Thursday, July 19, 2012

The Old Buzzard Had It Coming by Donis Casey is Today's Fourth Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Old Buzzard Had It Coming by Donis Casey as today's fourth free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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The Old Buzzard Had It Coming by Donis Casey

The Old Buzzard Had It Coming
Donis Casey
An Alafair Tucker Mystery
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press

Set in early 20th century Oklahoma, this is the first mystery in this series.

Alafair Tucker is a strong woman, the core of family life on a farm in Oklahoma where the back-breaking work and daily logistics of caring for her husband Shaw, their nine children, and being neighborly requires hard muscle and a clear head. She’s also a woman of strong opinions, and it is her opinion that her neighbor, Harley Day, is a drunkard and a reprobate. So, when Harley’s body is discovered frozen in a snowdrift one January day in 1912, she isn’t surprised that his long-suffering family isn’t, if not actually celebrating, much grieving.

When Alafair helps Harley’s wife prepare the body for burial, she discovers that Harley’s demise was anything but natural—there is a bullet lodged behind his ear. Alafair is concerned when she hears that Harley’s son, John Lee, is the prime suspect in his father’s murder, for Alafair’s seventeen-year-old daughter Phoebe is in love with the boy. At first, Alafair’s only fear is that Phoebe is in for a broken heart, but as she begins to unravel the events that led to Harley’s death, she discovers that Phoebe might be more than just John Lee’s sweetheart: she may be his accomplice in murder.

Apple iBook

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Hardscape by Justin Scott is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Hardscape by Justin Scott as today's third free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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Hardscape by Justin Scott

Hardscape
Justin Scott
A Ben Abbott Mystery
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press

This is the first mystery to feature the Connecticut real estate agent and private investigator.

Benjamin Abbott returns to his hometown to save his family’s recession-battered real estate business, never dreaming that things are about to heat up in picturesque Newbury, Connecticut.

Broke and looking for some excitement, Ben takes a job videotaping the adulterous goings-on in a bedroom in Jack and Rita Long’s "castle". But he doesn’t bargain on becoming embroiled in the murder of Rita Long’s friend. A second murder closer to home propels Ben to embark on a new career as a neophyte detective and leads him to encounter answers that will put him in mortal danger.

Apple iBook

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Mycroft Holmes and Murder at the Diogenes Club by David Dickinson is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Mycroft Holmes and Murder at the Diogenes Club by David Dickinson as today's second free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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Mycroft Holmes and Murder at the Diogenes Club by David Dickinson

Mycroft Holmes and Murder at the Diogenes Club
David Dickinson
A Mycroft Holmes Novella
Publisher: Endeavour Press

David Dickinson, who writes the historical "Lord Francis Powerscourt" mysteries, will be our guest later this morning!

Silence is golden at the Diogenes, Mycroft's Pall Mall club. You are only allowed to speak in the Stranger’s Room. But for William St John Plunkett neither silence nor speech is an option any more. He is found dead at the bottom of the great staircase, blood and brains spattered all over the marble floor.

Mycroft, although in the club at the time, leaves the details of the investigation to Inspector Lestrade, including the baffling geography of the Diogenes with its library called Plato's Cave and a dining room called Secundus the Silent. Eccentrics roam the building, Cholmondeley Warner with his matchstick cathedrals, Fitzpaine Somerset, bankrupted by grandfather clocks, the corpse himself, obsessed with attending funerals.

Inspector Lestrade is lost in the silent world of club land. Mycroft's health is failing, but he summons all his powers to resolve the murder mystery on his own doorstep. As the police close in on the killer Mycroft seems to be at death's door. "You must live for your country," his young assistant Tobias tells him, "you must live for England. England needs you."

Amazon Kindle Book

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Sharky's Machine by William Diehl is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Sharky's Machine by William Diehl as today's free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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Sharky's Machine by William Diehl

Sharky's Machine
William Diehl
Publisher: Story Merchant Books

This debut novel, originally published in 1978, was adapted for the 1981 film of the same title starring Burt Reynolds.

Italy, 1944: A squad of American soldiers on a dangerous secret mission is ambushed and slaughtered … and a fortune in gold vanishes.

Hong Kong, 1959: An aging American colonel, haunted by his wartime past, is brutally murdered in a luxurious brothel.

Atlanta, 1975: The last survivor of the fatal World War II ambush in Italy is executed at point blank range in a parking lot.

Blowing away a crazed, gun-wielding drug dealer on a crowded city bus gets police detective Sharky bounced from the narc squad into the dreaded dregs of the department — vice. That's where he stumbles on a high-priced call girl and her pimp who are fleecing rich johns in an even higher-priced blackmail scam. Together with his "machine" of hard-bitten vice squad veterans, Sharky closes in for a big sting. He doesn't count on falling for Domino, his alluring target. Or falling into the middle of the murderous design she's a part of — involving a hot presidential candidate, the shadowy multimillionaire who's backing him, and the ice-cold assassin they're using to wipe out the past … before it blows their future to hell.

Amazon Kindle Book

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The Black Samurai Mysteries by Marc Olden, Now Available as eBooks

Mysterious Press

It's been a busy week for the folks at Mysterious Press!

Yesterday we had the announcement that five "Philip St. Ives" mysteries by Ross Thomas were now available as ebooks.

Today we're hearing that a long list of Marc Olden crime novels have been re-released in new ebook editions.

In this post we're featuring the eight titles in the "Black Samurai" series, originally published as Signet mass market paperbacks in 1974 and 1975.

Rescued by a Japanese Samurai master, trained for seven years, Robert Sand became the Black Samurai. Having suffered at the hands of military racists and seeing his teacher and brother samurai killed before his eyes by the terrorists, Robert Sand became a man with a mission … to destroy the corrupt powers who are plotting to threaten everything he holds dear.

Seven more books by Marc Olden were also released. Use this link to see all Mysterious Press ebooks by this author on Amazon.com.

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Black Samurai by Marc Olden

Black Samurai
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (1st)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

On leave in Tokyo, American GI Robert Sand is shot trying to protect an old man from a quartet of drunk American soldiers. As Sand passes out, the old man springs on his tormenters, beating them senseless with frail, wrinkled fists. He is Master Konuma, keeper of the ancient secrets of the samurai, and Sand is about to become his newest pupil. Over the next seven years, the American learns martial arts, swordplay, and stealth, becoming not just the first black man to ever take the oath of the samurai, but the strongest fighter Konuma has ever trained.

One night, two dozen terrorists ambush the dojo, slaughtering Konuma and his students as the first step in a terrifying assault on world peace. Though he cannot save his sensei, Sand escapes with his life and a gnawing hunger for vengeance. All he has is his sword, but his sword is all he needs.

Black Samurai by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  Black Samurai by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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The Golden Kill by Marc Olden

The Golden Kill
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (2nd)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

The Chinese diplomat walks into the revolving door just a step ahead of the grenade. Samurai Robert Sand is too late to save him from the blast, but as the smoke clears he is hot on the grenade-tosser's heels. In Central Park, Sand disarms the killer and knocks him unconscious. His name is Ivan Vanich, and he is posing as a Soviet operative. His real employer is a power-mad millionaire, who arranged the hit as part of a plot to upend a Russo-Chinese trading contract and seize the profits for himself. The diplomat in the revolving door was only the first to die.

On special orders from an ex-president, Sand races to avert catastrophe. His hunt for answers takes him to a sprawling English castle, where the samurai comes face to face with the man who would let millions die for the sake of gold.

The Golden Kill by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  The Golden Kill by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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Killer Warrior by Marc Olden

Killer Warrior
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (3rd)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

Even the finest samurai occasionally needs to hone his skill. Robert Sand is in Japan, pushing his body to the limit under an aged sensei's guidance, when he gets the message that practice is over. A French arms dealer named Valbonne has gotten ambitious, and is about to start selling something rather more deadly than a bootlegged Kalashnikov. He is building an atomic bomb.

Valbonne's prospective buyer is a Japanese man who has never forgiven the United States for killing his family at Nagasaki. To take revenge, he plans to detonate the black market warhead somewhere in New York City. His contract with Valbonne earns him the support of the Frenchman's mercenary army, and the cunning of a bloodthirsty Native American who's handy with a hatchet. Unfortunately for them, this is just the kind of fight that Sand's been training for.

Killer Warrior by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  Killer Warrior by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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The Deadly Pearl by Marc Olden

The Deadly Pearl
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (4th)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

Her name is Rochelle, and she is only fifteen when she disappears. Her father is a secret service agent assigned to ex-president William Baron Clarke, and when he asks for help, Clarke calls the most capable tracker he knows: Robert Sand, the only black man to ever attain the rank of samurai. Sand combs the tenements of New York's East Village in search of the girl, finally learning what no father ever wants to hear: Rochelle is in the clutches of Pearl, the meanest pimp in town.

Called Pearl because of his exquisite taste in jewelry, he is no ordinary hustler. Kidnapping is his specialty, and the women he snatches for sale overseas are never older than eighteen. He is proud to call his business “white slavery,” but his latest victim may be his last. Robert Sand is coming for him, and all the guns in New York won't be enough to protect this Pearl from getting scuffed.

The Deadly Pearl by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  The Deadly Pearl by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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The Inquisition by Marc Olden

The Inquisition
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (5th)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

When Robert Sand's sensei was murdered, William Baron Clarke helped him take revenge. The former president of the United States, Clarke is a rich man who uses his wealth to combat evil around the world. Since they first met, Sand has become his chief enforcer—a killer with samurai skills and American style. Once, Clarke saved Sand. Now it's time to return the favor.

A fringe militia called the Inquisition kidnaps Clarke's daughter, a brilliant college student. Their leader goes by the name Dessalines, and his cruelty is exceeded only by his madness. Before he executes his prisoners, Dessalines always stages a drumhead trial. Sand has three days before the verdict comes in—time enough to perform some executions of his own.

The Inquisition by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  The Inquisition by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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The Warlock by Marc Olden

The Warlock
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (6th)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

Black magic orgies. Human sacrifices. Necrophilia. These are just a few of Augustus Janicot's special skills. This charismatic sadist has built a formidable following, convincing politicians across Europe that his voodoo ritual can win them office. When they consent to his bloody rites, he films them, and uses the footage for blackmail. On the verge of obtaining unlimited power, the Warlock is about to make a fatal mistake.

Janicot's next target is in Vietnam, and for Robert Sand, this is too close to home. An American trained in the ways of the samurai, Sand fears for the safety of Toki Jakata, the granddaughter of his late samurai master and the only woman he has ever loved. Sand has never been able to win Toki's heart, but he will do anything to keep Janicot from pulling it out of her chest.

The Warlock by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  The Warlock by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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Sword of Allah by Marc Olden

Sword of Allah
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (7th)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

Ever since he took the vows of the samurai, Robert Sand has been ready to die. But now, for the first time in his life, he has a reason to live. Her name is Ann, and he sits beside her, awaiting takeoff for Geneva, when terrorists seize the plane. Holding guns on the passengers and crew, they douse the cabin in liquor and light a fire that will burn until it reaches the gas tanks. The terrorists flee as smoke fills the plane, but one lingers—a Japanese killer with a vendetta against the black samurai. He puts two bullets in Ann's back, and even Sand's lightning reflexes are not fast enough to save her.

The Sword of Allah, the most feared terrorist organization on the planet, planned the attack. Its next operation threatens to turn the Cold War up to a boil, but they made one foolish mistake. Robert Sand is angry, and will have his revenge.

Sword of Allah by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  Sword of Allah by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

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The Katana by Marc Olden

The Katana
Marc Olden
A Robert Sand Mystery (8th)

Mysterious Press, July 2012

Though useless in battle, the emperor's katana is a beautiful weapon. Cast from solid gold, this 1,200-year-old blade was thought to be lost until Master Konuma, teacher of samurais, presents it as a gift to the people of Japan. Soon after, he is savagely murdered, leaving his American student, Robert Sand, to avenge his death. The sensei is gone, but the sword remains as a symbol of his generosity—until the day the katana vanishes.

A madman snatches the treasure from the Metropolitan Museum, wanting the katana at his side as he makes a bid for world domination. Now it's Sand's turn to steal it back, and destroy the monster who dishonored his sensei's memory. The katana is too valuable to use in a fight, but for its sake much blood will flow.

The Katana by Marc Olden, Amazon Kindle format  The Katana by Marc Olden, iTune iBook format

Important Note: Any prices mentioned above were correct as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

Review: Formula for Murder by Judith Mehl

Formula for Murder by Judith Mehl

We've just published our Review of Formula for Murder by Judith Mehl. A Kat Everitt Mystery. Pennystone Books Trade Paperback, June 2012.

Our rating: 3 of 5 stars

Available to purchase from …

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition

This Week's Bestselling Mystery and Suspense Television and Film on DVD (120718)

Amazon.com: Weekly Bestselling DVDs for Television and Film

Here is this week's list of the top bestselling mystery and suspense television and film Blu-ray discs available from Amazon.com.

We're using a script to embed an RSS feed from Amazon.com, which is frequently updated, but if you cannot see the box below — or have scripts blocked — you can use this link to see the relevant page on Amazon.com.

Spanish Poster for Lockout

Lockout (2012)

Today's mail brought a copy of the space-based action thriller Lockout (via Netflix) for us to watch (and review) and coincidentally we came across the Spanish version of the poster (right; click for larger image).

Titled MS1: Máxima Seguridad — the working title of the film was MS One: Maximum Security, and early trailers featured this as its title — the poster's tagline is "Solo contra 500 … ¿Donde esta el problema?"

Directed by James Mather from an original screenplay by Stephen St. Leger, Lockout stars Guy Pearce as a falsely convicted ex-government agent, whose one chance at obtaining freedom lies in the dangerous mission of rescuing the President's daughter (Maggie Grace) from rioting convicts at a maximum-security prison orbiting 50 miles above the earth.

Don Winslow's California Fire and Life to be Adapted for Film

California Fire and Life by Don Winslow

The film adaptation of Don Winslow's Savages is currently in theaters but filmmakers are already looking forward to the next project featuring the author's words: California Fire and Life.

Published in 1999, the crime novel follows Jack Wade, once a rising star of the Orange County Sheriffs Department’s arson unit. But a minor scandal has cost him everything … except his encyclopedic knowledge of fire. Now working as an insurance claims investigator, Jack is called in to examine a suspicious claim: real estate millionaire Nicky Vale's house has burned to a crisp — with his young and gorgeous wife in it. Jack follows the evidence into the crime infested inferno of the California underworld, filled with Russian mobsters, Vietnamese hoods, American crooks, and enough smoldering vice to char the entire gold coast. Things get so hot and deadly that Jack might not make it out alive … that is until he decides to fight fire with fire.

Shane Salerno — who co-wrote the screenplay for Savages with Winslow — will produce.

(Related article: Deadline.)

Today's Bestselling Free Kindle MystereBooks (120718)

Top 100 Free Kindle Mysteries and Thrillers, updated hourly by Amazon.com

Here is today's list of the Bestselling Free Kindle Crime Fiction: the top nine mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers.

We're using a script to embed an RSS feed from Amazon.com, which is updated hourly, but if you cannot see the box below — or have scripts blocked — you can click on the image to the right or use this link to see the relevant page on Amazon.com.

Telemystery: Production Begins on French Crime Drama Jo

Telemystery Prime Time Crime: Mystery and Suspense on Television

Lagardère Entertainment subsidiary Atlantique Production is set to begin production next week on Jo, the first French production of a television crime drama filmed entirely in English. (The project was previously known as Le Grand.)

The 8-episode series stars Jean Reno as police detective Joachim "Jo" Legrand.

Each episode will feature a different iconic Paris landmark as Jo investigates a series of mysterious murder cases.

The series was created by René Balcer — who has won multiple Edgar Awards for screenplays written for Law & Order and NYPD Blue, as well as an Emmy for producing Law & Order — in collaboration with Franck Ollivier and Malina Detcheva.

Val McDermid to Write Contemporary Version of Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen

Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen

Late last year HarperFiction announced that it was reworking Jane Austen's classic novels into contemporary stories. First to be identified was Joanna Trollope writing Sense and Sensibility, and later Curtis Sittenfeld writing Pride & Prejudice.

Today The Bookseller is reporting that crime novelist Val McDermid will write Northanger Abbey, what may have been Austen's first completed novel but one that wasn't published until after her death in 1818.

"There is so much scope for reinvention in this often misunderstood novel," said editorial director Louisa Joyner. "The idea of Val McDermid breathing life into it by bringing her literary expertise as the pre-eminent crime writer to re-ignite the novel's fear factor is incredibly exciting."

Northanger Abbey is scheduled to be published in Spring 2014.

(Hat tip to Mystery Fanfare for alerting us to this news.)

Poisoned Pen Press Announces Winner of Discovery Mystery Award

Poisoned Pen Press

Poisoned Pen Press has announced the winner of its inaugural Discover Mystery™ Award to be Ronald Sharp for his novel No Regrets, No Remorse. (The submitted manuscript was titled Human Pest Control.)

Guest judge Dana Stabenow said, "A Harley-riding hit woman who kills for virtue as well as profit and a Miami lawyer turned sculptor combine forces to butt heads with crooked lawyers, organized crime, and local authorities to track down a murderer. Ronald Sharp had me from the first chapter, a step-by-step account of how to blow up a house … with the bad guy safely inside, of course."

As the winner of the Discover Mystery award, Sharp was recognized with a $1000 cash prize and a publishing contract with Poisoned Pen Press. Poisoned Pen Press will release No Regrets, No Remorse in November 2012.

M. K. Graff, Author of the Nora Tierney English Mysteries

Omnimystery News: Guest Author Post

We are delighted to welcome back mystery novelist Marni Graff to Omnimystery News.

Marni is the author of the "Nora Tierney" mysteries, the most recent entry of which is The Green Remains (Bridle Path Press, April 2012 trade paperback).

During Marni's last visit, she wrote about Oxford, the setting for the previous book in this series. Today she tells us the challenges of setting a novel in a different country.

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Many writing books tell writers that setting often functions as a character in itself. For me, it's the world that my character's inhabit and will affect their actions, so it's a very important decision I make when choosing where my stories will unfold. I'm a big fan of writers who manage to bring me into their setting, and I feel most writers truly wish to have the place a book's characters move in feel real to their readers. Kaui Hart Hemmings, the novelist who wrote The Descendants, set in Hawaii and made into a recent movie with George Clooney, states: "The setting should do more than sit there—it should infiltrate the plot." And my personal hero, P. D. James, always starts her novels by deciding on the setting for its influence on the story she'll develop.

Marni Graff
Photo provided courtesy of
Marni Graff

Choosing to set my mystery series in England was a deliberate choice, yet one I knew would present challenges. My American protagonist, Nora Tierney, is a writer who has been living and working there for years, so while it's fine to have her appropriate common Brit words like "loo," her voice has to remain distinctly American versus the other characters in her circle. It's one reason I read UK authors continuously, to keep the cadence and slang of that country in my ear for my other characters. But the challenges go far beyond language.

Having a lifelong affinity for England and its environs, I originally choose Cumbria, the county containing England's glorious Lake District, as the setting for the opening of the Nora Tierney series. My visits to the land of Wordsworth and Beatrix Potter hold a fascination for me. It is one of the most beautiful natural areas I've ever seen, and the book series seemed to belong there. On my last visit, I took photographs and came home armed with maps and brochures to use.

Then life intervened with an opportunity to study at Oxford, and I found myself in the hallowed halls of Exeter College, studying Wilkie Collins and Daphne Du Maurier, two of my favorite writers. Sworn in as a reader at the Bodleian Library, I was able to read the original broadsheet reviews of The Woman in White.

Oxford is a jewel of a town encircled by the lush green countryside of the Thames Valley. Its mellow limestone "dreaming spires," as described by 19th C. poet Matthew Arnold, change color with the light and weather. Magnificently preserved architecture reflects every age from Saxon to present, all exhibited somewhere amongst the federation of forty-odd independent colleges which make up the University of Oxford.

This mix of "town and gown" is noticed at once when visiting: The university has its dons lecturing in sub fusc, scouts bringing students morning tea, an historic tutorial system, and those forbidden grassy quads (with their tradition of only being walked on by dons), while the town has its own muddle of traffic-choked streets, packed with bicycles and pedestrians, pubs and shops. Both exist alongside green meadows with grazing cattle, and rivers teaming with punters and canal boats.

Small wonder then that I fell in love with the place. I could picture Nora here, too, and suddenly the idea for a new mystery, one that had Oxford at its heart, took over. I set aside my original idea for a Lake District manuscript and started writing The Blue Virgin, a combination of cozy and police procedural. Trying to clear her best friend, Val Rogan, of the suspicion she has murdered her partner, Bryn Wallace, Nora quickly becomes embroiled in the murder investigation, to the dismay of DI Declan Barnes, the senior investigating officer. And did I mention Nora is four months pregnant with her dead fiance's baby?

I took great care to be accurate in describing Oxford's history and the colleges, as well as the various locations and sites my characters visit. After all, this is the town that gave the world Lewis Carroll, penicillin, two William Morrises, and graduates spread across the centuries whose influences are still felt. A very short list includes: Shelley, Tolkien, Browning, C. S. Lewis, Oscar Wilde, T. S. Eliot, and Christopher Wren. More modern grads you will recognize include Dorothy Sayers, Stephen Hawkings, Richard Burton, Indira Gandhi, Hugh Grant and Val McDermid.

Oxford exudes mystery, as any Inspector Morse fan can tell you. I knew that readers would be quick to point out any factual errors I made. I carefully described favorite student pubs, shops, and the wonderful Covered Market, and tried to give the reader the sense of that ancient town, and how living in it affects Nora's actions.

When I came home to write The Blue Virgin, I kept an enlargement of the town map taped to my desk — no sense describing a cobbled lane if I had the name wrong. I'd brought home research material with me, which I referred to often, as well as my photo album from the trip. My characters move within the real town, have tea at The Parsonage, and brunch at The Randolph Hotel. Only a few settings, such as Nora's flat, are fictional.

One sticking point was details of the police station. The series is a mix of police procedural and cozy; the main points of view are from the detective who is the senior investigation officer on the case, Declan Barnes, and my gal, Nora. I'd walked past St. Aldate's station and noted its position on my map. But now I needed to get inside it—and I was home in North Carolina at this point.

Google to the rescue. I found the email for the Thames Valley Police Constabulary, and emailed someone with a request that went something like this: Would someone in Oxford's St. Aldate's station be willing to answer a few questions via email for my mystery novel, in return for an acknowledgment in the completed novel?

Two days later I had my answer: The Chief Superintendent himself would be happy to answer my questions. With my contact established, I was able to accurately describe the interior of the station, and learned that the CID (Criminal Investigation Department) suffered through the summer heat on a non-air-conditioned upper floor. When one of my characters is detained in a holding cell overnight, she is kept awake by the clang of the noisy gates that lead to the station's parking lot. Now I felt secure, but my Afterword in the book indicates which areas are fictional, so that readers won't be sending me emails that the Artist's Cooperative I've described doesn't exist.

When I left Oxford, I stayed in the Lake District for an additional week to gather information for the future sequel and took updated pictures to refresh my memories from my previous trips there. I'd chosen the village of Bowness-on-Windermere on the shore of England's largest lake for the next book and stayed in a B&B there. I talked to shop owners, visited pubs, and wrote down some of the Cumbrian slang I heard.

By the time The Blue Virgin was in print and I started writing The Green Remains, I'd moved Nora to this Cumbrian setting. One of the first things I accomplished this time was to find my local contact. Newly retired Steve Sharpe of the Kendal Station, Cumbria Constabulary, did the honors, and here I struck gold.

Steve grew up in the area, and is something of a local naturalist and fisherman. Besides being able to answer my questions about policing and proper titles for everyone from my detective to the pathologist, he gave me wonderful information about things like: what is in bloom in autumn? What birds would be around? What is the weather like at that time of year? Steve has become a long-distance email friend, is now retired, and is still answering my questions, as I start writing the third book in the series, The Scarlet Wench.

The last bit of assistance I've had in both of these books is a terrific copyeditor, Giordana Segneri, who also does my layout design and creates my eye-catching covers. She'll be working on my manuscript and I'll get an email along the lines of: "Google maps says that walk Davey takes is really over a mile and he couldn't get to the bakery in three minutes" — and I am smart enough to adjust my text accordingly.

There is a wealth of information available on the Internet about anywhere in the world, and a writer with a good imagination can probably do any setting justice. I do feel experiencing the real place at least once gives a writer the smells, sense of color and light, and discreet feel for a place that research would deny. Setting isn't just good description—it is the world your specific people inhabit, and it has to support them and define them. But backed up with good research, a detailed map, and a cooperative local contact, any writer can make a setting come to life.

— ◊ —

A former writer for seven years with "Mystery Review" magazine, Marni Graff has interviewed Ian Rankin, Deborah Crombie, Val McDermid, and her mentor, P. D. James, amongst many others. A member of Sisters in Crime, she runs the Writers Read program in North Carolina, and is a founding member of Coastal Carolina Mystery Writers.

She is also the co-author of Writing in a Changing World, a primer for modern writers to find their writing group. Her poetry was most recently published in A Tribute to Amelia Earhart and her creative nonfiction most recently seen in Southern Women's Review.

Graff's English series features American children's book writer Nora Tierney. The Blue Virgin is set in Oxford; The Green Remains is set in the Lake District.

Visit Marni Graff online at her weblog, AuntieMWrites.

— ◊ —

The Green Remains by Marni Graff

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition

Barnes&Noble Print Edition and/or Nook Book

About The Green Remains:

American writer Nora Tierney is living at Ramsey Lodge in England's Lake District, anticipating two life-changing events: the publication of her first children's book and the birth of her first child.

Choosing a name for her son and checking proof pages with her illustrator, Simon Ramsey, fill her days — until a morning stroll along Lake Windemere leads her to discover the corpse of the heir to Clarendon Hall. When Simon is implicated in the death, Nora dives headfirst into the murder investigation to discover the real killer.

As the body count rises, Nora and her unborn child will face risks and perils she could never anticipate.

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