Monday, March 23, 2015

New This Week: Killer Cruise, A Psychic Crystal Mystery by Marilyn Baron

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during March 2015 and priced $4.99 or less …

Killer Cruise by Marilyn Baron

Killer Cruise by Marilyn Baron

A Psychic Crystal Mystery (3rd in series)

Publisher: The Wild Rose Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/23/2015 at 12:30 PM ET).

Killer Cruise by Marilyn Baron, Amazon Kindle format

The psychic detective team of Crystal & Hale, former Atlanta police detective Jack Hale and his bride "Crystal Ball Kate," is on a two-week transatlantic cruise. They are called in to investigate the threat to a high-profile European Union banking conference aboard ship and to calm the fears of the superstitious crew, who think the ship is cursed. Before long they realize they also need to catch an art thief and find a murderer.

Assisting them, posing as husband and wife at Kate and Jack's insistence, are Juliette Spencer, Kate's mother, and Graysville Police Chief Will Bradley, a debonair widower. Juliette just wants to enjoy the cruise and her daughter's company, but given Chief Bradley's unrelenting amorous advances in close quarters she may have to either jump ship or throw him overboard.

Killer Cruise by Marilyn Baron

See all three books in the Psychic Crystal Mystery Series for $3.99 or less each on Kindle.

Find more newly released mystery, suspense and thriller titles on the Omnimystery News Facebook page.

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.

Enter to Win — Shadow Ritual by Eric Giacometti and Jacques Ravenne

Enter to Win Shadow Ritual by Eric Giacometti and Jacques Ravenne

Omnimystery News invites you to Enter to Win a copy of Shadow Ritual by Eric Giacometti and Jacques Ravenne, courtesy of Le French Book.

One (1) winner will receive a copy of …

Title: Shadow Ritual
Author: Eric Giacometti and Jacques Ravenne
Genre: A Novel of Suspense
Publisher: Le French Book
Format: Trade Paperback
List Price: $16.95

Use the form below to submit your entry. One entry per person; US residents only. Entry period ends Monday, March 30, 2015. (If you cannot see the entry form, use this link.)

Synopsis: Ritual murders. Ancient enemies. A powerful secret. An electrifying thriller about the rise of extremism.

Two slayings — one in Rome and one in Jerusalem — rekindle an ancient rivalry between modern-day secret societies for knowledge lost at the fall of the Third Reich. Detective Antoine Marcas unwillingly teams up with the strong-willed Jade Zewinski to chase Neo-Nazi assassins across Europe. They must unravel an arcane Freemason mystery, sparked by information from newly revealed KGB files.

Inspired from the true story of mysterious Freemason files thought to hold a terrible secret, stolen by the SS in 1940, recovered by the Red Army in 1945 and returned half a century later.

Shadow Ritual by Eric Giacometti and Jacques Ravenne

A Conversation with Medieval Mystery Author Priscilla Royal

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Priscilla Royal
with Priscilla Royal

We are delighted to welcome author Priscilla Royal to Omnimystery News today.

Priscilla's 11th medieval mystery featuring Prioress Eleanor and Brother Thomas is Satan's Lullaby (Poisoned Pen Press; February 2015 hardcover, trade paperback, and ebook formats), and we recently had the opportunity to spend some time with her talking about her new book and the series as a whole.

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Omnimystery News: Prioress Eleanor was introduced in Wine of Violence, which was published in 2003. How has she, and other characters in the books, changed over the course of the series?

Priscilla Royal
Photo provided courtesy of
Priscilla Royal

Priscilla Royal: I like fictional characters that change over time. Even if I am not happy with all the changes, they are friends. I still love them at 60 and perhaps more than when they were 20. When I started my series, Prioress Eleanor was 20 and Brother Thomas slightly older. Both reacted and suffered with that white heat passion we experience at that time. Now they are almost ten years older. Passions are still strong, but there has been change for both. There has to be. No one can survive at that intense level forever. The delight in having recurring characters is showing how life impacts each. New recurring characters are sometimes introduced; a few die. As for the last, there won't be any major deaths, but I do hope readers will feel a little sorrow with me when a minor character dies.

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

PR: None of my onstage characters is anyone I know. I have never been able to write real people. If I could, I suppose I'd be writing nonfiction. But no author is able to completely avoid tapping into personal acquaintance. Some of my characters share physical attributes with real folks. Prioress Eleanor and Brother Thomas look a lot like my maternal grandparents. Prioress Eleanor's cat is a blend of a few which have owned me over the years. As for my own experiences influencing the stories, I defy any writer to prove he/she has never done that. After seven decades, I've seen a lot. Something I've learned is bound to be used. As for actual events, I do bring in real 13th century events because current events impacted our ancestors just as they do us.

OMN: Describe your writing process for us.

PR: Before I even begin the book, I have to know theme, title, first and last chapter. With the first books, I let the story develop as I wrote. But my editor required a chapter by chapter synopsis as the first submission for editing to catch flaws. This meant I had to write the story first, then go back and do the synopsis. Over time, I have learned to write less of the junk draft and do more of the synopsis until I finally did a very extensive chapter by chapter synopsis first, then expanded the story based on that. I find I can avoid repetitions in action or dialogue, pace the story better, make sure the important characters act logically, and deal with other craft issues. In short, I have a very wise editor, and I am grateful to her for teaching me that technique. As for characters, I often feel like I am auditioning actors for a play. Many show up for inclusion in the new book. Most get "don't call us; we'll call you." On occasion, I have dumped a character with the promise that he/she will be in a future book. I don't start the book until I have the cast I want. And, yes, I do talk to these imaginary people as if they were real …

OMN: Tell us more about the setting for the series. Given that your books are medieval mysteries, how true are you to it?

PR: My books are set mostly in 13th century East Anglia, which may be real but almost 700 years later is a very different place to modern East Anglia. Sights, smells, climate, topography, insect or bird life, and vegetation are not at all the same. To some degree, I am dealing with an almost fictional place. To get around this, since records of things like weather are sketchy, I use common experience coupled with research. We all, for instance, feel hot in summer even if we are living in Finland. The medieval bee was large, black and hairy, not the cute little striped thing most of us know today. When I wrote about the real Amesbury Priory, I was fortunate enough to find Peter and Christine Goodhugh who provided me with photos, descriptions, and vast amounts of information about the now vanished priory. When I wrote about a medieval manor, I found one in Kent that had been researched extensively with information readily available on the Internet. The short answer is that I try to be as true as I can to a vanished life, but I also must use my own experience to make the feeling of a season or place come alive.

OMN: What kinds of books did you read when you were young?

PR: My parents were avid readers, although neither thought about finding children's books for me. While my mother read Henry James and my father Mickey Spillane, I devoured Classics Illustrated into the "tween" years. Then a flashbulb went off, and I flew into print books. My tastes included 19th century Russians, Greek theater, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and a lot of fun trash. Thank goodness, my parents let me read almost anything I wanted. But it wasn't until my mid-30s that I discovered mysteries with Agatha Christie and Ellis Peters. So I was a late-bloomer on reading books as well as discovering mysteries. That said, I have wanted to write since I was in Grade Three. Wanted is a polite way of saying I was maybe just a tad obsessed.

OMN: What do you read today for pleasure?

PR: For pleasure reading outside the medieval, I enjoy biographies, especially of other writers. (There is comfort in knowing I am not the only eccentric, although little could match Nerval walking his lobster.) My favorite fiction genre has become mysteries. From the work of Andrea Camilleri to Henning Mankell, Raymond Chandler to Catherine Pirkis, there is a wide range of styles, characters, and world views. And I do read series. Donna Leon's Brunetti, Ian Rankin's Rebus, and Peter Robinson's Banks are just three examples of my favorites because they have kept their main character three-dimensional and paced long series well. I quickly lose interest if I learn everything I need to know about a character in one to three books. I also love any book in which wit is not a lost art.

OMN: What's next for you?

PR: Another book in the Prioress Eleanor/Brother Thomas series. I knew it was time for the generational shift that happens when parents die. My prioress's father was friend and advisor to King Henry III so his heir, Hugh, and daughter, Eleanor, have always been secondary figures in the power play game. But Edward I has now been king for seven years, and it is time for Sir Hugh to take on his hereditary responsibilities to family and title. When parents die, it is always unsettling to the survivors, but when Baron Adam does, it means my main character and her brother acquire the privileges and dangers of greater influence in the world. This gives them pause as people and a new function as characters.

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Priscilla Royal grew up in British Columbia and earned a BA in World Literature at San Francisco State University where she discovered the beauty of medieval literature. Before retiring from the Federal Government in 2000, she worked in a variety of jobs, all of which provided an excellent education in the complexity of human experience and motivation. She is a theater fan as well as a reader of history, mystery, and fiction of lesser violence. When not hiding in the thirteenth century, she lives in Northern California and is a member of California Writers Club, Mystery Writers of America, and Sisters in Crime.

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

— ♦ —

Satan's Lullaby by Priscilla Royal

Satan's Lullaby
Priscilla Royal
A Medieval Mystery

It is the autumn of 1278. The harvest is in. The air is crisp. Dusty summer breathes a last sigh before the dark seasons arrive.

For Prioress Eleanor, dark times arrive early in Norfolk. The head of her order, Abbess Isabeau, has sent Father Etienne Davoir from its headquarters in France to inspect all aspects of Tyndal Priory from its morals to its roofs. Surely the Abbess would not have chosen her own brother for this rare and thorough investigation unless the cause was serious and she had reason to fear intervention from Rome. Prioress Eleanor knows something is terribly amiss.

The situation turns calamitous when Davoir's sick clerk dies from a potion sent by Sister Anne, Tyndale's sub-infirmarian. Is Sister Anne guilty of simple incompetence — or murder? Or, Davoir asks, did Prioress Eleanor order the death to frighten him away before he discovered the truth behind accusations she is unfit for her position? When Davoir himself is threatened, the priest roars for justice. Even expectant father Crowner Ralf, the local representative of the king's justice, has lost all objectivity. The most likely suspects are Anne, the woman Ralf once loved, the prioress he respects, and the Tyndal monk, Thomas, who is his closest friend. Who among the French and English assembled at Tyndal has succumbed to Satan's lullaby?

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

Today's Selection of Daily Deals for Monday, March 23, 2015

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of today's Daily Deals found on Monday, March 23, 2015 at 7:30 AM ET …

Guardians of Stone by Anita Clenney

Guardians of Stone by Anita Clenney

The Relic Seekers (1st in series)

Publisher: Montlake Romance

Kindle Daily Deal Price: $1.99

Guardians of Stone by Anita Clenney, Amazon Kindle format

Fountain of Secrets by Anita Clenney

Fountain of Secrets by Anita Clenney

The Relic Seekers (2nd in series)

Publisher: Montlake Romance

Kindle Daily Deal Price: $1.99

Fountain of Secrets by Anita Clenney, Amazon Kindle format

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

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Today's Selection of Free MystereBooks for Monday, March 23, 2015

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of Free MystereBooks found on Monday, March 23, 2015 at 6:30 AM ET …

When the Danger Came Home by Madison J. Doherty

When the Danger Came Home by Madison J. Doherty

A Grace Bryant, Federal Air Marshal Mystery

Publisher: Jefferson and James

Price: FREE!

When the Danger Came Home by Madison J. Doherty, Amazon Kindle format

Call Me Cat by Karpov Kinrade

Call Me Cat by Karpov Kinrade

The Call Me Cat Trilogy

Publisher: Daring Books

Price: FREE!

Call Me Cat by Karpov Kinrade, Amazon Kindle format

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

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

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