Wednesday, May 13, 2009

A&E Announces Upfront Programming Including New and Future Crime Dramas

A&E

A&E announced its upfront programming yesterday and crime dramas, both new and potential, are prominent.

In the new category is Cooler Kings in which an ex-Honolulu cop bent on revenge for the death of his girlfriend meets a mysterious crew of detectives called the Cooler Kings, who offer him an unlikely chance at redemption. Jerry Bruckheimer (CSI) is executive producing.

In the potential category are a large number of series including two set in Los Angeles, two set in New York, and one involving the FBI.

The Lead Sheet, developed in part by crime novelist James Ellroy (L.A. Confidential, The Black Dahlia), follows the police work of the LAPD tracking the infamous Hillside Strangler in 1977; and Central Division which follows two female LAPD captains as they run a dangerous downtown division, the only division with women in the top two positions.

Night Falls in which a NYC beat cop survives a near fatal shooting and emerges with an unusual neurological side-effect. The secret he carries, which is triggered by how the darkness alters his brain chemistry, threatens to transform him into a modern day Jekyll and Hyde; and NY's Finest which tracks the new commissioner of a large U.S. city and his personal detail as he injects his own leadership style into the job, turning the city upside down.

The FBI project is untitled and has a unique twist on the procedural crime drama in which the tales of a group of up-and-coming criminals chasing their American dream are told in the first half of the show, while the second half tells the stories of the FBI Task Force charged with tracking them down. Instead of law and order, it's crime and punishment.

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Games of Mystery: Diamon Jones and the Amulet of the World, new at Big Fish Games

Games of Mystery

, your source for mystery-themed electronic and board games, parties for kids and adults, and mystery getaway vacations, is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery game from Big Fish Games released today. You can find out more about these games by visiting our page or by clicking on the links provided below.

Diamon Jones and the Amulet of the World

Explore the ancient world of Egypt in this mystical adventure game! Help Diamon Jones become the rich and famous hero he wants to be, as you explore the Pharaohs' temples and find amazing treasures. Travel all over the world on your incredible journey to first find the Amulet of the World, and then replace it, when the natural order of the world has been upended. Can you help Diamon Jones save the world?

Also available: Diamon Jones and the Amulet of the World Strategy Guide and a Diamon Jones and the Amulet of the World Game Walkthrough.

Diamon Jones and the Amulet of the World may be downloaded and purchased for as little as $6.99 with the Big Fish Game Club Jumbo Pack. Due to its large size, a demonstration version is not available.

Watch a preview video below:

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Other popular games on our page include several and games, games in the series and in particular the latest, Mystery Case Files: Return to Ravenhearst, Adventure Chronicles: The Search for Lost Treasure, Syberia and Syberia II, The Serpent of Isis, James Patterson's Women's Murder Club: A Darker Shade of Grey, and Nick Chase: A Detective Story.

Read our new game reviews by Ms. Terri: , and .

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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And don't forget to visit for all kinds of mysterious fun!

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Mystery Book Review: Snakehead by Peter May

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of Snakehead by Peter May. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

Snakehead by Peter May

by
A Li Yan and Margaret Campbell Mystery

Poisoned Pen Press (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 1-59058-606-9 (1590586069)
ISBN-13: 978-1-59058-606-8 (9781590586068)
Publication Date: February 2009
List Price: $24.95

Review: A deadly and contagious strain of Spanish Flu, illegal Chinese immigrants crossing the border at Mexico, a former lover that was never forgotten, all of these contribute to the success of Snakehead by Peter May. Snakehead is the second book in the Beijing series.

The story starts with the raising of a sunken submarine in the Arctic, filled with the corpses of men who died from an unexplained, terrible disease. Flash forward to Texas, where we meet Dr. Margaret Campbell, Chief Medical Examiner of Harris County, the third largest in the United States. She is called to investigate the mystifying deaths of 98 Chinese found hidden in the back of a truck trailer. Li Yan, the criminal justice liaison from China, and former lover of Dr. Campbell, is sent to Texas to help oversee the process and prevent further embarrassment for China. He has currently been living the Washington DC area, unbeknownst to Dr. Campbell, for the past year. During the autopsies of the bodies, a peculiar needle mark is found on the corpses. Blood tests eventually determine that each immigrant had been injected with Spanish Flu, a deadly virus that was thought to be eradicated. But who is the snakehead that is smuggling these Chinese into the country? At $60,000 a person, he stands to lose almost $6 million. Why are they being injected with the deadly virus? Is this some part of a terrorist plot? How many other illegal Chinese immigrants have already arrived in this country, carrying the deadly virus? What of Margaret and Li, can they bridge the gap between two cultures and live happily ever after? You will have to read Snakehead to find out.

Snakehead was an exciting, medical mystery that had me captured from the first page. May’s descriptive writing helped me to easily envision the scenes as they unfolded. “A frozen sun shone in the palest of clear blue skies … tiny colored ice particles dancing in clouded breath.” The description of medical forensics was just as thorough. The characters faced real life struggles, making the reader care about what happened to them. Margaret and Li clearly belong together, but can they get around their differences, forget the past, and forge ahead together in the future? The mystery itself was challenging, however, I was able to figure out who the snakehead was, and who engineered the Spanish Flu virus before I finished the novel. But that is what is so enjoyable about reading a mystery novel, being able to solve it before the last page.

This novel earns a 4.5 out of 5 stars. I enjoyed reading this novel and want to read the first book in this series, and the sequels, to learn more about the relationship between Margaret and Li. If you enjoy medical mysteries with a romantic twist, then Snakehead is the one for you.

Special thanks to Ruth Miller for contributing her review of Snakehead and to Poisoned Pen Press for providing an ARC of the book for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — Ruth Miller — All Rights Reserved — Reprinted with Permission

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Snakehead from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

Synopsis (from the publisher): American pathologist Margaret Campbell finds herself back on home soil, only to be faced by a truck full of dead Chinese and an unavoidable confrontation with her past.

Beijing detective Li Yan, now based at the Chinese embassy in Washington, is dispatched to find out how his fellow countrymen suffocated in a sealed refrigeration unit in southern Texas only to find himself face-to-face with the woman who walked out of China, and his life, to return to the U.S.

Tasked to work together again to find out who is behind the $100 million trade in illegal Chinese immigrants which led to the tragedy in Texas, they discover that the immigrants were unwitting carriers of a deadly cargo.

And still wrestling with the demons of their pasts, Li and Margaret find themselves racing against time to defuse a biological time-bomb that threatens to wipe out not only their future, but that of humankind.

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First Clues Review: Down the Rabbit Hole by Peter Abrahams

First Clues: Mysteries for Kids

is delighted to introduce a new feature for our website, book reviews written by students. These students offer their unique perspective on the book in their review and provide a valuable resource to parents looking for new mystery adventures for their kids to read.

Down the Rabbit Hole by Peter Abrahams

Down the Rabbit Hole by Peter Abrahams
The Echo Falls Series

HarperCollins (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-06-073701-8 (0060737018)
ISBN-13: 978-0-06-073701-6 (9780060737016)
Publication Date: April 2005
List Price: $16.99

Review written by Dorothy, Age 14, Grade 8. Date of review: April 2009.

Review: Sherlock Holmes has been reborn again in Peter Abrahams’ Down the Rabbit Hole as the freshly thirteen year old Ingrid Levin-Hill solves a thrilling mystery. It turns out that Echo Falls wasn’t an ordinary town, but one filled with secrets, particularly a significant one.

Ingrid happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Deciding to walk to soccer practice, she somehow ended up in the oldest part of town: the Flats. A woman, nicknamed Cracked-Up Katie, invited her into her house and called up a taxi for Ingrid allowing her to get to the soccer fields. Having accidentally leaving her shoes, a pair of red Pumas, behind, Ingrid soon found herself waist deep in the middle of a murder investigation. Along with all this, she was also preparing herself to play the role of Alice in the Echo Fall’s production Alice in Wonderland. Strange things began to occur in the midst of the rehearsals as her director is injured as a piano crashes into her, the changing of the script, and that quiet, mysterious man who seems to have a past experience with stage acting. Why are the police on her tail? What did she do wrong? Maybe it was because of her Pumas …

Being as the first children’s book ever written by Peter Abrahams, I would have to say he has caught the sense of a relatively detailed story easy enough for kids to comprehend. Ingrid Levin-Hill is a likable ordinary girl who didn’t expect herself to be caught up in a mystery, let alone a one filled with twists and turns. An exciting tale of a murder mystery being solved by your typical teenage sleuth will keep you on the edge of your seats as you anticipate what will happen next. You wouldn’t be able to put down this book until you’ve finally solved the mystery, or rather when Ingrid does. Down the Rabbit Hole is indeed an adventure you would be willing to take.

Subject of many reviews, this mystery will interest you when you read it. I give a thumbs-up to this amazing, intense story hoping that you will also find yourself traveling through the exciting world of Down the Rabbit Hole.

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Down the Rabbit Hole from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

is pleased to provide information on over 100 mystery series for children and young adults. Each series is conveniently listed under three different age categories (New Sleuth, ages 4 to 7; Future Sleuth, aged 7 to 10; and Sleuth in Training, ages 10 and older). If you have a favorite mystery series you'd like to see added to our site, please contact us.

All student book reviews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in any manner, print or electronic, without the express written consent of the copyright owner. Reviews are published here with permission of the copyright owner.

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The Halcyon Company to Adapt Philip K. Dick's Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said

Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said by Philip K. Dick

FirstShowing.net is reporting that The Halcyon Company is adapting the Philip K. Dick novel Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said. The Halcyon Company acquired the rights to Dick's entire body of work from his estate in 2007 and is free to develop any of his writings.

Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, written in 1974, is the story of a celebrity who wakes up after an assassination attempt to find no one has ever heard of him.

Philip K. Dick is generally considered a science fiction writer but many of his novels and short stories have strong mystery or suspense elements. To date, several movies have been made from his work including Blade Runner (based on the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), The Minority Report, Next (based on the novel The Golden Man), A Scanner Darkly, and Total Recall (based on the novel We Can Remember It For You Wholesale).

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Monday, May 11, 2009

New Hardcover Mysteries: An Interview with Michael Connelly

Later this month 's second thriller to feature crime reporter Jack McEvoy, The Scarecrow, is scheduled for publication. McEvoy first appeared in Connelly's 1996 thriller The Poet for which he won both the 1997 and the 1997 . In The Scarecrow, McEvoy is forced out of the Los Angeles Times amid the latest budget cuts, but before he goes, he uses his final days at the paper to write the definitive murder story of his career. But as he delves into the story he realizes the confessor to a brutal murder may actually be innocent. He's soon tracking a killer who operates completely below police radar -- and with perfect knowledge of any move against him. Including McEvoy's.

Barnes & Noble has graciously allowed us to post an interview with author Michael Connelly on our site. Conducted by host Molly Pesce, Connelly examines the internet as a helpful tool for criminals, and maps out how the book’s killer uses popular sites like Facebook and LinkedIn to gather extensive information about his victims.

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The Mystery Behind the Publication of a Mystery Book by Science Fiction Writer Roger Zelazny

The Dead Man's Brother by Roger Zelazny

Tom Jackson notified us about a post he wrote on the Sandusky Register about the mystery behind a mystery book written by a science fiction novelist.

Roger Zelazny was a popular, award-winner writer of science fiction who died in 1995. Fast forward 13 years to a literary agent's warehouse in New York City where a cardboard box with the notation "Save - No submissions at this time at Roger's request" is found. Inside is an untitled manuscript, though "The Dead Man's Brother" is written on every page. Thinking it was a draft, or possibly an earlier version of a published novel, it was set aside to be looked at later. When read by the author's literary agent, he discovered the book wasn't a fragment or otherwise incomplete, and most surprisingly, wasn't science fiction, but, as Publishers Weekly subsequently wrote in their review, a "fantastic and compelling hard-boiled mystery," written in 1971.

Jackson has penned a fascinating article on the backstory to the book's recent publication by Hard Case Crime (see the book cover above, right), and we thank him for letting us (and our readers) know about it.

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First Clues Review: Blood Fever by Charlie Higson

First Clues: Mysteries for Kids

is delighted to introduce a new feature for our website, book reviews written by students. These students offer their unique perspective on the book in their review and provide a valuable resource to parents looking for new mystery adventures for their kids to read.

Blood Fever by Charlie Higson

Blood Fever by Charlie Higson
The Young Bond Series

Miramax (Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-4231-0029-8 (1423100298)
ISBN-13: 978-1-4231-0029-4 (9781423100294)
Publication Date: March 2007
List Price: $7.99

Review written by Brendan, Age 13, Grade 7. Date of review: April 2009.

Review: Blood Fever, the second book in its series, is a fast paced novel with an adventurous flair. This book, written by Charlie Higson, is a novel written in classic James Bond style. We first meet the young James Bond in his primary school of Eton, where we left him in the precursor to this novel, Silverfin. James, a member of the secret Danger Society, is always on the lookout for an adventure. James jumps around on rooftops and avoids teachers in the middle of the night until a chance for a journey comes up .This chance for adventure arises when he gets the chance to visit Sardinia, an island off of Italy filled with pirates and cut-throats, on a school summer-trip. Some of James’ associates unknowingly find themselves entangled in a secret Italian society with a plot to topple the world. In true Bond style, James saves the day, gets the girl, and blows some stuff up. At some times in this book I do find some of the historical facts are incorrect though. Charlie Higson does a great job developing the characters, and finds an excellent place to set his novel. Some parts are to brief for me and I would have like if Mr. Higson had elaborated on some scenes, sometimes you are left wondering what happened to so-and-so. This book keeps the pages turning though, and the ending of this novel keeps me lusting for a sequel. I’m not sure if one is planned or not. Although this book hasn’t won any awards I expect it won’t be long before it does. 4 (of 5) stars.

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Blood Fever from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

is pleased to provide information on over 100 mystery series for children and young adults. Each series is conveniently listed under three different age categories (New Sleuth, ages 4 to 7; Future Sleuth, aged 7 to 10; and Sleuth in Training, ages 10 and older). If you have a favorite mystery series you'd like to see added to our site, please contact us.

All student book reviews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in any manner, print or electronic, without the express written consent of the copyright owner. Reviews are published here with permission of the copyright owner.

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Mysteries on TV: Case Closed and Lovejoy, New This Week on DVD

Mysteries on TV

, your source for the most complete selection of detective, amateur sleuth, private investigator, and suspense television mystery series now available or coming soon to DVD, is profiling two series that have season DVDs being released this week.

The criminal mind is a twisted one and Jimmy Kudo knows the shady corridors of humanity like no other detective in the business. He’s put more scum behind bars than just about anyone on the beat and his skills have earned him plenty of enemies, and he pays the price one dark night, being poisoned and left for dead. But rather than meeting his end in a shallow grave, Jimmy gets a new beginning. Awakening to find himself transformed, the evil elixir of his faceless foes has changed him into a small boy – the perfect cover for continuing his work! Utilizing his unlikely new persona and cutting edge technology, Jimmy is hot on the trail of his assailants as Conan Edogawa in the anime series . New episodes of Case Closed have been airing weekly in Japan since January 1996.

The Case Closed: Set Five DVD set of 4 disc contains the 24 episodes numbered 100 through 123 (106 through 130 using the Funimation numbering system). The DVD lists this as Season Five but it spans episodes that aired during both the fourth and fifth seasons in Japan.

Ian McShane is back as the crime-solving antiques dealer with an eye for beauty and trouble in , a British series that aired over 6 seasons on BBC in 1986 and then from 1991 through 1994. The series was based on the character created by Jonathan Gash (a pseudonym for novelist John Grant) in a series of books featuring Lovejoy.

Several cast changes took place during the 5th season. The characters Lady Jane Felsham and Eric Catchpole left, with two new characters joining the cast: Beth Taylor as Lovejoy's new apprentice and Charlotte Cavendish as the owner of a local antiques auction house.

The Lovejoy: Season Five DVD set of 4 discs contains the 13 episodes that aired from January through April 1993.

Also being released this week: the first season of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation on Blu-ray (5 discs).

Visit the Mysteries on TV website to discover more currently available on DVD.

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Mystery Savings: 50% Off DVD Sale at B&N.com

Mystery Savings: Discounted Products and Services on Books, Movies, and more!

Mystery Savings periodically provides our readers with current promotions that offer discounts or other incentives for purchasing mystery-themed products and services products through our partner websites. Below is a special offer recently received by us that we're pleased to pass on at this time.

Take advantage of 50% off savings to catch up with movies and TV series on DVD during the Barnes & Noble 50% DVD sale.

Look under the suspense and thrillers categories to find some great classic mystery movies or TV series like Bones.

All now at half price. It's time to save! Sales ends 06/01/2009.

DVD Sale - 50% Off Thousands of Titles

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Mystery Godoku Puzzle for May 11, 2009

A new has been created by the editors of the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books and is now available on our website.

Godoku is similar to Sudoku, but uses letters instead of numbers. To give you a headstart, we provide you a mystery clue to fill in a complete row or column (if you choose to use it!).

Mystery Godoku Puzzle for May 11, 2009

This week's letters and mystery clue

A E H J L O P R Y

He edited The Killing Spirit, a 1996 anthology of murder for hire (9 letters).

We now have two weeks of our puzzles on one page in PDF format for easier printing. Print this week's puzzle here.

Previous puzzles are stored in the Mystery Godoku Archives.

Enjoy the weekly Mystery Godoku Puzzle from the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, and Thanks for visiting our website!

   

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Sunday, May 10, 2009

Mystery Book Review: The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley

by
A Flavia de Luce Mystery

Delacorte Press (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-385-34230-6 (0385342306)
ISBN-13: 978-0-385-34230-8 (9780385342308)
Publication Date: February 2009
List Price: $23.00

Review: Alan Bradley’s novel, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, is the 1950s debut for eleven-year-old English sleuth and chemistry buff, Flavia Salina Dolores de Luca or “Flave” as she calls herself. It’s a five-star performance for young and old, and well worth applauding.

Flave’s a brat, a loveable, precocious and endearing one, but a brat nevertheless. She’s fixated on chemistry, thanks to the lab paraphernalia and ancestral genes inherited from a mentally unstable Tarquin de Luce. “My particular passion was poison,” she says. She’s also influenced by the mystery novels she reads and likes to refer to them. So when Flave discovers a downed man gasping his last in the cucumber patch at her family home of Buckshaw near the village of Bishop’s Lacey, with his final whispered word “Vale” cloaked in “a whiff of a peculiar odour – an odour whose name was, for an instant, on the very tip of my tongue “, she is ecstatically in her element. Now, she can apply her knowledge of chemistry for more than avenging slights from her older sisters, seventeen-year-old boy-mooning Ophelia (“Feely”) and thirteen-year-old bibliophile Daphne (“Daffy”) with her fountain-like spewing of passages from the latest novel she has read.

Flavia’s premiere case gets complicated when a dead bird, a jack snipe indigenous to Norway, is found on the premises with a Black Penny stamp impaled on its bill. Her father, a stamp collector who she thinks “loved stamps more dearly than he loved his offspring,” especially after his wife, her beloved mother, Harriet, died in a mountain climbing accident, gets entangled in the case, too. And his entanglement draws in “Father’s man, his factotum,” Dogger, an abused prisoner of war who it was rumoured “had been forced to eat rats,” suffers occasional delirium and is “happiest in the garden.” But others are implicated, too, as Inspector Hewitt discovers. There’s Mrs. Mullet, the cook, for example who thinks of herself “as a character in a poem by A.A. Milne” and produces “pus-like custard pies” for which, Flave says, the family “would rather eat creamed worms on toast.” There’s a strange photographer who comes to call and a retired librarian, a niece to “old Cuppa Twining” whose mysterious death years ago is linked to Flavia’s father when he was Jocko, the schoolboy , to the dead man in the garden, and to others in the story. Always just a step ahead of the Inspector and his men, Flave races about the village and its environs on “Gladys” her mother’s ancient rechristened bike to interview her own list of suspects, do her own experiments, find newspaper archives and obits and root through waste containers because “You never know what you’re getting into when you stick your nose in other people’s rubbish.” Her nosing around, though, gets her into far more trouble than she ever imagined, and she must use all of her ingenuity and knowledge of poisons and chemicals in order to clear her father’s name, save her own life and bring a murderer to justice.

Flavia is undoubtedly the star of this show. She is no goody-two-shoes but neither is she as wicked as she tries to present herself. Her love for her parents is obvious but never maudlin, and there is a begrudging affection between her and her sisters, despite the chemicals she injects into Feely’s lipstick. As younger readers will appreciate, Flave frequently appears to be light-years ahead of the adults she deals with (one of whom looks like “a George Bernard Shaw who had shrunk in the wash”), and more than capable of holding her own against her siblings. As everyone will agree, she’s a pretty smart cookie even on the run as a self-confessed “eleven-year-old murderess in pigtails and jumper,” trying to protect her father. And scenes are priceless of her searching the foliage for a poisonous plant while “launching into a loudly whistled rendition of ‘Bibbidi –Bobbidi-Boo’” or warming a bread and brown sugar sandwich for as long as it takes to sing three verses of “If I knew You Were Coming I’d’ve Baked a Cake” or of her cycling “bumpty-bump across the fields” for a shortcut while belting out: “Oh the moon shone bright on Mrs. Porter/And on her daughter./They wash their feet in soda water.”

A well paced story, written with Dickensian flair, Sherlockian suspense and tongue-in-cheek fun, Alan Bradley’s sterling novel sets the bar for the series to follow.

Special thanks to M. Wayne Cunningham (mw_cunningham@telus.net) for contributing his review of The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie.

Review Copyright © 2009 — M. Wayne Cunningham — All Rights Reserved — Reprinted with Permission

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right. The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (Kindle edition) is also available. Learn more about the Kindle, Amazon's Wireless Reading Device.

Synopsis (from the publisher): It is the summer of 1950—and a series of inexplicable events has struck Buckshaw, the decaying English mansion that Flavia’s family calls home. A dead bird is found on the doorstep, a postage stamp bizarrely pinned to its beak. Hours later, Flavia finds a man lying in the cucumber patch and watches him as he takes his dying breath. For Flavia, who is both appalled and delighted, life begins in earnest when murder comes to Buckshaw. “I wish I could say I was afraid, but I wasn’t. Quite the contrary. This was by far the most interesting thing that had ever happened to me in my entire life.”

To Flavia the investigation is the stuff of science: full of possibilities, contradictions, and connections. Soon her father, a man raising his three daughters alone, is seized, accused of murder. And in a police cell, during a violent thunderstorm, Colonel de Luce tells his daughter an astounding story—of a schoolboy friendship turned ugly, of a priceless object that vanished in a bizarre and brazen act of thievery, of a Latin teacher who flung himself to his death from the school’s tower thirty years before. Now Flavia is armed with more than enough knowledge to tie two distant deaths together, to examine new suspects, and begin a search that will lead her all the way to the King of England himself. Of this much the girl is sure: her father is innocent of murder—but protecting her and her sisters from something even worse.

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First Clues Review: Buffalo Bill Wanted! by Alex Simmons and Bill McCay

First Clues: Mysteries for Kids

is delighted to introduce a new feature for our website, book reviews written by students. These students offer their unique perspective on the book in their review and provide a valuable resource to parents looking for new mystery adventures for their kids to read.

Buffalo Bill Wanted! by Alex Simmons and Bill McCay

Buffalo Bill Wanted! by Alex Simmons and Bill McCay
The Raven League

Razorbill (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 1-59514-073-5 (1595140735)
ISBN-13: 978-1-59514-073-9 (9781595140739)
Publication Date: January 2007
List Price: $10.99

Review written by Alex, Age 13, Grade 7. Date of review: April 2009.

Review: Want to read a book about the amazing American Western front during the western expansion? Well many people would be tricked by reading this book, thinking that it will be a complex mystery of American history. The cover looks like the book should be in some sort of American history setting, but it is not. It’s the second installment in The Raven League series. It is entitled Buffalo Bill Wanted!. This title is given by authors Alex Simmons and Bill McCay.

Once again, if you enjoy reading historical fiction novels about America’s western expansion, DO NOT READ THIS BOOK! It is based in London, and a when a police constable is severely beaten and shot, all of London believes that the American performer, Colonel William Cody, had committed the crime. He was in London at the time of the crime, and clues were set up to frame him. The four young sleuths, with awkward names like Dooley, Owens, and Wiggins however, know that Cody was not the criminal. It is up to them to find out whodunit, for they cannot locate their old friend Mr. Sherlock Holmes. Through perils and accusations, they find the culprit.

This was one of the most boring books that I have ever read, and is not only a poor mystery, but a poorly written plot just made it a bad book. I was excited by the title, because it was seemingly about the “wild” west, but it was not. Also, I was not able understand any integration of the characters. Their backgrounds from the first book were very unclear. It would be easier to read if you knew what happened earlier in the series. Also, some of the side characters had similar names, so I found myself confused at points. Furthermore, the authors try to make certain scenes and pictures that are fast paced. These feeble attempts are just sad. One last thing is that I was able to figure out whodunit on page 48. There are 202 pages. It was not a good story.

The book has not won any awards. I believe it should never win any. It is also the second in the series of mysteries.

Of course, I do not recommend this terrible book. Do not waste your time reading this sack of garbage. Want to go to sleep fast? Well then this book is good for that, but nothing else.

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing Buffalo Bill Wanted! from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right.

is pleased to provide information on over 100 mystery series for children and young adults. Each series is conveniently listed under three different age categories (New Sleuth, ages 4 to 7; Future Sleuth, aged 7 to 10; and Sleuth in Training, ages 10 and older). If you have a favorite mystery series you'd like to see added to our site, please contact us.

All student book reviews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in any manner, print or electronic, without the express written consent of the copyright owner. Reviews are published here with permission of the copyright owner.

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Mystery Book Review: The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom by Wayne Madsen

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom by Wayne Madsen. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom by Wayne Madsen

by
The Misadventures of Inspector Moustachio

Community Press (Trade Paperback)
ISBN-10: 0-9797572-2-3 (0979757223)
ISBN-13: 978-0-9797572-2-8 (9780979757228)
Publication Date: November 2008
List Price: $16.99

Review: Jake and his sister Alexa head off on another misadventure on the other side of the magnifying glass in The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom, the third mystery in this series for 9- to 11-year-old readers by Wayne Madsen.

While playing a game of Go Fish (but of course), the magnifying glass comes alive with the image of Cap'n Snappy, who relates to the young detectives a tale of the battle between the evil sea witch Jezebel and King Neptune for control of the kingdom of Atlantis. After Jezebel captured Atlantis and banished it into a magical seashell, King Neptune captured her, trapping her in another seashell. Pirates are now searching for Jezebel's shell to release her, and together gain control of the Seven Seas. But Cap'n Snappy needs help stopping them and pleads with Inspector Moustachio and his investigative team to join him and his crew to save the world from the evil that lies at Earth's End.

The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom, like the earlier books in this series, has a Wizard of Oz or Alice in Wonderland style (and appeal) to them. Jake (Inspector Moustachio) and Alexa (Inspector Girl), together with their cat Rex (critter detective) and guinea pig Sandy (pet detective in training), meet a number of imaginative and unusual people and creatures (they're really one and the same on the other side of the magnifying glass) on their journey to Earth's End. Like him or love him, and there's probably little reader emotion in-between, Rex is frequently the center of attention. His "We're doooooooomed", a typical response to any given situation, gets a little tiresome, though.

The plot of The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom is straight-forward, however the path taken is somewhat serpentine; younger readers may have a hard time following some of the action. The riddles the team must solve add interest to their quest. In the end, Jake knows a bit more about the mystery behind the magnifying glass but realizes he has much to learn. Fortunately he'll have another chance to expand his knowledge in the next book in the series, The Secret of the Pharoah's Feline; Rex ought to really be in his element here!

Special thanks to Community Press for providing a copy of The Curse of Shipwreck Bottom for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — Hidden Staircase Mystery Books — All Rights Reserved

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Synopsis (from the publisher): In this swashbuckling misadverture, brave Jake Moustachio is quickly learning to control the powers of his magical magnifying glass -- and not a moment too soon! The fate of our young detectives, their precious guinea pig, Sandy, and their not-so-fearless cat, Rex, is starting to reveal itself, as they are tossed into a double-crossing, fantastic world on the high seas.

Earth's End is waiting for the mystery-solving foursome as they navigate an ocean full of dangerous suspects, sailing about on the other side of the magnifying glass.

Captain Snappy, a cranky pirate, calls upon the Moustachios to break the curse cast upon his ship and crew by the wicked sea witch Jezebel. But the evil Baron Von Snodgrass and his unrecognizable, evil partner are also sailing among the tumultuous waves of the sea, more determined than ever to stop the young detectives from fulfilling their destiny.

Only two adventurous kids can solve the puzzle to reverse the curse and save the cosmos from its impending doom.

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Games of Mystery: 3 Days Zoo Mystery, New at Big Fish Games

Games of Mystery

, your source for mystery-themed electronic and board games, parties for kids and adults, and mystery getaway vacations, is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery game from Big Fish Games released today. You can find out more about these games by visiting our page or by clicking on the links provided below.

3 Days: Zoo Mystery

In 3 Days: Zoo Mystery, five of the world's most unique animals have been stolen! Help Anna track down and return these rare animals to her uncle's zoo. The ultra-picky zoo inspectors are on their way, so you will only have three days to solve this mystery and save the zoo. This hidden object adventure game is full of challenging minigames and dark secrets. Will you be able to capture the crook and save the family zoo?

Also available: 3 Days: Zoo Mystery Walkthrough.

3 Days: Zoo Mystery may be downloaded and purchased for as little as $6.99 with the Big Fish Game Club Jumbo Pack. A demonstration version (43.73 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour.

Watch a preview video below:

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Other popular games on our page include several and games, games in the series and in particular the latest, Mystery Case Files: Return to Ravenhearst, Adventure Chronicles: The Search for Lost Treasure, Syberia and Syberia II, The Serpent of Isis, James Patterson's Women's Murder Club: A Darker Shade of Grey, and Nick Chase: A Detective Story.

Read our new game reviews by Ms. Terri: , and .

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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And don't forget to visit for all kinds of mysterious fun!

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