Sunday, December 8, 2019


The main character in a mystery can be in just about any walk of life. Many mystery books revolve around professional detectives which we usually consider a police detective or criminal investigator who is a sworn law enforcement professional. Plus there are Private Investigators whom we consider licensed professionals who can be hired to investigate. Sometimes PIs are retired police officers. Sherlock Holmes called himself a consulting detective. Journalists are often the main character in a mystery since they can get themselves into situations which requires sleuthing. Jessica Fletcher and Father Brown have solved many mysteries proving that anyone can do it. The following new sleuths range from a Child Protective Officer to a medical examiner.
Sidewalk Saint; Hardcover; Author - Phillip DePoy

Reading right now:

Phillip Depoy’s latest is the fourth book (“Sidewalk Saint”) in the Foggy Moskowitz series. Foggy is a Child Protective Officer who finds himself searching for a missing eleven-year-old girl named Etta whose father has broken out of jail in order to help save her life. While Foggy searches for her so does Canadian mobsters, New York Irishmen, the FBI, and the Seminole elite. Most of these people want Etta to keep quiet about something she knows that could harm them. It’s up to Foggy to find her, help her reveal the truth, and keep her alive.


On hold right now:

Image result for Chad Dundas The BlazeChad Dundas’ “The Blaze” centers around army veteran Matthew Rose who returns to Montana after his father’s death to settle his affairs. Matthew lost much of his memory from a brain injury he received in Iraq, but when he sees a house burn down it triggers a memory of another fire. This memory leads him down a road that may not only solve a murder from long ago, but help him to resolve his own past.


Lee Goldberg’s new novel is the first in a new series with Los Angeles County Sheriff Deputy Eve Ronin (called “Lost Hills”). As the youngest female homicide detective in the department’s history, Eve faces resentment and hostility. When her arrest of a movie star is captured on video and goes viral, she becomes the new face of the LA County Sheriff’s department. When she and her burned out partner catch what looks like the murder of a mother and her two kids, she must work to prove herself and find out what happened to the family.


Andrew Grant’s second book in his Paul McGrath series is called “Too Close to Home.” This unusual series centers around Paul McGrath, ex-military intelligence, who goes undercover on his own as a courthouse janitor to find justice first for his father and also for those who have been wronged by a corrupt system. 
Too Close to Home
Other Mysterious Things:

Dr. Judy Melinek teams up with her husband T.J. Mitchell to write what may well become the next hot medical examiner series. “First Cut” takes place in San Francisco and centers around medical examiner Dr. Jessie Teska. Judy Melinek is a forensics expert in real life so has the background to make the book realistic and gritty. It’s exciting to think that this may be the start of a series that could become as famous as Tess Gerritsen’s Rizzoli & Isles, Patricia Cornwell’s Kay Scarpetta, or Kathy Reichs’ Temperance Brennan.

Friday, October 18, 2019


Cozy mysteries are a mystery subgenre where the hero is usually an amateur who is placed in a situation which leads them to try to solve the mystery. Putting an amateur in the place of a professional detective helps us believe that anyone can be a hero and anyone can make a difference. Cozies can be and often are fun and light. Often cozies have less sex and violence than a regular mystery or the sex and violence is treated more lightly. Lots of cozies take place in small towns or in a very specific setting (examples would be where the head chef at the White House solves mysteries, or where the local antique dealer seems to always be involved in solving crimes). Cozies opened up the Mystery genre to readers who couldn’t deal with the violence of many mysteries. There are many cozy mystery authors and every month sees new additions come out. The next two months are no exception.
Image result for Beyond a Reasonable Stout

Reading right now:

Ellie Alexander’s latest is the third book in her Sloan Krause series (“Beyond a Reasonable Stout”). When a city councilman running for mayor on a platform to close the local breweries is found killed, brew master Sloan Krause agrees to help her friend who is suspected of the murder and soon discovers that the victim was blackmailing townspeople to get their votes. In the first book in this series, we found Sloan Krause leaving her husband over his infidelity and finding a new place in life. By this third novel, she has settled into her job as brew master and into the life of Leavenworth, Washington.

On hold right now:

Rita Mae Brown has been writing since the 1970s. “Scarlet Fever” is the 12th book in her Jane Arnold series. Sister Jane Arnold is master of the hunt club and finds herself investigating when one of the more dashing members of the Hunt is found dead in an antique store with a stolen ring in his pocket.

Anne Canadeo’s “Hounds of the Basket Stitch” is the third book in the Black Sheep & Co. mystery series. When two sisters living in a remote area of Plum Harbor are attacked and neither has any recollection of what happened, the Black Sheep knitters decide to investigate.
Image result for scarlet fever rita mae brown

Laura Childs writing with Terry Farley Moran presents the 16th book in the Scrapbooking series (“Mumbo Gumbo Murder”). New Orleans scrapbooking shop-owner Carmella investigates when she finds a friend’s body in his antique shop.
Image result for mumbo gumbo murder

Joanne Fluke’s “The Chocolate Shark Shenanigans” isn’t just a great title, but also the 17th book in her Chocoholic mystery series. Chocolatier Lee and her husband Joe are looking over an old house they plan to buy, fix up, and sell when they come across the body of a small-time developer who was also interested in buying the house in a case that goes back to Joe’s schooldays when he was part of a gang of five boys who hung out in the basement of the house.
The Chocolate Shark Shenanigans; Hardcover; Author - JoAnna Carl


G.A. McKevitt’s second book in her Granny Reid mystery series is called “Murder in the Corn Maze.” Savannah Reid’s case begins when she is taken to a corn maze at the antebellum mansion of a local judge, and she and her grandmother find a long-dead corpse still in its Sunday best in a mystery with distinctive characters and an insightful look at Southern culture.
Image result for Murder She Wrote time for murder

Other Mysterious Things:

Cozy mysteries aren’t just popular books, but can also appear on television. “Murder She Wrote” was a very long running television program and the books are still being written. The first “Murder She Wrote” novels were written by James Anderson. By 1989 the series was being written by Donald Bain who wrote 47 books in the series until his death when Jon Land took over the series. Now Jessica Fletcher and Jon Land’s Murder She Wrote series continues with “A Time for Murder” which is the 51st book in the series. In the latest novel, Jessica returns to the high school where she taught for a former colleague’s retirement party, but the colleague is murdered in a way that hearkens back to the very first murder Jessica investigated when she was a young teacher, the death of the school’s principal.