susan Gillard

Parlez-Vous Murder? by Susan Kiernan-Lewis

Parlez-Vous Murder? by Susan Kiernan-Lewis

A Stranded in Provence Mystery (1st in series)

Published: 05/14/17 by Susan Kiernan-Lewis

Edition(s): eBook only

eBook Price: 99¢

Parlez-Vous Murder? by Susan Kiernan-Lewis

A Death by Wounds by J. D. Oswald

A Death by Wounds by J. D. Oswald

A Lambert and Strange Mystery (1st in series)

Published: 05/14/17 by J. D. Oswald

Edition(s): eBook only

eBook Price: $2.99

A Death by Wounds by J. D. Oswald

Night Within Night by Mark Rogers

Night Within Night by Mark Rogers

A Novel of Suspense

Published: 05/14/17 by Endeavour Press

Edition(s): eBook only

eBook Price: $3.99

Night Within Night by Mark Rogers

Trust Me by Sydney Somers

Trust Me by Sydney Somers

A Novel of Romantic Suspense

Published: 05/14/17 by Sydney Somers

Edition(s): eBook only

eBook Price: $1.99

Trust Me by Sydney Somers

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of 05/16/17 4:30 PM ET. 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.

Death in a Cold Hard Light by Francine Mathews, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017 …

Death in a Cold Hard Light by Francine Mathews

Death in a Cold Hard Light by Francine Mathews, A Merry Folger Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Soho Crime

Death in a Cold Hard Light by Francine Mathews, Amazon Kindle format

After a trying case, detective Merry Folger begrudgingly agrees to take a leave from work to meet her fussy future in-laws in Greenwich, but it isn't long before she is summoned back to Nantucket. The body of a 21-year-old was discovered in the frigid waters of the Sound in the days leading up to the annual Christmas celebration, and the death isn't sitting well with Merry's father, the local police chief, who fears the track marks on the victim's arms may be indicative of a growing drug problem on the island. Feeling a constant need to live up to her father's expectations, Merry rushes home to her fiancé, Peter's, annoyance, only to find that heroin isn't the only destructive force in Nantucket.

Soon after Merry arrives, she feels stonewalled by her father. If he was so desperate for her help, why won't he share the details of the case with her? What is he hiding? For the first time, Merry fears she cannot trust her lifelong role model — her own father — let alone figure out why a young athlete and Harvard scholar ended up dead in the frigid, storm-churned Sound.

Death in a Cold Hard Light by Francine Mathews

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for May 2017. For new hardcover titles, visit New Mysteries where for a list of May 2017 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

Silent Rain by Karin Salvalaggio, New in Bookstores during May 2017

Today's featured new hardcover mystery, suspense, or thriller title scheduled to be published during May 2017 is …

Silent Rain by Karin Salvalaggio

Silent Rain by Karin Salvalaggio, a Macy Greely Mystery (4th in series)

Publisher: Minotaur Books

Silent Rain by Karin Salvalaggio, Amazon Kindle format

Grace Adams has spent three years trying to move on — mentally, physically, emotionally — from the traumatizing events of her past. But it's not easy when the world is morbidly curious about the crimes that shaped her childhood, when despite her changed name, people still track her down for the sensational details. Now in college in Bolton, Montana, the one person Grace has trusted with the truth about her past has betrayed her. The bestselling novelist Peter Granger wants to use Grace's story in his next book, regardless of how desperate Grace is to keep the details to herself. And then, on Halloween night, Peter Granger's house burns to the ground and his and his wife's bodies are found inside.

Montana state detective Macy Greeley is sent to Bolton to handle the investigation into the fire and deaths … which soon appear to be arson and murder. It doesn't take Macy long to realize that Grace isn't the only one whom Peter Granger has betrayed, and there are no shortage of others in town who took issue with him and his wife. What at first looked like a straightforward investigation is poised to expose some of Bolton's darkest secrets, and the fallout may put more than one life in danger.

Silent Rain by Karin Salvalaggio

For a list of more new hardcover titles to be published this month, visit our New Mysteries page for May 2017. For new paperback titles, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where a selection of May 2017 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers are shelved.

The Stranger Inside by Jennifer Jaynes, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during May 2017 …

The Stranger Inside by Jennifer Jaynes

The Stranger Inside by Jennifer Jaynes, A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

The Stranger Inside by Jennifer Jaynes, Amazon Kindle format

After mystery author Diane Christie loses her husband to suicide, she and her son move to the small coastal town of Fog Harbor, Massachusetts. Her daughter is attending college nearby, and Diane hopes that her family can now begin to heal. But rebuilding their lives after the tragedy isn't so simple.

Diane's depressed college-age daughter, Alexa, still avoids her, critical of everything Diane does, and even her generally amiable teenage son, Josh, has started acting out. Diane pushes forward, focusing on her writing and her volunteer work at a local crisis hotline. She knows that healing takes time.

But then a girl from Alexa's college is found strangled. Worse still, the murderer uses the crisis hotline to confess to Diane … and claims she is the only one who can stop the killing. And just when the glow of new love from an attractive admirer begins to chase away some of the darkness, more girls turn up dead, and Diane races to solve a mystery she fears will hit terrifyingly close to home.

The Stranger Inside by Jennifer Jaynes

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for May 2017. For new hardcover titles, visit New Mysteries where for a list of May 2017 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

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