Friday, May 30, 2014

New Poster for the Suspense Thriller A Walk Among the Tombstones

A Walk Among the Tombstones (September 2014)

A new poster has been released by Cross Creek Pictures for the suspense thriller A Walk Among the Tombstones (right; click for larger image). The tagline: "People are afraid of all the wrong things …"

Ex-NYPD cop Matt Scudder (Liam Neeson) now works as an unlicensed private investigator operating just outside the law. When Scudder reluctantly agrees to help a heroin trafficker (Dan Stevens) hunt down the men who kidnapped and then brutally murdered his wife, the PI learns that this is not the first time these men have committed this sort of twisted crime … nor will it be the last. Blurring the lines between right and wrong, Scudder races to track the deviants through the backstreets of New York City before they kill again.

Directed by Scott Frank from his own adapted screenplay and based on the novel of the same title by Lawrence Block (more details, below), A Walk Among the Tombstones opens in theaters September 19, 2014.

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A Walk Among the Tombstones by Lawrence Block

A Walk Among the Tombstones
Lawrence Block
A Matthew Scudder Mystery

A ruthless, ingenious pair of entrepreneurial monsters is preying on the loved ones of those who live outside the law.

Though he has no love for drug dealers and poison peddlers, ex-cop-turned-private investigator Matthew Scudder now must help them put two thrill-kill extortionists out of business — before another drop of innocent blood is spilled.

A Walk Among the Tombstones by Lawrence Block, Amazon Kindle format

A Conversation with Thriller Writer Terry Irving

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Terry Irving
with Terry Irving

We are delighted to welcome novelist Terry Irving to Omnimystery News today, courtesy of JKSCommunications, which is coordinating his current book tour. We encourage you to visit all of the participating host sites; you can find his schedule here.

Terry's debut thriller is Courier (Exhibit A; April 2014 mass market paperback and ebook formats), in which a news courier and Vietnam veteran escapes his nightmares by pushing his motorcycle to the limit–but is it fast enough to escape a death squad?

We recently had a chance to speak with Terry about his book.

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Omnimystery News: We used the catch-all "thriller" to describe your new book, Courier. How do you categorize it?

Terry Irving
Photo provided courtesy of
Terry Irving

Terry Irving: I originally set out to write a book that would fit into an airport book kiosk and people would grab it to get them through a long flight. I haven't found a genre for that yet so I've been calling Courier a political/motorcycle thriller. Oddly only one person online has asked what that meant and I responded that he would just have to buy it and see.

(This reminds me of when I was the Executive Producer of the Imus on MSNBC program and we developed a graphics look that was half Navajo Indian and half mystical. In particular, we had a tape recorder that would run on the bottom of the screen when Imus would play a pre-recorded segment. I got emails all the time pointing out that the reels were turning the wrong way. I would respond with, "How do you know which way the reels on a Mystical Navajo Tape Recorder turn?")

Returning to the subject at hand, I suppose that Courier is a classic Hitchcockian thriller. An ordinary guy suddenly finds himself caught in a terrible situation where all these people are trying to kill him. There's even a Maguffin. That was Hitchcock's term for something that appears to be the point of the plot but isn't. The perfect example is the Maltese Falcon. The second they find it, it proves to be worthless but the plot never was about the damn statue — it was always exactly as Bogie described it:

Spade: When a man's partner is killed, he's supposed to do something about it. It doesn't make any difference what you thought of him. He was your partner and you're supposed to do something about it.

In other words, the classic American theme of the single person who has to decide to live by a code in a society without honor. Courier appears to be about Watergate — and it is — but it's really about an extremely damaged soldier who dances with death to clear the ghosts from his head and whether he will open up enough to let anyone else in.

Don't get depressed, it's not Kafka, there are also a LOT of fast motorcycles. It's a thriller, for Pete's sake!

OMN: Introduce us to Rick Putnam. Is Courier the first in a series featuring him as a lead character?

TI: I was a motorcycle courier for ABC News in 1973 and, in the very beginning, I tried to base Rick Putnam, the lead character, on myself. I don't think it took 30 minutes to realize that even I wouldn't read a book about me.

So I went looking for someone to hang the story on and I found a picture of a very young Nick Cage on a motorcycle. He was perfect: better-looking, smarter, a better bike rider, and a sexy guy. If there is a movie, I want him in the lead role. Now, I don't know Mr. Cage (pray for a movie option,) so as I went along, bits and pieces of other people I've known were added in. The Vietnam scenes came from several vets that I'd worked with over the years, the dual driver's licenses from a friend of my brother, Rick's roommates from a trio of roommates in my first group house. And then, as I was writing, everyone would change in very surprising ways. The only real criterion was that he or she had to be consistent with the person I could see in my mind's eye. I don't even think Rick was a Vietnam vet until I was thinking of "why would this guy be driving so fast?" and remembered how learning to race Formula Fords would clear all the cobwebs out of my head on the one chance I had to try it.

Once you've gone to all the effort of creating a viable, living character, it seems dumb to kill him or her off. I've already written the sequel, Warrior, where the characters grow and fill out. I've always like series novels — Spenser, Dennis LeHane's Angie Gennaro and Patrick Kenzie, all the way back to John D. MacDonald and his buddy Meyer.

OMN: You've mentioned a few series characters. Do you have a list of favorite series characters — or even literary characters, who may have appeared only once?

TI: In no particular order:

• Rudyard Kipling's Stalky
• Rudyard Kipling's Kim
• John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee
• Lee Child's Jack Reacher
• Barry Eisler's John Rain
• John Buchan's Richard Hannay
• John Le CarrÄ—'s George Smiley
• Dorothy Sayer's Lord Peter Death Bredon Whimsy
• Steven Erikson's Fiddler/Sarge
• Elmore Leonard's (and television's) Raylan Givens
• Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden
• Kim Harrison's Rachel Morgan

I could go on …

OMN: You and Rick Putnam seem to share a lot of the same experience.

TI: OK, this is something I have to make people understand.

I am not Rick Putnam.

I wish I was as cool, strong, and outrageous but it's never happened and I suppose there's no chance of it happening now. What I used from my own experience was the reality of Washington DC in 1972. I'll bet that everyone has a time and place that is simply chiseled deep into their memory — when you first went to college, when you got your first job, your first apartment, joined the military. What I was able to do in Courier was throw myself back to a time where everyone smoked all the time, where there was one female and one black correspondent on the network, no women except secretaries, where sexual harassment was a fun way to pass the time for most men, where Washington was a small town where friendship mattered far more than ideology.

Now, not only have all the social aspects changed, even the streets and buildings I describe are simply gone. There is no red light district, no strolling hookers two blocks from the White House, no dark and dingy bars, no old run-down back-alleys. They are all replaced by high-rise office buildings and gleaming (but usually empty) parks. (I still wonder about where all the working girls went — there used to be hundreds out there, they can't all be online, can they?)

As for the roles of blacks, women, gays, Hispanics and human beings in general, all of that began to change with the group of young people I started with. I went to high school with 6 kids who were the first to be in a co-ed class at places like Harvard, Princeton, and Yale. I roomed in a co-ed dorm in college. My girlfriend went to law school when there were only 5% women in a class and was told that she had to work for the government because no firm would allow a woman to be the lead attorney.

I keep getting criticisms — well-meaning and otherwise — about inaccuracies:

• How can I say that paralegals didn't know what they were doing? Well, because we were the first paralegals ever hired and the law firms had no clue what to do with us.

• How can I say that a motorcycle takes corners faster than a car? Because cars back then had horrible suspensions and would go right off the road if you turned at more than 25 MPH.

• How can I say that people were playing Dungeons and Dragons (or a variant) in 1972? After all, Wikipedia says it wasn't published until 1974. Because I bought the damn 12 sided dice while I was in college and couldn't find anyone to play with.

• Cars didn't have alarms back then. Sure did because they used to keep me awake in West Philly during the summers.

Sorry, I was just letting off steam. Please continue.

OMN: How true are you to the setting of Washington DC?

TI: I was either completely accurate or totally inaccurate. If the location was a real place that I remembered like the news bureau, I knew the number of steps to a turn in the hall. I knew how the place smelled, I knew how you could scrape nicotine off the walls. Even streets were awfully familiar: I can remember where there was gravel along MacArthur Boulevard and you'd lose traction, traffic lights that were timed so you could hit them all on the green, and one curve out in Maryland that I damn near died on because I was racing another courier (right outside Howard Hunt's house, as a matter of fact).

If, on the other hand, I was creating a place like an apartment or a garage interior, I just wanted to make it something that would reasonably fit into the period. Either way, I spent a lot of time searching for pictures of the period, or newspapers, or community newsletters. Even if you don't use that particular piece of research, you get a jolt by seeing the hairstyles, the clothes, the enormous cars, the battered storefronts. All that kicks off new ideas and new possibilities. I would have revisited more locations but — as I said — most of them are gone.

I also did a good deal of research on Watergate (and I do think that the basic premise of the novel is extremely possible — if not probable) but I didn't put most of that in because the book was about this guy named Rick and not about the Dick in the White House.

OMN: Describe your overall writing process for us.

TI: My writing process can best be described as like a demolition derby: chaotic and fast with stuff being thrown out right and left.

I was a writer for television and that means deadlines. I can remember doing a lineup of a show (in pencil and you had to learn to subtract minutes and seconds in your head — try that sometime!) and I looked up to realize that I had four cigarettes burning and my hand was so cramped from holding the pencil that I couldn't flatten it out.)

The most useful course I ever took in high school was typing because, if I can just put my fingers on the keys, words will simply flow. I tested that out one day at CNN when I had to write a moving obituary for a very nice co-worker who I simply didn't know. I looked at the research, slammed through some of the pictures, and found myself standing behind my desk. I looked up and saw that I had ten minutes to write the piece so it could have pictures laid on. I just sat down and put my fingers on the keys.

I was told it was very moving and became to go-to guy for poetic and sensitive scripts from then on. You know what they say, writing is all about sincere emotion and real connection with the reader.

And if you can fake that, you've got it made.

So, I'm fast. I wrote the first draft of Courier in 10 weeks and was irritated because I wanted to do it in two months. Now, I also re-wrote the book at least 5 times from beginning to end. I'm never satisfied with my work and hate to read the book or watch the documentary when it goes to air because I'm going to find a mistake — it's a guarantee. I also listen to other writers and marvel at how damn good they are. I can only write in a very plain, newspaper style and I envy the people who can make words jump up and dance.

So, to sum this up, my writing method is to sit down and write. Most of the time, I have at least a vague idea of where I'm going but that can change. Characters will say something and it will completely change who they are, events occur that I don't expect, conversations appear out of nowhere. I'll read a newspaper from the period and that will kick off a possible plot twist.

I just keep on writing and, usually, things begin to fall into place. That's not to say that I don't have (and read) The Seven Basic Plots, 20 Master Plots, How to Write a Damn Good Thriller, and How to Write about Guns for Writers who don't have Guns. I do and I am conscious of whether the tension levels are going up or down, where I am in the Killing of the Monster plot, or whatever. I just don't worry about it very much.

OMN: What's next for you?

TI: This process has been a wild ride. After being a courier, a copy boy, a producer, a combat producer, a senior producer, content boss for a couple of dotcoms, ghostwriter, and an expert in the legal placement of explosives on semi-trailer trucks, this is all new and extremely exciting.

I have already written the sequel to Courier and begun the third book (or at least begun to think about it,) I've done the first draft of the Courier movie screenplay, written the first draft of an urban paranormal thriller, and blocked out some of the elements of a private eye series set in 1930's Manila. That's all fairly easy. What I don't know how to do is to publicize a book, act correctly during interviews, and manage to get through a book-signing. If I can, I'm going to hit every bookstore and convention in sight.

Finally, this isn't really just for fun. I began this by mentioning that I've just been fired. For a number of very good reasons, I have very little retirement savings so this book thing really has to make some money. They could well be under pseudonyms but I promise you'll be seeing a steady stream of new books from me over the next few years. I suppose the object is just to keep trying until I get it right.

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Terry Irving Book Tour

From Terry Irving: Born in 1951 in Bryn Mawr PA so as to be close to my mother. Well, she said she was my mother but she lied about everything else, so who knows. Had no interest in being a journalist but somehow was editor of newspapers at age 3, age 5, 5th Grade, 7th Grade, 9th Grade and 12th Grade. Took a job as a motorcycle courier for ABC News in 1973 because … well, they were paying me to ride a BMW all day! Worked ABC News for 20 years, then something along the lines of 20 jobs in the next 30 years. I have now been fired more often than I've received Emmy Awards (5 and 4, if you're keeping score.) Over the past 25 years, I've turned to writing because people hate to write and consequently they'll pay you more for it. I've written anchor copy, reports from the field, commercial videos, CD-ROMs, Users Manuals, advertising for satellite data switching software, standup comedy, and documentaries. When I was fired in 2012, I realized that everyone in the news business knew who I was and therefore, there was no hope of getting another real job.

So I wrote a novel.

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

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Courier by Terry Irving

Courier
Terry Irving
A Suspense Thriller

It's 1972. The Watergate scandal has Washington on edge and Putnam, a Vietnam veteran and courier for one of the capital's leading television stations, is trying to get his life back together after his nightmarish ordeal in the war. Racing at breakneck speed through the streets of the capital, he not only intends to be the best courier in the business, he also intends to escape the demons that haunt him. But when Rick picks up film from a news crew interviewing a government worker with a hot story, his life begins to unravel as everyone involved in the story dies within hours of the interview and Rick realizes he is the next target.

Enlisting the aid of friends who have discovered a way to hack into the government's computer databases, and a beautiful young Indian Rights activist, Eva Buffalo Calf, Rick races full throttle through the streets of the nation's capital to stay ahead of his pursuers as he searches for answers. When he discovers the killings have been orchestrated by a rogue CIA agent and his team of assassins, Rick isn't surprised when his road to the truth leads directly to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

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

The Fifth Day by Bernard Cookson is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

The Fifth Day by Bernard Cookson

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Fifth Day by Bernard Cookson as today's second free mystery ebook (A Novel of Suspense; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, May 30, 2014 at 6:45 AM ET. 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.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

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The Fifth Day by Bernard Cookson

The Fifth Day
Bernard Cookson
A Novel of Suspense
Publisher: Cookson Publishing

David Denby — an accomplished art thief — is looking forward to an amusing lunch date with an old flame: the lovely Contessa Antonella. But the meeting leads to an astonishing request … and his most ambitious theft to date.

The meticulously executed crime taxes the experience and imagination of Commissiario Pasetti, for whom the biggest mystery of all is, why?

Meanwhile, on the fringes of society, two people threaten Denby's escape: Anna, a street urchin, who lives by picking the pockets of tourists — and a vagrant known as "Radio Man". Their evidence leads the dogged Pasetti in hot pursuit across northern Italy, to the wooded shores of Lake Como. It is only as the chase closes in, that one of the shadowy figures behind the crime finally reveals his hand, with shocking consequences.

Amazon Kindle Book

This is a repeat freebie, last featured on this site on May 19, 2013.

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.

Pay Attention by K. L. Barnes is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

Pay Attention by K. L. Barnes

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Pay Attention by K. L. Barnes as today's free mystery ebook (A Maeve Tidewell Novel of Suspense; Kindle format only).

This title was listed for free as of the date and time of this post, May 30, 2014 at 6:30 AM ET. 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.

For a summary of all of today's featured titles, plus any that may have appeared before and are repeat freebies, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

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Pay Attention by K. L. Barnes

Pay Attention
K. L. Barnes
A Maeve Tidewell Novel of Suspense
Publisher: K. L. Barnes

Maeve Tidewell has a gift, of sorts. She sees glimpses of the future in her dreams. Unfortunately for her, Joseph Binyon wants that gift for his own. When Maeve wakes to find she is being held captive by the disturbed man from her past, she realizes she stands to lose much more than her vision. She stands to lose her life. As Maeve plans her daring escape, a stranger enters her dreams. She reaches out to him for help before Joseph has time to complete his bizarre ceremony …

Ben Drake hopes to strengthen his relationship with his teenage son during a road trip that takes him from California to the picture perfect mountains of Colorado. But strange dreams begin to fill Ben's nights and, when he discovers Maeve Tidewell is missing, he is compelled to search for her in the vast woodlands high above the valley floor they call home. Ben doesn't question the connection he experiences with Maeve as he sleeps. He only knows that if she is going to survive, he'll have to risk everything.

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.

Three Spy Novels by Dan Mayland is Today's Kindle Daily Deal

Kindle Daily Deal

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Three Spy Novels by Dan Mayland as today's Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 each is valid only for today, Friday, May 30, 2014. We're hightlighting the first book in the series, below.

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The Colonel's Mistake by Dan Mayland

The Colonel's Mistake
Dan Mayland
A Mark Sava Thriller
Thomas & Mercer

Mark Sava, former CIA station chief of Azerbaijan, lives a quiet life as a professor at Western University in the city of Baku. But his peace is shattered by both the assassination of a high-level American during an international oil conference and the arrest of CIA operations officer Daria Buckingham for the crime.

Sava knows the Iranian American Buckingham well — he personally trained her — and doesn't believe she had anything to do with the murder, so he visits a CIA control center to discuss the situation with the new station chief. When no one answers the outside intercom, Sava overrides the security code and stumbles upon the grisliest scene of his career. Now, he can't help but wonder if he really knows Buckingham as well as he thought …

Determined to find out, Sava soon finds himself and a partner caught in the middle of the new Great Game — a deadly intelligence war over oil that has Iran, China, and the United States clawing at each other's throats. Meanwhile, Colonel Henry Amato, assistant to the US national security advisor, is keeping a close watch on the situation from Washington. His stake in the Great Game is high — and personal.

Buy from Amazon.com

Amazon Whispersync OfferClick on the Amazon button to see also the special Whispersync offer associated with this title.

Important Note: This book was listed at the price mentioned above 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.

Mystery Bestsellers for the Week Ending May 30, 2014

Bestselling Crime Fiction: Hardcover Mysteries, Suspense Novels and Thrillers

A list of the top 15 Mystery Hardcover Bestsellers for the week ending May 30th, 2014 has been posted by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books.

James Patterson's Women's Murder Club mystery, Unlucky 13, maintained its position as number one this week on our list, though several other books were definitely in contention for the top stop.

One new title enters the list — position in [brackets].

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Suspicion by Joseph Finder

[11]: Suspicion
Joseph Finder

When single father Danny Goodman suddenly finds himself unable to afford the private school his teenage daughter adores, he has no one to turn to for financial support.

In what seems like a stroke of brilliant luck, Danny meets Thomas Galvin, the father of his daughter's new best friend, who also happens to be one of the wealthiest men in Boston. Galvin is aware of Danny's situation and out of the blue offers a $50,000 loan to help Danny cover his daughter's tuition. Uncomfortable but desperate, Danny takes the money, promising to pay Galvin back.

What transpires is something Danny never imagined. The moment the money is wired into his account, the DEA comes knocking on his door. Danny's impossible choice: an indictment for accepting drug money that he can't afford to fight in court, or an unthinkably treacherous undercover assignment helping the government get close to his new family friend.

As Danny begins to lie to everyone in his life, including those he loves most in the world, he must decide once and for all who the real enemy is or risk losing everything — and everyone — that matters to him.

Purchase Options

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Edition  Barnes&Noble Print/Nookbook Edition  Apple iBookstore eBook  Kobo eBook  The Book Depository: Free Worldwide Shipping

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (140530)

Big Fish Games

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

• The New Release is Haunted Hotel: Ancient Bane (Collector's Edition).

• The Daily Deal is Weather Lord: Hidden Realm, just $2.99 today only!

• The current Catch of the Week is Weird Park: Scary Tales, just $2.99 through Sunday, June 01, 2014 only.

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

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Haunted Hotel: Ancient Bane (Collector's Edition)

The New Release today is Haunted Hotel: Ancient Bane (Collector's Edition)

Abraham Shadowy bought an abandoned hotel, planning to turn it into a haunted attraction for his guests. But when his guests start actually disappearing, people begin to gossip. Is it all just a publicity stunt for the hotel, or is there something more sinister going on? Join your detective friend James as you search for the truth among Shadowy's mechanical contraptions. It's dark in there, so watch your step in this chilling Hidden Object Puzzle Adventure game!

This is a special Collector's Edition release full of exclusive extras you won't find in the standard version, including: Save James and help Anabel in the bonus game; Win awards for your achievements in the hotel; Collect 12 Egyptian objects; Music, screen savers, wallpapers, and concept art; and An available Strategy Guide.

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

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Weather Lord: Hidden Realm

Today's Daily Deal is Weather Lord: Hidden Realm

Command the powerful forces of nature to free an island of an evil scourge! As you make your way across a once lost land, you'll restore its villages, free its people and battle ogres, golems and Yeti scum. With the elements in your hands, a sword at your side and a little magic in your pocket, no one will be able to stop you on your march to victory in this thrilling Time Management game!

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. You can purchase this game today only — Friday, May 30, 2014 — for $2.99.

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Weird Park: Scary Tales

The current Catch of the Week is Weird Park: Scary Tales

Louis the Clown and Mr. Dudley are back in an all-new adventure that will take you through the dark corners of history's most famous fairytales to rescue children trapped in a frightening netherworld! Louis is up to his old tricks as he casts each child in the role of a legendary fairytale character and then creates the visually stunning but twialay out. Use your skills and intellect to find hidden objects and solve puzzles as you make your way through the stories of Cinderella, Peter Pan, Aladdin and more!

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. You can purchase this game at the special price of $2.99 through Sunday, June 01, 2014.

Also available for this game:

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Review: The Marathon Conspiracy by Gary Corby

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

A Mysterious Review of The Marathon Conspiracy by Gary Corby. A Nicolaos, Ancient Greece Mystery.

Review summary: This series of mysteries set in ancient Greece is an entertaining one, and this is a solid entry in it, even if the central whodunit plotline is rather thinly developed. Still, the central characters are engaging investigators and the contemporary feel of the narrative and dialog makes the lives and practices of the ancient Greeks quite approachable. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Marathon Conspiracy Gary Corby

The Marathon Conspiracy
Gary Corby
A Nicolaos, Ancient Greece Mystery
Soho Crime (May 2014)

Publisher synopsis: Nicolaos, Classical Athens's favorite sleuth, and his partner in investigation, the clever ex-priestess Diotima, have taken time out of their assignments to come home to get married. But if Nico was hoping they'd be able to get hitched without a hitch, he was overly optimistic. When they arrive in Athens, there's a problem waiting for them.

The Sanctuary of Artemis is the ancient world's most famous school for girls. When one of the children is killed, apparently by a bear, and another girl disappears in the night, Diotima's childhood teacher asks her former pupil to help them. Diotima is honor-bound to help her old school.

Meanwhile a skull discovered in a cave not far from the sanctuary has proven to be the remains of the last tyrant to rule Athens. The Athenians fought the Battle Marathon to keep this man out of power. He was supposed to have died thirty years ago, in faraway Persia. What are his remains doing outside the city walls?

Nico's boss, the great Athenian statesman Pericles, wants answers, and he wants Nico to find them.

What makes it all so ominous is that the skull was discovered by the two students of the Sanctuary of Artemis who are dead and missing.

What does a decades-dead tyrant have to do with two young girls? Where is the missing child? Is a killer bear really lurking beyond the walls of Athens? And who is the mysterious stranger who's trying to kill Nico and Diotima? Can the sleuths solve the interlocked crimes and save a child before their wedding?

Available from Amazon.com  Available from Barnes & Noble  Available from iTunes  Available from Kobo

Minotaur Mysteries: Murder Makes a Pilgrimage, A Sister Mary Helen Mystery by Sister Carol Anne O'Marie

Minotaur Books

Minotaur Books, an imprint of Macmillan and a leading publisher of mystery and suspense books, currently has over 200 books available for $4.99 or less.

Today, we are pleased to feature one of these titles, Murder Makes a Pilgrimage by Sister Carol Anne O'Marie, now just $1.99. (Price verified on May 29, 2014 as of 5:00 PM ET.)

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Murder Makes a Pilgrimage by Sister Carol Anne O'Marie

Murder Makes a Pilgrimage by Sister Carol Anne O'Marie
A Sister Mary Helen Mystery (5th in series)
Publisher: Minotaur Books

Vivacious and outgoing, Lisa Springer was the most unlikely member of the free pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, the birthplace of Christianity in Spain. And Sister Mary Helen soon had reason to suspect the auburn-haired knockout knew the other members of the tour group — and some of their ugliest secrets — all too well. So when Lisa was discovered strangled to death in a saint's crypt, Sister Mary faced no end of likely suspects — from Lisa's dangerously disaffected "best friend" to the group's charming, unreliable guide to the mild-mannered professor with a relentlessly snobbish wife.

And when Sister Mary Helen becomes the target of a number of frightening "accidents", she and Sister Eileen must race to uncover Lisa's past and expose a clever killer hellbent on prematurely sending one sleuthing nun to her heavenly reward.

Amazon Kindle Book

A New MystereBook: Dying for Diamonds by Cassie Page

New MystereBooks (Mystery eBooks)

Here is 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 May 2014 priced $4.99 or less …

Dying for Diamonds by Cassie Page is the third mystery in the Darling Valley cozy series with amateur sleuth Olivia M. Granville.

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Dying for Diamonds by Cassie Page

Dying for Diamonds by Cassie Page
A Darling Valley Mystery
Publisher: Cassie Page
Publication Date: May 28, 2014
Price: $0.99 (as of 05/29/14 4:15 PM ET)

How would you ruin a cozy breakfast date with your heartthrob? How about a dead body falling into your lap? That's what it seemed like to Olivia M. Granville when she and her Detective Matt McDreamy, known professionally as Gurmeet Richards, wandered into their favorite luxury jewelry store to check on her remodel for friend and client Xavier of Xavier's Gems.

Shocking as that diamond-draped skyfall was, finding herself at the center of the investigation into the murder of one of Darling Valley's leading socialites was worse. And to cap it off, was Matt two-timing her, just as they seemed to have finally found peace and happiness together? If not, how to explain those incriminating texts and photos?

And how did sleazy society blogger Awful Arlo get hold of them? And what were they doing on cable news so that the whole town was taking three steps backward from Olivia. She calls on her two best buds, couture-challenged Tuesday and sidekick/assistant Cody to help her solve the murder before she loses her business, her relationship and her sanity.

Amazon Kindle Book

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Minotaur Mysteries: All Mortal Flesh, A Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne Mystery by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Minotaur Books

Minotaur Books, an imprint of Macmillan and a leading publisher of mystery and suspense books, currently has over 200 books available for $4.99 or less.

Today, we are pleased to feature one of these titles, All Mortal Flesh by Julia Spencer-Fleming, now just $2.99. (Price verified on May 29, 2014 as of 4:00 PM ET.)

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All Mortal Flesh by Julia Spencer-Fleming

All Mortal Flesh by Julia Spencer-Fleming
A Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne Mystery (5th in series)
Publisher: Minotaur Books

Winner of the 2007 Nero Award.

Police Chief Russ Van Alstyne's first encounter with Clare Fergusson was in the hospital emergency room on a freezing December night. A newborn infant had been abandoned on the town's Episcopal church steps. If Russ had known that the church had a new priest, he certainly would never have guessed that it would be a woman. Not a woman like Clare. That night in the hospital was the beginning of an attraction so fierce, so forbidden, that the only thing that could keep them safe from compromising their every belief was distance — but in a small town like Millers Kill, distance is hard to find.

Russ Van Alstyne figures his wife kicking him out of their house is nobody's business but his own. Until a neighbor pays a friendly visit to Linda Van Alstyne-­and finds the woman's body, gruesomely butchered, on the kitchen floor. To the state police, it's an open-and-shut case of a disaffected husband, silencing first his wife, then the murder investigation he controls. To the townspeople, it's proof that the whispered gossip about the police chief and the priest was true. To the powers-that-be in the church hierarchy, it's a chance to control their wayward cleric once and for all.

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Herald Square, A Novel of the Cold War by Jefferson Flanders, Now at a Special Price

Herald Square by Jefferson Flanders

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Herald Square by Jefferson Flanders, now available at a special price, courtesy of the publisher, Munroe Hill Press.

The ebook format of this title was priced at $0.99 from the listed vendors (below) as of the date and time of this post (05/29/2014 at 3:30 PM ET). 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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Herald Square by Jefferson Flanders

Herald Square by Jefferson Flanders
A Novel of the Cold War
Publisher: Munroe Hill Press

New York, September 1949. When Dennis Collins arrives at Madison Square Garden for the Friday night fights, he is on top of the world. His career as the man-about-town columnist of the New York Sentinel is on the upswing; his beloved Brooklyn Dodgers are contending for the pennant; and a lover who had jilted him years ago has unexpectedly agreed to drinks and dinner at the Stork Club. Collins is sure that his luck has turned for the better.

But at the Garden his closest childhood friend, Morris Rose, approaches him for help. Rose asks Collins to safeguard microfilmed documents that he says will prove his innocence in a State Department loyalty investigation. Out of friendship, Collins reluctantly agrees to hold the microfilm for a week.

When Rose disappears from the scene, and FBI agents begin asking hard questions, Collins must solve a puzzle that somehow involves his friend, a shadowy former OSS officer, and a beautiful refugee, Karina, with a troubled past.

When Collins discovers that both American and Soviet operatives desperately want the documents he is holding, he is drawn into a twilight struggle between intelligence agencies that will challenge his loyalties and test his courage.

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Important Note: This book was listed at the above mentioned price 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.

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