SEATTLE MYSTERY BOOKSHOP
Winter 2008/2009 Newsletter
117 Cherry St. Seattle, WA
98104
Hours: 10-5 Mon – Sat, 12-5 Sun
Bill Farley, Founder / JB Dickey, Owner /Fran Fuller,
Bookkeeper
Janine Wilson, Bookseller / Gretchen Brevoort, Co-op /Marie Ary-Almojuela, Bookseller
staff@seattlemystery.com 206-587-5737 www.seattlemystery.com
cops — private eyes — courtroom – thrillers
— suspense — espionage — true crime — reference
New from the Northwest
Cherry Adair, Night Shadow (Dec., Ballantine hc, 23.00). Last in her paranormal romance trilogy with the anti-terrorist
group T-FLAC.
James H. Cobb, Robert Ludlum’s The
Infinity Hunt (Jan., Grand
Central hc, 23.99). Covert One supports the search by scientists into the
world’s hot spots – literally, the hot springs, geysers and deserts – for the
universal ancestor of us all. Others have the same mission, but with selfish
aims.
Vicki Delany, Valley of the Lost (Feb., Poisoned Pen hc, 24.95). In their small BC town, Probationary
Constable Molly Smith and Sgt. John Winters are puzzled by their new case: a
young woman has been found dead of what appears to be an accidental drug
overdose, leaving her infant alone beside her. Nothing is known about the young
mother outside of her first name. So two questions remain: who was she and was
the death accidental? Signing.
Earl
Emerson,
Cape Disappointment (Feb., Ballantine hc, 25.00). After a
10-year absence, the wait is over! Thomas Black and Kathy Birchfield are
working on opposite sides in a heated campaign. But the incumbent Senator’s
plane goes down off the Coast and Kathy is missing and Thomas finds the
cover-up is already underway. All he really wants is to find her. Others want
the whole thing to stay a mystery. Signing.
Yasmine
Galenorn, Night
Huntress (Jan., Berkley pbo, 7.99). 5th in the D’Artigo sisters series. Delilah’s
boyfriend, Chase, is kidnapped by a demon searching for the fourth spirit seal.
Signing.
Julie Garwood, Fire and Ice (Jan., Ballantine hc, 26.00). A Chicago newspaperwoman quits after
she’s pressured to write about her father, a popular rogue and thief. Working
for a smaller paper, a story she’s working on leads her to Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay
and secrets that powerful forces want to remain secret.
Lisa Jackson
& Nancy Bush, Wicked Game (Feb., Zebra pbo, 7.99). The sisters team up to craft a story of old friends who, to
their horror, discover that someone is targeting them, murdering them one by
one.
J.A. Jance, Cruel Intent (Dec., Touchstone hc, 25.95). In Ali’s 4th appearance,
her remodeling contractor’s unfaithful wife has been murdered. While the
husband is the obvious suspect, Ali Reynolds swims against the current and
tries to prove what she believes, that he is innocent. Signing.
Jayne Ann
Krentz,
Running Hot (Jan., Putnam hc, 24.95). Lifelong member of the Arcane Society,
Luther Malone is assigned to escort a librarian from Eclipse Bay, OR, to Maui
so that she can use her aura-reading to help the Society find a murder suspect.
Signing. In paper, Sizzle and Burn
(Feb., Jove, 9.99).
Kevin O’Brien, Final Breath (Jan., Pinnacle pbo, 6.99). Sydney had fled Seattle with her son
to find a new life but someone is sending her tokens from a series of murders
that have happened around the nation, deaths that had appeared to be
unconnected. The warning is clear: find the links or be next. Signing.
Linda L.
Richards,
Death Was in the Picture (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). In her
second case, Hollywood PI Kitty Pangborn is sent into the movie biz when her
boss, Dexter Theroux, is asked to help prove a hunky star had no part in the
disappearance and death of a starlet. Signing.
Kat
Richardson
– see Special Interest
Wendy Roberts, Devil May Ride (Dec., Obsidian pbo, 6.99). At the scene of a meth lab massacre,
crime scene cleaner Sadie Novak encounters the most malevolent spirit in her
experience. Signing.
Dana Stabenow, Whisper to the Blood (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). A
contentious plan to resume gold mining inside the state’s largest park is
causing problems and violence – and then murder. The mining company had hired a
skiing champ to promote the mine. In quick succession, she’s killed, as is the
leading mine opponent. Then there is the little matter of an unsolved murder
that happened a year ago inside the park, Kate Shugak seems to be in the best
position to investigate the various angles. Signing. In
paper, Prepared for Rage (Feb., St. Martin’s, 7.99). Also,
see Special Interest
Now in Paperback
William
Dietrich, The Rosetta Key (Feb.,
Harper, 7.99).
Carola Dunn, The Bloody Tower (Feb., Kensington, 6.99). Marie recommends.
Robert
Ferrigno,
Sins of the Assassin (Jan., Pocket, 7.99). Fran
recommends.
G.M. Ford, Nameless
Night (Feb., Harper, 7.99). Gretchen
recommends.
Sharan Newman, The Shanghai Tunnel
(Jan., Forge, 7.99).
Greg Rucka, Patriot Acts (Dec., Bantam, 6.99). Atticus and Drama. JB recommends.
April Smith, Judas Horse (Feb., Vintage, 13.95). JB recommends this Ana Grey, set
mostly in Oregon.
Mysterious Youth
Ridley Pearson, Steel Trapp: The Challenge (Jan., Hyperion, 8.99).
Coming This Spring
Anne Argula & Quinn, Mar.
Daniel Edward
Craig &
Trevor Lambert, April
William
Dietrich &
Ethan Gage, April
Robert Dugoni
&
David Stone, April
Sue Henry & Maxie
and Stretch, April
Caitlin
Kittredge &
Det. Luna Wilder, Mar.
Cricket McRae
&
Sophie Mae, Mar.
Gregg Olsen, Heart of Ice,
Mar.
New from the General Population
Nancy
Atherton, Aunt Dimity
Slays the Dragon (Feb., Viking
hc, 24.95). A Renaissance fair brings nothing but trouble to Lori’s
small English village. 14th in this cozy
classic. In paper, Aunt
Dimity: Vampire Hunter (Feb.,
Penguin, 7.99).
Maggie
Barbieri,
Quick Study (Dec., St. Martin’s hc,
24.95). 3rd in the Murder 101 series with college
English professor Alison Bergeron.
Jefferson
Bass, Bones of Betrayal (Feb., Morrow hc, 24.95). Body Farm director Bill Brockton is called in
when a body is found near Oak Ridge, TN, in a dirty swimming pool. The victim
didn’t drown – he died of recent radiation poisoning and he was involved in the
Manhattan Project 65 years ago. In paper, The Devil’s Bones (Feb., Harper, 7.99). Fran recommends this series.
Deb Baker, Ding Dong Dead (Dec., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 4th
featuring dolls and death.
Lorna Barrett, Bookmarked for Death (Feb., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 2nd with mystery bookshop owner Tricia Miles, who
has a real-life body on her hands when a bestselling author is murdered in the
bathroom.
Josh Bazell, The Beat Reaper (Jan., Little Brown hc, 24.95). Debut funny thriller from a medical resident. Peter Brown,
an emergency room physician, was able to become a doctor due to a new life in
the Witness Protection Program. Someone in the ER, from his past life, has just
realized who he is, and the Jersey mob has a strong memory and a long reach. Gretchen
recommends.
Alex Berenson, The Silent Man (Feb., Putnam hc, 24.95). 3rd in this Edgar-winning espionage series. As
the CIA’s John Wells is heading to work with fiancée Jennifer Exley, DC is
attacked in a spectacular way and the participants are determined to be
Russian. Wells’ investigation and battle will take him into the heart of the
former Soviet state. Signed
Copies Available. In paper, The Ghost War (Feb., Jove, 9.99). Janine
recommends this author.
Ira Berkowitz, Old Flame (Jan., Three Rivers tpo, 12.95). Debut noir
novel set in Hell’s Kitchen. Positively blurbed by Chelsea
Cain, Thomas Perry and Reed Farrell Coleman, but no plot given.
Jedediah
Berry,
The Manual of Detection (Feb., Viking hc, 25.95). Debut
purported to be unlike any mystery that has gone before. At a huge detective
agency, in a city that is always dark and rainy, Charles Unwin works in
anonymity, writing up solved cases. When the firm’s great detective disappears
and Unwin’s boss is murdered, he’s suddenly promoted to detective, a job he has
no talent for. Relying on The Manual of Detection, he faces a bewildering
number of oddities in his investigation. Said to be a mix of The Big Sleep, The
Yiddish Policeman’s Union, Carlos Ruiz Zafon and Jorge Luis Borges.
Steve Berry, The Charlemagne
Pursuit (Dec., Ballantine hc, 26.00). Bookdealer
Cotton Malone’s latest hunt is for a manuscript said to be from Charlemagne’s
tomb. Tied into the clues are Cotton’s father’s military records and Nazi
exploration of Antarctica. 4th in this
biblio-adventure series. In paper, The Venetian Betrayal (Dec.,
Ballantine, 9.99).
Annette Blair, A Veiled Deception (Jan., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 1st
in a new series with vintage clothing and vintage murder, whatever that is.
Really, we don’t know what that is.
Miranda Bliss, Dying for Dinner (Dec., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 4th
in the Cooking Class series.
Jay
Bonansinga, Perfect Victim (Dec., Pinnacle pbo, 6.99). 4th with FBI profiler Ulysses Grove.
C.J. Box, Three Weeks to Say Goodbye (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). Nine months
after a childless couple adopt a baby girl, the birth father lets them know
that he never signed any papers and his father, a powerful judge, is jamming
through a return order. These two men seem intent on forcing their power down
the couple’s throat, but don’t seem to care that much about the child. In paper, Blue Heaven (Dec., St. Martin’s, 7.99).
Suzanne
Brockman, Dark of Night (Jan., Ballantine hc, 25.00). Still stinging from their wounds (Into the Fire, Feb.,
Ballantine mm, 6.99), the members of Troubleshooters, Inc. gear up to achieve
justice. In paper,
All Through the Night (Dec.,
Ballantine, 7.99).
Jan
Brogan, Teaser (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95).
Looking on-line at video clips, a reporter finds a lead to a story.
Jan Burke, The Messenger (Dec., Simon and Schuster hc, 25.00). Something
different from the Edgar winner: a supernatural thriller about a voice from a
Caribbean shipwreck, a man who has looked 24 years old for the last two hundred
years, a job to hear the last wishes of the dying, and doomed love.
Stephen J.
Cannell, On the Grind (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 25.95). 8th Shane Scully.
Kate Carlisle, Homicide in Hardcover (Feb.,
Obsidian pbo, 6.99). Her mentor dead on the eve of his great triumph – a
restoration of a priceless copy of Faust - she’s not only a suspect, she’s
wondering if there is something to the idea that this copy is cursed. First in
a new bibliomystery series set in San Francisco.
Lincoln Child, Terminal Freeze (Jan., Doubleday hc, 24.95). In Alaska’s Arctic Circle, scientists
find an ancient animal encased in ice. Their corporate sponsors have obviously
never watched King Kong because they
order it cut from the ice and brought back as a media spectacle.
Laura Childs, Eggs in Purgatory (Dec., Berkley pbo, 6.99). Third series
from the scrapbooking and tea shop writer. When three friends open the
Cackleberry Club Café, a local lawyer is one of their first customers and the
first victim. With obligatory recipes. Marie
enjoys this author.
Blaze Clement, Cat Sitter on a Hot Tin Roof (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 4th with Florida pet sitter Dixie Hemingway.
Meredith S.
Cole, Posed for Murder (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). A
photographer’s first show is a catastrophe. Not only did nothing sell and the
gallery owner make her pay for all expenses, but the police have closed the
show down. The photos were recreations of actual crime scenes and one of the
models that she used has actually been murdered. Debut
thriller by a NYC filmmaker and winner of the St. Martin’s/Malice Domestic Best
First Traditional Mystery Novel Competition.
Kate Collins, Evil in Carnations (Feb., Obsidian pbo, 6.99). 8th
in this flower shop series. One of Abby’s friends is accused of murdering her
date after Abby pushed her to start seeing men again. Didn’t
work out so well.
Susan Conant and Jessica Conant-Park, Fed Up (Feb., Berkley hc, 23.95). 4th
culinary mystery by the mother/daughter team. In paper, Turn Up the Heat (Feb., Berkley, 7.99).
Beverly
Connor,
Scattered Graves (Feb., Obsidian pbo, 7.99). 6th with forensics investigator Diane Fallon.
After a mayoral election, she’s replaced as head of the crime lab. Two big
murders will get her back in the game.
Michael
Craven, Body Copy (Feb., Harper tpo, 13.95). Tremaine was
a championship surfer who quit at the top of his sport. He lives in a crappy
trailer park and works as a PI, taking challenging cases. Nina Aldeen hires him
to investigate her father’s murder. It happened a year ago and the cops have
made no progress. Debut.
Bill Crider, Murder in Four Parts (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 16th Sheriff Dan Rhodes.
Shirley
Damsgaard, The Witch’s Grave (Jan.,
Avon pbo, 6.99). 6th in this cozy witch
series.
Casey Daniels, Nights of the Loving Dead (Jan., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 4th in the Pepper Martin series,
heiress-turned-cemetery-tour-guide.
Sean
Doolittle, Safer (Feb., Delacorte hc, 24.00). A man moves
his family to anywhere Iowa to find a better, quieter life. The family seems to
be fitting in fine but then the police show up at their home in the middle of a
party and arrest him on charges of inappropriately touching a young neighborhood
girl. Everything will fall apart and leave him wondering who has framed him and
wants his life destroyed. Sometimes too much safety can be dangerous. Bill
recommends.
Tim Dorsey, Nuclear Jellyfish (Feb., Morrow hc, 24.95). 11th
Florida lunacy with philosopher/psychopath Serge A. Storm. Signed Copies Available. In paper, Atomic
Lobster (Jan., Harper, 7.99).
Barry Eisler, Fault Line (Feb.,
Ballantine hc, 25.00). Something new from the former covert op: Two
brothers haven’t been close in years. But one, a lawyer, has been attacked and
the only person he can call on for help is his brother, an undercover soldier.
The real struggle will be for them to figure out a way to work together before
their familial troubles distract them and get them killed.
Robert Ellis, The Lost Witness (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 25.95). In her second appearance, LA’s
Robbery-Homicide Det. Lena Gamble is out of favor with the brass, though loved
by her fellow officers for the way she closed her last case. Now, after months
of small-time cases, she’s assigned to work a homicide. She’s disappointed to
figure out it is one they plan for her not to solve.
J.T. Ellison, Judas Kiss (Jan.,
Mira pbo, 6.99). Nashville homicide cop Taylor Jackson is usually not
affected by the crimes she investigates. This murder – a young pregnant mother
whose first baby is found near the body – is different. The clues will lead to
amateur, internet porn and allow an old adversary to implicate Jackson in the
crime. Fran recommends this series.
Dianne Emley, The Deepest Cut (Feb., Ballantine hc, 24.00). 3rd with Pasadena cop Nan Vining, and Cut to the Quick (Feb., Ballantine pbo, 6.99). 2nd
in a trilogy with West Coast homicide Det. Nan Vining. In
paper, The First Cut (Jan., Ballantine, 6.99). Signing.
Hallie Ephron, Never Tell a Lie (Jan., Morrow hc, 24.95). After years of work, high school
sweethearts Ivy and David are where they want to be in their lives. At a yard
sale, a woman they’ve not seen in years appears and intimates that she and
David once had a thing. It unnerves Ivy and their wonderful life begins to
crumble. Sister of writer and director Nora. Gretchen
recommends.
Janet
Evanovich,
Plum Spooky (Jan., St Martin’s hc, 27.95). Another
‘between-the-numbers’ novel. In paper, Plum Lucky (Jan., St. Martin’s, 6.99).
Jimmie Ruth
Evans,
Leftover Dead (Jan., Berkley pbo, 7.99). 5th
in the Trailer Park series under this pseudonym by Dean James.
Linda
Fairstein,
Lethal Legacy (Feb., Doubleday hc, 26.00). ADA Alex Cooper finds herself in the middle of a bibliomystery. A young woman was
assaulted but refused to talk. The next week, another young woman is found dead
in that same apartment, with a rare book nearby. Clues lead the investigation
to a wealthy and eccentric family of book collectors and benefactors of the NYC
Library’s rare book collection. In paper, Killer Heat (Jan., Vintage, 7.99).
Monica Ferris, Thai Die (Dec., Berkley hc, 23.95). 12th in the
Crewel World needlecraft series.
Joanne Fluke, Cream Puff Murder (Mar., Kensington hc, 24.00). It’s a busy time for Hannah. Her
mother is about to have a novel published and one of the trainers has been
found dead in the health club’s Jacuzzi with a plate of Hannah’s cream puffs
nearby. To make it even more complicated, the delicacies were purchased by
Hannah’s flame Det. Mike Kingston. 11th in
this culinary series. Signing. In paper, Carrot Cake Murder (Feb.,
Kensington, 6.99). Marie recommends.
Steven M.
Forman,
Boca Knights (Feb., Forge hc, 24.95). Debut comic
thriller. Eddie has retired after decades as a Boston cop. The winters
and crooks of the Northeast have worn him down, so he heads to sunny Florida to
relax in the sun. But he arrives in Boca Raton to find the crime down there is
just as bad, just hidden better beneath the shorts and sandals.
Jack Fredrickson, Honestly Dearest, You’re Dead (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). Chicago
PI Dek Elstrom learns that
he’s been named executor to a stranger’s will and can earn an easy $400. Easy,
right… Marie enjoyed.
Lee Goldberg, Mr. Monk is Miserable (Dec., Obsidian hc, 21.95). 7th
original novel based on the TV series. In paper, Mr. Monk Goes to Germany (Dec., Obsidian, 6.99).
Margaret
Grace, Malice in Miniature (Feb., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 3rd in the Miniaturist mystery series.
Sarah Graves, A Face at the Window (Jan., Bantam hc, 22.00). 12th
in the Home Repair is Homicide series
set in Maine. In paper, The
Book of Old Houses (Dec.,
Bantam, 6.99).
Norman Green, The Last Gig (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 25.95). Puerto Rican PI Alessandra Martillo is a run-of-the-mill private eye, working
low-level jobs around the Bronx. But the head of the local Irish Mob thinks
he’s got a traitor and that Alessandra is just the person to find the rat. First in a new series by a noted author of hard-boiled noir.
Tim
Green, Above the Law (Feb., Grand Central hc, 24.99).
Attorney Casey Jordan returns.
John Grisham, The Associate (Jan., Doubleday hc, 27.95).
James
Grippando, Born to Run
(Dec., Harper hc, 25.95). Miami attorney
Jack Swyteck and his father have finally patched up their relationship and get
along. They’ll need to. The Vice President has been killed, mysteriously, in
the Everglades and the President wants former Florida governor Harry Swyteck to
be the new VP. Harry needs son Jack to be his personal lawyer and Jack will be
completely out of his element in DC. In paper, Last Call (Dec., Harper, 7.99).
Rosemary
Harris,
The Big Dirt Nap (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 2nd with professional gardener Paula Holliday. In
paper, Pushing Up
Daisies (Feb., St. Martin’s,
6.99).
Ellen Hart, Sweet Poison (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 16th with restaurateur Jane Lawless. In paper, The Mortal Groove
(Dec., Griffin, 14.95).
A. J. Hartley, What Time Devours (Jan.,
Berkley pbo, 7.99). A timeless mystery, unsolved, and a long-lost Shakespearean
play entangle Thomas Knight.
Steven F.
Havill,
The Fourth Time Is Murder (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 15th in his Posadas County series.
Betty
Hechtman,
Dead Men Don’t Crochet (Dec., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 2nd crocheting mystery.
Hugh Holton, Revenge (Jan., Forge hc, 24.95). Final book by the 29-year veteran
Chicago cop, the 10th with Larry Cole. Also, The Thin Black Line (Jan., Forge hc, 25.95), true stories by
and about Black law enforcement officers.
Kay Hooper, Blood Sins
(Dec., Bantam hc, 25.00). 2nd with the elite FBI Special Crimes Unit. In
paper, Blood Dreams (Dec., Bantam, 7.50), the 1st in the trilogy.
Charlie
Huston,
The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of
Death (Jan., Ballantine hc,
25.00).
A slacker is prodded out of the house and into the job of cleaning crime
scenes. At his latest job site, he meets the daughter of a suicide. She later
calls him, asking him to help her brother by doing some cleaning. He knows he
should say no but… In paper, The Shotgun Rule (Jan.,
Ballantine, 14.00). Janine recommends this book and this author.
Julie Hyzy, Hail to the Chef (Dec., Berkley pbo, 7.99). 2nd mystery with the White House chef.
Greg Iles, The Devil’s Punchbowl (Dec., Scribner hc, 26.95). Hard by the
river in Natchez, MS, is a geological pit called the
Devil’s Punchbowl. It is said to hold the treasure of pirate Jean Lafitte as
well as an unknown number of bodies. Penn Cage steps back into action along its
rim.
Stuart
Kaminsky,
Bright Futures (Jan., Forge hc, 23.95). 6th
with Lew Fonesca, “the Man Who Makes Things Work in Sarasota.” Janine
recommends this series.
Alice
Kimberly,
The Ghost and the Haunted Mansion (Jan., Berkley pbo, 6.99). In the 5th
Haunted Bookshop mystery, a haunted mansion is inherited by a local mailman who
promptly sets out of get rid of the ghosts. Author also writes as Cleo Coyle.
Rita Laikin, Getting Old is a Disaster (Jan., Dell pbo, 6.99). 5th with ‘Florida’s self-proclaimed oldest living private
eye’, Gladdy Gold.
William
Lashner,
Blood and Bone (Feb., Morrow hc, 24.95). His 1st stand-alone
thriller: a former star athlete has gone nowhere and is the very definition of
a slacker. But the murder of his dead father’s law partner puts him in the
cops’ crosshairs and he realizes that his lifestyle is not only a dead-end – it
also has made him a suspect.
Michael A.
Lucas,
Devil Born Without
Horns (Dec., Re/Search tpo,
10.95). A degree in film history doesn’t lead to many lucrative jobs
opportunities when one graduates from college, so James Pichaske
takes a manual labor job to keep his mind clear to write about movies. The job
involves moving furniture for a fancy store. He begins to suspect that high-end
furniture is not all they’re selling and he’s quickly drawn into a noirish world of drugs and crime in this humorous satire.
Colin MacKinnon, The Contractor (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). A CIA contractor uses his extensive
network of contacts to hunt a shadowy Pakistani who is thought to be
constructing a nuclear weapon. This network came with a high price: it was put
together by his late father who committed suicide years before. In paper, Morning Spy, Evening Spy (Dec., Griffin, 14.95).
Michael
McGarrity,
Dead or Alive (Jan., Dutton hc, 24.95). 12th Kevin Kerney: freshly
retired and living in London, a frantic call draws him home as an escaped
convict is killing his way across New Mexico. In paper, Death Song (Dec., Onyx, 7.99).
G.A. McKevett, A Body to Die For (Jan., Kensington hc, 22.00). A
weight-loss queen is the prime suspect in a killing and plus-sized PI Savannah
Reid is in for a work-out with this case. In paper, Poisoned Tarts (Jan., Kensington, 6.99).
John
Ramsey Miller, The Last Day (Jan., Bantam pbo, 6.99). A man struggles to save his family from
overwhelming forces. Really, that’s what the catalog gives us.
Rick Mofina, Six Seconds (Jan., Mira
pbo, 6.99). Three strangers, all with their own lives in shambles, will
be united in a scheme that could drastically alter the world in a mere six
seconds.
Bob Morris, A Deadly Silver Sea (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 3rd in the Zack Chasteen
series. In this one, a honeymoon goes bad.
Shirley
Rousseau Murphy, Cat Playing
Cupid (Feb., Morrow hc, 16.95). 14th with feline PI Joel Grey.
Tamar Myers, Batter Off Dead
(Feb., Obsidian hc, 22.95). 17th in the Pennsylvania Dutch mystery series. In paper, As the World Churns (Jan., Obsidian, 6.99).
Carol
O’Connell,
Bone by Bone (Jan., Putnam hc, 24.95). An ex-Army CID investigator returns to
his small Northern California town for the first time in years. Two decades
have passed since Oren and his brother Josh went into the woods to play and
only Oren came out; no trace of the brother was ever found. But his first day
back, there’s a thump on the porch and Oren finds a jawbone with teeth. His
father tells him that it has been happening for some time – Josh has been
coming home, bone by bone. Signed Copies Available. Favorite
author of both JB and Janine.
Catherine
O’Connell,
Well Read and Dead (Feb., Harper tpo, 13.95). 2nd
in the High Society Mystery series.
Perri
O’Shaughnessy, Show No Fear (Dec., Pocket hc, 25.00). 12th with attorney Nina Reilly.
Michael
Palmer, The Second Opinion (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 25.95). His latest medical thriller. In paper, The First Patient (Jan., St. Martin’s, 9.99).
Robert B.
Parker, Night and Day (Feb., Putnam hc, 25.95). 9th Jesse Stone. His small town seems anything
but a paradise as the female high school principal has been accused of
violating students’ privacy and a voyeur is violating the homes of the town’s
women. In paper, Stranger
in Paradise (Feb., Berkley,
9.99).
T. Jefferson
Parker, The
Renegades (Feb., Dutton hc, 26.95). Cop Charlie
Hood patrols the dusty backroads of the Southwest at
night and by himself, as he prefers it. He knows that evil is out there, just
outside the beams of his headlights. He’s assigned a new partner who is soon
and suddenly shot dead one night while they drive. Charlie knows he must find
the killer and, unlike the Westerns in popular fiction, the bad guys don’t
always look like bad guys. A modern-day Western from the
multi-Edgar winning author. Signed Copies Available. In paper, L.A. Outlaws (Feb., Signet, 9.99). Gretchen and Janine recommend them both.
James
Patterson, Run for
Your Life (Feb., Little Brown hc, 27.99). 1st in a new series with a NYC detective, Michael
Bennett. In paper, 7th
Heaven (Jan., Grand Central,
14.99).
Richard North
Patterson,
Eclipse (Jan., Holt hc, 26.00). A California attorney, his life and
morale in tatters, accepts a request to help defend an African freedom fighter
against murder charges from his corrupt government.
Louise Penny, A Rule Against
Murder (Jan., St. Martin’s hc,
24.95). Chief Insp. Gamache is on holiday to
celebrate his wedding anniversary at a remote lodge but it will become a
‘busman’s holiday’. A family arrives to pay respects to a dead member and
unveil a memorial. This will kick open the locked door on grudges and secrets
and lead to murder. 4th in this award-winning series and was also
published as The Murder Stone. In paper, The Cruelest Month (Jan., St. Martin’s, 7.99).
Thomas
Perry,
Runner (Jan., Houghton Mifflin hc, 25.00). Missing for
nine years, Jane Whitefield returns! After marrying and promising her husband
to stop her work, she’s confronted by circumstances that cry out for her
talents. A bombing at a crowded event is an attempt by a violent group of hitmen to kill a young woman. Jane takes the woman in hand
and on the run. Gretchen and Janine highly recommend.
Cathy Pickens, Can’t Never Tell (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 5th Southern Fried mystery with attorney Avery
Andrews. In paper, Hush
My Mouth (Dec., St. Martin’s,
6.99).
Rhonda
Pollero,
Fat Chance (Jan., Pocket hc, 21.95). 3rd
stylish and silly mystery with Sophie Kinsella.
Spencer Quinn, Dog On It (Feb., Atria hc, 24.00). First in a new
series with Chet and Bernie, narrated by the hardboiled voice of Bernie, the more intelligent of the pair - even if he is a dog. They
look for a missing teenager who seems to have fallen in with a bad crowd.
Misa Ramirez,
Living the Vida Lola (Jan.,
St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). Sacramento PI Dolores “Lola” Cruz is given
her first big job by her company’s boss. What seems to be a simple
disappearance gets harder when some of the people involved are from Lola’s own past.
Robert J.
Randisi,
Hey There (You with the Gun in Your Hand)
(Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 3rd Rat Pack thriller.
Emile
Richards,
A Lie for a Lie (Feb., Berkley pbo, 7.99). 4th in the Ministry is
Murder series with Aggie Sloan-Wilcox.
Joan Rivers, Murder at the Academy Awards (Feb., Pocket hc, 25.00). Can we talk? Mother/daughter announcers
Maxine and Drew are on the red carpet. Just as a young actress, known for her
wild ways, gets to their mikes, she collapses. Dead! How’s that for drama? How
was her gown??
J.D. Robb, Promises
in Death (Feb., Putnam hc,
26.95). 28th Eve Dallas novel, releasing just four months
after the 27th. Janine loves this series! Go figure…
Karen Rose, Kill for Me (Feb., Grand Central hc, 16.99). Last in her trilogy.
S.J.
Rozan, The Shangai Moon (Feb.,
St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). After a 7-year absence, the return
of Lydia Chin. Estranged from Bill Smith, Lydia is asked to help on a
job that spans the globe and time. A cache of jewels was unearthed in Shanghai
and was believed to have been hidden by Jews at the start of WWII. Before
anyone can investigate, the haul is stolen by a Chinese official who vanishes.
It is now believed that he’s in NYC and that one of the world’s greatest and
most valuable gems, missing for more than half a century, is among the items. Signed Copies Available.
Thomas B.
Sawyer,
No Place to Run (Feb., Sterling & Ross hc, 25.95). A client
tells his lawyer about a murder he committed on Sept. 11th, 2001.
Not just an errant story, the man has documentation. The lawyer takes his
family on the run due to the explosive revelations, but it doesn’t save him as
he and his wife are killed by a car bomb. Whoever is behind the deaths isn’t
done and it’ll be up to the attorney’s two children to carry the evidence and
expose the truth.
Michelle
Scott,
Corked by Cabernet (Feb., Berkley pbo, 6.99). 5th in the Wine Lovers
series.
Susan
Arnout Smith, Out at Night (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 2nd with crime scene tech Grace Descanso.
Jill
Sorenson, Crash into Me (Feb., Bantam pbo, 6.99).
Special Agent Sonny Vasquez investigates a murder with a pro surfer as the
prime suspect. Debut.
Erica
Spindler, Breakneck (Jan., St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). Dets. Riggio and Lundgren search for clues in a series of
murders that appear to be pointless.
Mary Stanton, Defending Angels (Dec., Berkley pbo, 7.99). AKA Claudia
Bishop, this new series features Savannah attorney Brianna Winston Beaufort,
whose dead clients still expect her to help them. First in a
new, supernatural series.
Andrew Vachss, Another Life (Dec., Pantheon hc, 24.95). In order to get medical care for his
mentor, “the Prof”, Burke agrees to search for the missing son of a Saudi
prince. In order to solve this case, he’ll have to dig into his own past. In paper, Terminal (Dec., Vintage, 13.95), his 17th
Burke.
Carrie Vaughn, Kitty and the Dead Man’s Hand (Feb., Grand Central pbo, 6.99). Kitty and
Ben go to Las Vegas to get married, but bounty hunters, an old-school magician
and a seductive star all have designs on Kitty, and she may not survive, much
less get married. Fran recommends this Urban Fantasy series.
Debra
Webb, Find Me (Jan., St. Martin’s pbo, 7.99). A
reporter travels to Maine and witnesses a series of strange and deadly events.
She must get to the bottom of it all before she becomes one of them.
Melinda Wells, Death Takes the Cake (Feb., Berkley pbo, 7.99). 2nd
with baker Della Carmichael, who enters a cake competition only to find her
chief (chief, not chef) rival drowned in a bowl of batter. What a waste of
batter…
John Morgan
Wilson,
Spider Season (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 8th
in his Edgar-winning series with writer Benjamin Justice. Writing his memoir,
Justice kicks up trouble. This past Fall, Bold Strokes
Press began reissuing the series.
Lee Wood, Kingdom of Silence (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). A tangled web faces DS Keen Dunliffe: a US Marshall and his prisoner have been murdered
before the prisoner could testify against a rabid animal rights group and there
has been an outbreak of hoof-and-mouth disease.
First mystery by a noted science fiction writer.
Stuart
Woods, Mounting Fears (Jan., Putnam hc, 25.95). A political thriller. In paper, Santa Fe Dead (Dec., Signet, 9.99).
John Zakour, The Flaxen Femme Fatale (Dec., Daw pbo, 7.99). 5th in this sci-fi pulp series. Zach Johnson is
the last independent PI on the planet. He’s looking for a blonde who has
knowledge of a deadly secret weapon.
Now in Paperback
Elizabeth
Becka, Unknown Means (Jan., Hyperion, 7.99).
Laura
Benedict, Isabella
Moon (Jan., Ballantine, 14.00). Gretchen
recommends.
William
Bernhardt,
Strip Search (Dec.,
Ballantine, 7.99), and Capitol Conspiracy
(Jan., Ballantine, 7.99).
James
O. Born, Burn Zone (Jan., Berkley, 7.99).
Andrew
Britton, The Invisible (Feb., Pinnacle, 6.99).
Geraldine
Brooks, People of the Book (Jan., Penguin, 15.00).
Rita Mae
Brown, The Purrfect
Murder (Feb., Bantam, 7.50). Marie
enjoys this series.
Gordon
Campbell, Missing
Witness (Jan., Harper, 7.99). 2008 Edgar nominee for Best First Novel.
Carol
Higgins Clark, Zapped
(Jan., Pocket, 7.99).
Barbara
Colley, Wash and Die (Dec., Kensington, 6.99).
John Connolly, The Reapers (Feb., Pocket, 9.99). Fran recommends.
Loren D.
Estleman,
American Detective (Dec., Tor, 6.99). Bill
& JB recommend.
Joy
Fielding, Charley’s Web (Jan, Pocket, 7.99).
Brian Freeman, Stalked (Jan.,
St. Martin’s, 7.99). Fran recommends.
Stephen
Frey, The Fourth Order (Feb., Ballantine, 7.99).
Julie
Garwood, Shadow Music (Jan., Ballantine, 7.99).
Eli Gottlieb, Now
You See Him (Feb., Harper,
13.95).
Sue Grafton, T is for Trespass (Dec., Berkley, 7.99).
Martha Grimes, Dakota (Feb., NAL, 15.00).
Andrew
Gross, The Dark Tide (Feb., Harper, 7.99).
Parnell Hall, Hitman (Feb.,
Pegasus, 14.95). Stanley Hastings.
Kim
Harrison, The Outlaw Demon Wails (Dec., Harper, 7.99).
Joan Hess, Mummy Dearest (Feb., St. Martin’s, 6.99).
Craig Holden, Matala (Feb., Simon & Schuster, 14.00).
Thomas
Holland,
K.I.A. (Feb., Berkley, 7.99).
Joshilyn
Jackson,
The Girl Who Stopped Swimming (Feb., Grand Central, 13.99). Fran
and Gretchen highly recommend this author.
John
Lescroart, Betrayal (Jan., Signet, 9.99).
Lisa Lutz, Curse of the Spellmans (Feb.,
Simon & Schuster, 14.00). High staff
recommendations for this comic series.
Nancy Martin, Murder Melts in Your Mouth (Jan.,
Obsidian, 6.99).
Walter Mosley, Diablerie (Jan., Bloomsbury, 15.00).
Julia
Navarro, The Bible of Clay (Feb., Bantam, 7.50).
Derek Nikitas, Pyres (Dec.,
Griffin, 13.95). Gretchen recommends this Edgar nominee.
Douglas
Preston, Blasphemy (Jan., Forge, 9.99). Fran
recommends.
David
Rollins, The
Death Trust (Feb., Bantam, 7.50).
Mary
Saums, Mighty Old Bones (Jan., St. Martin’s, 6.99).
Theresa
Schwegel,
Person of Interest (Jan., St. Martin’s, 7.99).
Lisa
Scottoline,
Lady Killer (Jan., Harper, 7.99).
Michael Simon, The Last Jew Standing (Dec., Penguin, 14.00).
Alexandra
Sokoloff,
The Price (Dec., St. Martin’s, 6.99).
Robert
Tanenbaum,
Escape (Feb., Pocket, 9.99).
Joseph
Weisberg,
An Ordinary Spy (Jan., Bloomsbury, 14.00).
Coming this Spring
Susan
Wittig Albert & China Bayles, April
David
Baldacci,
First Family, April
Jim Butcher & Harry
Dresden, April
Dorothy
Cannell
& Ellie Haskell, April
Laura
Childs & the Tea Shop, Mar.
Harlan Coben, & Myron Bolitar, April
Michael
Connelly
& Jack McEvoy, May
Diane Mott
Davidson &
Goldy Schulz, April
Brian Freeman
&
Jonathan Stride, April
Joe Gores,
Spade & Archer, April
Jane Haddam & Gregor Demarkian, April
Marshall Karp,
Flipping Out, April
Carolyn Hart & Annie Darling, April
Jonathan Kellerman & Alex Delaware, Mar.
Harley Jane Kozak & Wollie Shelley, Mar.
Laura Lippman, Life
Sentences, Mar.
Lisa Lutz & the Spellmans, Mar.
Walter Mosley,
The Long Fall, Mar.
James Patterson, The 8th Confession, April
Douglas Preston & Lincoln
Child &
Pendergast, May
Bill Pronzini & Nameless, April
Tom Rob Smith, The Secret Speech, May
Olen Steinhauer,
The Tourist, Mar.
Louise Ure,
Liars Anonymous, April
Randy Wayne White & Doc Ford, Mar.
F. Paul Wilson,
Aftershocks & Others, Mar.
Brian Wiprud,
Feelers, Mar.
[Books in RED were in a catalog that
arrived too late for inclusion in the printed version.]
Sherlockiana
John Hall, Sherlock Holmes at the Raffles Hotel (Nov., Breese tpo, 18.50). Now retired,
Watson fears Holmes will stagnate without cases to keep his mind sharp. A
vacation is what these two need, to Singapore! Once there, settled in their
hotel, the game, once more, is afoot.
Russell Miller,
The Adventures of Arthur Conan Doyle (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 27.95). A lively
biography drawn from recently released correspondence, personal papers, and
untapped archives.
Gaslight
Grimoire: Fantastic Tales of Sherlock Holmes, JR Campbell
and Charles Prepolec, eds. (Oct.,
Edge tpo, 16.95). With a forward by David Stuart Davies, 11 new stories
discovered in Dr. Watson’s dispatch box. We just found out about this Canadian
release in Nov and wanted to include it.
Historical
Suzanne
Arruda, The
Leopard’s Prey (Jan., Obsidian
hc, 23.95). A murder in British East Africa is personal this time for American
adventuress Jade del Cameron. Her boyfriend is the accused. 4th
in this 1920s series. In paper, The Serpent’s Daughter (Dec.,
Obsidian, 14.00).
William
Bernhardt, Nemesis:
The Final Case of Eliot Ness (Jan.,
Ballantine hc, 26.00). A novel based on historical events: after securing
Capone’s conviction, Ness was hired by the Mayor of Cleveland to clean it his
town. There he ran into a series of murders tagged “The Torso Murders”. They
were never officially solved and haunted Ness to his grave.
Cassandra
Clark,
Hangman Blind (Feb., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). Debut medieval
mystery. With her land in turmoil, Abbess Hildegard begins a journey
from her Abbey of Meaux towards York. She’ll
encounter death and murder along the way, as well as at her childhood home, the
Castle Hutton.
Sarah
D’Almeida,
Dying by the Sword (Dec., Berkley pbo, 7.99). 5th in the Musketeer series.
David Stuart
Davies,
Without Conscience (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). During 1942,
in wartime London, private detective Johnny Hawke is on a case that will lead
him into the path of a violent deserter.
David
Dickinson, Death of a
Pilgrim (Feb., Soho Constable hc, 25.00). In 1905 Europe, pilgrims are being
murdered on their way to shrines. In his 8th mystery, Lord Francis Powercourt is asked to investigate.
David Fulmer, Lost
River (Jan., Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt hc, 25.00). The murder of a customer in a Storyville
whorehouse brings Valentin St. Cyr back to his old neighborhood. After working
for months in the rest of the city as a ‘real’ detective, he reluctantly
returns. That feeling gets worse as more bodies are uncovered and as the police
want to pin the deaths on him. In paper, The Blue Door (Jan.,
HMH, 13.95). Janine and JB recommend this Shamus-winning author.
Susanna Gregory, The
Westminster Poisoner (Feb.,
Sphere hc, 24.95).
The 4th Thomas Chaloner, detective and former spy. London is
over-indulging with the lifting of the Puritan ban on Christmas celebrations.
Chaloner is called in when two men die not from over-indulgence, but from
poison. In paper, The Butcher of
Smithfield (Feb., Sphere,
14.95), the 3rd. And
To Kill of Cure (Feb., Sphere, 9.95), her 13th with Matthew Bartholomew.
John Harwood, The
Séance (Feb., Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt hc, 25.00).
It is late in Victorian England and contacting the dead is the rage. A young
woman attends a séance in a desperate attempt to help her mother, distraught
over the loss of a child. Constance, with good intentions, will be drawn down
the rabbit hole of betrayal, blackmail, fear and phenomenon.
J. Sydney Jones, The
Empty Mirror (Jan., St. Martin’s
hc, 24.95). It’s
the summer of 1898 in Vienna and Gustav Klimt is touched by a lurid string of
murders when one of his models becomes the latest victim. This most
cosmopolitan of European cities is at its height of artistic renown, as is
Klimt, but he’s known for being strange and unpredictable, even for an artist,
and suspicion is easily cast upon him.
Margaret Lawrence, Roanoke (Feb., Delacorte
hc, 24.00). The murky world of Elizabethan politics spans the Atlantic
when a man is sent to the New World to seduce a native princess rumored to have
great wealth. Once there, he will be drawn into the still-unanswered question
of the disappearance of the Roanoke settlers.
Paul Malmont, Jack London in
Paradise (Jan., Simon & Schuster hc, 25.00). A novel based on the
life of the famous writer: London went to Hawaii for treatment for morphine
addiction. This story imagines what happens when he falls in love with the wife
of a powerful villain.
Andrew Martin, Murder
at Deviation Junction (Jan.,
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt tpo, 13.95). It’s a cold, dark Winter for
railway detective Jim Stringer. He’s hoping for a promotion heading into 1909.
4th US release in this series.
Roland Merullo, Fidel’s
Last Days (Jan., Shaye Areheart
hc, 23.00). Two
people, working individually to rid Cuba of Fidel’s tyranny find themselves
part of something far larger and far uglier than they had imagined.
Caro Peacock, A Dangerous Affair (Feb.,
Avon tpo, 13.95). The still surfaces of Victorian London may seem peaceful
but the truth is otherwise. Two famed dancers have been fighting quite
publicly. Then one is poisoned and the other faces the gallows if found guilty.
Liberty Lane gets involved through the help of prominent friends.
Andrew Pepper, The
Revenge of Captain Paine (Nov.,
Phoenix tpo, 16.95).
Now married, former Bow Street Runner Pyke is well off though he’s still not comfortable
with his new luxury. The country is railroad mad, and a gruesome murder that
takes place within this new world leaves many uneasy. Pyke is asked to
unofficially investigate so that it might all remain quiet and less scandalous.
David Roberts, No More Dying (Feb., Soho Constable hc, 25.00). 8th whodunit set in 1930s
England with Lord Edward Corinth and Verity Browne.
John Maddox
Roberts,
SPQR XII: Oracle of the Dead (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). A rivalry
between priests at different temples may have led to a massacre. In paper, SPQR XI: Under
Vesuvius (Dec., Griffin, 14.95).
C.J. Sansom, Revelation (Feb., Viking hc, 25.95). In his 4th book, Matthew
Shardlake is beset by troubles everywhere: he’s working to free a teenager from
Bedlam, Henry VIII is maneuvering to wed yet again and the prophecies from the
Book of Revelations are making the population nervous. A series praised by PD
James. In paperback, Winter
in Madrid (Feb., Penguin,
15.00), a 1940s thriller.
Dan Simmons, Drood
(Feb., Little Brown hc, 26.99). History and
fiction blend for a thriller that grows out of the life of Charles Dickens. On
June 9, 1865, Dickens was involved in a disaster that very well may have
changed his life. After this, he began his ventures into London’s slums and a
growing obsession with crypts, drugs, corpses and murder. Narrated by his good
friend Wilkie Collins, this novel leads us into the mind of a great artist and
perhaps into a solution of his unfinished last novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
Diane
A.S. Stuckart, Portrait
of a Lady (Jan., Berkley tpo,
14.00). In his second appearance, Leonardo da Vinci and his assistant Dino
go undercover, as women, to search for answers after two female servants are
murdered. This will simple for Dino, as he is really Delfina,
a woman masquerading as a man in order to be Leonardo’s apprentice. In paper, The Queen’s Gambit (Jan., Berkley, 7.99).
Frank Tallis, Fatal Lies (Feb., Random House tpo, 15.00). As the world
inches toward WWI, Dr. Lieberman and Insp. Rheinhardt investigate a murder at a
prestigious military academy.
Andrew Taylor, Bleeding Heart Square (Jan., Hyperion hc, 25.95). During the cold London winter of 1934, Lydia
Langstone runs from her abusive husband and takes a room in the same private
square where the father she has never met lives. She begins to notice odd
things about this little community: a previous tenant disappeared, she’s told,
and the cops are always watching…something. Latest historical
thriller by multiple winner of the CWA Ellis Peters Historical Dagger Award.
His Roth Trilogy will be reissued: The
Four Last Things (Jan.), The Judgement of Strangers (Feb.), and The Office of the Dead (Mar.,
Hyperion, 15.95 ea.).
Charles Todd, A Matter of Justice (Jan., Morrow hc, 23.95; signed copies 24.95). Insp. Rutledge
investigates a murder in Somerset. In London, the victim was highly regarded;
in his village, he was universally despised – even his wife and the local
coppers disliked him. Why such a difference? In paper, A Pale Horse (Jan., Harper, 14.99).
Jacqueline
Winspear, Among the
Mad (Feb., Holt hc, 25.00). On Christmas
Day, 1931, a letter arrives at Scotland Yard threatening mayhem and death if
demands are not met. Curiously, it also mentions Maisie. After questioning by
the Elite Branch, and being cleared, she’s asked to act as a special adviser on
the case.
Janine
recommends this series.
In paper
Jonathan
Barnes, The
Somnambulist (Jan.,
Harper, 14.95).
Stephanie
Barron, A Flaw in the Blood (Jan., Bantam, 14.00).
John Boyne, Next of Kin (Jan., Griffin, 15.95).
Ariana
Franklin,
The Serpent’s Tale (Feb., Berkley, 15.00). Janine
highly recommends.
Margaret
Frazer,
The Apostate’s Tale (Jan., Berkley, 7.99).
Lawrence
Goldstone, The Anatomy of Deception (Jan., Delta, 14.00).
Philip Kerr, The One from the Other (Feb., Penguin, 14.00).
Laurie R.
King, Touchstone (Jan., Bantam, 12.00). Fran
highly recommends.
Eliot
Pattison, Bone
Rattler (Jan., Counterpoint, 14.95).
David Wishart, Illegally Dead (Feb., Hodder & Stoughton, 9.95).
Coming this Spring
Ace Atkins, Devil’s Garden, April
Rhys Bowen & Molly
Murphy, Mar.
Philip Kerr & Bernie
Gunther, Mar.
Anne Perry & William
Monk, Mar.
From Overseas
James Church, Bamboo and Blood (Dec., St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). Insp. O is
sent to Pakistan to investigate the death of a diplomat’s wife. He’s instructed
to address just this crime, but leads take him into forbidden territories. 3rd with this North Korean cop. In paper, Hidden Moon (Nov., Griffin, 13.95).
Leighton Gage, Buried Strangers (Jan., Soho hc, 24.00). Chief Inspector Mario Silva of the
Federal police is called in when a dog unearths a human bone in Sãn Paulo,
Brazil. Quickly, his team finds more bones and they understand that the pet
uncovered a secret graveyard. But one of the biggest questions is how old is this
secret cemetery, or is it still in use? In paper, Blood of the Wicked (Jan., Soho, 13.00).
Mari Jungstedt, The Inner Circle (Dec.,
St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 3rd with Swedish
Insp. Knutas. A woman is abducted from an
archeological dig and horribly murdered. The killing was in some way
ritualistic and may be connected to other, recent crimes that, though cruel,
had not reached the level of homicide.
Simon Lewis, Bad Traffic (Dec., Scribner hc, 24.00). Debut novel by a
travel writer who knows the lands. A corrupt Chinese cop arrives in
London after a distress call from his daughter. While he may have seen how the
world works along the Siberian border, his search for her will take him into
the English countryside and into conflict with a sadistic gang of human
traffickers.
Eduardo Mendoza, The Mystery of the Enchanted
Crypt (Feb., Telegram tpo, 12.95). A strange and funny descent into the underside of 1970s Barcelona.
The narrator, sharp-minded but foul-smelling guy, is sprung from an asylum by
the cops in return for help in looking for a girl who disappeared from a
convent school. With the help of his street-walking sister, he’ll go in search
of the teen.
Jo Nesbo, Nemesis (Jan., Harper hc, 25.95). 3rd as written, 2nd
released in the US. Insp. Harry Hole draws the investigation of a murdered bank
teller. Strangely, a former girlfriend calls, and everything goes to hell.
She’s found shot to death and, though it’s ruled a suicide, Harry doesn’t buy
it. But his main rival on the force is pushing on all fronts, trying to move
Harry out of his way. In paper, The Redbreast (Jan.,
Harper, 14.95).
Malla Nunn, A Beautiful Place to Die (Jan., Atria hc, 25.00). Set in 1950s
Apartheid South Africa by a screenwriter who grew up there at that time. A
detective begins to investigate the murder of a fellow officer but runs into a
wall of suspicion and the secret police. He’s English by birth and the dead cop
was Afrikaans.
Matt Beynon
Rees,
The Samaritan’s Secret (Feb., Soho hc, 24.00). In his 3rd
story, Omar Yussef is pulled into an international crisis: the man who
controlled the distribution of World Bank money to the Palestinians has been
murdered and the money is missing. If it isn’t found quickly, all of his people
will suffer when the flow of money ceases. In paper, A Grave in Gaza (Feb., HMH, 13.95). Marie highly recommends this series.
Rafael Reig, A
Pretty Face (Dec., Serpent’s
Tail tpo, 14.95).
Surreal Spanish suspense: a children’s book author has been murdered. She seeks
the help of one of her characters to investigate her death. Part
mystery, part fantasy, and part satire.
Roger Smith, Mixed
Blood (Feb., Holt hc, 25.00). Debut thriller for
an accomplished screenwriter and director. An American bank robber,
hiding out in Cape Town after a big heist and a murdered cop, is drawn into
that world’s violence and corruption when he and his family are
the target of a random gang assault. Violence begets violence and no one is
concerned with legalities – just getting even.
Mehmet Murat Somer, The
Kiss Murder (Jan., Penguin tpo,
14.00). A Turkish
bestseller, an hilarious mystery with an unnamed
person as the sleuth: male computer tech by day, charming transvestite hostess
by night at Istanbul’s most glamorous and lurid nightspot. One of the
nightclub’s girls has been murdered. Our narrator sets out to find the killer
with a wardrobe that would make Audrey Hepburn jealous and the skills of a
kickboxing expert. Gretchen recommends.
Kitty Sewell, Bloodprint (Feb., Touchstone hc, 24.99). After a hurricane destroys her Florida
Keys life, a psychotherapist moves to Bath to start over. One of her first
clients has a past that echoes her own, and sinister events begin to unnerve
her. In paper, Ice Trap
(Nov., Touchstone, 15.00).
In
paper
Adrian Hyland, Moonlight Downs (Feb., Soho, 13.00).
Christopher
G. Moore,
The Risk of Infidelity Index (Jan., Grove, 14.00).
Eliot
Pattison,
Prayer of the Dragon (Nov., Soho, 14.00).
Qiu Xiaolong, Red Mandarin Dress (Feb., St. Martin’s, 13.95).
Coming This Spring
Cara Black & Aimee
Deduc, Mar.
Andrea
Camilleri &
Insp. Montalbano, Mar.
Ariana
Franklin & the Mistress of Death,
Mar.
David
Hewson & Nic Costa, Mar.
Diane Wei
Liang &
Mei Wang, May
Hakan Nesser & Insp
Veeteren, April
Michael
Robotham &
Joe O’Loughlin, Mar.
Alexander
McCall Smith & the #1 Crew,
April
Yrsa
Sigurdardóttir, My Soul to
Take, April
Qui Xiaolong & C.I.
Chen, Mar.
From Great Britain
Ray Banks,
Sucker Punch (Feb., Houghton Mifflin Harcourt hc,
25.00). Finally
free of parole and working at a gym, Cal Innes is asked by a young boxer to
second him at an LA tournament. The City of Angels it ain’t
and Cal’s trip turns ugly. In paper, Saturday’s Child (Feb.,
HMH, 14.00).
M. C. Beaton, Death of a Witch (Feb., Grand Central hc, 24.99). 25th Hamish MacBeth. In paper, Death of a Gentle Lady (Jan., Grand Central, 6.99).
P.J. Brooke,
Blood Wedding (Dec., Soho Constable hc, 25.00). In Granada, Spain, a young Muslim
girl’s murder is investigated with great care by Insp. Max Romero. Since the
bombings, everyone is on guard to not create a political nightmare. When the
main suspect commits suicide, things get dicey: was it an admission of guilt,
were the cops leaning on an innocent man too hard, or is there something deeper
and more dangerous going on? First in a new series.
Alison Bruce, Cambridge
Blue (Jan., Soho Constable hc,
25.00). In
Cambridge, a young detective is the first to find a body that will unsettle the
town. The victim belongs to a prominent and eccentric family and will not be
the only murder of one of its members. The young cop, Goodhew, will need all of
his talents.
Jack Higgins, A Darker Place (Feb.,
Putnam hc, 26.95). A Russian wants to leave Putin’s rule and seeks life in the West.
The US or UK should be thrilled to have him as he’s a famous writer and
ex-military. The trouble is he may also be a spy.
Susan Hill, The Risk of
Darkness (Feb., Overlook hc, 24.95). Simon
Serailler is unsettled by a new employee at the Cathedral, a fiery female
Anglican priest with a head of red hair. Things are just heating up as a recent
widower becomes unhinged. Fran raves about this author.
Joyce Holmes, Bad
Vibes (Jan., Bywater Books tpo, 14.95). The 3rd
Fizz and Buchanan, from 1998.
Hazel Holt, Mrs.
Malory and a Time to Die (Dec.,
Obsidian pbo, 6.99).
18th in this popular Marple-like series. Two
of her old friends run a popular riding school. When the husband is found dead
in the stable, it becomes clear that his popularity wasn’t universal.
Michael Marshall, The Intruders (Jan., Harper pbo, 7.99). A former LAPD officer finds out that he’s the link and
the answer to three strange events that happened years ago in the Deep South.
British writer recommended by Janine.
Val McDermid, A
Darker Domain (Feb., Harper hc,
24.95). Scotland’s
head of the Cold Case Review Team, DI Karen Pirie has new leads on two
interesting cases: A young woman has recently reported a miner missing after a
labor action – 23 years after he left home; and an heiress was kidnapped and
killed despite the ransom payment and the case went unsolved – until a tourist
in Tuscany finds something that might make a difference. Signing.
Danuta Reah, Night Angels (Feb.,
Bywater Books tpo, 14.95). First US release of a 2001 book. DI Lynne Jordan had run an
investigation into human trafficking. Someone is killing the women she
interviewed.
Phil Rickman, To
Dream of the Dead (Jan., Quercus
hc, 24.95). 10th with Anglican priest Merrily Watkins. This
December is a trying month for the village of Ledwardine. Heavy rains have
caused the river to rise and isolate the town. Merrily’s daughter is part of an
archeological dig that has been examining a row of ancient standing stones. Not
all in the town think the stones should be disturbed and believe the rising
waters are punishment. In paper, The Fabric of Sin (Jan.,
Quercus, 9.95).
Nick Stone, The
King of Swords (Dec., Harper hc,
24.95). A murder
with odd aspects leads Miami cops Max Mingus and his partner Joe toward a
notorious and elusive criminal rumored to be involved in voodoo and protected
by people with juice. In paper, Max’s debut, Mr. Clarinet (Dec., Harper. 14.95). British writer.
Cathi Unsworth, The
Singer (Feb., Serpent’s Tail
tpo, 16.00). 20
years ago, the singer for a prominent British punk band disappeared after his
girlfriend was found dead. A reporter has a fresh trail on the events and a
deadline on his book deal.
In
paper
Benjamin
Black,
The Silver Swan (Feb., Picador, 14.00).
Tom Cain, The Accident Man (Feb., Penguin, 14.00). Janine and Fran recommend this debut.
Morag Joss, The Night Following
(Feb., Delta, 13.00).
John
Mortimer, Rumpole Misbehaves (Dec., Penguin, 14.00).
Caro Ramsay, Absolution (Feb., Pegasus, 14.95).
Peter Robinson, Friend
of the Devil (Jan., Harper,
7.99).
Aline
Templeton, Lying Dead (Jan., Hodder, 9.95).
Camilla Way, The Dead of Summer (Jan., HMH, 13.95).
Coming this Spring
Robert
Barnard, The
Killings at Jubilee Terrace,
May
Tom Cain & the
Accident Man, Mar.
Liza Cody, Gimme More,
Mar.
Anthony Eglin, The Rail of the
Wild Rose, April
Peter
Robinson &
Insp. Banks, Mar.
Barbara Vine, The Birthday
Present, Mar.
Martyn Waites, White Riot,
Mar.
Mystery Specialty Presses
Bitter Lemon
Friedrich Glauser,
The Spoke
(Jan., 14.95). In the last book of
the Sgt. Studer books, the German cop investigates a murder committed with a
bicycle spoke. 5th in a series recommended
by Janine.
Busted Flush
Reed Farrel
Coleman,
The James Deans (Jan., tp, 14.00). 3rd
Moe Prager, nominated for 6 mystery awards and winner of 3.
Crippen & Landru
(we didn’t know about these for the Fall newsletter but
wanted to include them now.)
John Dickson
Carr,
13 to the Gallows (Sept., tp, $20). Four
original radio plays aired on the BBC in the early ‘40s. Two he wrote with a
co-writer, Val Gielgud, and two he wrote alone. Two of the plays are also set
in radio studios. [Val was the brother of John Gielgud, and like him a noted
actor and writer. Both were the grand-nephews of the legendary Ellen Terry.]
Hugh
Pentecost,
The Battles of Jericho (Sept., tp, $19). 15 short stories were
written between ’64 and ’76 and feature artist and sleuth John Jericho.
Jericho’s paintings, like the stories themselves, are very much about the
unrest of the time and social justice and his artist’s eye allows him to catch
details of detection that others miss. A pseudonym of Judson Philips, the afterward
is by the writer’s son Daniel Philips.
Felony & Mayhem
Karin
Alvtegen, Betrayal (Jan., tp, 14.95). 3rd novel by this young and noted Swedish author.
Two people who each boil in their own hate and poison are toxic enough on their
own. But when circumstances bring them together they ignite, causing
unimaginable pain to themselves and those around them. In
paper, Missing (Jan., 14.95), her debut from 2003. The author is the
great-niece of Astrid Lundren.
Reginald Hill, Traitor’s Blood (Jan., tp, 14.95). Political thriller
from ’83.
Timothy Holme, A Funeral of Gondolas (Jan., tp, 14.95). 2nd
with Italian Insp. Peroni, from ’81.
Hard Case Crime
Charles Ardai, Fifty-to-One (Dec., 6.99). A new book by the Edgar-winning author (as Richard Aleas) and
publisher of this terrific young press. A shady publisher teams with a
showgirl to write the story of a heist at a nightclub run by the mob. Pretty
soon, the police and gangsters are after them both. As a tribute to the first
50 books from his press, a full-color insert will show all the covers published
before this one, many shown spread out on the ‘publisher’s’ desk on the cover.
Made to look like an old PI office, “Hard Case Crime Books” is painted on the
outside of the window. Very nice touch.
Lawrence
Block, Killing Castro (Jan., 6.99). Originally published in
1961 under an unknown pseudonym, this is the first publication under Block’s
name. Five people accept the offer of $20 grand to get into Cuba and kill
Castro. Keep in mind that this was published around the time of the Bay of Pigs
and one year before the Cuban Missile Crisis, 15 years before the Church
Committee revelations of CIA/Mob assassination schemes.
Roger Zelazny, The Dead Man’s Brother (Feb., 6.99). The
award-winning author’s last novel, the manuscript lost for decades amidst his
papers. A former art smuggler has gone on to be a respected dealer. A murder in
his gallery lands him in dutch with the NYPD but the
CIA offers to spring him if he’ll do them a favor: look for a missing Vatican priest
who absconded with millions. The connection is that the priest is apparently
hiding with the dealer’s former lover. Fran recommends this author.
Midnight Ink
Sue Ann
Jaffarian, Booby
Trap (Feb., tpo, 13.95). 4th with “plus-sized, middle-aged, and whip-smart
Odelia Grey”. Janine recommends this comic series.
Poisoned Pen Press
Deborah
Turrell Atkinson, Pleasing
the Dead (Feb., hc, 24.95). The
dangerous and invasive arms of the Yakuza have reached into Kahului and
attorney Storm Kayama is up against enemies who have no faces or souls. In
paper, Fire Prayer (Feb., 14.95), 3rd
in this Hawaiian series. Signed
Copies Available.
Donis Casey, The Sky Took Him (Jan., hc, 24.95). Blackmail, murder and
long-guarded secrets as the family gathers for the
imminent death of Alafair Tucker’s brother-in-law in Enid, OK, in the Fall of
1915. Signed Copies
Available. In paper, The Drop Edge of Yonder (Jan., 14.95), 3rd
in the series.
Kerry
Greenwood,
Death By Water (Dec., hc, 24.95). The 15th
of the Phryne Fisher books, from 2005.
Tim
Maleeny, Greasing the Piñata (Dec., hc, 24.95).
First the son disappears, then his father – a retired Senator. Their bodies are
found on a golf course, mutilated. The man’s daughter asks Cape Weathers to
investigate and, though he doesn’t want the case, he doesn’t want to see her be
the next victim. The case will take him into the unfamiliar territory of Mexico
and into troubles he can’t see but knows will come. 3rd
in this popular series and first in hardcover. Janine recommends this series.
Jeffrey Siger, Murder in Mykonos (Jan., hc, 24.95). Debut novel from an
American who has lived on this Grecian island paradise for 25 years.
Just as he is getting used to his new job as the island’s police chief, former
Athens homicide Det. Andreas Kaldis is faced with a crime that will make the
tourists shudder: a young woman vanishes without a trace and then her body is
found in a remote church atop a pile of bones. Suddenly, the police begin to
find bones everywhere and the island’s economy won’t survive if the tourists
leave. Pressure is intensified on Kaldis to find the villain.
Peter May, Shakehead (Feb., hc, 24.95). 4th with
American pathologist Margaret Campbell and Beijing Det. Li Yan. Yan has been
assigned to the Chinese embassy in DC to investigate crimes involving Chinese
nationals. They’re both called in when a semi-trailer is found full of dead
Chinese. In paper, The Fourth Sacrifice (Feb., 14.95). Janine recommends this series.
Betty Webb, The Anteater of
Death (Nov., hc, 24.95). When a body is found
inside the anteater enclosure at the Central California Zoo, the staff and the
animals get to work proving the anteater didn’t do it. Signed Copies Available.
In paper
Mark de
Castrique,
Blackman’s Coffin (Nov., 14.95).
Mary Anna Evans, Findings (Nov., 14.95). Fran recommends.
Rue Morgue
Catherine
Aird, His Burial Too (Feb., 14.95). Insp. Sloan from ’73, the 6th.
Delano Ames, Murder Begins at Home (Jan., 14.95). 2nd Jane &
Dagoburt Brown, from ’49.
Nicholas
Blake, Thou Shell of Death (Jan., 14.95). Nigel
Strangeways #2 from ’36.
Manning Coles, The
Fifth Man (Feb., 14.95). Tommy
Hambledon #6 from ’46.
Michael
Gilbert, Smallbone Deceased (Dec., 14.95). 4th
Insp. Hazelrigg, from ’50.
Gladys
Mitchell,
The Longer Bodies (Dec., 14.95). From 1930, the 5th
Mrs. Bradley.
Collections
Rome
Noir, Stangalino
and Jakubowski, eds. (Feb., Akashic
tpo, 15.95).
Authors include Carlo Lucarelli and Gianrico Carofiglio with all new
stories.
San Francisco Noir 2: The
Classics, Peter
Maravelis, ed. (Feb., Akashic tpo,
15.95). Great short pieces from the great: Ambrose Bierce, Mark Twain,
Jack London, Dashiell Hammett, Bill Pronzini and Joe Gores.
Reissues of Note
Lawrence
Block, One Night Stands and Lost
Weekends (Dec., Harper, 14.95).
24 more short works, written between 1958 and 1962, reputedly collected
together for the first time and not include in the earlier tome Enough Rope (2002). Includes three Ed
Noon novellas previously collected as One
Night Stands released by Crippen & Landru.
Raw Rumbles: The Hal Ellson Omnibus
(Dec., Re/Search tp, 19.95). In the
post-war world of pulp paperbacks, Hal Ellson was one of the more successful
writers. While others, such as Goodis and Thompson, have gotten more critical
attention, Ellson has been left in obscurity, probably due to his more lurid
and salacious style. Here are three of his early novels that drew on his own
years in the world of gangs and troubled youth: Duke (1949), Tomboy
(1950) and The Knife (1961).
Charlaine
Harris, A Fool and His Honey (Feb., Berkley, 7.99). 6th
Aurora Teagarden, from ’99.
Joe
R. Lansdale, Savage Season and Mucho Mojo (Jan., Vintage, 13.95 ea.). The 1st
and 2nd (from ’90 and ’94) of the books with best friends and polar
opposites Hap and Leonard. Great fun from Deep Texas.
Robert
Littell,
The Debriefing (Dec., Penguin, 14.00). From 1979, an elite Army debriefer goes to
work on a Soviet defector. One of Janine’s favorite
espionage authors.
Barbara
Michaels,
Houses of Stone (Feb., Harper, 7.99). 1993 suspense by the
author otherwise known as Elizabeth Peters. Fran recommends Peters writing as
Michaels.
Maj
Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö,
The Man on the Balcony and The Laughing Policeman (Feb., Vintage, 13.95 ea.). The 3rd
and 4th of their Martin Becks, from ’67 and ’68.
Cornell Woolrich, The Black Angel (Dec., Pegasus, 14.95). Intense and intimate noir
from 1943. A young bride frantically works to
prove her husband didn’t kill his mistress. Postponed from 8/07.
Special Interest
Unusual
Suspects: Stories of Mystery and Fantasy, Dana
Stabenow, ed. (Dec.,
Ace tpo, 14.00). New stories by PNW writers and lesser mortals: Mike Doogan, John Straley and the editor, as well as
Laurie R. King, Donna Andrews, Carol Nelson Douglas, Charlaine Harris and
others.
Mean
Streets: Four All-New Novellas of Dark Nights, Cruel Cities and Paranormal P.I.s, (Jan., Roc tpo, 15.00). Jim Butcher, Simon R.
Green, Thomas E. Sniegoski and KAT RICHARDSON!
Peter Ackroyd,
Poe: A Life Cut Short (Jan., Doubleday hc, 21.95). A re-examination of the life and work of the creator of the mystery
story by a respected biographer.
In
the Shadow of the Master, Michael Connelly, ed. (Jan., Morrow hc, 24.95). Mystery Writers of America present
this collection of Poe’s works, and essays by 20 contemporary writers who
explain the influence Poe had on them: Block, Grafton, Deaver, Lippman,
Gerritsen, Scottoline, DeMille, and others.
On a Raven’s Wing, Stuart M. Kaminsky, ed. (Jan., Harper tpo, 14.95). Mystery Writers of America present 20
new stories inspired by Poe’s work, written by many of today’s masters,
including James W. Hall, Don Winslow, Thomas H. Cook.
We traditionally put our staff lists of the
Ten Best Books we read during the year in our winter newsletter. To save space
and include more forthcoming books, you can find our lists on our blog. We’ll
be posting them as December unfolds. In early January, you’ll also be able to
find our 2008 Bestsellers lists on our blog as well.
The Seattle Mystery Bookshop is a
member of the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association. Go to
www.killerbooks.org to see a monthly list of books recommended by other mystery
booksellers.
Mail and phone and e-mail orders for
these or any other books are welcome.
We special
order non-mysteries as well.
We can get you all the books you need, no matter what the topic.
Gift certificates are available in any
denomination, can be ordered by phone or e-mail, and are a great present for
the local mystery fans on your list. We can send it to them for you, whether
you live here or not.
Visit our website for our full calendar
of scheduled author events, our past newsletters, a link to a listing of
available signed copies, and ordering instructions.
Copies in the best condition go to
those who reserve in advance.
Dust jacket protectors are put on all
signed books that are shipped out.
Browse our listing of signed, used and
collectable books at www.biblio.com
Prices and dates are subject to change
without notice.
Material highlighted in Blue does not appear in the printed version of this issue.
The Seattle Mystery Bookshop Newsletter
was composed and produced by the staff.