Saturday, October 25, 2014

An Excerpt from Littlemayor, a City of Brunswik Mystery by Leon Shure

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Leon Shure
Littlemayor by Leon Shure

We are delighted to welcome back author Leon Shure to Omnimystery News.

Leon's new mystery is the second in his City of Brunswik series, Littlemayor (August 2014 ebook formats), and earlier in the week we had the opportunity to spend some time with him to talk more about his mysteries.

Today we're pleased to introduce you to Littlemayor with an excerpt from the first chapter.

— ♦ —

Littlemayor by Leon Shure

UNAVAILABLE, OUT OF THE OFFICE, touring company sites, in a closed meeting.
  "We have been unable to contact Severn Matalokus since the Council meeting last June," Tarko, the Brunswik City Manager, told the assembled city officials.
  They sat, a wall of men on both sides of the conference table, facing, on one end, the small woman they called "Littlemayor," but never to her face. On the other end of the row was the city clerk, Helena Bell, a woman in her 70's, who looked like she could bite.
  Littlemayor was Mayor Martha "Maggie" Philapaitis Wellington, a charismatic, all-eyes-on-her woman, in her mid-60's. Elegantly dressed in a dark blue business suit with her trademark multi-colored scarf around her aging-faster-than-the-rest-of-her neck. Maggie had recently been elected to her third four-year term as Mayor of Brunswik, a suburb on Chicago's wealthy and diverse North Shore, which is, of course, at the Southern tip of Lake Michigan.
  "The last thing Matalokus told me," Helena Bell said, "was that the wrecking ball would begin to swing at the strip mall as soon as permits were granted. I issued those right after the June meeting. So far, nothing. The whole building season passed, and now that spring has arrived, still nothing." She looked like she had been personally slighted by a rude individual who deserved to be given rabies by her sharp teeth and infected saliva.
  "Worse," Tarko said. "Matalokus has changed his e-mail address. His secretary cannot be reached and only an answering service is taking his messages. Which are not answered. We tried to text him, but he has changed his business telephone number. We tried his home number and were advised that the old number had been discontinued and the new number is classified."
  Tarko, an Asian Indian-American, was young to be a city manager. Usually, that job is rewarded to someone of vast experience. The manager makes all the day-to-day decisions for the mostly otherwise employed city fathers. This was Tarko's first managership, having been an assistant in some downstate communities. He was smart and eager and wanted very much to be a success. He looked a little boyish, and the mayor liked him in a parental kind of way.
  Maggie leaned forward, which, unfortunately, made her 4 foot, 10 inch seated figure look even more like a child's. "Why would someone who was so gung-ho about building at the corner of Third and Main, suddenly disappear?"
  "No idea." This was from Rauptt, chairman of the City's Plan Commission, which had recommended approval of Matalokus' proposal for a mall. To be anchored by a huge single-floor department store, part of a chain of clothing and small appliance stores in the Chicago area.
  As presented by the developer, Matalokus, the plan was to tear down the present strip mall, combine it with other adjacent lots and construct a complex with storefronts for at least ten other businesses. All in all, the project, also including a few outlying stores in the large parking lot, would upgrade the whole area. The definition of "upgrade" being that the proposed shopping mall on the far west side of Brunswik would provide more much-needed property tax revenue for the city.
  Maggie turned to meet the eyes of the Police Superintendent Feather, whose wimpy name belied his aggressive stance and purposely thugged-up speech patterns. "I could, if you want, Madame Mayor, secure and restrain the [wanting to say "perpetrator"] . . . this individual in his home. We know where he lives. Highplace."
  Maggie thought, so Matalokus has a home in an even more rich and prestigious North Shore suburb than Brunswik.
  Chief Feather continued, "Or I could tap his phones, get all of his tax records, and stake-out his house."
  Maggie shook her head, no. "Matalokus is not a criminal or a fugitive. He just doesn't want to be found. I don't want the city to be sued for violating his privacy. I think we'd have a few problems, in any case, doing anything extra-jurisdictional." Adding in case the aldermen did not understand, "Beyond Brunswik city boundaries. I don't want to infuriate city fathers all up and down the North Shore. I just want to know what happened to him. I know, this wouldn't be the first time someone has gotten cold feet on a project, but it is downright strange that nothing has been announced and there's so much secrecy surrounding this man."
  She looked at Rauptt of the Planning Commission. "I assume that all the plans could be transferred to some other developer if the proposed project falls through?"
  Rauptt nodded, but didn't look happy or relieved.
  Tarko took up the presentation. "That puts us in the position of, number one, canceling all of the permits for Matalokus and his company, Severn Holdings. Also this would require Council action to abrogate some significant tax breaks and the rescinding of some zoning and traffic variations. These angered the neighboring sub-division committees in the first place and reversing them now would make us look like idiots. Or number two finding some other company with an abundance of cash to take over the project."
  From Rauptt: "Another problem is that this land is in blind real estate trust. It was assumed by the Planning Commission and from hints from Severn himself that the property is owned by Matalokus family members."
  His face always flushed whenever he had to speak in public. He was short for a man, only about 7 inches taller than the mayor. He'd retired young after a successful career in business, and, as a volunteer, spent more time on Planning Commission work than did the city's building commissioner or anyone else.
  The term "blind real estate trust" caused a few quizzical looks among the aldermen. Rauptt noticed and continued. "A blind real estate trust means the owners are not listed. Their names are not recorded. It's allowed by Illinois law. So no one knows who owns the land. There is a front-man, but he needn't actually be the one who calls the shots on the property. Basically, a blind trust is created so property parcels can be bought up without exciting any interest. which would jack up the price, and to discourage premature public scrutiny by local jurisdictions. Or so renters don't know who own their apartment building, and, so, can't bother the real owner with calls when the heat fails or a pipe bursts."
  Tarko: "We'd need the Severn Company's cooperation in transferring whatever titles or contingencies are necessary to bring in another developer."
  Alderman Casey, the chair of the Council's real estate committee, spoke up: "A one-story department store is really needed in that area." Casey was a smooth real estate lawyer, some said shifty. He enjoyed the give and take of politics and could be Mayor some day, many thought. "Otherwise, our residents must travel, inconveniently, to the multi-story super-mall just over the city's west boundary. The area around the proposed mall has one of the oldest resident populations in the city and would get a lot of small bus service from churches and nursing homes."
  Maggie decided not to ask how old was old. Was she old? Probably they all thought of her as being ancient. She thought of herself as being in the youth of old age at 66. Maybe they were all waiting for her to die or retire? Too bad, she had a lot of life left in her. She wasn't nearly done yet.
  "I don't want to give up on Severn just yet," Littlemayor said. "Has anyone tried just driving to his place of business? Have they gone bankrupt? Has there been any article about the company in the business press?"
  "So far as we know, the company is thriving," the city manager said. "It's stock is all family owned, so we can't get as much information from the SEC, but the business takes up an entire, five-story building along Route 88, between Aurora and Naperville. I have personally driven over there, without an appointment of course, and asked to see Matalokus. I was given a polite heave-ho. They said he was in another country."
  "I'll take over," Maggie said. "Perhaps my sources will be useful." As Mayor, it was assumed she had access to people with power. Those wealthy enough to own huge North Shore estates and politicians who had been in office long enough to amass both power and wealth. Although the local elections were officially non-partisan, her political allegiance was no secret. She could appeal for help from the elevated levels of the Democratic Party.
  Tarko looked relieved at the Mayor's offer but Rauptt looked apprehensive. Rauptt said, "Well, I hope I might help you if you would like someone to bounce ideas around." A bit of a tangle of words. Rauptt added, in explanation, "With."
  Why, she wondered, was Rauptt taking this problem so personally? Probably, putting the best interpretation upon it, he felt a deep commitment to the city. Maggie made a mental note to put Rauptt's name up for "Volunteer of the Year" and give him a big plaque.
  Maggie nodded and smiled at Rauptt to show her appreciation, but her second thoughts were less magnanimous. Did Rauptt fear a loss of status if the Mayor was successful where others had failed?
  Was Rauptt interested in being Mayor? She couldn't believe that. He wasn't the type who could project empathy about the concerns of the common voter. Too aloof and specialized. Unprepossessing, not particularly attractive or appealing to the eye.
  Quite the opposite from the charming Mr. Matalokus. Dark, handsome, filled with energy, several years older than herself. He had a full head of beautiful white hair. A nice smile. A cute guy. Made her laugh. He was Maggie's type.
  The last time she'd seen him, they'd met for a working lunch at the restaurant on the city's golf course. He'd been charming. Maggie was Greek too and felt like she could hear old world music whenever Matalokus spoke.
  She'd been a widow for 20 years and a day didn't pass without her thinking about her late husband. He'd been Greek, as well, despite anglifying his unpronounceable Greek name for business reasons.
  When Matalokus drove her back to city hall after their lunch together, she'd hesitated in her seat, wondering if he would make the gentlemanly effort to undo his seatbelt, open his door, and circle the car to open her side. Instead, he leaned into her and kissed her fully on the lips.

— ♦ —

Leon Shure is a life-long resident of the Chicago area, and has lived both in the city and in the North and Northwest suburbs. A bachelors and masters graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, Shure worked for the Lerner Newspapers (a chain of weeklies in the city); the Day Newspapers, a suburban daily newspaper chain owned by Field Enterprises, now the Chicago Sun-Times; and Paddock Publications, a chain of daily newspapers in the Northwest suburbs, where he worked as a police reporter. He received the Jacob Sher Award for Outstanding Investigative Reporting.

As a lawyer, Shure served as an attorney for a Federal Agency and has held elective office in local governments.

He is married and has two children.

For more information about the author, please find him Twitter.

— ♦ —

Littlemayor by Leon Shure

Littlemayor
Leon Shure
A City of Brunswik Mystery

Tiny but feisty Mayor Maggie Wellington finds her life and political career threatened when a developer of a shopping mall goes missing and an alderman dies in an arson.

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A Conversation with Thriller Writer John Lansing

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with John Lansing
with John Lansing

We are delighted to welcome thriller writer John Lansing to Omnimystery News today.

John's new Jack Bertolino novel, Blond Cargo (Gallery Books; October 2014 ebook formats), and is the second in this series to feature the retired New York police inspector.

We recently had the chance to catch up with John to talk more about his books.

— ♦ —

Omnimystery News: Introduce us to Jack Bertolino. What is it about him that appeals to you as a writer?

John Lansing
Photo provided courtesy of
John Lansing

John Lansing: Jack Bertolino is a retired NYPD Inspector. Exemplary record. He spent 25-years as an undercover narcotics detective who worked his way up the political ladder. He ran a group of narco rangers who were responsible for putting multi-ton quantities of cocaine on the table, millions of dollars of laundered cash, and shutting down major cartel kingpins. If it wasn't for a violent fall off a steel girder doing cleanup at ground zero post 9/11 he'd still be carrying a badge.

After three unsuccessful operations and months of painful rehab, he promised never to go under the knife again. Jack found himself standing at the crossroads. Shooting pains ran down his six-foot-three frame on a daily basis. He was damaged goods, recovering from a contentious divorce, and self-medicating his chronic back pain with a daily Vicodin, Excedrin cocktail. He decided to leave his hometown of Staten Island, and move west to find some peace.

What's that old saw? Men make plans and God laughs. Well, twenty-five years of taking down drug dealers, money launderers and killers came back to haunt him, and shook up his newfound state of calm in Marina del Rey, California.

I've always been drawn to flawed characters, in fiction, and in real life. Men and women, fighting demons, who were hell-bent on reinventing themselves.

OMN: How has Jack Bertolino changed from the first book in the series?

JL: Jack Bertolino is a constantly evolving and nuanced character. His resolve and moral compass remains intact from book to book, but he's an emotional product of his day-to-day life and will react accordingly as cases and personal life throw him curve balls.

Each book in the Bertolino series is a stand alone, in that, a case will have a beginning, middle, and an end. And the ensemble of characters may change from one book to the next depending on story line, but there is a core group of confidents and colleagues that Jack trusts who will also arc and grow from story to story. Let's not forget about his ex-wife and her boyfriend who moved into the house Jack built with his own sweat equity and lost in the divorce, or his son, Chris, who's at Stanford on a baseball scholarship.

Jack lives with some serious guilt about his son. When he was working his way up through the ranks as an undercover narcotics detective, he chose the pump, the constant action of working the mean streets of NYC at the expense of family. In doing so, he missed Chris' first steps, baseball games, birthdays, and graduations. Jack's doing his best to repair the damage.

OMN: How would you categorize the books in this series?

JL: The Devil's Necktie and Blond Cargo are Mystery/Thrillers, or Crime/Thrillers. I think there's a large audience for the genre, and more importantly, it's the kind of book I enjoy reading. My bookshelves are filled with novels by Walter Mosley, Michael Connelly, Ian Rankin, Robert Crais, John Sandford, Lee Child, T. Jefferson Parker, Susan Grafton, and James Lee Burke. That's the short list. I'm presently working my way through the Jo Nesbo series and having a blast.

OMN: How would you tweet a summary of Blond Cargo?

JL: Jack is back in Blond Cargo. Bertolino risks his life, career, and relationship with the woman he loves to pay back a debt of honor.

OMN: Describe your writing process for us.

JL: When I sit down to write, I don't start with a plot outline. I did, when I was writing for television. Then it was a necessity. You weren't green lit, given a script assignment and production number without an accepted outline. You didn't get a paycheck without an outline. If production went to hell in a hand basket you couldn't deliver a script in a week without a concise outline.

Now, things have changed for me. I start with an event, or premise, or concept, that intrigues me and I let the characters dictate the action and define the plot, not an executive producer or a star. And then, yes, the plot helps me decide on my cast of characters.

I'll use small step-outlines once I'm off and running, but I use them more as roadmaps. Nothing is set in stone until the book is copyedited. I'm basically flying by the seat of my pants. It's a daunting but exhilarating way to work.

As far as characters go, if they are created out of whole cloth, I will write a biography. If the character is based on someone I know, it's more of a shorthand process.

A perfect example is narcotics Detective Nick Aprea, Jack's only ally on the LAPD. He appears in both of my novels, and he's a major player in the third book I'm in the process off writing. His character is based on a dear friend, who passed away.

Nick was a tough guy, ex military, ex cop, great writer. He didn't suffer fools and if you were lucky enough to have him call you a friend, he'd go to the mat for you. He always had my back. I enjoy spending time with Nick on the page and I think he's a good foil for Jack Bertolino.

OMN: How true are you to the settings of your books?

JL: I live in Marina del Rey, California, and that's where my books are set. Like my protagonist, I'm a New York transplant. But I've been here for so many years I'm almost a native. Jack Bertolino's still a fish out of water.

It helps me to write what I know. What I can touch, feel. Streets I walk down, roads I drive on, and restaurants I eat in. I think the reader appreciates getting an honest feel for the geography where the action takes place. Often a location, or set piece, turns into one of the characters. I'll use real locations to help paint a picture, but I'll fictionalize a setting if it better serves the story.

OMN: What's next for you?

JL: I'm presently working on the third novel in the Jack Bertolino series and making good headway. And in November, Chris Sulavik at Tatra Press is publishing my short story, "The Test". It's a coming of age story, set on Long Island in 1963 that deals with race, violence, social politics, and young love.

— ♦ —

John Lansing started his career as an actor in New York City. He spent a year at the Royale Theatre playing the lead in the Broadway production of Grease. He then landed a co-starring role in George Lucas' More American Graffiti and guest-starred on numerous television shows. During his fifteen-year writing career, Lansing wrote and produced Walker Texas Ranger, co-wrote two CBS Movies of the Week, and he also co-executive produced the ABC series Scoundrels. A native of Long Island, John now resides in Los Angeles.

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

— ♦ —

Blond Cargo by John Lansing

Blond Cargo
John Lansing
A Jack Bertolino Mystery

Jack Bertolino's son, Chris, was the victim of a brutal murder attempt and Vincent Cardona, a mafia boss, provided information that helped Jack take down the perpetrator of the crime. Jack accepted the favor knowing there'd be blowback.

But now the mobster's daughter has gone missing and Cardona turned in his chit. Jack discovers that the young, blond, mafia princess has been kidnapped and imprisoned while rich, politically connected men negotiate her value as a sex slave.

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Bonita by D. W. Ulsterman is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

Bonita by D. W. Ulsterman

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

Bonita by D. W. Ulsterman

A Frank Bennington, P.I. Mystery

Publisher: D. W. Ulsterman

… as today's second free mystery ebook.

Bonita by D. W. Ulsterman, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 25, 2014 at 7:10 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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

More on today's free book, below.

After decades working within the murky political underbelly of the nation's capital, hard living D.C. politico Frank Bennington finds himself out of a job, recovering from a heart attack, and wondering what the hell he's supposed to do next.

Then a phone call from a long ago acquaintance gives Frank an opportunity to use his particular brand of talents and insights to reveal a cover-up with global implications. It is a scandal involving powerful and influential figures who wish for the truth to remain hidden, and the lie to continue to be perpetrated, for it is a lie worth trillions of dollars to those who control its message. In Frank Bennington's new world of private investigations, dead men tell no truths, and that is exactly what his enemies hope to make of him.

Bonita by D. W. Ulsterman

The Red Pearl Effect by Scott Corlett is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

The Red Pearl Effect by Scott Corlett

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature …

The Red Pearl Effect by Scott Corlett

A Sam Quick Adventure

Publisher: Scott Corlett

… as today's free mystery ebook.

The Red Pearl Effect by Scott Corlett, Amazon Kindle format

This title was listed for free as of October 25, 2014 at 7:00 AM ET. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

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

More on today's free book, below.

In 1949, the U.S. eastern seaboard narrowly misses annihilation when a volcanic island erupts off the African coast.

Fast-forward to present day, and American scientist Sam Quick and her team are on mission to the island, searching deep inside the volcanic ridge for the elusive bacteria that will finally liberate the U.S. from Middle Eastern oil. Just days into the expedition, Quick's team is attacked, setting off a chain of events that ricochets the scientists around the capitals of Europe and into far deeper and darker places than any volcanic mineshaft. And at the center is a brutal Russian billionaire hell-bent on rewriting history.

But in this highest-stakes experiment of her life, can Sam Quick stay alive long enough to stop him?

The Red Pearl Effect by Scott Corlett

Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman is Today's Nook Daily Find

Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman as today's Nook Daily Find.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Saturday, October 25, 2014.

Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman

An Amish Village Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Zondervan

Price: $1.99 (as of 10/25/2014 at 6:30 AM ET).

Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman, Amazon Kindle format  Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman, Nook format

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

When the coffee shop manager is murdered in Middlebury's Amish Artisan Village, two women from different walks of life must join together to solve the mystery …

Spring has arrived in Middlebury, Indiana, and Amber Wright is optimistic about the growing profit from her collection of Amish shops — until she receives a call that Ethan Gray is dead. Hurrying over to A Simple Blend, she finds a solitary hole in the front window and the store manager lying next to the espresso machine, dead from an apparent heart attack. All the money is still in his register.

When Amber hires a young Amish woman, Hannah Troyer, to take over the shop's duties, the two women become fast friends — as well as amateur sleuths. The police believe Gray's death is a by-product of vandalism, but Amber and Hannah aren't convinced.

Clues that don't add up, a neighbor who is pulled into the midst of the investigation, a town with secrets to hide, and a blossoming romance — all will combine to push Amber and Hannah into unfamiliar roles in order to reveal answers to the mysteries around them.

Murder Simply Brewed by Vannetta Chapman

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