Friday, May 06, 2011

Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason is Today's Featured Free Kindle Mystery

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature a mystery title that is currently available in Kindle eBook format for free from Amazon.com. We don't know how long it will be offered at this special price (typically only until a certain number of downloads have been completed), so download it today!

— ◊ —

Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason
More Information About Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason

Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason
A Women of Justice Mystery
Revell (Kindle eBook)
Download Link

About Too Close to Home (from the publisher): Samantha Cash is the FBI's secret weapon. Her methods are invisible, and she never stops until the case is closed. When missing teens begin turning up dead in a small Southern town, Samantha is assigned to help local chief Connor Wolfe find the killer. And he has two problems with that. There's her faith -- in God and herself. And then there's the fact that she looks exactly like his late wife. As they get close to an answer, the case becomes personal. The killer seems to be taking an interest in Connor's 16-year-old daughter, who thinks her dad is getting way too protective. Can't a girl just have some fun?

Mysterious Reviews: Mysteries Reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery BooksRead our Review of Too Close to Home by Lynette Eason at Mysterious Reviews.

Mystery Bestsellers for May 06, 2011

Bestselling Hardcover Mystery Books

A list of the top 15 mystery hardcover bestsellers for the week ending April 22nd, 2011 has been posted by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books.

No change at the top, with Michael Connelly's 4th Mickey Haller legal thriller, The Fifth Witness, retaining the number one spot this week. Two new titles enter the list this week.

— ◊ —

Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris
Amazon.com Print/Kindle EditionBarnes&Noble Print/Nookbook EditionApple iBookstore eBookKobo eBook

The 11th Southern Vampire mystery featuring Sookie Stackhouse, Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris, debuts at number 8.

With her knack for being in trouble's way, Sookie witnesses the firebombing of Merlotte's, the bar where she works. Since Sam Merlotte is now known to be two-natured, suspicion falls immediately on the anti-shifters in the area. Sookie suspects otherwise, but her attention is divided when she realizes that her lover Eric Northman and his "child" Pam are plotting to kill the vampire who is now their master. Gradually, Sookie is drawn into the plot-which is much more complicated than she knows ...

— ◊ —

The 10th Anniversary by James Patterson
Amazon.com Print/Kindle EditionBarnes&Noble Print/Nookbook EditionKobo eBook

Debuting in 11th position is the tenth Women's Murder Club thriller, The 10th Anniversary by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro.

Detective Lindsay Boxer's long-awaited wedding celebration becomes a distant memory when she is called to investigate a horrendous crime: a badly injured teenage girl is left for dead, and her newborn baby is nowhere to be found. Lindsay discovers that not only is there no trace of the criminals -- but that the victim may be keeping secrets as well.

At the same time, Assistant District Attorney Yuki Castellano is prosecuting the biggest case of her life -- a woman who has been accused of murdering her husband in front of her two young children. Yuki's career rests on a guilty verdict, so when Lindsay finds evidence that could save the defendant, she is forced to choose. Should she trust her best friend or follow her instinct?

Lindsay's every move is watched by her new boss, Lieutenant Jackson Brady, and when the pressure to find the baby begins interfering with her new marriage to Joe, she wonders if she'll ever be able to start a family.

— ◊ —

For more mystery books news, 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, May 05, 2011

Review: The Informant by Thomas Perry

The Informant by Thomas Perry
More information about the book

The Informant by Thomas Perry. A Butcher's Boy Mystery. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Hardcover, May 2011.

This exciting, fast-paced novel has its fair share of victims but at some point one has to wonder, is the Butcher Boy really that good or are his adversaries really that inept? Possibly the best way to experience this thriller is to simply sit back and enjoy the ride, and not dwell too much on the details of the plot as it goes racing by.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: The Informant by Thomas Perry.

Purchase Options: Amazon.com Print Edition | Amazon.com Kindle Edition | Barnes&Noble NookBook | Kobo eBook

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

The Woman in Black Starring Daniel Radcliffe to be Distributed in US by CBS Films

The Woman in Black (2012)

Other than a minimalist international poster (right) and a scant 45 second or so teaser trailer (below), we haven't heard much recently -- until today, that is -- about the film The Woman in Black, adapted from the supernatural thriller by Susan Hill and starring Daniel Radcliffe in his first major role since the end of the Harry Potter series.

We're now learning that US distribution rights have been acquired by CBS Films, with a release date to be announced. The film opens in the UK in February, 2012.

The storyline follows a young lawyer, Arthur Kipps (Radcliffe), who is ordered to travel to a remote village and sort out a recently deceased client's papers. As he works alone in the client's isolated house, Kipps begins to uncover tragic secrets, his unease growing when he glimpses a mysterious woman dressed only in black. Receiving only silence from the locals, Kipps is forced to uncover the true identity of the woman in black on his own, leading to a desperate race against time when he discovers her true intent.

The Woman in Black, published in 1983, was previously adapted in 1987 as a stage play and in 1989 as a BBC made-for-television drama.

(Source: Deadline|New York.)

Indefensible by Pamela Callow is eHarlequin's Friday Freebie

eHarlequin Freebie Fridays!

We're always happy to see a mystery or suspense novel featured on Freebie Fridays at eHarlequin. For those of you unfamiliar with it, if you purchase any two books on Fridays at eHarlequin.com, you receive the featured title free! (eBooks are excluded from this promotion.)

Pamela Callow's second Kate Lange mystery, Indefensible, is free with the purchase of any two or more other books tomorrow, Friday May 6th. It will automatically be added to your shopping cart. In our review of Indefensible, we called the book "a superbly plotted and suspenseful thriller, with solid characters and a riveting, dynamic storyline."

Click on the banner above to start shopping!

Indefensible by Pamela Callow

About Indefensible (from the publisher): When Elise Vanderzell plummets from her bedroom balcony one gorgeous summer night, her children awaken to a nightmare.

Their mother is dead.

Their father is charged with her murder.

Lawyer Kate Lange knows all about nightmares. She's survived the darkest period of her troubled life and the wounds are still raw. Now she's been handed a case that seems utterly unwinnable: defending her boss, high-profile lawyer Randall Barrett. A prosecutor's dream suspect, Randall is a man who was cuckolded by his ex-wife. A man who could not control his temper. A man who had argued bitterly with the victim the previous day in full view of the children.

With limited criminal law experience, Kate finds herself enmeshed in a family fractured by doubt. Randall's teenage son is intent on killing him. His daughter wants only to feel safe again. And the entire legal community would like nothing better than to see Randall receive a public comeuppance. As Kate races to stay a step ahead of the prosecution, a silent predator is waiting for the perfect time to deal the final blow.

New Warner Bros. Archive DVDs: Pilots for Harry-O and Search

Official Shop of Warner Bros.

New on DVD this week from the Warner Bros. archives ...

Harry O Pilot (1974)

In March 1973, ABC aired a made-for-television movie titled Such Dust as Dreams Are Made On, starring David Janssen as Harry Orwell, a Los Angeles cop forced into retirement and setting up a private investigation practice in San Diego. The intent was for the movie to serve as a pilot for a potential series. The network wasn't quite satisfied with the result and after a bit of retooling, a second made-for-television movie was filmed, Smile Jenny, You're Dead, which aired in February 1974 and led to the series Harry O being scheduled for the 1974/1975 television season. (Subsequent airings of this movie were shown as Don't Call the Police.)

Warner Bros. has now made this second pilot available as a made-to-order DVD. The plot follows Harry on the trail of the lowlife who murdered his pal’s son-in-law, but is also notable for featuring a young Jodie Foster as Liberty Cole, a pre-teen who sets up home on Harry's beachfront property.

Somewhat inexplicably, the series Harry O, which ran for two seasons on ABC, has not been made available on DVD.

Probe (1972)

Hugh O'Brian stars as Hugh Lockwood, a high-tech private eye, in the made-for-television film Probe, which led to a series featuring the character titled Search. The series ran for one season (1972/1973) on NBC.

Lockwood is fitted with a hipster ring that is a camera, transmitting images and sounds of his surroundings; and a scanner, detecting telltale changes in pulse or other biometric readings of himself and the people around him. The ring and more electronic devices – some embedded – keep Lockwood linked with his mission director (played by Burgess Meredith) at Probe Control, where experts and banks of computers provide instant mission-critical warnings, intel, even language translations.

Warner Bros. has now made this telefilm available as a made-to-order DVD. The plot follows Lockwood on a quest to recover priceless diamonds lost since World War II.

OMN Welcomes Suspense Novelist M. L. Malcolm

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is pleased to welcome M. L. Malcolm, whose latest novel of suspense is Heart of Deception (Harper, April 2011 Trade Paperback, 978-0-06-196219-6).

Today M. L. writes about ambiance and how important it is to a book ... indeed, in her opinion, it makes all the difference.

— ◊ —

Heart of Deception by M. L. Malcolm
Photo provided courtesy of
M. L. Malcolm

Perhaps more than any other genre, mysteries are enhanced by their surroundings; the place becomes essential to the mood of the story, and often directly affects the behavior of its characters. What would Sherlock Holmes be without London? How could James Lee Burke’s Dave Robicheaux exist outside of New Orleans? How could the Easy Rawlins’ mysteries by Walter Mosley be set somewhere other than 1940’s Los Angeles? Or Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum do her bond bailsman thing anywhere else but New Jersey?

I enjoy discovering and then sharing fascinating facts that I uncover in relatively unexplored historical corners, so when deciding upon the opening setting for my latest novel, Heart of Deception, I wanted to find a place that would allow me to do exactly that. My research quickly led me to Tangier.

This city has long played a role in the popular imagination, from the era of the Barbary Pirates to the Bohemian days of the 1970’s. Even Mark Twain, in Innocents Abroad, suggested, "I would seriously recommend to the Government of the United States that when a man commits a crime so heinous that the law provides no adequate punishment for it, they make him Consul-General to Tangier."

But other than World War II buffs, few people realize the strategic role the city held during the early days of that massive war. The first American casualties in Europe were not inflicted by the Germans; they came at the hands of the French, when the Vichy government elected to honor their agreement with Hitler and defend North Africa. Tangier was the base of the espionage operations that helped pave the way for that invasion, code-named “Operation Torch.”

My main character, Leo Hoffman, is recruited to work as a spy in 1939. The American O.S.S. wasn’t operating in Europe until 1942, but President Roosevelt personally sent the diplomat, Robert Murphy, to North Africa in 1940 to keep tabs on what was happening there. Murphy recruited twelve men—nicknamed “the Apostles”—who were allegedly vice-consuls monitoring compliance with foreign trade agreements, but who were in fact serving as gatherers of intelligence for the U.S. and its allies. I knew that’s where Leo needed to end up as well.

He would work under the command of Colonel William Eddy, a real marine who had an outstanding service record in WWI in military intelligence, and was personally tapped by William “Wild Bill” Donovan, founder of the American Office of Strategic Services, to head up the spy network in North Africa. (In 1944 Eddy went on to become Minister Plenipotentiary to Saudi Arabia, where he continued to serve as an important source for the Central Intelligence Agency.)

Eddy had been born in Syria to missionary parents, had spent much of his life there, and was totally comfortable living in the Middle East. The first thing he did was to move his operations from Cairo to Tangier. This got him out from under the British, whom he didn’t trust, especially the head of the Secret Intelligence Service in Algiers, whom Eddy once said “would sell his country, his soul, or his mother for a peseta.” It also put his headquarters just twenty miles from Spain, which facilitated communication with the European continent.

The other advantage was Tangier’s near-lack of a functioning government. The eight-nation governing council allegedly in charge of the independent city-state had collapsed; the lack of control made it a perfect home base for spies. As my character, Leo Hoffman, notes in the opening scene of Heart of Deception, “The city was an enormous spider web of intrigue. One small vibration in one isolated corner, and out scurried the predators with a thousand eyes, ready to feast on the vulnerable.”

In fact the mystique surrounding the city of Casablanca after the release of the 1942 movie really belonged to Tangier. In the play upon which the movie was based, “Everybody Goes to Rick's,” Rick’s Café was modeled on the bar at the Hotel El Minzah, where Leo is having coffee in the first scene of Heart of Deception. But there was not an official Nazi presence in Tangier, so moving the action to Casablanca gave Hollywood the bad guys it needed for the movie, because that city was officially under Vichy control.

The ancient streets of the Medina, the desperateness of the many international refugees, the threat of murder and mayhem around every corner—in 1940 Tangier was the perfect setting for a newly-minted spy. If “the clothes make the man,” I believe “the setting helps make the mystery.” And Leo’s story would not have been quite the same had I put him down in any other place.

— ◊ —

Although born in New York, M. L. Malcolm spent most of her childhood in Florida. Her education gradually brought her back north, as she earned degrees from Emory University and Harvard Law School. However, after practicing law for three years, M. L. determined that "she and the law were not meant for each other," and she is now a self-described "recovering attorney."

M. L. has won several awards for her fiction, including special recognition in the prestigious Lorian Hemingway International Short Story Competition, and a silver medal from ForeWord Magazine for Best Historical Fiction Book of the Year 2009. She has also amassed an impressive hat collection (and yes, she does wear them). Visit her website at MLMalcolm.com.

— ◊ —

Heart of Deception by M. L. Malcolm
Print EditionKindle EditionNookBookKobo eBook

About Heart of Deception: A man of many contradictions, Leo Hoffman is a Hungarian national with a French passport, a wealthy businessman with no visible means of support, and a devoted father who hasn't seen his daughter in years. He is also a spy.

Recruited by the Allies to help lay the groundwork for their invasion of North Africa, Leo intends to engage in as little espionage as possible—just enough to earn his American citizenship so he can get to New York and reunite with his daughter, Maddy. But while Leo dodges death in France and Morocco, Maddy is learning shocking truths about her father's mysterious past—haunting knowledge that will compel her down her own dangerous path of deception and discovery.

Heart of Deception is available in Trade Paperback and popular eBook formats (see icons below book cover).

Read the first chapter of Heart of Deception below; use the Aa settings button to adjust font size, line spacing, and word density.

Find a Group of Missing Students in Mystery Trackers: Raincliff, 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.

— ◊ —

Mystery Trackers: Raincliff (Collector's Edition)
Mystery Trackers: Raincliff (Collector's Edition)

When a university bus carriying a group of young students goes missing, the Mystery Trackers are called in to search the city of Raincliff. Explore the entire town and learn of the skilled supernatural foes who are watching your every move. Use your hidden object talents to carefully dissect scenes, overcome obstacles, and piece together perplexing puzzles. Tackle this difficult case and unravel the strange mystery to find the students.

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

See also the previous game in this series, Mystery Trackers: The Void (Collector's Edition).

Mystery Trackers: Raincliff (Collector's Edition) may be downloaded and purchased for $13.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. A demonstration version (302.88 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour; the standard version is 916.96 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

— ◊ —

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, May 04, 2011

Review: Red Wolf by Liza Marklund

Red Wolf by Liza Marklund
More information about the book

Red Wolf by Liza Marklund. An Annika Bengtzon Mystery. Atria Hardcover, February 2011.

A generally enjoyable, if strikingly uneven thriller, the overall plot involving the former terrorists has a credible foundation, is well developed and plays out with some unexpected twists and turns ... but getting there requires a circuitous route and detours into two significantly overwritten subplots.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: Red Wolf by Liza Marklund.

Purchase Options: Amazon.com Print Edition | Amazon.com Kindle Edition | Barnes&Noble NookBook | Kobo eBook

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

The Raven Gets a Release Date ... but Loses Title

The Raven (2012)

We haven't heard much recently about the film The Raven -- a fictionalized account of the last days of Edgar Allan Poe's life, in which the poet is in pursuit of a killer whose murders mirror those in the writer's stories -- but today we're learning that the film has an official release date (March 9th, 2012) and that it will get a new title.

The Untitled Raven Project stars John Cusack as Edgar Allan Poe, who teams up with police detective Emmett Fields (played by Luke Evans) to find the serial killer. The screenplay is written by Ben Livingston and Hannah Shakespeare.

(Source: /Film.)

New Poster for Anonymous

Anonymous (2011)

A few weeks ago we featured the first trailer for the political thriller Anonymous, which has as a key element of its plot: Did William Shakespeare actually write the plays credited to him? And if not, who did?

Today, the studio has released a new poster for the film, featuring an "anonymous" man with a quill in his hand.

Set during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I and focusing on a time when cloak-and-dagger political intrigue, illicit romances in the Royal Court, and the schemes of greedy nobles hungry for the power of the throne were exposed in the most unlikely of places: the London stage.

The film, which stars Rhys Ifans as Edward de Vere, the purported author of the plays attributed to William Shakespeare (played by Rafe Spall), Vanessa Redgrave as Queen Elizabeth I, and Joely Richardson as Princess Elizabeth Tudor, opens in theaters September 30th, 2011.

A&E's 2011 Upfront Announcements Include Miniseries Adaptation of Coma by Robin Cook

Coma by Robin Cook

A&E announced its upfront programming today, and among the projects moving forward is a miniseries based on the 1977 medical thriller Coma by Robin Cook. The project, which was originally announced during the 2010 upfronts, is being developed by executive producers Ridley Scott, Tony Scott and David W. Zucker for Scott Free Productions.

In the book, a doctor discovers that something sinister is going on in her hospital after routine procedures send more than a few seemingly healthy patients into comas on the operating table. The patients are then sent to an undisclosed institute where they are to be observed; sensing something is amiss, the savvy doctor realizes that their organs are being illegally harvested for profit. She must then decide who she can trust and how to stop it ... before she is silenced.

The book was made into a feature film, also titled Coma, that was adapted and directed by Michael Crichton. A&E's 4-hour adaptation is expected to air in May 2012.

Other crime dramas in development at the network include the previously announced Big Mike (working title), featuring a plus-sized detective in San Diego; and Longmire (working title), based on the mystery series by Craig Johnson featuring Wyoming sheriff Walt Longmire.

Omnimystery Blog Archive

Total Pageviews (last 30 days)

Omnimystery News
Original Content Copyright © 2022 — Omnimystery, a Family of Mystery Websites — All Rights Reserved
Guest Post Content (if present) Copyright © 2022 — Contributing Author — All Rights Reserved