Friday, March 25, 2011

No Less in Blood by D. M. Pirrone (Mystery Book Review)

No Less in Blood by D. M. Pirrone
More information about the book

No Less in Blood by D. M. Pirrone. Non-series. Five Star Hardcover, March 2011.

This multi-faceted story is more about interpersonal relationships than the underlying mystery, though there are elements of suspense that are handled well. The plot, with its multiple points of view and alternating timeline, is easy to follow, the narrative clearly written and fast-paced. Those who appreciate a strong, family-centric drama will be taken in by this debut novel.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: No Less in Blood by D. M. Pirrone.

Purchase Options: Amazon.com Print Edition

New Hardcover Mysteries for April 2011

New Hardcover Mysteries from the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books

The Hidden Staircase Mystery Books has updated its list of new hardcover mysteries with books scheduled for publication in April 2011. Please note that some titles may publish early (and may already be available) and some may be delayed, published at a later date.

Below we're listing those authors with returning series characters, new series characters, and non-series or stand-alone mysteries in separate sections. All titles are available on our April new mystery books page (which will become the default home page for the site on April 1st).

• Authors with mysteries featuring returning series characters (in italics) this month:

Susan Wittig Albert, China Bayles (19th)David Baldacci, Sean King and Michelle Maxwell (5th)Rita Mae Brown, Mrs. Murphy (19th)Carol Higgins Clark, Regan Reilly (14th)Cassandra Clark, Abbess of Meaux (3rd)Jane K. Cleland, Josie Prescott (6th)Michael Connelly, Mickey Haller (4th)Douglas Corleone, Kevin Corvelli (2nd)Jeanne M. Dams, Dorothy Martin (10th)Diane Mott Davidson, Goldy Schulz (16th)John DeMers, Brett Baldwin (2nd)P. C. Doherty, Hugh Corbett (16th)David Downing, John Russell (4th)Martin Edwards, Lake District (5th)Kate Ellis, Wesley Peterson (15th)Terence Faherty, Scott Elliott (5th)Christopher Farnsworth, Nathaniel Cade (2nd) — Jessica Fletcher and Donald Bain, Murder, She Wrote (35th)Sarah Graves, Jacobia "Jake" Tiptree, Home Repair is Homicide (14th) — Susanna Gregory, Thomas Chaloner (6th) — J. M. Gregson, Inspector Peach (15th)James Grippando, Jack Swyteck (9th)Rosemary Harris, Paula Holliday, Dirty Business (4th)Carolyn Hart, Death on Demand (21st)David Hewson, Nic Costa (9th)James Patrick Hunt, Evan Maitland (4th) — Graham Hurley, Joe Faraday (11th)Lisa Jackson, Reuben Montoya and Rick Bentz (7th)Iris Johansen, Eve Duncan and Joe Quinn (12th) — Philip Kerr, Bernie Gunther (7th) — Bernard Knight, Richard Pryor (2nd)Camilla Lackberg, Bertil Mellberg (2nd)Donna Leon, Guido Brunetti (20th)Keith McCarthy, Eisenmenger-Fleming (8th)Carol McCleary, Nellie Bly (2nd)Susan McDuffie, Muirteach MacPhee (2nd)Michael McMenamin and Patrick McMenamin, Bourke Cockran Jr. and Mattie McGary (2nd)Bill Moody, Evan Horne (7th)I. J. Parker, Sugawara Akitada (8th)Eliot Pattison, Hadrian Boone (4th)Anne Perry, Charlotte and Thomas Pitt (26th) — Amanda Quick, Arcane Society: Looking Glass Trilogy (2nd)R. T. Raichev, Antonia Darcy and Major Hugh Payne, Country House Crime (6th)Cynthia Riggs, Victoria Trumbull, Martha's Vineyard (10th)Sara Rosett, Ellie Avery, Mom Zone (6th)Ann B. Ross, Julia Springer (12th)Betty Rowlands, Sukey Reynolds (11th)John Shannon, Jack Liffey (13th)Deborah Shlian and Linda Reid, Sammy Greene (2nd)Clea Simon, Dulcie Schwartz (3rd)Julia Spencer-Fleming, Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne (7th)Kathryn R. Wall, Bay Tanner (11th)Lis Wiehl and April Henry, Triple Threat (3rd)Jacqueline Winspear, Maisie Dobbs (8th)Stuart Woods, Stone Barrington (19th).

• Authors with mysteries introducing characters (in italics) in a new series this month:

Sandra Balzo, AnneLise GriggsDaniel Blake, Franco PatreseMarcia Clark, Rachel KnightPatrick Easter, Tom PascoeJanice Hamrick, Jocelyn ShoreMeagan J. Meehan, Angelo ZenoniClea Simon, Pru Marlowe, Pet Noir.

• Authors with non-series or stand-alone mysteries this month:

David Albahari — Shumeet Baluja — Mary Higgins Clark — Edward ConlonTed DekkerHallie Ephron — Jessica Tarahata Hagedorn — Linda LombardiLisa Lutz and David Hayward — Isaac Marion — Robert Masello — Ferenc Máté — The Medieval MurderersElle NewmarkPeter PrangeKarl Puttlitz — Nora Roberts — Lisa Scottoline — Whitley Strieber — E. Duke VincentNorb VonnegutMichael WallnerBarbara WarrenLouise Welsh — Michael Lee West.

For more information on any of these titles, please visit the April new mysteries page on our website. If you're interested in new paperbacks, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where you can discover a library of new mysteries, also updated with April 2011 releases.

Please visit the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books where we are committed to providing readers and collectors of mystery books with the best and most current information about their favorite authors, titles, and series.

Bookperk: Insider Access to the World of Books

Bookperk (HarperCollins)

The folks at HarperCollins e-mailed us this morning to let us know about a new site they've launched called Bookperk, which provides readers with exclusive merchandise and experiences from their favorite authors and books.

The site consists of a number of "offers", some of which require a purchase, some of which are giveaways. Two current offers (they seem to be available for a week or so at a time) piqued our interest (being the mystery and suspense fans that we are!):

• Purchase a copy of Jacqueline Winspear's latest Maisie Dobbs mystery, A Lesson in Secrets, and receive a special gift from AMC's upcoming murder mystery series The Killing. (Offer details link.)

• Enter to win a hardcover edition of I Am Number Four, signed by the cast of the film adapted from the book, plus an "I Am Number Four" hoodie. (Five winners; Offer details link.)

You can sign up for a free newsletter on the site, and also refer your friends to get credit against a future purchase. It's an interesting site; check it out!

(Disclosure: There are no referral links in this post. No request was made by, nor incentive provided by, HarperCollins to write this post.)

Michael Connelly Developing Film Project for Series Character Harry Bosch

The Black Echo by Michael Connelly
More information about the book

Late last year, crime novelist Michael Connelly reaquired the rights to his series character Harry Bosch from Paramount and it looks like he's not wasting any time transitioning the character to film.

Connelly is reportedly in talks with Yellow Bird Films -- the producers behind the "The Girl Who ..." movies adapted from the Stieg Larsson thrillers -- to develop a film project for the LAPD homicide detective.

In 1995, Paramount optioned Connelly's first two books featuring Bosch, The Black Echo and The Black Ice, but the deal also included a 15-year adaptation lock on the character and a reaquisition fee tied to the studio's development costs. (No films were ever made.)

Last week, The Lincoln Lawyer opened in theaters, adapted from another of Connelly's novels (featuring a different series character, criminal defense attorney Mickey Haller).

(Source: Deadline|New York)

Summit to Distribute Film Adaptation of I, Alex Cross by James Patterson

Summit Entertainment

Summit Entertainment has secured the US distribution rights to the upcoming film adaptation of I, Alex Cross by James Patterson. Tyler Perry will star as forensic psychologist Alex Cross, with Matthew Fox cast as the villain.

We'd include a synopsis here, but as we previously reported, the characters and plotline are apparently from a different Patterson novel (Cross), the film adaptation of which at one time had a different star attached (Idris Elba). So we're not entirely sure what the screenwriters have in store for us.

Filming will begin this summer with a release date expected in 2012.

(Source: The Hollywood Reporter)

Go On a Twisted Literary Adventure in Dark Parables: The Exiled Prince, New from BFG

Games of Mystery

Games of Mystery is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery casual game from Big Fish Games released today and available to BFG Club members. You can find out more about these games by visiting our Mystery Games: Big Fish Download Games page or by clicking on the links provided below.

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Dark Parables: The Exiled Prince
Dark Parables: The Exiled Prince

Many centuries ago, a princess kissed a frog and transformed him into a handsome prince. Unlike the fable, however, they never ended happily ever after. It is rumored that the Frog Prince is still alive and now roams the deserted path in the Black Forest, capturing unsuspecting visitors. When the chancellor's daughter disappears, you are sent to investigate. Journey through the mysterious forest in a hidden world to find the missing princess and break an age-old curse in this eerie hidden object adventure game.

For a more in-depth gaming experience, check out Dark Parables: The Exiled Prince (Collector's Edition), which is full of exclusive extras you won’t find in the standard version, including an integrated strategy guide, bonus gameplay, wallpapers, concept art, an original soundtrack, and early access.

See also the first game in this series, Dark Parables: Curse of Briar Rose.

Dark Parables: The Exiled Prince may be downloaded and purchased for $6.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. A demonstration version (175.58 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour; the full version is 289.97 MB.

Watch a preview video below:

Get any standard game for $6.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. Other benefits include the $2.99 Daily Deal, Tomorrow's Game Today, and special member rewards. And if you purchase any 6 games within a single month, you earn a free game with the Big Fish Game Club Monthly Punch Card! (Collector's Editions earn 3 punches each, half-way towards your free game!)

Read Ms. Terri's reviews of the adventure and casual mystery games featured on this site, including Midnight Mysteries: The Edgar Allan Poe Conspiracy, Nancy Drew Dossier: Lights, Camera, Curses!, Enlightenus, and many more!

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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Games of Mystery is your source for mystery-themed video, electronic, and board games, parties for kids and adults, and murder mystery weekends and mystery getaway vacations!

Mystery Bestsellers for March 25, 2011

Mystery Bestsellers

A list of the top 15 mystery hardcover bestsellers for the week ending March 25th, 2011 has been posted on the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books website.

A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness retains the number one spot on the list for the third consecutive week. Two new titles move up from a debut just off the list last week into the top 15 this week.

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Toys by James Patterson
More information about the book

Moving all the way up to number 4 is the latest from James Patterson, the non-series thriller Toys.

Hays Baker and his wife Lizbeth possess super-human strength, extraordinary intelligence, stunning looks, a sex life to die for, and two beautiful children. Of course they do -- they're Elites, endowed at birth with the very best that the world can offer. The only problem in their perfect world: humans and their toys!

The top operative for the Agency of Change, Hays has just won the fiercest battle of his career. He has been praised by the President, and is a national hero. But before he can savor his triumph, he receives an unbelievable shock that overturns everything he thought was true. Suddenly Hays is on the other side of the gun, forced to leave his perfect family and fight for his life.

Now a hunted fugitive, Hays is thrown into a life he never dreamed possible -- fighting to save humans everywhere from extinction. He enlists all of his training to uncover the truth that will save millions of lives -- maybe even his own.

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Started Early, Took my Dog by Kate Atkinson
More information about the book

Just a few places lower, in 7th position is the fourth mystery in the Jackson Brodie series, Started Early, Took my Dog by Kate Atkinson.

It's a day like any other for Tracy Waterhouse, running errands at the local shopping center, until she makes a purchase she hadn't bargained for. One moment of madness is all it takes for Tracy's humdrum world to be turned upside down, the tedium of everyday life replaced by fear and danger at every turn.

Witnesses to Tracy's Faustian exchange are Tilly, an elderly actress teetering on the brink of her own disaster, and Jackson Brodie, who has returned to the land of his childhood, in search of someone else's roots. Variously accompanied, pursued, or haunted by neglected dogs, unwanted children, and keepers of dark secrets, soon all three will learn that the past is never history -- and that no good deed goes unpunished.

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The top four mystery bestsellers this week are shown below:

A Discovery of Witches by Deborah HarknessThe Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg LarssonTick Tock by James PattersonToys by James Patterson

Please visit the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books where we are committed to providing readers and collectors of mystery books with the best and most current information about their favorite authors, titles, and series.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Showtime Developing Crime Series Adapted from Chew Comics by John Layman and Rob Guillory

Chew by John Layman and Rob Guillory
More information about the book

Showtime is developing a half-hour crime series adapted from the Chew comics by John Layman and Rob Guillory.

Tony Chu is a detective with a secret. A weird secret. Tony Chu is cibopathic, which means he gets psychic impressions from whatever he eats. It also means he's a hell of a detective, as long as he doesn't mind nibbling on the corpse of a murder victim to figure out whodunit ... and why. He's been brought on by the Special Crimes Division of the FDA, the most powerful law enforcement agency on the planet, to investigate their strangest, sickest, and most bizarre cases.

The comics have been collected into a series of trade paperbacks, which include Chew: Taster's Choice, Chew: International Flavor, and Chew: Just Desserts.

Terri Hughes Burton and Ron Milbauer (Supernatural, Point Pleasant) wrote the pilot screenplay.

(Source: Deadline|Hollywood)

Typhoon, an International Thriller by Charles Cumming

The Mystery Bookshelf: Discover a Library of New Mysteries

The Mystery Bookshelf, where you can discover a library of new mysteries, is pleased to feature a new mystery series title we recently received from the publisher.

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Typhoon by Charles Cumming
Non-series
St. Martin's Griffin (Trade Paperback)
Publication Date: March 2011
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-65420-7

Typhoon by Charles Cumming
More Information About Typhoon by Charles Cumming

About Typhoon (from the publisher): In 1997, a few months before the British government is scheduled to return Hong Kong to Chinese rule, Joe Lennox, a brilliant young operative for SIS (MI6), loses both his girlfriend and his first high profile asset – a prominent defector who disappears from a safe house. The girlfriend, the ravishing Isabella Aubert, he lost to Miles Coolidge, a hard-bitten CIA agent; the asset to collusion between his bosses and the CIA.

A decade later, Lennox is back in China, facing his old nemeses. With the CIA plotting to use an Islamic group to destablize China, the SIS seeking to thwart them and his old asset the key to all of this, Lennox, Coolidge, and the girlfriend they shared are hopelessly intertwined in a plot where trust is impossible and truth is unknowable.

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About the author: Charles Cumming is an Assistant Editor of The Week magazine, and regularly writes book reviews for The Spectator and The Mail on Sunday.

He is one of the trustees of The Pierce Loughran Memorial Scholarship fund which provides tuition fees for the Yeats Summer School in Sligo, Ireland. In 2008 he was a First Story writer-in-residence at Cranford Community College, London. He is also the founder and President of the Jose Raul Capablanca Memorial Chess Society. Visit his website at CharlesCumming.co.uk.

Read the first chapter(s) of Typhoon below. Use the Aa settings button to adjust text size, line spacing, and word density.

One for the Money Now Scheduled for Release in January 2012

One for the Money (2012)

If you were looking forward to seeing Katherine Heigl play bounty hunter Stephanie Plum this summer in the film adaptation of One for the Money by Janet Evanovich, you'll have to wait a few months longer.

Just three weeks ago, the studio announced the film's release date was being moved from July to June. Now Lionsgate has announced it is moving the release date back to January 27th, 2012.

One for the Money, originally published in 1994, is the first book in this long running series of bestselling "numbered" mysteries. Smokin' Seventeen is published this June.

(Source: The Hollywood Reporter)

OMN Welcomes Mystery Author Roxe Anne Peacock

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is pleased to welcome Roxe Anne Peacock, whose debut mystery is Leave No Trace (Whiskey Creek Press, February 2011 Trade Paperback, 978-1-61160-071-1).

Today, Roxe Anne discusses her experiences that led to writing the book. And she's also providing our readers with an opportunity to win a copy of her book. Visit Mystery Book Contests, click on the "Roxe Anne Peacock: Leave No Trace" contest link, enter your name, e-mail address, and this code (2462) for a chance to win! (One entry per person; contest ends 04/07/2011.)

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Leave No Trace by Roxe Anne Peacock
Photo provided courtesy of Roxe Anne Peacock

My family didn’t have a lot of money when I was a young girl. Traveling meant a trip to the local river or through the books I read.

When we lived close to a local library, I thought I was in heaven. We also went to garage sales where I discovered the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew and The Bobsey Twins. I took my treasured book along with a quilt and sat under the nearest shade tree. Our house had no air conditioning nor did we have many fans. We kept our windows open and hoped for a breeze.

Some of my other favorite books were To Kill a Mockingbird, Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, Amelia Earhart, and books on destinations.

My family did a lot of camping and fishing. We spent several summers at Castle Rock State Park; though it wasn’t a park in the 1960’s. Yes, I even helped catch the fish and clean them. My siblings and I caught minnows and crawdads, too. We searched at night by flashlight for the biggest worms we could find. I always try to include a river somewhere in my stories.

My love for caves began as a young teen. I was fortunate enough to visit the Merrimac Caverns and a few other small caves. My passion for these wonders was the inspiration for Leave No Trace.

After reading several books about rappelling caverns, especially the Carlsbad Caverns, I knew my book would be centered around Carlsbad Caverns National Park, Carlsbad, New Mexico.

My plot changed from rappelling the caverns after I heard a news flash about two best friends on a road trip who visited Carlsbad National Park. Their hike to Rattlesnake Canyon was their last. The two friends didn’t take provisions and only had three bottles of water on their trip through the desert. When they were found, Raffi Kodikian was barely alive, and he had killed and buried his best friend, David Coughlin.

Now that I wasn’t using the caverns, I decided to use the Flight of the Bats in my story. It is where hundreds of thousands of Mexican free-tailed bats enter and exit a gigantic hole in the earth. The bat flight talks are scheduled from Memorial Day weekend through September.

I researched Carlsbad to see what river I could use in my story and found the Pecos River. I also found the infamous Flume which was once featured in Ripley’s “Believe It or Not” as the river that crosses itself.

In keeping with the best friend theme, I decided to have my protagonist, Jessica Waters and her best friend, Sandra Adams looking forward to attending college in the fall and sharing a dorm. The plans were put on hold when Sandra disappears after prom.

Mutual friend and Sandra’s boyfriend, Jason Harris was the last known person to have been seen with Sandra. He also had secured both girls a summer position at Sally’s Diner where he works. Jason isn’t the only suspect in Carlsbad. Teacher and cross country coach Carl Lundstrum was accused of having an affair with Sandra.

Her plans to investigate her best friend’s disappearance couldn’t go any better when Sally Cooper, owner of Sally’s Diner, calls and asks her to start her job earlier than planned. What better way to research a disappearance than working at a diner where all the gossip mongers hang out. Jessica was going to make it her business to find her best friend if it was the last thing she ever does.

My decision to add a diner stems from my first job as a teenager; waitressing. My pay was $1.05 an hour, and I worked sixteen hour days. I worked eight hours at one diner and then was transferred to another diner for eight more. At the time, I was only fifteen. The tips were pretty good. I usually received 25 cents for serving a customer a cup of coffee.

The gossiping was heavy and so was the petting that went on in the back room with the manager and a few customers. I refilled many cups of coffee to all the local cops and listened to their police calls. The experience was good for my writing today.

I wouldn’t trade my experiences for all the technology in the world. My childhood let me enjoy the imagination a child should have. How many children do you see playing outside?

In today’s society, children are almost expected to be adults at birth. Where is the imagination in playing video games? Now they even have books for babies to read or should I say, memorize.

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To learn more about the author, visit her website at RoxeAnnePeacock.com.

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Leave No Trace by Roxe Anne Peacock
Print EditionKindle Edition

About Leave No Trace: Jessica Waters was looking forward to attending college in the fall with her best friend, Sandra Adams. But when Sandra disappears the night after prom, mutual friend Jason Harris becomes the number one suspect. Jason isn’t the only suspect in the tight-knit community of Carlsbad, New Mexico. Before Sandra disappeared, she confessed to having an affair with coach and teacher, Carl Lundstrum. Now Jessica is going to make it her mission to find out what happened to her best friend, if it is the last thing she ever does.

Leave No Trace is available in Trade Paperback and Kindle Edition (see icons below book cover).

For a chance to win a copy of Leave No Trace, courtesy of the author, visit Mystery Book Contests, click on the "Roxe Anne Peacock: Leave No Trace" contest link, enter your name, e-mail address, and this code (2462) for a chance to win! (One entry per person; contest ends 04/07/2011.)

Explore a Mysterious Town in Shiver: Vanishing Hitchhiker (Collector's Edition), New from BFG

Games of Mystery

Games of Mystery is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery casual game from Big Fish Games released today and available to BFG Club members. You can find out more about these games by visiting our Mystery Games: Big Fish Download Games page or by clicking on the links provided below.

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Shiver: Vanishing Hitchhiker (Collector's Edition)
Shiver: Vanishing Hitchhiker (Collector's Edition)

During a rainstorm, you pick up a young hitchhiker, who leads you to an eerie town where nothing is as it seems. Leaving an unusual object in your car, you try to track her down and return it to her. But you are suddenly haunted by memories that are not your own. Explore a spooky landscape as you figure out where the strange woman has gone, diving deeper into the mystery as you progress through incredible locations and scenes. Will you find the vanishing hitchhiker and discover her secret?

This is a special Collector's Edition, full of extras not found in the standard version, including an integrated strategy guide, bonus gameplay, wallpapers, concept art, and early access.

Shiver: Vanishing Hitchhiker (Collector's Edition) may be downloaded and purchased for $13.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. A demonstration version (320.06 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour.

Watch a preview video below:

Get any standard game for $6.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. Other benefits include the $2.99 Daily Deal, Tomorrow's Game Today, and special member rewards. And if you purchase any 6 games within a single month, you earn a free game with the Big Fish Game Club Monthly Punch Card! (Collector's Editions earn 3 punches each, half-way towards your free game!)

Read Ms. Terri's reviews of the adventure and casual mystery games featured on this site, including Midnight Mysteries: The Edgar Allan Poe Conspiracy, Nancy Drew Dossier: Lights, Camera, Curses!, Enlightenus, and many more!

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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Games of Mystery is your source for mystery-themed video, electronic, and board games, parties for kids and adults, and murder mystery weekends and mystery getaway vacations!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

TNT Drops Two Crime Drama Projects

TNT: We Know Drama

Yesterday we reported that TNT has renewed Southland for a fourth season, and ordered Perception, a new series starring Eric McCormack as a neuroscientist who solves complex criminal cases.

Today we're learning that the cable network has passed on two other crime drama projects that were in development: Bird Dog, about father and daughter cops (Gerald McRaney and Ashley Williams), who work as partners; and the untitled adaptation of The Rabbit Factory by Marshall Karp, with Steven Weber and D. L. Hughley attached to star as LAPD detectives Mike Lomax and Terry Biggs.

(Source: Deadline|Hollywood)

The Magician's Nephew to be Next Chronicles of Narnia Film

The Magician's Nephew by C. S. Lewis
More information about the book

Walden Media, which owns the film rights to the books in the Chronicles of Narnia series by C. S. Lewis, has been talking about the next book to be adapted.

The most recent film to be released, Voyage of the Dawn Treader (in December 2010) has been something of a financial disappointment, at least domestically, so expectations for a fourth entry in the film series were considered slim. However, Michael Flaherty, co-founder and president of Walden Media, recently had this to say: ""We are starting to talk to Fox and talk to the C.S. Lewis estate now about The Magician's Nephew being our next film."

This choice for the next book to film may come as something of a surprise, as it is the sixth book (of seven) written in this fantasy adventure series but it is also a prequel to the first (The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe).

The Magician's Nephew introduces readers to the land of Narnia and how it came to be. The storyline features young Digory and Polly, who are tricked by Digory's peculiar Uncle Andrew into becoming part of an experiment, and set off on the adventure of a lifetime. Hurtled into the Wood between the Worlds, the children soon find that they can enter many worlds through mysterious pools there. In one world they encounter the evil Queen Jadis, who wreaks havoc in the streets of London when she is accidentally brought back with them. When they finally manage to pull her out of London, unintentionally taking along Uncle Andrew and a coachman with his horse, they find themselves in what will come to be known as Narnia.

(Source: The Christian Post)

OMN Welcomes R. Michael Phillips, Author of the Ernie Bisquets Mystery Series

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is pleased to welcome R. Michael Phillips, whose second mystery in the Ernie Bisquets series is Rook, Rhyme & Sinker (Asylett Press, January 2011 Trade Paperback, 978-1-934337-98-1).

Today Mike writes about the origin of his series, and how a picture is worth a thousand words. And he's also providing our readers with an opportunity to win a copy of his new book. Visit Mystery Book Contests, click on the "R. Michael Phillips: Rook, Rhyme & Sinker" contest link, enter your name, e-mail address, and this code (2198) for a chance to win! (One entry per person; contest ends 04/06/2011.)

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Rook, Rhyme & Sinker by R. Michael Phillips
Photo provided courtesy of
R. Michael Phillips

As a trained artist the idea of becoming a mystery writer was not even in the realm of possibilities in my life goals. Yet, there I was five years ago, half way through painting a copy of Manet’s Le Fifre and I found myself making notes about a London forger engaged in the same activity.

Why, you ask, was I painting a copy of a Manet? I wish I could tell you it was something as intriguing as the mysteries I’ve concocted for my series but, in reality, I’m just an artist and avid antique collector with a passion for antique, museum frames. I’ve restored my Victorian home and to complete the interior I’ve hung period paintings in the rooms– copies, actually, of some of my favorite artist’s work.

Now, back to that Manet. Painting is a very solitary activity, giving leave for the mind to wander down who knows where. It was during one of those mental vacations that I found myself wandering the streets of London’s darker side. As my brush stroked the canvas my mind was busy plotting the theft of a Manet by a London forger. He was a kindly old man, someone who would blend into a crowd and, for those who made his acquaintance, could never be imagined to be associated with art forgery. I followed him from London to the Musee d’Orsay in Paris and back again without ever leaving the stool in my studio. The weeks went by, and as I neared completion of the painting, I found I had filled a notebook with character sketches, London locations, plot scenarios, and the list went on and on.

With the painting finally completed, framed and hung in a place of honor in my living room, the only thing left to do was visit the city I had been jotting notes down about for months. Off to London I went, to visit the streets I had envisioned my characters were soon to walk. I had done so much research on the Internet I felt quite familiar with my new surroundings. I made copious notes, took photographs of specific locations, and had the pleasure of meeting a wide assortment of wonderful people who would soon lend character traits to my characters, giving them the little idiosyncrasies that make us the individuals we are and give fictional characters depth.

The real work was about to begin. I was pretty well set with the antagonist, but what about a hero? Who could I introduce who would be different from the vast collection of literary sleuths who have held us perched on the edge of our seats for generations? Who indeed, I thought. I agonized over this character for weeks until it finally came to me– Ernie Bisquets.

Ernie Bisquets? Certainly not a glamorous name, or one you might associate with crime fighting in general, but nonetheless, it was Ernie Bisquets I settled on. To my notebook I went to define this man who I was about to introduce alongside such literary giants as Nick and Nora Charles, Hercule Poirot, Jesse Stone, Nancy Drew, etc.

I gave Ernie the confident swagger in his walk of a gentleman who fit right in among the swells of Mayfair society. Thin and of medium height, he would greet friend or stranger alike with a wink and a nod. Always impeccably dressed, with shoes polished and the day’s paper tucked neatly under his arm, he could be seen most days on a leisurely stroll down Bond Street or through Grosvenor Square. He was, to all who passed him on the street, a man of success. Life was good for Ernie Bisquets, until he slipped his hand into the wrong pocket.

There’s the rub. Common pickpocket? Not Ernie Bisquets. He was anything but common. Ernie was a legend in London’s underworld. A man who perfected his trade and stayed one step ahead of Scotland Yard; a man whose abilities were celebrated by his cronies, but whose identity eluded the official police. That was then, but now he’s a reformed pickpocket newly released from Edmunds Hill prison in Suffolk, struggling to stay on the right side of the law. Detective Inspector Derby Flannel is anxiously awaiting his descent back into his old habit, while Patterson Coats, president of the East London Adventurers Club, has put his reputation on the line to ensure that will never happen.

East London Adventurers Club? See what I mean about the mind wandering who knows where? As engaging as Ernie Bisquets is, I felt he still needed a reason to change his ways and a support group to keep him on track. I should also add, it wasn’t in the least his own idea to step over the line and take on London’s villains. The East London Adventurers Club is what you might consider a “fixer”. Besides traveling the world in search of antiquities for major British museums they have, on occasion, been contacted through back channels by the Crown and affluent British society to discreetly handle delicate matters, matters which are best kept from the media at all costs. This is their true calling and something the group excels in, and has engaged in, since the club was chartered in 1856. The club has remained in the Coats family through four generations and their relevance in contemporary London still proves invaluable. The current members are Patterson Coats, Patterson’s nephew Nigel Coats, and Lily Jean Corbitt, a feisty American. Together they dodge murder and mayhem through the streets of London, chasing down scoundrels and bringing the worst villains London has to offer to justice.

How does Ernie fit in? The London underworld has little time for the law, private or otherwise. Patterson Coats needed someone who could walk amongst this criminal element and extract information covertly. It was a dangerous position to put Ernie in, but a necessary one. Apparently Patterson had a hand arranging Ernie’s capture, for the sole purpose of introducing him to the group and affording him the opportunity to walk on the right side of the law. This is something Ernie struggles with throughout the first book, Along Came A Fifer, and his final decision on the matter I will leave for you to discover on your own.

Back to reality. With all the pieces in place I set off to write the book. It was a long two years of writing, but I finally finished the first book. It was then I found out, to my surprise, up to that moment this was the easy part. I spent the next year sending out queries and enlarging the file I kept rejection letters in. It absolutely amazed me how many different ways publishers and agents could say, “No thank you.” I persevered though, filling in the hours between sending out queries and receiving groups of rejections by writing the second book and making notes for additional adventures.

Then it happened, I received an acceptance letter. As a footnote here I should mention the final query that got the publisher’s attention was so different from the first queries I had sent out you would think they were written by two different people. To say the query, at times, is more important than the book itself is an understatement. But, there I sat, dumbfounded. After three years of writing I was unable to put together a coherent sentence to express the excitement this news brought with it. It finally did sink in. After a few conversations, contract negotiations and a handshake my book went into editing. Almost four years after I jotted down the original notes, in July of 2009, Asylett Press released what started out as just an intriguing thought as I worked on a painting– my first English cozy.

Here it is 2011 and Rook, Rhyme & Sinker, second book in the Ernie Bisquets Mystery Series, has just been released. I continue to paint, and my mind continues to wander down who knows where. Fortunately, I have this wonderful group of characters that have a firm grasp of my attention and keep me to the task of putting their latest adventure to paper. A quick trip to Great Britain here and there and we’re once again in the thick of it.

My wife has been the rock through this whole journey. Her excitement and support of this monumental undertaking was the difference between throwing in the towel on a few occasions and seeing this all the way through. She has quite a unique way of keeping me grounded. Every once in a while, as I talk through one of the scenes in the latest story, my wife will wait patiently for me to finish and quietly say, “You do know they’re not real, right?”

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You can learn more about the author and the Ernie Bisquets mysteries by visiting his website at EastLondonAdventurersClub.com.

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Rook, Rhyme & Sinker by R. Michael Phillips
Print EditionKindle Edition

About Rook, Rhyme & Sinker: A hoard of ivory chessmen discovered on the Isle of Lewis in 1831 still commands the attention of scholars and museum patrons in modern-day London, but the police are more concerned with the connection a newly discovered rook has with a body that just bobbed up in the Regents Canal.

Just when Ernie Bisquets, a reformed London pickpocket, was settling into his new life with the East London Adventurers Club, his daily routine is interrupted by the apparent suicide of an old school mate. What surprises him even more is the bequeath left to him by the deceased -- an old nursery rhyme and one of the lost Lewis Chessmen. Intrigued over the connection, the group investigates the circumstances surrounding the death. They soon find it was murder, and that leads to the discovery of a lost hoard of these priceless artifacts hidden in a St. Ives bridge. What they don't realize is an unscrupulous antique dealer, who has been searching for this lost hoard for decades, is shadowing their every move.

Rook, Rhyme & Sinker is available in Trade Paperback and Kindle formats (see icons below book cover above).

For a chance to win a copy of Rook, Rhyme & Sinker, courtesy of the author, visit Mystery Book Contests, click on the "R. Michael Phillips: Rook, Rhyme & Sinker" contest link, enter your name, e-mail address, and this code (2198) for a chance to win! (One entry per person; contest ends 04/06/2011.)

Read the first chapter of Rook, Rhyme & Sinker below; use the Aa settings button to adjust font size, line spacing, and word density.

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