Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Breach of Duty, A J. P. Beaumont Mystery by J. A. Jance, Now Available at a Special Price

Breach of Duty by J. A. Jance

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to present the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, William Morrow …

Breach of Duty by J. A. Jance

A J. P. Beaumont Mystery (14th in series)

Publisher: William Morrow

Price: $3.99 (as of 10/29/2014 at 1:00 PM ET).

Breach of Duty by J. A. Jance, Amazon Kindle format

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

The Seattle that Beau knew as a young policeman is disappearing. The city is awash in the aromas emanating from a glut of coffee bars, the neighborhood outside his condo building has sprouted gallery upon gallery, and even his long cherished diner has evolved into a trendy eatery for local hipsters. But the glam is strictly surface, for the grit under the city's fingernails is caked with blood.

Beau and his new partner Sue Danielson, a struggling single parent, are assigned the murder of an elderly woman torched to death in her bed. As their investigation proceeds, Beau and Sue become embroiled in a perilous series of events that will leave them and their case shattered — and for Beau nothing will ever be the same again.

Breach of Duty by J. A. Jance

An Excerpt from A Place To Call Home, a Novel of Suspense by Amy Schisler

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Amy Schisler
A Place To Call Home
by Amy Schisler

We are delighted to welcome author Amy Schisler to Omnimystery News today.

Amy's debut book is the suspense novel A Place To Call Home (Sarah Book Publishing; August 2014 trade paperback and ebook formats), and we are pleased to introduce you to it with an excerpt from the first chapter.

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A Place To Call Home by Amy Schisler

THE SOUND OF THE POWER TOOLS above them lulled both girls to sleep. Cassie's dream took her back in time to a week ago when they were still living in their foster parents' home. The girls were playing hide and seek in the house.
  Cassie counted, her eyes closed.
  "One hundred. Ready or not, here I come," she opened her eyes and called.
  Cassie looked in all of Ellie's usual hiding places — behind the living room curtains (no, they were called draperies in this house), in the hallway powder room (she had no idea why it was called that), inside the foyer closet amid fur and cashmere coats. Cassie nervously swallowed and peered into her foster father's office.
  "Ellie, Ellie, where are you?" she called in a hushed voice. "I saw you go downstairs, and I've looked everywhere. You'd better not be in Mr. Moore's office."
  "Cassie," the housekeeper hollered. "Senor Moore es home. I am leaving."
  "Si, Senora. We're just playing. Hasta mañana."
  Cassie ran into the office as soon as she heard the servant's door close. She spied her sister under the desk. Ellie giggled.
  "What are you doing in here, Ellie? Do you want to get us in trouble? We have to get out of here. You know we're not allowed..." The front door opened causing Cassie to jump. She squeezed under the desk with Ellie.
  "Do you think he'll know we're here?" Ellie whispered.
  "You better hope not, Ellie. Now, shush!"
  They saw the door to the office swing open, and watched as Mr. Moore's feet came closer to the desk. They held their breath as he stopped just inches from the front of the desk, their wide eyes looking down at the tips of his shoes staring up at them from the below the front panel of the desk. They listened as Mr. Moore pushed the button on the answering machine.
   "Alex, we've got problems," said a familiar voice. "Reynolds has gone nuts. He's on his way over to your place. His wife is leaving him, and he's blaming us. He says he's not covering for us any more. Says he's going to the press with what he knows about Cassie and Ellie and about the company. All the money in the world won't keep them from running with this story, Alex. If he talks, nobody can stop this, not even your people."
  Cassie and Ellie looked at each other in alarm. Mr. Moore started to come around the desk but was stopped by a loud pounding on the front door.
  "Open up Moore," someone yelled. "If you don't let me in, I'll blow the door handle off."
  Mr. Moore hesitated for a moment then started across the room toward the front hall. The girls huddled down so that they could peek out from under the desk. They watched him go into the foyer and both jumped when they heard the gunshot and the sound of the front door flying open. They saw shards of wood rain down in the office doorway.
  Ellie started to cry, but Cassie put her arms around her and held her tight. She clamped her hand over Ellie's mouth.
  "Don't cry, Ellie, please don't cry," she whispered to her frightened sister.
  A strange voice echoed through the house. "Don't move, Moore, or I'll blow your head off."
  Mr. Moore knew him. "Okay, Eddie, take it easy. We can talk about this."
  The girls listened as the man yelled at their foster father. He was using words they weren't allowed to say or hear, and he was even crying. He said his wife had found out something, that he should have told her, that he had ripped up some checks. Cassie was confused by what he was saying and what it all meant. She heard him say his wife and boys were gone. She was trying so hard to concentrate so she could remember what he was saying. She was trying to understand what he was talking about and what was happening.
  Mr. Moore was attempting to get the man to calm down, but he only got angrier. They listened to him threaten to go to the police, but Mr. Moore said the man would be the one in jail and his wife would be more determined than ever to leave him.
  "Shut up," the man yelled. "Don't you ever talk about my wife."
  Suddenly the girls saw a quick movement in the foyer, but both men were out of their line of sight through the only partially open door. They grabbed their ears as the sound of the gun echoed through the house. Ellie tried to scream, but Cassie slapped her hand back over her sister's mouth.
  They heard a loud scuffle in the entrance hall, another bang, and then a loud thump. They felt the rush of air as the office door swung all the way open, listened to the sound of something being dragged across the floor, and sat frozen as the room filled with an eerie silence after the front door slammed shut. Outside, a car started and then rolled down the gravel driveway, but Mr. Moore never came back in.
  Cassie and Ellie waited under the desk for what seemed like hours. When they ventured out, Ellie was still shaking.
  "Come on, Ellie. Let's get out of this room before he gets back." Cassie led her sister to the front hall.
  When they reached the doorway, Ellie screamed at the sight of the blood that fanned out across the floor running in dozens of little streams through the grooves in the marble. Ellie fainted, just missing the red sea and its many tributaries.
  "Ellie, no," Cassie screamed as she lunged but failed to catch her.

— ♦ —

Amy Schisler
Photo provided courtesy of
Amy Schisler

Amy MacWilliams Schisler of Bozman, Maryland has been writing all of her life for fun and as a freelance writer. A graduate of University of Maryland College Park with a Masters of Library and Information Science, Amy has resided in Talbot County for 21 years. She was employed as a school library media specialist at White Marsh Elementary and Chapel District Elementary and a reference librarian at Chesapeake College. For the past seven years, she has operated her own computer tutoring service working primarily with senior citizens while spending as much time as possible writing.

No stranger to politics, Amy is the wife of former State Delegate Ken Schisler. They have brought up three daughters on the Eastern Shore and are very involved in their local community. Amy is the leader of Girl Scout Troop 453, Director of Summer Roundup Girl Scout Camp, part of the Liturgical Ministry for Saints Peter and Paul Parish, leader of the Women of Faith Prayer Group, and volunteers at Saints Peter and Paul Elementary and High Schools.

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

— ♦ —

A Place To Call Home by Amy Schisler

A Place To Call Home
Amy Schisler
A Novel of Suspense

Susan O'Neil, young, single entrepreneur and owner of her own computer consulting business, is shocked to discover runaways Cassie and Ellie eating out of her trash. Thus begins a dangerous journey, both figuratively and literally, for Susan, the children, and childhood friend and undercover FBI agent, Jim Russell.

Racing against the clock to find the true paternity of the supposed orphans pits Susan and Jim against a ruthless killer who will stop at nothing to protect his empire. From the Baltimore City Government to the Caribbean Islands and the Las Vegas Casinos, the unearthed secrets about Cassie and Ellie's past threaten all of their futures.

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A Conversation with Mystery Author Jeffrey Siger

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Jeffrey Siger
with Jeffrey Siger

We are delighted to welcome author Jeffrey Siger to Omnimystery News today.

Jeffrey's sixth mystery in his Andreas Kaldis series, Sons of Sparta (Poisoned Pen Press; October 2014 hardcover, trade paperback, audiobook and ebook formats), was published earlier this month and we recently had the opportunity to spend some time with him talking about his books.

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Omnimystery News: Tell us a little more about what inspired you to write this series. And how has your central character, Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis, changed from his first appearance in Murder in Mykonos to the present book?

Jeffrey Siger
Photo provided courtesy of
Jeffrey Siger

Jeffrey Siger: Back when I started writing about Andreas Kaldis, I didn't intend on becoming a chronicler of Greece's trials and tribulations. My original goal was to write a stand-alone novel telling the story of an island I knew intimately. I wanted to talk about its people, culture and politics and only settled upon the mystery format because it struck me as the best vehicle for exploring how a tourist island society might respond to a threat to its newfound economic glory. That's when I decided to drop a serial killer into the midst of Mykonos' Mama Mia-style setting and turn the place into something more resembling No Country for Old Men.

When that book, Murder in Mykonos, became Greece's #1 bestselling English language novel and hit The New York Times' "radar list" of best selling hardcovers, I figured I better stick with my characters, because a lot of people liked them — and I did too, particularly the easy way serious issues, political and otherwise, could be expressed around them.

On the subject of change, my characters' lives move forward through the series, never static, always growing, hopefully bringing me along in the process.

OMN: Into which mystery subgenre would you place your books?

JS: Many call my Andreas Kaldis novels "fast-paced police procedurals," though some in the series have thriller aspects and others suspense. At one point I wondered whether any of those labels accurately reflected my use of the "crime" format as a means for categorizing my goal of addressing serious issues confronting contemporary Greece in a manner that touched upon its ancient roots. But I no longer have that misgiving. Why? Because I came to appreciate that the underlying purpose of virtually all crime fiction is to restore order to a fractured society; and that is precisely what I seek to achieve in exploring the vagaries of Greece's culture amid a land of awesome natural beauty. In other words, now I don't care how my work is labeled … as long as it's read.

OMN: Tell us something about Sons of Sparta that isn't mentioned in the publisher's synopsis.

JS: Readers of Sons of Sparta will learn a great deal about contemporary Greek culture and some may find substantial links to ancient Greek mythology — even though I may not have consciously realized the latter when writing it.

OMN: Give us a summary of the book in a tweet.

JS: #SoS turns a true-life, century-old honor killing into a chilling study of a contemporary Greek family's struggle between faith in law and blood-vendetta roots.

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

JS: Friends tell me that my primary character, Andreas Kaldis, and I share the same sense of humor and the same way of addressing problems. I never intentionally set out to do that but I think ultimately a writer cannot help but put part of himself into many of his characters.

I'm also flattered so many think my books are about real people and real places. I take that to mean I've made it all seem real to them. Of course, the geography and historical data about Greece is meant to be accurate — with a modest bit of poetic license added in at times — and perhaps that is what makes the novels seem so real.

But by and large the people are the product of some alchemy lurking within each of us waiting to artfully turn an unformed sense of beings we never knew into characters as unique as we are to each other. Yes, sometimes we consciously model a character on someone we know well, but mostly we assemble a new being from disparate physical and emotional elements stored in our individualized spare parts warehouses. Bottom line: Writers are body snatchers.

As for the influence of real events, in most instances a real event sparks an idea that sends me off and running. For example, in my latest novel, Sons of Sparta, a fan approached me with a century-old story about her family that I used in the first scene of the book. That scene launched all that followed, but not a subsequent word was based on real events.

OMN: Describe your writing process for us.

JS: When I begin to write a book I always have a theme, but never a plot. My themes arise from an epiphany-like moment of inspiration and since I never know when to expect such a moment, I always carry a tiny notebook in my back pocket and a pen up front. I scribble down ideas, random thoughts, rarely anything more than a possible general direction to take the story. It's nothing remotely resembling an outline, never a biography of a character, nor as I've learned, close to how the book ultimately turns out.

So, how do I come up with a plot? Damned if I know.

I have no more specific idea of where I'm headed than does a fellow who one day decides to "Go West, Young Man." And though each day I may start out thinking I know where my writing is going, by the end of that session it generally bears no more resemblance to where I began than does a flower to its seed.

What drives me forward are instinct, glimpses of the Promised Land, and tenacity for overcoming inevitable obstacles. Some days it's an easy stroll across wide-open plains in soft summer breezes, others are a bare-knuckle struggle up a cliff face in an ice storm. But if I keep heading west, I'll find fresh, exciting characters along the way and plot shifts jumping out of trees. And every once in a while my characters might even trust me enough to let me write a bit of the story myself.

OMN: Where do you usually find yourself writing?

JS: I write anywhere I can set up my Macbook Air and NOT be disturbed by people talking to me. But absolute silence in a locked room is best — provided I hold the key to get out.

OMN: How do you go about researching the plot points of your stories? Have you come across any particularly challenging or exciting topics?

JS: I spend approximately six months immersed in research and in verifying details of the venues, events, and characters I describe. Much of my "insider" insight comes amid Mykonos' fabled 24/7 nightlife from conversations with persons possessing first-hand knowledge of the issues, experiences, and intrigues I describe, and with visitors from around the world willingly sharing their private thoughts and confidences in relaxed beachside chats or pre-dawn whispered conversations in a club or bar. I know, it's hard work.

My most challenging topic … which hopefully will not turn into my most exciting … is shaping up to be an element in the book I'm finishing for 2015 publication. It explores the world of "bomba" or counterfeit booze. Everyone of my friends in the bar business that I approach to talk about bomba — so named for the "bomb" that goes off in your brain when you drink it — gives me a blank stare and an answer along the lines, "I know nothing about that."

Prior to that, I guess you could say the most exciting came in researching the habitats of violent anarchists in Athens for Assassins of Athens. The taxi I traveled in to study Athens' worst neighborhoods got caught up in traffic and we found ourselves surrounded by eight masked-men demanding the camera they'd seen me using taking photographs of their neighborhood. When I refused, the taxi driver almost had a heart attack, but we were able to convince the leader I was a writer, not a cop, and they let us go. I ran into the taxi driver on Mykonos two years later and he was raving on about that being the "most frightening experience" of his more than twenty years of driving a taxi in Athens. Obviously he'd not grown up in Pittsburgh.

OMN: How true are you to the setting in your books?

JS: Location is seminal to my stories; it makes them come alive. Abandoned island mines, ancient ruins, island churches, village lanes, modern big city neighborhoods (sordid, elegant, and in between), even places beyond Greece (such as relatively unknown Sardinian locales) are as important as the characters in my books.

I believe readers deserve the unexpected and I concentrate great effort on bringing surprises to them in an utterly believable way. The stories may be fiction, but you want to be honest with your readers on the verifiable details such as locations so that when the moment arrives to leap on to the imagined they'll come along with you.

OMN: What advice might you offer aspiring authors?

JS: My advice to aspiring authors is always the same: "Writing is a lousy way to make a living but a wonderful way to make a life."

So have fun at it.

OMN: Tell us more about the book's cover design. And was Sons of Sparta always your intended title?

JS: My series' book cover design has been completely redone in what I (modestly) consider one of the best series depictions anywhere. The folks at Poisoned Pen Press did it with dedication and a commitment to expressing the essence of each book within the overall vision of the series.

As for titles, I inadvertently alliterated the title of my first book, Murder in Mykonos, and it just seemed natural that the second book should be called Assassins of Athens. That labeled me an "alliterist" and I've been expected since then to keep up the practice. At least I'm not limited to twenty-six letters of the alphabet.:)

OMN: What's next for you?

JS: I am writing a new book (as I do every year), doing my weekly Saturday blog for Murder is Everywhere, posting another blog on the 19th of each month for Poisoned Pen Press, using my best efforts to serve effectively as a national board member of Bouchercon, and keeping track of my growing grandkids. I'm sure there's something I'm missing … but am also sure the lady in question will remind me of precisely what that may be.

— ♦ —

Born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Jeffrey Siger practiced law at a major Wall Street law firm and while there served as Special Counsel to the citizens group responsible for reporting on New York City's prison conditions. He left Wall Street to establish his own New York City law firm and continued as one of its name partners until giving it all up to write full-time among the people, life, and politics of his beloved Mykonos, his adopted home of thirty years. When not in Greece, he enjoys his other home, a farm outside New York City.

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

— ♦ —

Sons of Sparta by Jeffrey Siger

Sons of Sparta
Jeffrey Siger
A Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis Mystery

Did the warriors of ancient Sparta simply vanish without a trace along with their city, or did they find sanctuary at the tip of the mountainous Peloponnese? That stark, unforgiving region's roots today run deep with a history of pirates, highwaymen, and neighbors ferociously repelling any foreigner foolishly bent on occupying this part of Greece. Less well recorded are the Mani's families' strict code of honor and their history of endless vendettas with neighbors and with their own relatives. No wonder their farms look like fortresses.

When Special Crimes Division Detective Yiannis Kouros is summoned from Athens to the Mani by his uncle, Kouros fears his loyalty to his boss, Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis, is about be to be tested by family pressure on the detective to act in some new vendetta, for this uncle once headed the Mani's most significant criminal enterprise. Instead, Kouros learns the family is about to become rich through the sale of its property — until the uncle is killed, and thus the deal. Acting swiftly to head off a new cycle of violence, Kouros satisfactorily solves the murder. Or so it seems until, back in Athens, Kaldis' probe into deeply entrenched government corruption leads straight back to the Mani. Both cops now confront a host of unexpected twists, unanticipated players, unanswered questions — and people yet to die.

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Everybody Wants an Oscar by Peter S. Fischer is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

Everybody Wants an Oscar by Peter S. Fischer

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Everybody Wants an Oscar by Peter S. Fischer

A Hollywood Murder Mystery

Publisher: The Grove Point Press

… as today's third free mystery ebook.

Everybody Wants an Oscar by Peter S. Fischer, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 29, 2014 at 7:20 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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

More on today's free book, below.

After six long years, Joe Bernardi's novel is at last finished and has been shipped to a major publisher. But even as he awaits news, fingers crossed for luck, things are heating up at the studio. Soon production will begin on Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie" and Jane Wyman has her sights set on a second consecutive Academy Award. Jack Warner has just signed Gertrude Lawrence for the pivotal role of Amanda and is positive that the Oscar will go to Gertie. And meanwhile, Eleanor Parker, who has gotten rave reviews for a woman's prison picture called "Caged" is sure that 1950 is her year to take home the trophy.

Faced with three very talented ladies, all vying for his very best efforts, Joe is resigned to performing a monumental juggling act. Thank God he has nothing else to worry about or at least that was the case until his agent informed him that a screenplay is floating around Hollywood that is a dead ringer for his newly completed novel. Will the ladies be forced to take a back seat as Joe goes after the thief that has stolen his work, his good name and six years of his life …

Everybody Wants an Oscar by Peter S. Fischer

Too Quiet in Brooklyn by Susan Russo Anderson is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Too Quiet in Brooklyn by Susan Russo Anderson

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Too Quiet in Brooklyn by Susan Russo Anderson

A Fina Fitzgibbons, Brooklyn Mystery

Publisher: Susan Russo Anderson

… as today's second free mystery ebook.

Too Quiet in Brooklyn by Susan Russo Anderson, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 29, 2014 at 7:10 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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

More on today's free book, below.

Private Investigator Fina Fitzgibbons stumbles upon a throttled woman in the heart of Brooklyn Heights and discovers that the dead woman's four-year-old grandson is also missing. She begins a wild hunt for the strangler-kidnapper, Ralph.

During the chase, she resists falling in love with her boyfriend, Denny, an NYPD patrol officer, steps on the toes of Detective First Grade Jane Templeton, and uncovers secrets about her own past. In the end, Ralph has a deadly surprise for Fina.

Too Quiet in Brooklyn by Susan Russo Anderson

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