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Showing posts with label crime fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime fiction. Show all posts

Revelations by Laurel Dewey

Revelations is Laurel Dewey's third Jane Perry novel. I haven't read the previous ones, but, after reading this one, I'll read all future ones. Revelations is one of the most intriguing crime novels I've read this year. Jane is a flawed, but fascinating character. And, the mystery is complex and absorbing.

Sergeant Detective Jane Perry was just about to take leave after she learned there was the possibility she had cancer when her partner and former boss, Sergeant Morgan Weyler, said he owed an old friend, and asked her to go with him to Midas, Colorado to investigate an unusual kidnapping. Fifteen-year-old Jake Van Gorden was missing after he tried to kill himself by hanging on the bridge. And, now the police and Jake's parents were getting unusual communications from someone who may have the teen. But had the teen been complicit in his own disappearance?

Jane doesn't trust anything she finds when they arrive in Midas. The small, upscale town is filled with secrets. And, the police chief, Bo, is part of the puzzle. He and his assistant are on the verge of retirement, and, even though he reluctantly shares clues and his suspicions with Weyler and Perry, he's hiding something. And, he's convinced he has his suspect, Jordan Copeland, a man who served time for a child's murder. Bo only succeeds in angering Jane, and she sets out to find answers for herself. And, she has to do it on her own, because even Jake's parents have secrets, and they are blocking the investigation.

While Jane is determined to find answers, she's also wrapped up in her own issues. She's a recovering alcoholic who just quit smoking. And, she's already had a tragic life. When she stumbles upon Jordan, he digs at her feelings and past, and that frustrates and angers her. In her confusion, she finds the owner of a bar, The Rabbit Hole, a man who accepts and reaches out to her. As Jane Perry searches for answers to the mystery of Jake's disappearance, she also searches for the truth about the puzzles of her own life.

Laurel Dewey combines mystery, mysticism, secrets and revelations in a riveting story that takes Jane Perry down her own rabbit hole. Jane is a gruff, angry woman, a fascinating character, in search of answers in her own life.  Revelations has truths to tell about the past, secrets to unveil. Sink into Jane Perry's story of an investigation and its Revelations.

Laurel Dewey's website is www.laureldewey.com

Revelations by Laurel Dewey. The Story Plant. ©2011. ISBN 9780984190553 (paperback), 479p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I received the book in order to participate in a book tour.

The Rough Guide to Crime Fiction by Barry Forshaw

I only came across Barry Forshaw's The Rough Guide to Crime Fiction because a friend donated it to  the library in memory of Jim.  I wish I had it in hand months ago.  It's a little gem for anyone interested in the history of crime fiction, and the movies made from outstanding books.

Ian Rankin wrote a short preface in which he argues that the crime novel is "The perfect vehicle for a discussion of contemporary issues in the most unflinching terms." And, then he turns the book over to Forshaw to discuss those issues in the context of crime fiction.  Forshaw, a critic of crime and literary fiction, is also a film critic, and he combines both of those interests in this fascinating book.

Forshaw takes readers through the history of crime fiction, beginning with the Bible, Sophocles and Shakespeare.  Then he moves on to the men who established the genre, Edgar Allan Poe and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.  There are short sketches of the authors, sidebars listing their best books, and sidebars describing the movies made from the books.  From the origins, we move to the Golden Age; Agatha Christie, John Dickson Carr, Dorothy L. Sayers.  The fathers of the American hardboiled school are covered, Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, along with the detectives that followed them. 

Private eyes, police procedurals, professional and amateur sleuths, even serial killers are covered in individual chapters that highlight authors while summarizing the book Forshaw considers the best example of their work. Anyone interested in reading some of the best of the genre, or learning more about the history of crime fiction would appreciate this book.  As I said earlier, I wish I had read this earlier.  Forshaw's The Rough Guide to Crime Fiction is a keeper for any fan of the history of crime fiction and crime fiction films.

The Rough Guide to Crime Fiction by Barry Forshaw.  DK Publishing, Inc. ©2007. ISBN 9781843536543 (paperback), 320p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book.

Lucky Stiff by Deborah Coonts

Deborah Coonts' debut novel, Wanna Get Lucky? impressed me as original, with a unique character and a terrific setting, Las Vegas.  But, her second mystery, Lucky Stiff, shows that she has mastered her craft.  Coonts sucks us into Lucky O'Toole's world of casinos and crime and Las Vegas in the opening paragraph.  She takes us through suspense, tears, smiles, romance, and lots of laughter in the course of this wonderful book.  Even with its dark underside, Coonts gives us the magic of Las Vegas as seen through the eyes of Lucky.

It's hard to put down a book that begins with, "Millions of enraged honeybees had done the impossible.  Single-handedly they had brought the Las Vegas Strip to a standstill."  As Head of Customer Relations for the Babylon, "the most over-the-top casino on the Las Vegas Strip," it was Lucky's job to handle that problem when it was an exhibit at that hotel that stopped traffic.  But, that problem was just a bump in Lucky's day.  She had to successfully handle a championship fight during Fight Week, manage the situation of a naked district attorney in a closet, and deal with her mother's current media production.  Then there was the love of her life, set to become a star in the music world, with the possibility of leaving her behind while he toured.  So, why shouldn't she launch an investigation when a hated odds maker ended up as a meal for sharks in the tank at Mandalay Bay Resort?

Deb Coonts has created characters that are larger than life, fitting their roles in Las Vegas.   Lucky O'Toole is sarcastic, strong, with a big heart, and a need to be loved.  Even the minor characters in this book can hold their own with her.  However, I'm a big fan of all of her returning characters, the Great Teddie Divine, the Big Boss, Lucky's mother, Mona, her assistant, Miss Patterson, the private detective, the Beautiful Jeremy Whitlock.  All of these bigger than life characters fit in the city, and the life of the casino.  And, Deb Coonts brilliantly assigns them roles in her latest mystery, Lucky Stiff.  It's a fast-paced, fun mystery with a great cast, a great setting, and an intriguing mystery. 

If you haven't yet discovered it, I hope you take a gamble, and visit Lucky O'Toole's world, the Las Vegas of Wanna Get Lucky? and Lucky Stiff.

Deborah Coonts' website is www.deborahcoonts.com

Lucky Stiff by Deborah Coonts.  Tom Doherty Associates, ©2011. ISBN 9780765325440 (hardcover), 368p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - The author sent me a copy of the book, in hopes I would review it.

Finding Nouf by Zoë Ferraris

I picked up Zoë Ferraris' Finding Nouf because another librarian said she wanted to discuss it.  It was an Alex Award winner in 2009.  Alex Awards are presented by the American Library Association to adult books that have special appeal to young adults, ages 12 to 18.  I loved Finding Nouf, and I'm eager to read the sequel, City of Veils.  But, I can't wait to hear my friend's opinion, because I just don't see this book as having a great deal of appeal to a large number of teens.

The story pairs an unlikely couple as sleuths.  Nayir ash-Sharqi is a Palestinian desert guide, working in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.  When sixteen-year-old Nouf, a daughter of the powerful Shrawi family goes missing, Nayir is asked to help in the search.  But, when the body is found, and it turns out Nouf died of drowning in the desert, one of the family members asks Nayir to investigate.

Agreeing to investigate as a favor to his friend, the religious Navir finds himself working with Katya Hijazi, to his discomfort.  In Saudi Arabia, Katya's lifestyle is unusual in so many ways.  She has a PhD.  She's working as a lab technician in the city crime lab, where there is a department for women.  She's not yet married at the age of 28, although she's engaged to Nayir's friend, Othman.  As an observant Muslim, Nayir should have nothing to do with an unmarried woman, and the two of them could find themselves in trouble if caught together.  Although Katya is frustrated with her country's beliefs, she is not as uncomfortable with their working relationship as Nayir is.  However, they're both uncomfortable as they pry into the secrets of the Shrawi family.


Finding Nouf is a fascinating mystery.  Although I guessed part of the ending, I was unprepared to discover the actual killer.  At the same time, this book introduces two intriguing characters with backgrounds that are not familiar to most American readers.  The rituals and customs of Muslims and the people of Saudi Arabia are important elements to this story.  Zoë Ferraris takes readers into the mysteries of an unfamiliar world in more ways than one.  Now, I'm just waiting to hear from other librarians.  It's a wonderful mystery, a wonderful story.  Is it also a mystery most teens will appreciate?

Zoë Ferraris' website is www.zoeferraris.com.

Finding Nouf by Zoë Ferraris.  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, ©2008. ISBN 9780594000563 (hardcover), 320p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book

Eyes of the Innocent by Brad Parks

I need to start this review with a disclaimer.  Despite yesterday's beautiful blog posting by Brad Parks, Brad knew I would never promise a positive review of his new book, Eyes of the Innocent.  In fact, he told me to feel free to rip it, because I've never given anyone a good review because they were a friend.  That said, Eyes of the Innocent is released today, and it's even better than his Nero and Shamus award-winning mystery, Faces of the Gone.

Carter Ross is an investigative reporter for New Jersey's largest newspaper, The Newark Eagle-Examiner.  He's survived long enough in a day of newspaper cutbacks to know how to play the game.  So, the mistakes he made on a Monday morning were certain to lead to trouble.  His editor paired him with the newest young intern, called "Sweet Thang" by the staff, and sent them to cover a house fire that killed to little boys.  However, despite Carter's arguments, because the executive editor wanted a story about space heaters, they were sent to cover that angle.  Too bad they didn't end up covering a space heater story.

Instead, Carter. one of the last remaining WASPs in Newark, and a wealthy twenty-two-year-old girl end up at the end of a knife in a burnt-out house.  From there, it only gets worse.  Lauren (Sweet Thang) has a gift with witnesses, and before long Akilah Harris,  the mother of the two dead childen, has told her sob story of an orphaned life, working two jobs, trying to pay a mortgage.  That story is set for the front page, until it starts to unravel.  There are missing mortgage records, and Akilah's story has a few other missing pieces.  When a city councilman with links to Akilah goes missing, it seems there's much more to the story.  Carter knows it could be a heck of a story, with a missing councilman, missing mortage papers, urban house-flipping and political corruption.  "Reporters love cover-ups only slightly less than they love their mothers - more if their mother doesn't cook well."  In the long run, though, it's Carter's editor who points out what the story is really about, the two dead little boys and all the people who failed them.  The pictures of those little boys in the newspaper showed "The eyes of the innocent."

Brad Parks, through Carter Ross, unravels a complex, tragic story of corruption, greed and murder.  At the same time, the book is filled with the humor that gets an investigative reporter through the smut and sordid details that are part of the job.  In the very beginning Carter admits he made four mistakes on Monday, and tries to get out of writing the space heater story.  "Can't we just reprint one of the old space heater stories?...I seem to recall from the archives the nineteen eighty-eight space heater story was a classic - fruity yet full-bodied, with hints of singed circuit breaker."  There are funny comments throughout the book.  But, the best humor comes from Parks' wonderful characters themselves.  Poor Carter Ross, trapped between a man-hungry city editor and a sexy "Sweet Thang" while the gay Cuban intern makes fun of Carter for his WASPish clothes and his woman problems.  I just have a feeling Parks knew, and now Carter Ross knows, people like the pawnshop and restaurant owners, and the councilman's aide.  All of these characters bring a realistic feeling to Eyes of the Innocent.

Investigative reporters have the perfect job for uncovering crime.  Carter Ross, and his friends and acquaintances, have a world of crime ahead of them.  It's time for readers to discover Newark, New Jersey through Carter Ross' eyes, and with his sense of humor.  Once you've seen his world, it will be the last time you can view newspapers, city government, or Newark through the Eyes of the Innocent.


For more Brad, visit his website (http://www.bradparksbooks.com/), follow him on Twitter (http://www.twitter.com/brad_parks) or became a fan of Brad Parks Books on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/#/pages/Brad-Parks-Books/137190195628?ref=ts).

Eyes of the Innocent by Brad Parks. St. Martin's Minotaur, ©2011. ISBN 9780312574789 (hardcover), 304p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - The publisher sent me copies of the book, in hopes I would review it.

The Girl in the Green Raincoat by Laura Lippman

If you've never read Laura Lippman's Tess Monaghan mysteries, you can still pick up the series with The Girl in the Green Raincoat, the eleventh in the series.  This novel, originally serialized in the New York Times Magazine, brings together so many of the characters in Tess' life in a clever tribute to Rear Window and Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time.  At the same time, this is uniquely Lippman, marking a milestone in Tess' life.  Read it as a lover of Tess Monaghan's stories, or as someone discovering them, but you won't regret it.

Tess is 35, with a high-risk pregnancy, put on bed rest with at least two months to go.  As an active private investigator, she's anxious and antsy already on her first day of confinement.  Once Crow brought her binoculars, she could lay on the sun porch and watch people, particularly the people walking their dogs in the dog park across the street.  She immediately focused on a miniature version of her own greyhound, walked by a woman in a green raincoat every day.  But, on the sixth day, when the greyhound ran through the park without its owner, Tess' perspective changed.  What happened to the woman that her dog was running without her?

Tess might be bedridden, but she's still as curious as ever, determined to solve the mystery.  Despite Crow's admonitions that she needed to keep her blood pressure low, she set an investigation in motion, recruiting her employee, Mrs. Blossom, and her best friend, Whitney Talbot.  But, when the investigation snowballs, Tess makes a mistake that could be tragic.

The Girl in the Green Raincoat succeeds on so many levels.  The author's notes pays homage to Lippman's inspirations.  She also said the serialized format gave her the opportunity to allow other characters to tell their stories, Mrs. Blossom, Tess' father, Whitney.  So, don't hesitate to pick it up, even if you've never read a previous Tess Monaghan book.  And, if you've read everything, welcome to a new stage in Tess' life.

Laura Lippman's website is http://www.lauralippman.com/

The Girl in the Green Raincoat by Laura Lippman.  HarperCollins, ©2011. ISBN 9780061938368 (paperback), 158p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - The publisher sent me a copy of the book, in hopes I would review it.




Cat Sitter Among the Pigeons by Blaize Clement

Charlaine Harris' Lily Bard series featured a damaged character, a woman gang-raped who struggled to face life.  Blaize Clement's Dixie Hemingway is also a damaged character, only finding herself after five books in the series.  But, I'm afraid, in the sixth one, Cat Sitter Among the Pigeons, Dixie went off the deep end with her reckless actions.

Dixie Hemingway was a deputy with the Sarasota County Sheriff's Department in Florida until the tragic death of her husband and young daughter.  After an emotional break-down, she turned for refuge to the family home on Siesta Key, living next to her fireman brother and his partner, where she worked as a pet sitter.  Dixie poured most of her emotions into her relationship with animals, and it's a job with a cat that traps her.

Dixie's first day assisting a man with his cat, Cheddar, was interrupted when his granddaughter, Ruby, showed up with her baby in arms, wanting to stay there.  When she went to leave the house, Dixie was followed from the house, kidnapped, and then released when the kidnappers discovered they had Dixie, and not the younger, Ruby, who resembled her.  It seems Ruby was caught up in a real estate scheme, and the threatened people would do anything to keep her from testifying.  Dixie wanted to help, but when the baby was kidnapped, she insisted on involving herself.

I had a problem with Dixie's personality in this book, and one major decision can't even be discussed without spoiling the book.  But, I did find Dixie's immersion in this kidnapping case to be out-of-character.  Maybe it isn't out-of-character for the woman she has become following her daughter's death, but it certainly is reckless behavior considering her former career as a deputy.  Within a few days of meeting Ruby's baby, she ignores all reasonable behavior.  I can't really discuss it more, but I'd like to hear your opinion once you've read the book.  My sister emailed me before I read this, so I moved it up on my TBR pile.  Once I finished, we had a lengthy discussion about Dixie's personality, and her decisions.  Despite our sorrow over a major decision, we understood.  But, I'm still convinced a former deputy wouldn't have acted as recklessly as Dixie did in the course of the kidnapping case. 

I love the cover of Blaize Clement's Cat Sitter Among the Pigeons.  And, as a former Florida resident, familiar with Dixie's home county, I've always enjoyed the descriptions of the setting.  But, I think I'm giving up on Dixie as a character.  I just can't trust her behavior anymore.

Blaize Clement's website is http://www.blaizeclement.com/

Cat Sitter Among the Pigeons by Blaize Clement. St. Martin's, ©2011. ISBN 9780312643126 (hardcover), 272p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book

Lois Winston, Guest Blogger

Oh, do I have a fun interview for you today!  Lois Winston is launching a new series for Midnight Ink, the Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mysteries.  The first book is Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun

Lois' bio on her website says, "Lois Winston straddles two worlds. She's an award-winning author of romantic suspense, humorous women's fiction, and mystery. She's also an award-winning designer of needlework and crafts projects for magazines, craft book publishers, and craft kit manufacturers. Like Anastasia, the protagonist in her ANASTASIA POLLACK CRAFTING MYSTERIES series, Lois worked for several years as a crafts editor. A graduate of the prestigious Tyler School of Art, she often draws on her art and design background for much of the source material in her fiction.

Lois Winston chose to do an interview today, and I think you're going to enjoy it.  Thank you, Lois.

LESA’S BOOK CRITIQUES


An interview with crafts editor and reluctant amateur sleuth Anastasia Pollack

by author Lois Winston

Lois: Hello, Anastasia. Would you please tell everyone why you’re the subject of this interview?

Anastasia: Oh good, we’re starting with an easy question. You’re interviewing me for Lesa’s Book Critiques because I’m the protagonist (and star!) of your new series, The Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mysteries from Midnight Ink.

Lois: The first book in the series was just released, wasn’t it?

Anastasia: ASSAULT WITH A DEADLY GLUE GUN came out January 1st. New year, new series.

Lois: You refer to yourself as a crafts editor and reluctant amateur sleuth. Care to explain?

Anastasia: By profession I’m the crafts editor at a women’s magazine. The reluctant sleuthing was sort of forced upon me when I discovered the dead body of our fashion editor glued to my office chair. When the medical examiner ruled she was murdered with my glue gun, I became Suspect Numero Uno in the eyes of the detectives investigating the case.

Lois: They believed you had both motive and opportunity, didn’t they?

Anastasia: I was framed! Marlys collected enemies like she collected Manolos, but the detectives didn’t seem interested in looking elsewhere. I realized if I didn’t find the real killer, I could wind up wearing a neon orange jump suit for the next twenty years. I’m far from a fashionista, but even I know orange isn’t my best color. Besides, I’m a single mom. Who would raise my kids?

Lois: You lost your husband recently. Tell us about that.

Anastasia: Karl permanently cashed in his chips at a roulette table in Las Vegas. He was supposed to be at a sales meeting in Harrisburg, Pa. As if that weren’t enough of a shock, within days I learned he’d wiped us out, leaving me with a Mt. Everest of debt and a loan shark demanding fifty thousand dollars. One day I’m living the American dream; the next day I’m on the verge of living out of a cardboard box.

Lois: Well, we won’t give away any more of the plot since we’re hoping people will want to buy ASSAULT WITH A DEADLY GLUE GUN, but tell us about the other members of your family. You have quite an eclectic household.

Anastasia: You should know. You created all of us.

Lois: True but humor me for the sake of the readers of Lesa’s blog.

Anastasia: Our family used to consist of Karl and me, our two teenage sons, and Ralph. He’s the Shakespeare quoting parrot I inherited from my great-aunt Penelope Periwinkle. However, a few months before Karl died, his mother moved in with us. Lucille is a die-hard, old-school communist and the most cantankerous person you could ever meet. She doesn’t have a kind word for anyone except her dog Manifesto (although the boys and I call him Mephisto the Demon Dog.)

Having Lucille with us was bad enough. Having Lucille with us without Karl running defense is something I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy. And if that weren’t enough, shortly after Karl died, my mother’s fifth husband also died. So Mama’s now living with us, too. Mama claims to descend from Russian royalty. She’s also a past-president and current social secretary of the Daughters of the American Revolution. So you can imagine how well she and Lucille get along. Then there’s Catherine the Great, Mama’s extremely corpulent white Persian. If Mama and Lucille don’t set off World War 3, Catherine the Great and Mephisto the Demon Dog will.

Lois: You do have your hands full.

Anastasia: Which is all your fault, by the way.

Lois: Yes, but I did create a sleuthing sidekick for you, didn’t I?

Anastasia: Cloris McWerther, food editor and best friend. She’s Watson to my Sherlock. She also supplies me with to-die-for goodies whenever I’m running late and don’t have time to grab breakfast. You should try her mango and macadamia muffins.

Lois: Everyone will be able to try Cloris’s muffins if they visit Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen -- http://www.mysteryloverskitchen.com/ -- on January 9th. Cloris has given me permission to post her recipe there.

Anastasia: Don’t be a killjoy and post the calorie count.

Lois: I promise I won’t, but for now we’ve about run out of time. I’d like to thank Lesa for posting this interview and Anastasia for allowing herself to be the subject of it. You can read the first chapter of ASSAULT WITH A DEADLY GLUE GUN at http://www.loiswinston.com/. In addition, Anastasia and her fellow editors blog at Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers, http://www.anastasiapollack.blogspot.com/, where you’ll find crafts projects, recipes, guest authors and more.

I’m doing a blog tour and book giveaway this month in celebration of the release of ASSAULT WITH A DEADLY GLUE GUN. You can find the schedule at both my website and at Anastasia’s blog. Everyone who posts a comment to any of the blogs over the course of the month will be entered into a drawing to receive one of 5 copies of ASSAULT WITH A DEADLY GLUE GUN. (If your email isn’t included in your comment, please email me privately at lois@loiswinston.com to let me know you’ve entered so I have a way of getting in touch with the winners.) In addition, I’ll also be giving away an assortment of crafts books on selected blogs, so look for those as well.




Thank you, Lois and Anastasia for a fun interview.  And, good luck to both of you.  (I think you're going to need it, Anastasia.)

Lois Winston's webpage is http://www.loiswinston.com/
Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun by Lois Winston.  Midnight Ink, ©2011. ISBN 9780738723471(paperback), 301p.

Death Without Company by Craig Johnson

If Jen Forbus has her way, Craig Johnson would receive the recognition he deserves.  No one is a bigger fan than she is.  I'm glad, because she introduced me to his wonderful books.  And, she's right.  He's not as well-known as he should be.  I've only read the first two books in his Walt Longmire series, but they're beautifully written mysteries, with fascinating characters.  I loved Johnson's comment in this second book, Death Without Company.  "It's a character-driven piece."  It certainly is.  If you read mysteries for the characters, as I do, you should be reading Craig Johnson's books.

Walt Longmire has been the sheriff in Absaroka County, Wyoming for almost twenty-five years.  And, his day-to-day job consists of recruiting jurors for a jury pool, handling traffic accidents in the snow, and trying to hang on to competent deputies.  But, once in a while, he gets a case that is so complicated that his entire team, along with his friends, family, and even his dog, called Dog, become involved. 

Lucian Connally was the sheriff who hired Longmire, fresh from a stint as a military cop in Vietnam.  The two men might have different styles, but Walt still respects Lucian's opinion.  So, when Lucian insists that Mari Baroja, a fellow resident at the Durant Home for Assisted Living was murdered, Longmire is willing to look into it.  But, then Lucian shocks Walt by saying he was once married to Mari, until her Basquo father and uncles annulled the marriage.  Lucian's stories of Mari and her family drag Longmire's team into an investigation that immediately turns violent, as someone tries to kill everyone who knows the past history of Mari Baroja.  However, does anyone actually know the whole truth?

In the Walt Longmire series, Craig Johnson has created a cast of characters with depth and personality, beginning with Walt and his best friend, Henry Standing Bear.  But, every one of Johnson's characters are individuals who demand attention, from those who are a permanent part of his team, such as his deputy, Vic Moretti, and Ruby, who runs the office.  The newest deputy, Santiago Saizarbitoria, immediately fits in, with an enormous personality.  Unlike so many other authors, though, Johnson pays attention close attention to minor characters, who live on his pages. 

The investigation is the most important part of the story, as it should be in a police procedural, but these books are so much more.  Johnson has a way with a phrase.  Ruby keeps messages for Longmire on Post-it notes, and turns them over when he comes into the office.  He says he, "Picked up my life in Post-it form."  There's humor in these stories, and it can be very dry, as fits people who have lived difficult lives.  Death Without Company has an intriguing, complicated storyline with surprises, wonderful characters, and beautiful writing.  These mysteries are for anyone who misses Tony Hillerman, or wants to read outstanding crime novels set in the West.  And, Death Without Company is definitely for anyone who wants to read a "Character-driven piece."

Craig Johnson's website is http://www.craigallenjohnson.com/

Death Without Company by Craig Johnson.  Penguin Group (USA), ©2006. ISBN 9780670034673 (hardcover), 288p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library Book






Cat Coming Home by Shirley Rousseau Murphy

I think I'm where I'm at today in the world of books and crime fiction authors, partially due to Sandie Herron.  Sandie gave me a start, introducing me to mystery authors, when I first started as Chair of the Authors' Programming for the Lee County Reading Festival about twelve years ago.  So, when she asked if she could do a guest review, I jumped at the chance.  It's not every day that someone of Sandie's stature and experience in the book business wants to do a book review. 

Sandie's review was originally published in http://www.iloveamysterynewsletter.com/

CAT COMING HOME 
  

By Shirley Rousseau Murphy
William Morrow, 2010 (10/26/10)
ISBN: 9780061806933 Price $19.99

CAT COMING HOME is an excellent addition to the mystery series featuring feline Joe Grey and his pals in a small town nestled among the hills next to the sea. Molena Point, California is home to a unique breed of cat, one that is capable of reading and speaking the human language. Please don’t jump to the conclusion that this must then be some implausible, cutesy tale of talking cats; it is not. The ability of Joe Grey, his lady love Dulcie, and their young friend Kit to speak is kept private and hidden from all but a few chosen humans. The cats choose to anonymously help the local police department using their unique skills and instincts.

The Joe Grey series focuses on a different individual or family in Molena Point in each book. However, the community is still very much involved with their own set of skills. Each entry can stand alone yet the reader’s enjoyment is so much richer when the books are read in sequence. Even though this is 16th in the series, none of the charm has been lost with longevity, rather it has been enhanced as we watch how the people and cats interact and grow. 

Maudie Toola has just returned to Molena Point along with her orphaned grandson Benny. They are trying to start life anew following the horrible shooting deaths of Benny’s father and new stepmother. It is almost Christmas, but Molena Point is having trouble of its own: isolated individuals are being attacked in their homes. The lone women are then roughed up and their homes ransacked with the perpetrators fleeing just as quickly as they arrived. With nothing of substance stolen, Chief of Police Max Harper and his men can’t seem to get a handle on how to catch these criminals or get a clue on where they might strike next. They have determined that the attackers plan a diversionary break-in which captures the police’s attention while the invaders go on to attack their chosen victim. Trying to cover the entire town for both possibilities is stretching the small police force very thin.

Joe Grey and Dulcie are as frustrated as the police. After all, how can two cats survey the entire town at once? Kit is helping but is distracted by a large yellow tomcat who seems to know more about these crimes. Could he be another speaking cat? Where did he come from and why is he here?

Ryan Flannery is building a studio onto Maudie’s home where she can make her award-winning quilts. Ryan isn’t the only one worried about Maudie being alone with all those new windows through which she is so visible. Maudie has a secret, one that only reveals itself at sly moments when she thinks no one is looking. Maudie and Benny both admit that they did not see the killer in those brief flashes of gunfire yet, if the killer thinks otherwise, he could have followed them from Los Angeles, putting them at great risk.

Maudie is unclear who she can trust. Her sister and nephews live just up the street but they haven’t offered any assistance or support. Maudie has become fond of young teenager Lori who helps Ryan in construction. Yet Lori’s father is in prison for murder and one of Maudie’s nephews has just stabbed him in jail. Perhaps Lori is in just as much danger as Maudie.

Who is behind the vicious newspaper attacks against police chief Max Harper and the entire department? Ownership of the paper recently switched hands and what used to be news coverage has become twisted and opinionated quasi-editorials. Most residents read the paper, and some actually believe the drivel printed every day. Max needs to calm everyone down and prove he is still capable of doing his job. There is a particularly amusing scene when Ryan sneaks Joe Grey into town hall.

Shirley Rousseau Murphy’s writing has taken a step forward with her agility in twisting many storylines together. Plot lines that seem unrelated come together effortlessly. Mrs. Murphy has a way of weaving all the events together with strings of friendship. I suppose one of Maudie’s award-winning quilts could represent the various factions and plot lines patched together so seamlessly. I am certain that CAT COMING HOME will be an award-winning addition to this heart-warming series. It absolutely deserves to be on everyone’s “TBR” piles this fall. Just in time to celebrate the holidays along with Molena Point once Joe and pals help Max and his crew put the violence to rest. Highly recommended.

Sandie Herron
http://www.iloveamysterynewsletter.com/

Moonlight Mile by Dennis Lehane

Twelve years ago, Angela Gennaro walked out on her partner, Patrick Kenzie when he turned four-year-old Amanda McCready over to her mother in Gone, Baby, Gone.  There was one more book in the series, then Dennis Lehane moved on to standalone novels, leaving Kenzie/Gennaro fans begging for more.  We've waited eleven years for Moonlight Mile, but we finally have the novel that concludes the series in a way we can live with.

Twelve years after the events of Gone, Baby, Gone, Patrick Kenzie is still a private investigator.  He's also a desperate man, "Sucking it up doing jobs I don't like for a company I'm not terribly in love with so that eventually I can get hired permanent and we can get insurance and benefits and a paid vacation."  He and Angie are married.  She's close to getting her doctorate, and they have a four-year-old daughter.  But, they're hurting in a bad economy just as everyone else is.  He lost his free office as a consequence of the church reforms in Boston following their failure to deal with bad priests.  Patrick is feeling the same desperation as so many people in the bad economy, worrying about money and mortgage payments.

And, Amanda McCready has disappeared again.  Her aunt never forgave Patrick for giving Amanda back to her lousy mother.  Since Bea blames Patrick for the past, she wants him to find the sixteen-year-old. But, now, she's a sixteen-year-old on the run from her crazy mother and gun-toting husband, with just a few members of the Russian mob after her.  So why wouldn't Patrick look for Amanda when, "A girl disappears again twelve years after her first disappearance brought down a gang of cops and cost the city a few mil during a bad budget year?"  Of course, he'll take the case that drove a wedge between him and Angie twelve years earlier. 

Dennis Lehane has brought us full circle with Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro Kenzie.  And, he is still the master at telling the story of the couple and their community.  They're brought up-to-date in a city suffering from a bad economy; empty houses, unfinished developments, and people desperate to survive.  It's a story of consequences, consequences as a result of events twelve years earlier, and consequences of events the characters have no control over, the economy.   Moonlight Mile allows Patrick and Angie to team up for one more case, while Angie reminds him "Why we got out of the rough stuff business.  It wasn't just because you got shot.  It was because we were junkies to it.  We loved it.  We still love it."  

And, we still love Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro.  So, thank you, Dennis Lehane, for Moonlight Mile.  Here's a fan who accepts Moonlight Mile as a satisfying conclusion to a beloved series.

Dennis Lehane's website is http://www.dennislehanebooks.com/

Moonlight Mile by Dennis Lehane.  HarperCollins, ©2010. ISBN 9780061836923 (hardcover), 336p.


*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I requested a copy of Moonlight Mile from the publisher, so I could read and review it.

Strangers by Mary Anna Evans

If archaeology mysteries interest you, have you tried Mary Anna Evans' books yet?  Strangers is the sixth in the series to feature Faye Longchamp.  Faye, who once only collected and sold artifacts from her Florida plantation home, has finished school, finished her Ph.D., and established a company with her husband.  But, anyone who has read about Faye knows it's easy to uncover murder on an archaeological dig.

Evans' latest mystery is timely.  She introduces Faye's new career, saying, "She and Joe had started their archaeological consulting business just in time for the economy to tank, taking with it the property development industry that fueled so much archaeological work."  So, they were very lucky to find a job in St. Augustine, excavating the rear garden at Dunkirk Manor, a B & B.   Unfortunately, Faye can do not much more than supervise, since she's seven-and-a-half months pregnant.  But, she can probe the early history of the house.

The story of Dunkirk Manor only goes back to the 1920's, but the house is already supposed to be haunted.  An ancestor of the present owner hosted Hollywood bigwigs and stars at parties at the house.  One party ended in the murder of a young actress, but no one was ever found guilty.  As Faye's team uncovers a swimming pool from that era, a local librarian is hoping they uncover traces of murder.  And, Faye herself makes a discovery of great importance,  the journal of a priest who arrived in St. Augustine along with the soldiers who founded the city.

But, it's the disappearance of another young woman that causes the greatest disturbance at the house.  When the owners' secretary disappears, leaving behind blood and a collection of priceless artifacts, a local police detective must rely on Faye's knowledge for help.  He just doesn't realize the danger she's in.  Even Joe, as protective as he is, has no idea what direction the danger will come from.

Two of these storylines are intertwined beautifully.  The current disappearance, along with the actress' murder ninety years earlier, work together for a disturbing story.  Unfortunately, the story of Father Domingo seems out of place.  I found myself jarred out of the story each time his diary entries appeared, and I waited, unsuccessfully, for a link to the rest of the story.  I'm sure I must have missed it, so I'm glad I'll have the change to see the author this week, and ask her about the connection. 

I may have missed one connection, but I always learn so much from Mary Anna Evans' Faye Longchamp mysteries.  Evans' skillfully uses archaeology as her own tool to tell us about forgotten history, and forgotten people.  At the same time, she gives us a couple we've learned to care about, Faye Longchamp-Mantooth, and her husband, Joe.  I hope they have a long history together in archaeological mysteries.

Mary Anna Evans' website is http://www.maryannaevans.com/

Strangers by Mary Anna Evans.  Poisoned Pen Press, ©2010. ISBN 9781590587423 (hardcover), 250p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I requested my Advanced Reading Copy from the publisher, since I wanted to read and review it.

Death Notice by Todd Ritter

Sunday Salon provides the perfect opportunity to introduce debut authors.  And, I can think of some journalists who have successfully written crime fiction.  Michael Connelly, Brad Parks, and Hank Phillippi Ryan are names that immediately come to mind.  I know there are dozens of others.  Now, Todd Ritter has the opportunity to join their ranks with his mystery, Death Notice.

There had never been a murder in the quaint town of Perry Hollow, Pennsylvania.  Police chief Kat Campbell knew the history of the mill town, since her grandparents met at the lumber mill, and her father was once the police chief.  And, she recognized most of the residents of the small town.  So, Kat was as shocked as everyone else when a trucker found a coffin at the edge of town, with a local farmer in it.  The murder was horrible enough to call in the sheriff, who turned it over to the Pennsylvania Bureau of Criminal Investigation.  As head of the task force, Nick Donnelly suspected the death was at the hands of a serial killer dubbed "The Betsy Ross Killer," due to his skill in using a needle and thread on his victims.  But, even Nick wasn't prepared when Henry Goll walked in the door, with a warning.  Goll wrote the obituaries for the local newspaper, but he had never received a fax that predicted a death before.

Donnelly's task force was expected to handle the investigation.  However, Chief Campbell became a partner in the case when she insisted on protecting her town.  She pointed out she knew the citizens.  But, she couldn't protect everyone from a killer determined to spread terror.  And, she and Donnelly reluctantly accepted Goll as part of their case when the killer seemed to target him to receive messages.

Ritter avoids rookie mistakes in this compelling mystery.  Kat, Donnelly, and Goll are all fascinating characters with weaknesses that make them all the more interesting.  Kat, with a special needs child, is particularly aware of her complex role as a single mother and a police chief.  And, each time I thought I knew where the case was going, the author threw in a twist.  Those twists made perfect sense at the end of this successful debut. 

Since I often review cozy mysteries, I feel compelled to say some of the details in this book can be grisly.  But, it's a well-written crime novel, riveting enough that I read it in one sitting.  So, I'll put you on notice.  Todd Ritter's Death Notice will be joining the ranks of other successful first novels by journalists turned mystery writer.

If you're a fan of authors' websites, as I am, check out Todd Ritter's at http://www.toddritteronline.com/.

Death Notice by Todd Ritter.  St. Martin's Minotaur, ©2010. ISBN 9780312622800 (hardcover), 336p.


*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book

The Human Disguise by James O'Neal

Did you ever wonder what Florida would look like in the future?  Curious as to the conditions in the U.S. after years of world-wide war, plague, and terrorist attacks?  Can one cop make a difference?  James O'Neal's fascinating futuristic cop novel, The Human Disguise, is a riveting speculative novel, a story set "More than twenty years from now."



Let's set the scene.  There was a ban on immigration in the U.S. eleven years earlier.  An amnesty bill gave citizenship to everyone who was inside the borders.  Since the country was fighting two wars, there were 27 million citizens taken in on one day, and then most were conscripted into the military.   Every September 11th, terrorists attack somewhere in the U.S.  The plague and famine have wiped out enormous numbers of people, and there are quarantine zones in the U.S.  Homeland Security is the only federal agency left.  There are emissaries from Jupiter on the way to Earth.  Germany is threatening war again.  And, in South Florida, there is a Unified Police Force because cities can't afford their own police departments.  It's even too expensive to send out crime scene investigators unless a victim's family paid.

Tom Wilner has been a cop in this devastated section of Florida for six years.   And, if he hadn't been sitting in a bar watching the wife who left him, and her boyfriend, Tiget Nadovich, he wouldn't have witnessed the unusual fight in which men who were fatally wounded actually survived.  That one bar fight triggers suspicions in Wilner's mind, and that of another cop and friend, Steve Besslia.  But, while Wilner, a down-to-earth cop, focuses on the investigation, and the unusual involvement of two men who don't seem to get along, Nadovich and Johann Halleck, Besslia has a wild idea that they're dealing with aliens.   As the case gets murkier, with missing circuit boards, unusual suspects who seem to heal themselves, and his suspicions that his wife may be involved, Wilner is initially reluctant to trust a Homeland Security agent, Shelby Hahn.  It isn't long, though, before Wilner realizes he, Besslia and Shelby may be the only ones knowledgeable enough to stop the complete destruction of what's left of South Florida.

Fan of science fiction?  O'Neal's speculation as to the future of Florida and the world is scary because of the real possibilities.   If you think humans aren't the only race here, you'll appreciate The Human Disguise.  If you're a fan of crime fiction, you'll enjoy the crime investigation twenty-some years from now.  O'Neal has successfully combined crime and science fiction, but his true success is Tom Wilner.  He's a family man who lost his wife, but is doing his best to take care of his children.  And, it's hard not to feel sorry for Wilner, a man determined to protect people, and do his job, despite his own confusion and uncertainty as to what is actually happening.  Tom Wilner is a hero, a cop forced to look beyond The Human Disguise.

James O'Neal's website is http://www.jamesonealbooks.com/

The Human Disguise by James O'Neal. Tor, ©2010. ISBN 9780765359773 (paperback), 381p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I bought my book.





How Not to Survive a Vacation by Desert Sleuths Sisters in Crime

The final event of the the Desert Sleuths chapter of Sisters in Crime's Write Now! 2010 Conference was the launch of their new anthology, How Not to Survive a Vacation.  I won't be doing a formal review of the book.  It wouldn't be fair, since I was just named Fan Guest of Honor at their conference.  However, I don't actually review other crime fiction anthologies, either.  How do you properly review a collection with various authors?  In the past. when I discussed an anthology, I've highlighted those stories that were memorable.   So, I'll mention the stories that popped for me.

How Not to Survive a Vacation is a collection of crime fiction short stories written around the theme of vacation.  The stories fit in three categories, "Marine Getaways," "Mountain Getaways," and "Desert Getaways."  The landscapes are integral parts of the stories in which, unfortunately, very few people actually get to enjoy their vacations.   

JoAnne Zeterberg launches the collection with a fun police procedural, "Death on the Intergalactic Sea."  It comes as a shock to Echo McClelland to discover her fantasy cruise is actually a science fiction/fantasy cruise, complete with costumed characters.  So, it doesn't make it any easier to find a killer.  Merle McCann's historical mystery, "The Bride Wore Black," takes us back to Seattle in 1909 for the story of a bride whose wedding plans ended in tragedy.  Or did they?  Susan Budavari's "Sins of the Father" might have the most unexpected twist at the end of the story.  Or, maybe it's Deborah J. Ledford's "Loose End," a story that really leaves the reader dangling.  And, I want to highlight Judy Starbuck's "Cowgirls Don't Cry" for the realistic depiction of Arizona, essential to this vacation mystery.

I can't highlight all eighteen stories in How Not to Survive a Vacation.  Everyone will discover a favorite, and it might be based on your own favorite vacation spots, seaside, mountains, or desert.  However, I can say the reader will be very glad they're not on some of these trips. If you think you're had the vacation from hell, check out a few of these stories. It's enough to make you want to tuck in safely at home, and NOT go anywhere.

The Desert Sleuths' website is http://www.desertsleuths.com/

How Not to Survive a Vacation by Desert Sleuths Chapter of Sisters in Crime.  DS Publishing, ©2010. ISBN 9780982877401 (paperback), 206p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I bought a copy of this book, although I was later given an autographed copy as well.

Larry Karp for Authors @ The Teague

It's hard to resist an author who wears a shirt that says "Will Write For Chocolate." So, I presented Larry Karp with chocolate cigars from our local candy company, Cerreta's, and asked him to talk about his Ragtime trilogy.

Larry said his books worked themselves out as one mystery involving the history of ragtime. Although the books are part of a trilogy, they can be read on their own, or in order.

Karp said he wanted to start by letting us know he's non-musical. He has no musical talent, but he does have an intense love of music. He likes classical music, opera, early jazz, and ragtime. Early on, ragtime was popular in southern states and the south midwestern states. But, in 1899, Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag" made ragtime popular, and it stayed that way until World War I when jazz replaced it in popularity. In the 1940s, musicians in California revived ragtime. Then, in 1973, the movie, "The Sting," used Joplin's music, particularly "The Entertainer."

Joplin's goal was to transfer the rough music of the brothels and bars into a form of classical music. He was a serious composer. In the early 70s, Joshua Rifkin released a million-selling album of Joplin's ragtime music. George Roy Hill, director of "The Sting," heard that album, and used the music for the background of the film. Joplin's music was played as he wanted it played, not too fast, but just as it was written. Then, in 1976, Joplin was posthumously awarded a special lifetime achievement award.

Karp loved ragtime, so he began to read about it. He devoted himself to a six year research project. He discovered a book called They All Played Ragtime by Blesh. The author interviewed ragtime pioneers. The book was a popular, readable history of the people involved in the music, and the history of it. Karp was captivated by the characters and events surrounding ragtime. He learned all he could about the history of ragtime. That became the framework of his murder mystery.

The first book in Larry Karp's trilogy deals with the signing of the contract for "Maple Leaf Rag," the song that was so popular for two decades. A Sedalia, Missouri white publisher gave the black composer Scott Joplin royalties, something that was unheard of at the time. No one knows why he gave him a penny a copy as royalties. Since "Maple Leaf Rag" was the fist sheet music to sell one million copies, Joplin made out quite well at a time when $700 a year was a good income. The story deals with a young boy, Brun Campbell, who was a piano prodigy. He ran away from home to Sedalia because he wanted piano lessons from Scott Joplin. The black musician did teach the white boy, the boy whose nickname became the title of the first book in the trilogy, The Ragtime Kid.

Book two focused on a dispute between Scott Joplin and Irving Berlin in 1911. Joplin wanted to make ragtime respectable, and he moved to New York City. He wanted to write an opera, and he took it to Tin Pan Alley to the music publishing house where Irving Berlin worked. He left his opera at the publisher with the young lyricist, Berlin. The publishing house said they didn't handle that type of music. When Berlin came out with "Alexander's Ragtime Band" in 1911, Joplin claimed he plagiarized the end of his opera. Nothing came of the claim, and there was no proof.

From 1911-1916, Joplin suffered from cerebral syphilis, a disease common to musicians at the time. His judgment became bad. He became manic-depressive. He only lived another half year. But, he wanted to provide for his wife and daughter. It was said he wrote a new manuscript called "If," but it was never found.

So, Larry Karp thought, what if there was a young pupil's of Joplin's in 1916, who was bookkeeper with the publisher who employed Berlin. What if the new manuscript was left with Irving Berlin? What if it led to murder?

Joplin and Berlin were both muisc writing machines. However, Irving Berlin wrote for commercial gain, while Scott Joplin had artistic goals. This second mystery became The King of Ragtime. Joplin, and then Berlin, both called themselves "The King of Ragtime." The mystery involves solving a murder, and who was really "The King of Ragtime."

Karp didn't know where he was going next, but a bookstore owner suggested he write a trilogy. He'd written about the birth and death of ragtime. Larry decided he could write about the resurrection of it, the ragtime revival.

The Ragtime Fool is the third book in the trilogy. Brun Campbell, "The Ragtime Kid," had married unwisely, a very religious woman who didn't approve of his music. He worked as a barber in California, and when the ragtime revival hit, he jumped on the bandwagon. He wanted to restore Joplin's, and his own, reputation. Karp thought Brun's wife must have thought him a fool, so that became the book title, The Ragtime Fool.

The latest book is set in 1951. On April 17, 1951, there was a ceremony to honor Scott Joplin in Sedalia, Missouri. It was to be held at a black high school. There would be an audience of blacks and whites, and a plaque would be hung in Joplin's honor. There was a black high school because Sedalia wasn't integrated until 1968. Karp's Sedelia researcher told him the Ku Klux Klan was active in Missouri at the time. They held ceremonies and cross burnings in Liberty Park in Sedalia. She said everyone knew who they were, even with their sheets on, because their dogs followed them.

So, Karp had his idea for the story. What if the Ku Klux Klan wanted to blow up the high school?

Brun was going to play a role in this story. Karp needed to get him to town, and he needed another young man like Brun. So he invented a young piano player in New Jersey, and he and Brun met in Sedalia. A lot happened related to ragtime in the book.

Karp added another item of interest. He invented a journal that Joplin reportedly kept. That journal would be of interest to different people, Brun, an author, and the Ku Klux Klan. Larry needed that journal to end in the right hands, and he needed to stop the KKK from blowing up the high school. This book is more a thriller than a whodunnit.

While writing this book, Karp read a review of a Ray Bradbury book, Death is a Lonely Business. It was set in Venice, California. Vencie was originally set up in the 1890s to resemble Venice, Italy, with real canals. There was also an amusement pier with a roller coaster. Bradbury's book was an homage to 1940s Venice. But, he featured a barber who had many of the same characteristics of Brun Campbell, had pictures of him with Scott Joplin, and all of that barber's stories turned out to be fake.

Once Karp read the book, he was angry. Brun Campbell did exist, and he did study with Joplin. There's even a group of musicians in St. Louis called Brun's Boys who like and play Brun's music. Karp was so angry that we wanted his young science fiction writer in his book to be named Ray. But, he finally realized he couldn't do that. His son suggested he name the science fiction author, Cal, the same name as the barber in Bradbury's book, so he could have his little joke, but not name the character for Ray Bradbury.

Larry Karp said he does a great deal of research, and he likes to get the details right, but he knew nothing about dynamite, and he needed to use it to plan to blow up the high school in The Ragtime Fool. He read about dynamite, but just couldn't put it all together. He was visiting a friend in Canada, and they went to lunch with another man, a contractor at a restaurant built with a large beam supported by large poles. So, he asked the contractor how he would go about blowing up that building, since it was supported as the high school might have been. Ralph told him how to blow it up, and Larry wrote it all down in a notebook.

It wasn't until he and his wife were almost to Customs that he realized he had notes saying, "How to blow up Hubbard High School," with instructions. It was right about the time older people had been caught at the borders, smuggling drugs. Karp thought about tearing the pieces out of the notebook, and swallowing them, but there were cameras right there. So, he told his wife, who was driving, to smile sweetly. Everything went fine, but he decided, in the future, mail it home.

Karp was asked, if you could ask Scott Joplin one question, what would it be. Karp said he did wonder where his manuscripts went, but it's thought that, once Joplin's wife died, and then his executor, that the executor's daughter disposed of them. Every ragtime historian dreams of walking in somewhere, and finding a trove. What would Karp ask Joplin? If he's satisfied now with his legacy. Joplin told his wife, "People won't appreciate my music until I'm gone 25 years."

When asked what he's working on now, Dr. Karp said he's going back to his roots. He's writing a medical thriller about in vitro fertilization. He worked on the early process, and there was quite a scandal involving one doctor. He thinks this will make a good mystery.

And, Larry Karp might be back for Authors @ The Teague if his medical thriller is published.

Larry Karp's website is www.larrykarp.com

The Ragtime Fool by Larry Karp. Poisoned Pen Press, ©2010. ISBN 9781590586990 (hardcover), 303p.