They Never Learn
Vanessa Orr

This is a story that grabs you by the throat and won’t let go, somewhat like its protagonist, Scarlett, a female serial killer who stalks and murders men who harm women. From the get-go, you know who and what Scarlett is, and the only real question is whether she’ll get caught—or if you even want her to.

As an English professor at Gorman University, Dr. Scarlett Clark is privy to all the campus secrets, from frat-boy rapes of inebriated coeds to tenured professors using their status to sleep with young female students. She carefully targets those who commit the crimes, and stages their murders to seem like suicides or accidents. Unfortunately, the head of the psychology department, Dr. Samina Pierce, begins studying campus deaths and realizes that something is off—putting Scarlett’s extracurricular activities at risk of being revealed.

Alternating chapters follow the story of young Gorman student Carly, a social misfit who is trying to adjust to life at the college while also trying to understand her own attraction to her roommate, Allison. Like Scarlett, Carly mistrusts men, stemming from her own volatile relationship with her father. Far more powerless than the professor, however, she can only stand idly by as Allison continues to put herself in dangerous relationships.

In this age of the #MeToo movement, it’s good to see many of the issues facing campus women, such as sexual harassment, stalking, lack of professional advancement for being female, and rape come to light, even though Scarlett’s choice of resolution may go too far for most.

Seeing a woman as the predator, instead of the prey, may make some readers uncomfortable, even as it empowers others. To have the roles switched in this way makes for a very intriguing story, and while the reader may not agree with Scarlett’s methods, there’s no doubt that it shines a light on issues that men—as well as women—need to address.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 20:39:53
A Lady Compromised
Jean Gazis

In the fourth volume in Darcie Wilde’s popular Rosalind Thorne Mystery series set in Regency England, the starchy manners and sparkling repartee of Jane Austen’s genteel country society hide sinister secrets. In Wilde’s latest, Helen Corbyn, a young gentlewoman, is looking into the sudden, untimely death of her older brother William with Rosalind’s help.

As it happens, Helen is a neighbor of Rosalind’s handsome old flame Devon, now Duke of Casselmaine. Rosalind is about to make an extended visit to Cassel House to help with the wedding of Devon’s cousin Louisa—and to find out whether there’s any chance of rekindling her past romance with the duke.

It’s clear right away that Rosalind and Devon’s attraction is as strong as ever, but Rosalind’s determination to learn whether William Corbyn died by suicide or murder threatens to derail their relationship before it can properly begin. Devon is leading an ambitious, expensive, and contentious project to drain the fens and improve the farmland in the area, and Rosalind must reluctantly consider his possible involvement in William’s death, a suspicion not helped by the fact that Devon seems intent on discouraging her from pursuing her inquiries.

A Lady Compromised portrays the outwardly straight-laced mores and complicated social connections of the country gentry vividly through a varied cast of characters, including social climbers, scheming poor relations, plucky young women, Bow Street Runners, and stalwart servants. Rosalind is intelligent, empathetic, and likable, as well as an astute judge of character who can elicit important information from seemingly superficial chitchat.

Wilde’s descriptions of people, places, and events create an immersive experience for the reader. Although it takes some time to set the stage, the plot’s fast and furious twists and turns sustain the suspense until the final pages, and the brief epilogue hints at more adventures to come in Rosalind’s personal journey.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 20:50:17
Snake Island
Craig Sisterson

After opening his authorial account in his homeland with an historical coming-of-age story set against the harsh realities of a whaling station in To Become a Whale, Australian novelist Ben Hobson takes a darker turn with his sophomore effort, and first book to be published in the United States. Snake Island is a superb literary thriller that explores father-son relationships, family loyalties, violence, and retribution.

In one senseless act, Caleb Moore shattered his family. Now in prison for attacking his wife, Caleb has lost everything, including his parents, Vernon and Penelope, who have cut him off. But when retired teacher Vernon learns Caleb has been getting regularly visited and badly beaten by local thug Brendan Cahill while the authorities look the other way, he decides he must step in.

Vernon’s solution? Try to broker peace with Brendan’s own father. The catch? Ernie Cahill is head of a local family that switched from sheep farming to drug cultivation, and thanks to male pride and unforeseen events, rather than helping, Vernon escalates matters into a dangerous feud with the region’s crime kingpin.

Hobson intercuts chapters from different perspectives as other characters get involved, including a stained local cop and Brendan’s brother, whose priorities don’t match his criminal family’s.

Snake Island is a rich, powerful tale in a stark rural setting, threaded with issues of domestic violence, vengeance, masculinity, and frontier justice. It’s modern noir with Western sensibilities, from a masterful writer.

Fans of the great “grit lit” tales set in the American South and Southwest, or Shakespearean tragedy, will find plenty to love in this novel as it builds from high simmer to blood-soaked finale.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 21:04:41
Once Again
Margaret Agnew

How is anyone supposed to survive after that death of a child? That’s the driving question of Once Again, Catherine Wallace Hope’s debut novel. The story begins with devastated couple Erin and Zac Fullerton reaching a macabre milestone—500 days since their daughter Korrie’s death at the hands of a killer. While Zac is coping as best he can and has gone back to work, Erin has essentially shut down. Shortly, however, she’s given a reason to re-engage with the world.

Zac doesn’t have an average job. He’s an astrophysicist focused on the study of time, and even proposed to Erin using a diamond he referred to as a “time crystal.” Though Erin reaches out to him, and wants to spend the 500th day together, he refuses—this is a day at work Zac can’t possibly skip. He has discovered both a black hole and a white hole, and a time distortion event unlike any other is slated to occur.

Erin has the time crystal, and when time begins to shift, she finds herself reliving the day her daughter died in seemingly random bursts that may just give her a second chance to save Korrie’s life.

Though Wallace Hope’s thriller story leans toward science fiction, the human emotion in the tale is very real. Erin and Zac’s grief is fresh, raw, and believable, twisting them into people they never thought they’d be. Zac doesn’t get much time at all in on the action; he exists largely to explain the concepts happening behind the scenes. He serves more as a grounding element for the chaotic Erin, a stable base as she goes from empty shell to active participant in her own life. This time, she makes different choices. This time, if she fights hard enough, she might be able to change Korrie’s fate. Watching her change is the strongest and most moving part of the book.

Less satisfying is the time mechanism itself. Though it is explained enough to be internally believable, it takes gravity away from those emotions when there’s a reset button that can be pressed. Erin overcomes many hardships in her efforts to reach her goal, but that character development doesn’t end up having much of an effect by the end of the story. The resolution achieved doesn’t quite feel earned. Given that, I’m not sure that the book’s driving question is ever absolutely answered.

This book has gorgeous prose and an excellent balance of multiple narrators. It doesn’t glorify grief, and neither does it glorify the serial killer who took Korrie’s life. Though the scientific aspects are thoroughly explained, they aren’t distracting and remain accessible to the general reader. At heart, this is a good story, well told that establishes Wallace Hope as an author to definitely watch in the future.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 21:18:19
Deception by Gaslight
Benjamin Boulden

Deception by Gaslight is the entertaining, if predictable, first entry in Kate Belli’s new historical mystery series, Gilded Gotham.

Genevieve Stewart, a reporter for the New York City Globe, is pursuing a vigilante-style jewel thief across New York City in 1888. The thief is known by the press as the “Robin Hood of the Lower East Side” because he burgles the wealthy and gives something back to the poor. He has even recently detailed his philosophy in a letter to the Globe, sharing how his victims are selected, which is primarily for their blatant personal greed.

While following leads in New York’s dangerous Five Points neighborhood, Genevieve stumbles across a murdered corpse that is connected to the Robin Hood burglaries. Also there is the man who will become her primary suspect and romantic infatuation, the wealthy and the extraordinarily handsome Daniel McCaffrey. Genevieve is certain McCaffrey is Robin Hood, but she is just as certain that he has nothing to do with the murder (or the two that follow).

Deception by Gaslight’s 19th-century setting is vibrant and rich with historical accuracy. The dark streets, the odors, the colors, and textures are well described. Genevieve is a likable and admirable character. She is full of life and happiness and ambition. The mystery is fun and marred only by a couple of telegraphed plot points, but that doesn’t take much from the story’s overall pleasant allure.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 21:22:54
The System
Kevin Burton Smith

It’s so solemn and officious, they ought to have the guy from Law & Order narrating the preface…

“In the United States, the term criminal justice system refers to the institutions through which an accused offender must pass—until the accusations are either dismissed or proven, and punishment is assessed and completed,” and winds up a page-and-a-half later (after a brief history of California’s prison gangs who “direct the criminal activities of street gangs from behind bars”) with…

“This is the story of one such crime—those accused of it, those who witnessed it, the law enforcement who investigated it, the lawyers who prosecuted and defended it, and those left behind on the outside.”

All that’s missing is the two-note musical squonk.

Fortunately, Ryan Gattis is after bigger game, and once the po-faced intro wraps up, we’re in for a rollicking ride. Set in Los Angeles in 1993, this is an entertaining and eye-popping, Bonfire of the Vanities-style look at “one such crime,” the murder of dope dealer Scrappy, gunned down outside her mother’s Long Beach home, and the subsequent Greek chorus of memorable characters, the righteous and the wronged, who get caught up in the case. Everybody’s given a chance to tell their own stories, in their own voices, and oh what voices! Angry, frightened, self-serving and, perhaps most heartbreaking of all, bewildered. A glossary is helpfully provided for those of us who failed Homie 101 or Advanced Shyster, but it’s the sheer humanity and opposing world views that make this book such a treat.

Such an approach could easily falter, but Gattis never stumbles, confidently leaping from viewpoint to viewpoint, letting the characters speak for themselves, studding the action with just enough reproduced arrest warrants, affidavits, and court transcripts to make 87th Precinct fans feel right at home.

But it’s the first-person bloviations of the passengers on this voyage of the damned that make this trip really worth your while. No dry, stat-choked screed, this is a blow-by-blow account, drenched with humanity, that asks readers to simply bear witness to the people on this journey, and maybe, just maybe, try to understand.

Most pointedly, Dreamer, the young gang member fingered for the crime by Augie, a heroin addict who witnessed the murder. Augie was pressured by his racist parole officer Phillip Petrillo, who wants Dreamer put away so he can put the move on his “tasty treat” girlfriend, “good girl” Angela, whose cousin, the mercurial Wizard, is a big shot gangbanger, rapper wannabe, and Dreamer’s best friend. And that’s just the beginning.

As we follow Dreamer as he’s sucked into a broken criminal justice system straight outta Kafka, it becomes clear that, in this year of our discontent, we may not have come very far after all.

Forget 1993. This story, as compelling as it is at times painful, could have been ripped from today’s headlines.

Or tomorrow’s.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 21:41:53
Confession on the 7:45
Robert Allen Papinchak

Confession doesn’t seem good for anyone’s soul in Lisa Unger’s taut psychological thriller Confessions on the 7:45. It’s always Alfred Hitchcock and Patricia Highsmith territory when two strangers meet on a train, share problems, and become co-conspirators.

For Unger, it’s two women—Selena Murphy, a licensing director at a literary agency, and a character named Martha, who works at an investment firm. They encounter each other when their Manhattan commuter train stalls on the tracks. During a casual conversation, they disclose a similar piece of information—they are troubled by extramarital affairs.

Selena has evidence. She has a surveillance tape of her husband of almost 10 years, Graham, having sex with their nanny Geneva on their children’s Ikea activity playroom rug. Martha admits to having an affair with her married boss. Both are stunned that they have shared such intimate personal details and dumbfoundedly ask one another the same question, “Why did I just tell you that?” Maybe it’s the mini-bar bottles of Grey Goose vodka talking, or maybe there’s a con being played. If so, who’s the grifter and who’s the mark?

After Selena gets home, she confronts Graham, tells him to leave, and resolves to fire Geneva, who may be a “serial homewrecker.” Shortly after, Geneva vanishes. Selena begins to reassess her marriage. She even suspects Graham may have had something to do with Geneva’s disappearance.

The word to pay attention to is “liminal.” It’s there in the first chapter’s opening sentence (“Selena loved the liminal space”), and it makes a significant appearance near the end of the novel in the “divine nowhere” of an airport, the “ultimate liminal space, neither here nor there.” In between, Selena makes space for the stranger who keeps showing up in her life. But why?

In what seems a superfluous secondary plot, single mother Stella Behr is a bookstore owner with a 15-year-old daughter, Pearl. A “quiet, bookish, regular guy,” Charlie, begins as Stella’s clerk, but quickly insinuates himself into the family. When Stella dies, it propels the novel into several seemingly diverse subplots which eventually converge. Charlie and Pearl settle into a new normal, traveling across the country like Lolita and Humbert Humbert, morphing into an incipient Bonnie and Clyde.

By the final ironic conclusion, tables have turned a number of times. Unger cleverly exposes several counterfeited identities. Revenge and truth become opposite sides of the same coin. One of the characters notes it’s “never just about the score, but how well you played the game.” For readers willing to become Unger’s mark, she plays the “long game” with flawless fervor.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 21:49:57
Silent Bite
Debbie Haupt

Number 22 in David Rosenfelt’s long-running Andy Carpenter series finds Andy gratefully back on terra firma after barely surviving a family Christmas cruise his wife Laurie insisted on as part of a devious plot to extend her favorite holiday season.

So when Willie, his friend and partner in their dog-rescue nonprofit The Tara Foundation, urges him to defend Willie’s former cellmate, Tony Birch, who is accused of murder, the semi-retired lawyer Andy is happy to accept if it gets him away from the 24/7 Christmas torture at home.

Willie is certain of Tony’s innocence, even though the evidence to the contrary is mounting, and soon there’s not one murder but two that Tony is accused of. All of which leaves Andy wondering if, like Christmas, the legal nightmare will ever end.

Silent Bite is full of doggy love and holiday mockery, featuring Rosenfelt’s customary irreverent, almost-slapstick humor, plus great clues that will keep readers guessing—all elements Rosenfelt’s loyal fans have come to expect from the series. Although the mystery is unique to this novel, new fans might feel a bit left out without the benefit of the series’ backstory.

The narrative is the perfect fit for Rosenfelt’s quirky characters and the story will have the audience both laughing and spooked from the plethora of twisty-turny tip-offs in between holiday tomfoolery. If readers’ thinking caps are on firmly, they’ll be able to follow the subtle hints to whodunit.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-05 21:53:44
The Girl in the Mirror
Craig Sisterson

Near-identical twins create plenty of havoc in this energetic debut thriller by Rose Carlyle that twists and turns its way from Thailand to the Seychelles and back to Australia as the dangling carrot of a massive inheritance induces all sorts of nefarious acts.

Strangers and even friends and family struggle to tell twins Iris and Summer apart. They look strikingly similar on the outside, but their interior worlds are vastly different. Iris, our narrator, has always felt second best to her charming, kind, marginally older twin Summer. Rather than being exactly alike, Iris is Summer’s mirror, from barely noticeable exterior differences like which cheekbone is slightly higher, to her internal organs being flipped from the norm. Whereas Summer seems effervescent and happy, Iris has always been more cynical, anxious, and insecure. Good things come so easily to Summer, Iris gets crumbs. Or so she tells us. Clearly Iris is jealous of Summer—perhaps for good reason, perhaps not—and in her first outing Carlyle adroitly walks readers along a tightrope between empathy and suspicion.

But when Summer calls from Thailand, distraught about the health of her husband Adam’s son, Iris flies to her aid. Truthfully, it’s the chance to sail the family yacht she’s felt so connected to for so many years, as much as any connection to and feelings for her fortunate sister. But when tragedy strikes on the high seas, and a waiting Adam mistakes Iris for his own wife, could she change her whole life with a lie?

Carlyle has crafted a tense, compulsive tale where reader sympathies shift like sands scoured by ocean waves. The scenes of sailing on the high seas are evocative; you can feel the spray on your face and the tension ramping up as the twins, so similar yet so different, seek to co-exist in a cramped, bobbling world of their own. The Girl in the Mirror offers more twists than a bowline, and while some keen crime readers may predict a swerve or two, there’s so much to admire and enjoy about this debut. Like an America’s Cup yacht, it’s sleek, pacy, and such a fun ride as it zigzags its way to the finish line.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 15:21:41
Murder by Milk Bottle
Dori Saltzman

It’s a busy bank-holiday weekend in the city of Brighton, England, in August 1957. In successive order, three seemingly random people are murdered with the same peculiar weapon, a milk bottle; England’s top crime bosses descend on the city for a summit to discuss incursions by American mobsters; a famous American ice skater is shot during a solo practice, then mysteriously vanishes; and the pretty Milk Girl arrives in the city to open the highly controversial House of Hanover Milk Bar.

Caught in the middle of this maelstrom is Constable Peregrine Twitten, an enthusiastic young policeman with a reputation for attracting chaos the way honey brings flies, and for thinking himself smarter than everyone else.

Murder by Milk Bottle is ridiculously and deliciously absurd with a madcap cast of characters—none of whom can see the forest for the trees. The multiple deaths—including a poor woman trampled by a herd of dairy cows!—are hardly more important than the fact that no one bothers to tell Twitten where the police commissary is.

When the triple murder is finally solved, two-thirds of the way through the book, it’s anticlimactic. In fact, the author tells you its anticlimactic, then continues her story in all its absurdity.

My only quibble with the book is its Britishness, which I loved, but which also made it hard to read at times, especially some historical references in the early part of the story.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 15:28:02
Lapse
Craig Sisterson

In Down Under sports commentary speak, lawyer-turned-debut author Sarah Thornton plays an absolute blinder with Lapse, a thrilling small-town tale about shame, secrets, and Aussie rules football. Like the United States and unlike most of the rest of the world, when you utter the word “footy” in Australia it doesn’t automatically mean soccer. Instead, a good chunk of the country is obsessed with a high-scoring game of hard contact, high athleticism, and battling kicks that can seem chaotic to observers who haven’t grown up with it.

When Clementine Jones flees from her life as a high-flying Sydney corporate lawyer to Katinga, a dusty small town in inland Australia, she ends up becoming the coach for the local Aussie-rules football team. (Imagine a Wall Street lawyer shifting to rural Wyoming and coaching the town’s low-A baseball team.) On the cusp of the team’s first playoff appearance in years, and perhaps Katinga’s first championship in half a century, Clem’s star player Clancy quits. He’s also been fired from his job for stealing. Both events are out of character for the aboriginal man, so Clem starts asking questions, lifting the lid on simmering racial tensions and a past she’s running from.

Like an athlete shining in her first game on the big stage, Thornton has made an auspicious debut, with Lapse shortlisted for the Ned Kelly Awards. Her lineup of damaged heroine, a wonderful evocation of a footy-obsessed small town, and exploration of the bubbling undercurrents of racism alongside plenty of corruption, mystery, and intrigue, all adds up to a real winner. An exciting new voice.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 15:32:52
The Wrong Family
Eileen Brady

Juno is 67, homeless, and dying of cancer. In another life she’d been a mother, wife, and family therapist. While sitting in a park one beautiful day she overhears a couple talking and, with nothing else to do, decides to follow them. Each day, when Willow and Nigel Crouch take their evening walk, Juno tags behind, taking in each detail of their conversations, immersing herself in their lives.

Then one night, she follows them home.

The Wrong Family is written in two voices, Willow’s and Juno’s, each one compelling in her own way. Willow is an anxious woman. She’s worried that her teenaged son, Samuel, doesn’t connect with her any more; worried that her husband, Nigel, is growing increasingly distant from her; worried her twin brother, Dakota—the spoiled black sheep of her family—is spiraling out of control.

Meanwhile Juno, like the reader, learns about the Crouches as she listens. Once paid to hear others’ problems, she has become even more observant—and secretive—in order to survive on the streets of Seattle. Along with the homeless woman, the reader becomes witness to the disintegration of a dysfunctional family. However, in a fateful decision, Juno lends the destruction a hand.

Author Tarryn Fisher’s prose is spot on, very readable and fast-paced. Just when you think you have the plot figured out, you turn the page to find your assumptions were all wrong. Fisher encourages us to be sympathetic to Juno in this enjoyable dark thriller, giving us just enough detail before clobbering us over the head.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 15:35:52
The War Widow
Benjamin Boulden

The War Widow, by Australian-Canadian author Tara Moss, is a modern commentary on the post-WWII, private eye novel.

Set in Sydney, Australia, in 1946, it introduces former war correspondent and recently sidelined newspaper reporter Billie Walker. Billie, a strong and fashionable midcentury woman, reopens her dead father’s private inquiry agency. She is ably assisted by her handsome and tough secretary Samuel Baker.

When Netanya Brown hires Billie to find her missing teenage son, Adin, Billie assumes the boy has gone off with friends or a lover, but the trail leads to an exclusive club, The Dancers, and to a premier auction house. An old informant from Billie’s newspaper days, tells her about a possible prostitution ring and Billie slowly comes to realize the two cases are related.

The War Widow is a strong debut for the tough-minded, elegant, and determined Billie Walker. It’s mystery as a look at class and society from a fresh and very female perspective. The commentary, at times, is too modern for the story’s era, but it is never dull or misinformed.

The War Widow’s only flaw is the longwinded descriptions of its characters’ clothing: materials, sewing patterns, and other minutia. Billie even goes so far as to describe someone’s clothing and then prognosticate what that character might wear in a different season.

The mystery is tailored nicely and features corrupt cops, murder, Nazi war criminals, and prostitution. In the end, Billie is able to solve it adeptly as she moves from the criminal underworld to the highest levels of society.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 15:39:22
Goodnight Beautiful
Sarah Prindle

Annie Potter and her new husband Sam Statler are settling into married life in Upstate New York, where Sam, a therapist, has gone into private practice. They plan to start a quiet life away from the chaos of New York City, as well as make regular visits to Sam’s ailing mother, who lives in a nursing home nearby. Despite their mutual love, things aren’t perfect. Sam is keeping secrets from Annie, both personal and financial, which threaten to undo their newlywed bliss.

Sam becomes preoccupied and distant and Annie is unsure what is going on or how to help. Then one night, Sam never comes home from work. Annie calls the police to report him missing, but there is no sign of Sam or his car, no indication as to what has happened. Her husband seems to have vanished entirely.

As the police investigate and Annie starts uncovering some of Sam’s secrets, she questions whether she really knew Sam and wonders whether he could have left on his own. But this mystery is far from predictable, and several shocking revelations will throw everything the reader knows into question and make uncovering the truth a daunting task.

Aimee Molloy’s newest book, Goodnight Beautiful, at first comes across as a fairly straightforward missing-spouse case…but there are plot twists so jarring, there will be many times when the reader will think, “Yikes, I didn’t see that coming!”

Molloy does a phenomenal job getting into the hearts and souls of her characters, including their weaknesses and psychological issues—which is fitting, since Sam is a therapist and psychology plays a key role in the story. Molloy’s examination of characters’ motives, personalities, flaws—and in the case of the villain of the story, mental issues and delusions—really make them well developed and complex.

The author’s strongest point, however, is in how she artfully crafts scenes that hide the truth and make the reader think one thing, which inevitably gets upended by the creative plot twists. Goodnight Beautiful succeeds as a mystery and a psychological thriller. It’s difficult to explain the author’s true mastery of the plot without revealing spoilers, so suffice it to say this is a mystery people will have to read for themselves to fully appreciate its complexity and the intricacy of its storyline.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 15:59:12
Head Wounds
Benjamin Boulden

Head Wounds, by Michael McGarrity, is the 14th and reportedly last Kevin Kerney novel. Kerney, retired from his police chief job, is limited to a side role in this complicated and entertaining crime tale that stands on the shoulders of Kerney’s son, Doña Ana County Sheriff’s Office Detective Clayton Istee.

When two people, James Goggin and Lucy Nautzile, are found with their heads scalped and their throats cut in a Las Cruces motel room, Istee’s crime database searches fail to identify any homicides with a similar signature. But it doesn’t take long for Istee to discover that the victims were part of a tribal casino robbery that was never reported to the police.

The investigation follows a violent trail of murders before revealing a professional Mexican hit man named El Jefe, a bevy of corruption, mobsters, and other hired killers. For Istee, it becomes personal after he shoots El Jefe’s adopted son and finds himself as the assassin’s next target.

Head Wounds is a violent, at times over-plotted (with its crosses and double-crosses) crime thriller that is built on McGarrity’s vibrant painting of New Mexico. The villains are bad—El Jefe is uncannily omniscient and kills for the simplest of reasons—and the good guys, especially Istee, are dogged and fearless in their pursuit of justice.

The story moves with the speed of a roadrunner, which helps overcome the plotting excesses, making the overall effect entertaining and exhilarating as Clayton Istee and El Jefe chase each other across New Mexico’s enchanting and forbidding desert.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 16:03:12
The Man in the Microwave Oven
Vanessa Orr

Theo Bogart fled England after a family tragedy, changed her name, and is now living in San Francisco, where she owns a specialty boutique and helps her friend Nat with his newly opened café. After hiding her true identity from everyone for more than a year, including from her significant other, Ben, she is terrified when another resident of her neighborhood threatens to tell everyone about her secret. But she’s not the only one who has reason to want the woman dead.

When Katrina Dermody is found murdered in her car, there is no shortage of suspects; and when more bodies start dropping, even Theo’s grandfather becomes a suspect in a case that grows to involve British spies, a foreign orphanage, backroom real estate deals, murdered priests, embezzlement, and more.

The strength of the story lies in its large cast of characters, a quirky bunch who live in San Francisco’s Fabian Gardens neighborhood, and who despite many differences of opinion, look out for one another. The city itself plays a major role, a fitting backdrop to a melting pot of individuals that include a reformed street kid, a homeless man, a freelance writer, a computer whiz, real estate moguls, and budding entrepreneurs among others. As Theo tries to keep her own secrets hidden, she uncovers more about the individuals around her—and the motives that drive them.

While the cast of characters is large, at the heart of the story is Theo’s desire to protect those she loves—and the life that she’s built in her new American city. If she can figure out the murders, with the help of this coterie of friends, she might even be able to avoid becoming the killer’s next victim.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-06 16:07:10
L.A. Times Book Prize and Awards Season
Oline Cogdill

This is the book awards season, with nominations and presentations starting now through August when Bouchercon 2021 occurs.

Of course, in-person ceremonies can’t be held just yet, but authors deserve to be rewarded for their good works.

Left Coast Crime kicked off the presentations with its awards a couple of weeks ago in a tidy ceremony. Details of who won can be found here at Mystery Scene.

The 75th Edgar Awards, sponsored by Mystery Writers of America (MWA), will be presented via Zoom at 1 pm (EST) on April 29. Meanwhile, MWA is hosting a series of interviews with the nominees, Grand Masters, and Ellery Queen honorees. In addition, authors are reading from their nominated books on Mystery Writers of America’s Facebook page.   

Malice Domestic will have its ceremony in July.

I think the organizers of these virtual award ceremonies are doing a terrific job. They are focusing on the nominees—and let’s face it, it truly is an honor to be nominated—with the winners being allowed to discuss their book and offer their gratitude, often in a prerecorded video.

The applause is missing, but I hope everyone watching is applauding at home.

And traditional buying of the drinks isn’t happening, but we can toast at home. And when we can do it in-person, winners should expect to be toasted many times.

The latest awards presentation was this weekend with the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.

Full disclosure, I was a judge in the Mystery & Thriller category, along with my fellow judges Naomi Hirahara and Michael Nava. I was elected to present the award. The 2020 L.A. Times Book Prize in the Mystery & Thriller category was awarded to S.A. Cosby for Blacktop Wasteland. You can view the ceremony here. (This Mystery/Thriller Award is given out about 23 minutes into the ceremony.)

In presenting the award, our group statement was:

Blacktop Wasteland by S.A. Cosby, published by Flatiron, centers on a young family man at a crossroad in his life. This compelling novel deeply explores race, responsibility, parenthood, moral complexities and identity. Set in economically strapped area of Virginia, Blacktop Wasteland also looks at how a family’s struggles with cash are acerbated by a financial downtown. Cosby’s noir story reflects concerns of the 21st century through a gripping plot accented by fully fleshed out characters with realistic motives.

The five finalists in the 2020 L.A. Times Book Prize in the Mystery & Thriller category were:
- Blacktop Wasteland, by S.A. Cosby (Flatiron)
- A Beautiful Crime, by Christopher Bollen (Harper)
- Little Secrets, by Jennifer Hillier (Minotaur)
- And Now She’s Gone, by Rachel Howzell Hall (Forge)
-These Women, by Ivy Pochoda (Ecco)

Congratulations to all.

 

Oline Cogdill
2021-04-17 17:08:09
At the Scene, Summer Issue #168

168 Spring Cover, Sujata MasseyHello Everyone!

Everyone has their favorite Sherlock Holmes incarnation. That’s just a given among Mystery Scene readers. But how about your top Professor Moriarty? One of my favorites is Daniel Davis who matched wits with the crew of the Enterprise—including Data as Sherlock Holmes—in two popular episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation. In this issue, Tom Mead looks at the many faces of Moriarty—including the real life villains who inspired Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to create his nefarious criminal mastermind.

There are many diverse new characters in crime fiction lately. One of the most intriguing is Sujata Massey’s Perveen Mistry, a female Parsi lawyer in 1920s India. Massey was able to draw on her family background for much of the research needed but she journeys to India on a regular basis to learn more. Oline Cogdill talks to Massey in this issue.

The son of an African American father and a Mexican American mother, Stephen Mack Jones’ August Snow is a bright new star in the mystery firmament. Snow is also a whistleblower: an ex-cop in Detroit who stood up against corruption within the DPD and won millions of dollars from the city in the subsequent court case. Now, Snow is engaged in some high-octane do-gooding—bad guys watch out! John B. Valeri chats with Jones in this issue.

Caroline Kepnes has added to the gallery of terrifying yet charismatic antiheroes with her protagonist Joe Goldberg. In his own way, Joe is a hopeless romantic—until the woman in his crosshairs turns out to be less than perfect. John B. Valeri interviews Kepnes.

Joseph Goodrich takes a look at the uniquely imaginative short stories of John Collier in this issue. I’m a fan of Collier’s quirky 1930 novel His Monkey Wife: or Married to a Chimp and had forgotten how many of his short stories deserve equal praise. Don’t miss out on this author.

Margaret Maron’s acclaimed North Carolina mysteries featuring Judge Deborah Knott are just part of her influential legacy. She’ll also be remembered for her key role in launching the Sisters in Crime organization and the helping hand she lent to many young writers over the years. Sadly, Maron passed away this February. Oline Cogdill celebrates Margaret’s life and career in this issue.

You might think of writing as an indoor occupation, but Will Dean is out there chopping trees and clearing ditches while coming up with his uniquely claustrophobic tales. Craig Sisterson tracks down the author to his Swedish forest lair in this interview.

In addition to the fiendishly clever crossword puzzle by Verna Suit, we have “Perilous Puzzles” in this issue by Maya Corrigan. Elaine Viets and Debbie De Louise offer interesting essays on their new books. Ben Welton takes a look at the influential academic mystery The Horizontal Manby by Helen Eustis.

And don’t overlook the Thrillerfest and Malice Domestic conventions this year, both of which are being presented online. If you had trouble getting to New York City or Washington, DC, in the past, then this is a great opportunity for you to see some terrific writers in your own home.

Enjoy!

Kate Stine
Editor in Chief

Teri Duerr
2021-05-16 20:55:06
Summer Issue #168, Table of Contents

168 Summer Cover, Sujata Massey

 

Features

Sujata Massey

Massey’s own family background and copious amounts of detailed research enhance her Perveen Mistry novels set in 1920s India.
by Oline H. Cogdill

The Lockridges

Meet the husband-and-wife writing duo that created the charming Mr. and Mrs. North mysteries.
by Michael Mallory

Perilous Puzzles

by Maya Corrigan

Stephen Mack Jones

Jones’ new August Snow mystery boasts the tagline: “Gentrification has never been bloodier.”
by John B. Valeri

My Book: Death Grip

From her first words to last call, Elaine Viets has had a lifelong interest in dive bars.
by Elaine Viets

The Many Faces of Moriarty

The criminal mastermind is, as Sherlock says, “the organiser of half that is evil and of nearly all that is undetected in [London]...”
by Tom Mead

Caroline Kepnes

Joe Goldberg, a suave yet terrifying stalker, slips his way into our hearts and minds.
by John B. Valeri

John Collier: Fact & Fancy

This idiosyncratically talented author is regularly “rediscovered.” The mystery is why he’s ever forgotten in the first place.
by Joseph Goodrich

Margaret Maron (1938—2021)

In addition to her own influential and award-winning work, Maron was instrumental in developing the careers of many authors.
by Oline H. Cogdill

Will Dean

From an isolated cabin in a boggy Swedish forest, Dean conjures an intense standalone full of claustrophobia and creepiness.
by Craig Sisterson

My Book: Time’s Relative

A rediscovered manuscript from 23 years ago leads to a new time travel adventure.
by Debbie De Louise

Helen Eustis: The Horizontal Man

This influential book put an academic setting to splendid use.
by Ben Welton

Capital Crimes Crossword

by Verna Suit

 

Departments

At the Scene

by Kate Stine

Mystery Miscellany

by Louis Phillips

Hints & Allegations

The 2021 Edgar Allan Poe Awards, 2021 International Thriller Award nominations

Reviews

Small Press Reviews: Covering the Independents

by Katrina Niidas Holm

Very Original: Paperback Originals Reviewed

by Hank Wagner and Robin Agnew

Sounds of Suspense: Audiobooks Reviewed

by Dick Lochte

What About Murder? Reference Books Reviewed

by Jon L. Breen

Short and Sweet: Short Stories Considered

by Ben Boulden

Mystery Scene Reviews

 
 

Miscellaneous

The Docket

Letters

Advertising Info

 

 

Teri Duerr
2021-05-16 21:10:39
Summer Issue #168
Teri Duerr
2021-05-18 16:21:22
Mia Manansala on Filipino Cuisine, Mary Higgins Clark, and Her Debut Novel "Arsenic and Adobo"
Robin Agnew

Mia Manansala

Mia Manansala (pronounced MAH-nahn-sah-lah) has penned Arsenic and Adobo, a debut mystery featuring Lila Macapagal, a young Filipino-American woman and her huge Filipino-American family (and their restaurant). Manansala's original voice brings some real sparkle to the cozy mystery universe with plenty of humor and warmth, while also tackling serious themes around immigration and race. And the food in the book is amazing…. Don’t read while hungry!

Robin Agnew for Mystery Scene: When I read your bio, I was reminded how supportive the mystery community is. Can you talk a bit about your journey to publication of this first book?

Mia Manansala: It has definitely been quite a journey. Arsenic and Adobo is not the first book I wrote—my first book was a murder mystery set at a comic book convention and starring a queer, geeky Filipino-American woman. (Gee, I wonder who the inspiration for that was?) That book won a 2017 William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grant. It got me into the mentorship program Pitch Wars, where I revised the book heavily with my mentor Kellye Garrett, and it got me my first agent. However, it failed on sub. I made it to acquisitions a few times, but the rejections were all the same: love this, don’t know how to sell it.

I was on sub for almost a year and a half, and I spent that time working on the book that would become Arsenic and Adobo. It started off great. The opening chapters won the Eleanor Taylor Bland Award and it was getting good buzz, but then I got sidetracked when deaths in the family made it difficult to write. I had to put the project aside until I was ready, which took some time.

It got sidetracked again when I finally finished it and my then-agent told me she didn’t like the book! She was extremely honest with me, and I thank her from the bottom of my heart for that. She basically said, “I love the book I couldn’t sell. This, I could easily sell. But I don’t love it. And you deserve an agent who does.” So we amicably parted ways and it was back to the query trenches for me, which was terrifying. Luckily, I had some writer friends who believed in me and recommended me to their agents, plus I also did well with my cold queries. I signed with my agent, Jill Marsal, about two weeks after sending out my first query, and she sold my book at auction after two weeks on sub.

So a very happy ending, but what a roller coaster.

The food in the book is incredible. Can you talk about your relationship to cooking? I was hungry the whole time I read it. (Thanks for including recipes at the end!)

The book is dedicated to my dad, who passed away at the end of 2018. He taught me everything I know about food in general, and Filipino food especially. He was the cook in the house, and it was from him that I learned how food can be someone’s love language. He had a great sense of humor, but was a quiet, stoic man in general, and not given to affectionate embraces and I love you's. But the man could cook. And the feasts he made every weekend and on the holidays spoke volumes about the time and care he put in for us.

Food is also the one tangible connection I have to my culture outside of my family. I was born in Chicago and have never been part of the Filipino community here. I can’t speak Tagalog. I’ve only been to the Philippines a handful of times, and what I know of the history and culture are things I’ve researched on my own since it’s not taught in schools here. I think every diaspora kid clings to food as their connection to their ancestral homeland, even those who’ve never been able to visit it.

Adobo and ArsenicCan you also talk about your background a bit? I think this is the first mystery I've read with a Filipino American as the main character, and it's a very welcome addition to the cozy universe.

I was born and raised in an immigrant family in Chicago. Our house was multigenerational: my maternal grandparents, parents, me, my two younger brothers, and two cousins all grew up together. It was also a way station for family who were new to the country and needed a place to stay until they were stable enough to strike out on their own. What I know of Filipino culture is based on the way my family operated and my experiences growing up—my books aren’t meant to represent all Filipinos, because we are not a monolith. However, the things I’ve included are true to me.

What came first for you when creating the story...character? Setting? Plot?

Kellye Garrett and I were joking one day about how so many cozy tropes are the same as romantic comedies: girl from a small town tries to make it in the big city and either fails or is called back home to solve some crisis, and in the process finds love and the place she’s meant to be. I loved the idea of “rom-coms with dead bodies,” and one day, I was riding the train to work when the first line popped into my head, fully formed: “My name is Lila Macapagal and my life has become a rom-com cliche.”

Somehow, the character had named herself and given me the opening line. I just had to figure out who she was and the story she wanted to tell.

Do you have an arc in mind for your main character, Lila? She's young so obviously lots can happen to her going forward.

I purposely made Lila much younger than me so that she’d have room to grow and learn. I wanted her to start off slightly spoiled, even a little bratty, and not fully aware of some of the privileges she has. She’s also got “big fish in a small pond” syndrome, where she’s very ambitious and thinks she’s too good for a town as small as Shady Palms. Hopefully, her strong relationships with her family and friends can show her there’s more than one path to her dreams.

What writers have been influential to you? Did you grow up reading lots of mysteries?

I grew up around mysteries. I would watch Murder, She Wrote, Matlock, and Perry Mason with my grandparents, read Encyclopedia Brown books from my school library, and my mom got me into Mary Higgins Clark when I was ten or 11. That was when my mom started working at Walden Books (Remember those?) and employees were able to check out two books a week, like a library, got great discounts, and also tons of ARCs. I remember the excitement of her bringing home a new Mary Higgins Clark book, which she’d read, then hand off to me. My mom is also the one who got me into cozies, culinary cozies in particular, once she started working at the library.

She got really into those Hannah Swensen books by Joanne Fluke, so I started reading them to have something to talk about with her. That was probably the first time I realized I could combine my love of food and mysteries. Though I still say my first culinary mystery was Encyclopedia Brown Takes the Cake. I still remember that book over 20 years later. Pretty sure I even made a recipe from it when I was a kid!

Currently, writers like Kellye Garrett and Gigi Pandian have shown me that there’s a place for funny women of color characters (and writers!) in the mystery genre. They’ve both been extremely supportive, which feels like a dream since I love their books!

What has been the most unexpected thing about writing your first book?

I had a pretty set idea of who my protagonist, Lila, was before I started writing the book, and was surprised at the ways she’s grown and evolved from my preconceptions of her character. A lot of my original ideas are still there, but I think that as I changed as a person and writer, so did she.

In your preface, you talk about some of the things that were "triggers" for some of your readers, and indeed, you touch on some topics that aren't especially cozy: drug use, domestic violence, and racial profiling and systemic racism just to name a few. Why did you feel a need to include that statement in your preface, and why were these things you felt were important to write about?

Even though this is an own voices story (I’m a Filipino-American woman writing a female Filipino-American character), I knew there were major gaps in my cultural knowledge due to the way I grew up. So I hired a homeland Filipino sensitivity reader. No group is a monolith and I maintain that I wrote about experiences that are true to me and people I know, but I still wanted the due diligence of having someone from the same culture giving me objective feedback on that aspect. There’s a major divide between homeland and diaspora Filipinos, so while our experiences are different, I knew it was important to get the feedback of a Filipino reader born, raised, and currently living in the Philippines. We already have so little representation in mainstream media, the last thing I wanted to do was bring my internal biases to the story and reinforce harmful stereotypes or incorrect language.

And I’m so glad I did. I’m sad to say that there were instances that didn’t raise a flag for me as an American and avid mystery reader, but were hugely triggering for her due to the current politics in the Philippines and lack of familiarity with mystery genre tropes. I don’t want my book to only appeal to mystery readers or only Americans, so having this outside perspective was truly helpful, and was what gave me the idea to include the author’s note and content warnings.

At the same time, I write crime fiction. Yes, it’s light and humorous and I do my best to keep the grittier aspects off the page. But I’d be doing myself, my story, and my genre a disservice by pretending these darker aspects don’t exist in American society, especially as a writer of color.

I feel like some things can't be taught, like pacing and humor for example, but your novel does well in both regards. Can you talk a bit about how you wrote these? I'm making the assumption that humor is a natural part of your personality, but it's often hard to pull off on the page.

Pacing and humor are extremely important to me, so thanks for saying that! Honestly, the hardest thing for me regarding humor is knowing when to pull back. Humor is often a defense, and when I’m writing a tough scene, my instinct is always to lighten it up with a joke. Sometimes that’s the right call and sometimes it’s not—there are times you need to let the characters (and readers) really sit with a moment so they experience the emotional weight of the scene.

As for pacing, I read a lot, particularly in the mystery genre, so I instinctively know how the pacing is supposed to go. Not immediately, of course, but during revisions, when I’m reading through my story and it feels saggy, I usually know where and why. My best advice to any writer with pacing issues is read a lot, read widely, and read deeply in your particular subgenre. Cozy pacing is different from thriller pacing. Lastly, hour-long crime shows are perfect for studying pacing, so if you’re more visual, watch those and make notes on when particular beats hit.

Finally, what's next? Another Lila story? I hope so!

Yes! I signed a three-book deal with Berkley, so at the time of writing this interview, I’m waiting on edits for Book 2 (tentatively coming out February 2022, but publishing changes all the time) and plotting Book 3. I still have plenty of ideas for Lila and her crew, so here’s hoping I get to write more in the Tita Rosie’s Kitchen Mystery Series. If not, I have another series idea as well as a possible standalone percolating in the back of my head, and I’ll get started on those when the time is right.

 

Mia P. Manansala (she/her) is a writer and book coach from Chicago who loves books, baking, and bad-ass women. She uses humor (and murder) to explore aspects of the Filipino diaspora, queerness, and her millennial love for pop culture. She is the winner of the 2018 Hugh Holton Award, the 2018 Eleanor Taylor Bland Crime Fiction Writers of Color Award, the 2017 William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grant for Unpublished Writers, and the 2016 Mystery Writers of America/Helen McCloy Scholarship. She's also a 2017 Pitch Wars alum and 2018-2020 mentor. A lover of all things geeky, Mia spends her days procrastibaking, playing JRPGs and dating sims, reading cozy mysteries, and cuddling her dogs Gumiho, Max Power, and Bayley Banks (bonus points if you get all the references).

Teri Duerr
2021-05-26 20:44:11
The Secret Talker
Eileen Brady

What would you do if a stranger on the internet said he knew your secrets, that he saw you with your husband, likes what you wore, but thinks you are shut off from the world around you? Most people would be frightened, but Qiao Hongmei, is intrigued. Why?

Hongmei, frankly, seems bored and ignored. The Chinese wife of an American professor living in Northern California, Hongmei is working on her thesis, but she still has time on her hands. Glen, her husband, is busy with his classes and often works in his home office, the door closed. Why not answer the stranger?

The Secret Talker, a novella by well-known author and screenwriter Geling Yan, slowly reveals how manipulative an internet predator can become, seducing his target through observations, and flattery and deliberately distancing her from her real life.

Events she’d hidden, such as her early life in a small village in China, now impact her thoughts. Ideas she’d tucked away awaken. Gradually her exciting electronic dalliance moves from admiration to something that feels like stalking, but instead of being a victim, Hongmei goes on the offensive. She sets a daring trap to catch and identify her internet troll.

Translated from Chinese by Jeremy Tiang, I sensed that the author’s style might be more lyrical and nuanced in her original language. Regardless, the story of a married couple living together, and yet not connecting comes across. As the plot reaches its climax, Hongmei’s pursuit of her pursuer reveals that her carefully constructed life is now unbearable and unsustainable.

Teri Duerr
2021-05-26 22:26:07
MS Concentration Easier

Admin
2021-05-31 13:40:56
Lauren Willig's 'Band of Sisters'
Robin Agnew

Lauren WilligLauren Willig, the beloved author of The Pink Carnation series, has turned her sights to the harrowing and inspiring relief efforts of a group of Smith College women stationed in France just a few short miles behind the front lines of WWI. They plunged into the effort to help, remaining in France through the end of the war and beyond. Willig shines a light on this largely unknown group of heroic women with her new novel, Band of Sisters.

Robin Agnew for Mystery Scene: For readers who aren't sure what your book is about, can you explain a bit of the history behind Band of Sisters?

Lauren Willig: Band of Sisters is based on the true story of the Smith College Relief Unit, a group of enterprising Smith alumnae who charged off to France at the height of World War I to bring humanitarian aid to French villagers caught between two armies. We’ve all read about occupied France during World War II, but the Germans also occupied a chunk of France during World War I. In spring of 1917, the German lines were pushed back—not much, but a bit. Before they marched out, the Germans made sure to inflict maximum damage. They did everything from poisoning the wells to breaking the plows, systematically destroying anything that might provide either shelter or sustenance. They sent the able-bodied off to work camps in Germany—and then deliberately conducted the infirm, the elderly, the very young, back to their ruined villages in the hopes that they would die in droves and be a burden to the French war effort.

One Smith grad had other ideas. A groundbreaking archeologist (if you’re thinking Amelia Peabody, these women were absolutely sisters in spirit!) and occasional war nurse, Harriet Boyd Hawes heard of the crisis and returned the States to give a rousing speech at the Smith College Club in Boston, urging her compatriots to action. It was both the chance to alleviate considerable suffering—and to show the world just what the American college woman could do. Just three months later, Hawes set sail with the brand new all-female Smith College Relief Unit, which included two doctors, several social workers, a handful of kindergarten teachers, and “chauffeurs” (women who knew how to drive and would be in charge of their three trucks).

As you can imagine, it wasn’t all smooth sailing! Their headquarters, on the grounds of a ruined chateau, was a stone’s throw from the front. These urban, upper middle class women had considerable difficulties with livestock (including buying dozens of roosters when they meant to get hens!). There were differences of opinion and character that nearly scuppered the Unit before they could really get going. The British, who took over their sector, were deeply skeptical about women in their war zone. And, of course, the Germans did their best to shell them out of existence. But, despite all that, the women of the Smith College Relief Unit persevered in their mission—even when it came to facing down a German invasion. What they accomplished really has to be read to be believed!

You frame the chapters with letters home from the women. Are these all actual letters, or fictional letters, or a mixture?

All of the above! One of the best parts of writing Band of Sisters was getting to read the thousands of pages of letters the real members of the Smith College Relief Unit wrote home from the front. They were alternately snarky and earnest, making a joke out of all of their mishaps but deadly serious about the obligation they owed their villagers. I fell in love with them all—and I’ll confess that there were times I was tempted to ditch the whole novel, and just put together an annotated collection of their letters, because the letters were such joy to read and told the story so much better than I ever could.

My compromise with myself was the letters that you see at the start of each chapter. I wanted to give readers a taste of what those letters were like—and it also gave me a chance, with a large ensemble cast, to give you a window into the thoughts of characters we otherwise would only see through the eyes of our two heroines. The letters in the book are a pastiche of bits that are entirely my own invention, some pieces closely paraphrased from real letters, and a phrase or two taken wholesale from the letters that were published in the Smith Alumnae Quarterly at the time (sometimes over the objections of the letter writers, who wrote indignantly home telling their family members to stop sending their letters over to the alumnae mag).

For those who want to hear the real voices of the members of the Smith College Relief Unit (and you do! Trust me, you do!), I highly recommend heading over to the Smith Alumnae Quarterly website and clicking on the November 1917 through July 1918 editions in their electronic archives.

Band of Sisters by Lauren WilligThe work of historical fiction, it seems to me, is to extract a few characters that readers can bond with and create a compelling story for them....in this case, the background is so compelling, I can't imagine that was the hard part. How did you evolve your main characters, Emmie and Kate? And how were they based on real counterparts?

So true! Usually, I start with the characters and build my world around them. In this case, I was handed a world ready-made, down to the last detail. (Seriously, those letters. The details in them are incredible.) I had a story, but what I needed were characters to make it come alive. I didn’t want to use the lives of any of the real members of the unit for my two main characters. That seemed unfair to them, and a bit of a betrayal, to read their private letters and then air their innermost thoughts and feelings in public. But the sources I was reading did inspire my two fictional heroines, Kate and Emmie.

Kate is pure A Tree Grows in Brooklyn: she’s the daughter of Irish and Czech immigrants who won a scholarship to Smith at a time when anti-Catholic and anti-Irish sentiment was rife and the number of Catholics girls at Smith were in the single digits. In real life, one of the Unit’s two doctors, Maud Kelly, was Catholic—and I was very struck by the difference in tone when people referred to her. The other inspiration for Kate was the real assistant director of the Unit, Marie Wolfs, who was Belgian—and, while friendly with everyone and just as Smithie, always seemed a little apart from the rest of the Unit. What would it be like being part of the Unit but apart?

Kate’s college roommate Emmie is her opposite: Emmie is pure Mayflower and Knickerbocker, the daughter of a famous suffragette socialite. Emmie has the social connections Kate lacks but worries that she’ll never be able to live up to the example of her impressive mother—and that she’s not as talented as the other women. Emmie was inspired less by a specific woman in the group and more by broader social movements: I’d been reading up on both the “gilded socialites” of that older generation, the Gilded Age dowagers who threw their weight behind suffrage and women’s causes, and the Settlement House work of the younger generation, where the daughters of those socialites went into distressed urban areas and provided practical social service work. Many of the real members of the Unit had done Settlement House work, and I used their experiences and backgrounds to help create Emmie.

There are parts of the book that are set during shelling and follow the women as they retreat, as they were very near the front lines. How did you imagine that part of your book? It's pretty harrowing and feels so authentic.

I wish I could claim I imagined it! Here, again, I owe a debt to the real women of the Smith College Relief Unit, most of whom wrote home detailed accounts of their adventure. They were very aware that they’d been part of history and really felt the need to write it out: both to share it with the world, and, one imagines, to make sense for themselves of something that had been terrifying and fraught. Everything that happened on that retreat in the book—evacuating villages, setting up pop up food kitchens, members nearly being abandoned at a crossroads, being bombed out of Amiens—all of those are things that happened to the real women. In fact, the great frustration to me was that I couldn’t shoehorn in all the things that happened to them on that retreat, because there were even more.

In this present time of upheaval in our own world, I am finding reading wartime fiction almost soothing...I love reading about characters who have survived war and incredible situations and came out the other side. Did you find researching this book harrowing? Comforting? Soul changing?

I was about halfway through writing Band of Sisters when New York locked down last spring. And suddenly, what had been largely an academic exercise for me became something more—for the exact reasons you say. While the sirens were screaming past my window, I was writing about these Smithies getting the word that the Germans had broken through the line. While we got up at one a.m. to try to get a grocery delivery slot, I was writing about the Smith College Relief Unit parceling out food to refugees at railway stations. The weirdest bit was when I found myself, for several days in a row, writing about the exact same day: only a hundred and two years ago.

But they came out of it. That was what I reminded myself, as my two year old tugged me to the window, pointing the way to the park and asking me why we couldn’t go there, as my kindergartner wrestled with unfamiliar technologies that were suddenly school, the real school, three blocks away, blocked off as surely by disease as the Smithies were by the Germans. I took such comfort in knowing that they, too, had been lost and scared but had soldiered on and done the best they could, taking kindness as their guide.

There was one line from the real letters that jumped out at me, that I held onto through all the madness of the spring. After the harrowing experience of a German invasion, Elizabeth Bliss, class of 1908, wrote home, “It was marvelous to see how fine people are when all the external, superficial things are stripped away by a great emergency. I shall never forget all the beautiful as well as terrible things I saw."

I imagine we’ll remember the beautiful and the terrible as well—and how fine people are, when all the external, superficial things are stripped away.

As a novelist you had to give some shape to your story, so how did you create dramatic tension for your characters? One of the strongest parts of the book, for me, was the misunderstanding between Emmie and Kate. Though they so clearly love each other, they somehow can't get to the same place. How did you create drama and pacing for your story?

I spent 13 years at an all girls’ school, so I’ve always been fascinated by the ups and downs of female friendships, and particularly the ways those we love the most can also be the ones we understand least—and, how sometimes, our closest friends also reflect our deepest insecurities. Both Emmie and Kate see in the other something they lack: Kate envies Emmie her social connections, her comfort in the world, and feels that to Emmie’s people she’ll always be “just another Bridget: Irish, Catholic, and poor”, while Emmie envies Kate her academic success and her brilliant organizational skills.

The real events of 1917 and 1918 gave me the external frame for my story, and provided a certain amount of the pacing, but I knew the emotional heart of it needed to come from the relationship between my two main characters and their struggling through their preconceptions of each other to re-find their friendship. I think we’ve all had those friendships that are frozen at a certain moment in time—elementary school friends, college friends—where you have to grapple with the contrast between the people you were then and the people you’ve become now and try to see each other as you truly are—and discover whether the heart of the friendship is really something worth salvaging.

How long were the Smith women in France? Did they all leave after the war? Did they leave and come back? Did they maintain some kind of presence there, or was it over when the war ended?

The Smith College Relief Unit landed in France on August 14th, 1917—and although they were turfed out of their headquarters by the Germans in Operation Michael in March of 1918, they stayed and turned their hand to war work rather than relief work. As soon as it was safe, in January of 1919, the Unit went back to their headquarters at Grecourt and picked up where they left off—despite the extra havoc the Germans had wreaked in the interim! In 1920, the Unit officially handed off their work to the Secours d’Urgence, but even then, two members of the Unit stayed on, only departing when their library, civic center, and dispensary were transferred to the Bureau de Bienfaisance in 1922. So, five years after they first arrived, the last remnants of the Smith College Relief Unit said farewell to Grecourt.

But that’s not quite the end to the story: in 1924, the trustees of Smith College installed a replica of the Grecourt Gates at Smith, in token of the bravery of those women who went oversees to alleviate suffering in the midst of a war zone. It was a very moving reunion for the members of the Unit—and the gates are the iconic symbol of Smith College to this day.

I can't believe you aren't a Smith grad yourself. Smith must be delighted with this book, though. Do you have a relationship with Smith? Might you be speaking or teaching there in the future?

Although I’m not a Smithie, I like to think I’m of the lineage of Smith… in a kind of roundabout way. I spent my formative years at a little all girls’ school in New York ruled by a formidable Smith alumna, who came there straight out of Smith and was running the place within a decade—and continued to run it for the next thirty-odd years. Every year, our headmistress would call us together, and tell us again how getting a scholarship to Smith had transformed her life—and how much we owed the world in exchange for the education that had been given us. When I stumbled on the Smith College Relief Unit, when I read Harriet Boyd Hawes’ call to action, when I gobbled up the Unit members’ letters home, I could hear my headmistress’s voice in my head—and suddenly, so much about her and the values she attempted to drum into us made sense to me in a way they never had before. So, while I can’t claim a direct relationship with Smith, I’m terribly proud to have been shaped by an institution that was shaped by a Smithie.

Were you frustrated that the work of these women is so unknown? I'm so glad you've written about the great work they did. I had never heard about it and I wonder if you shared this frustration and it led to writing the book?

Frustrated does not even begin to describe it. The craziest thing is that the Smith College Relief Unit were a media sensation in their own day. Their founder, Harriet Boyd Hawes, very deliberately courted media attention, and the members of the unit were constantly complaining about being beset by reporters who tramped all the way out to their muddy headquarters at Grecourt. (Occasionally they set the reporters to work repairing chicken coops.) In fact, they were so well known that when they came under Red Cross control in 1918, their Red Cross handler joked that it was a huge publicity coup for the Red Cross, since everyone knew about the Smith Unit!

And now? Not even Smithies have heard about the Smith Unit. I’m ashamed to admit that when I first stumbled on Ruth Gaines’ memoir, Ladies of Grecourt, my first thought was that it had to be fiction—because what would a group of Smithies be doing in the Somme? I think it’s partly that shame that drove me to write the book. I was appalled at myself for not believing it might have happened. As an all girls’ school girl, you’d think I would know better!

The problem is that we’ve inherited a very limited narrative of World War I—or war generally, really. We think of it as a male province, as a matter of battles and tactics. If women come into it at all, they’re there as nurses. The truth is, as much as I would like to claim that the Smith Unit were wholly unique (and in some ways they were), there were a number of American women participating in relief work in the Somme, including heiresses Anne Morgan and Helen Clay Frick. In fact, the Smith Unit was so very successful and so very popular that it led to a Vassar Unit and a Wellesley Unit. But we’ve never heard of those either. I think part of the work of the historical novelist is reshaping our preconceptions of history and putting these forgotten narratives back in the story, because only that way do we get a full and accurate historical picture.

Finally, what are you working on next? As always, I look forward to where ever your interesting mind chooses to take your lucky readers.

Thank you! Right now, I’m working on a sort of prequel to Band of Sisters, currently entitled Smith II: the ReSmithening. As I was working on Band of Sisters, I became fascinated by the founder of the Smith College Relief Unit, Harriet Boyd Hawes: a brilliant, eccentric, divisive figure with a tangled past. After graduating Smith, she went off to the American School of Classical Studies in Athens in 1896, where she scandalized the locals by bicycling around the city in bloomers and scandalized her teachers by demanding to be allowed to excavate (women were expected to confine themselves to less energetic classical studies; it was suggested that Hawes become a librarian). Along the way, she was swept up in the Greco-Turkish War, and was decorated by the Queen of Greece for her nursing during the war.

And here’s where I really started to wonder…. Hawes is famous for excavating Crete. But, before returning to her studies, she hared off to the States to join the Red Cross and nurse in the Spanish-American War. Then she went off to Crete and made her name. What happened? Why the Spanish American War interlude? I couldn’t stop wondering about it, and as I wrote my own fictional version of Hawes, Betsy Hayes Rutherford, little hints about her past kept cropping up.

So that’s what I’m writing now! It’s the story of Betsy Hayes, a Smith grad who wants to be an archaeologist but whose life is changed forever by her experiences during the Greco-Turkish War and who redeems herself and discovers the woman she’s meant to be in the jungles of Cuba. It’s a coming of age story, a war story, and a story about what women can do. While researching this, I discovered some amazing—now forgotten!—stories about the heroic women who nursed with the Red Cross in Cuba and I’m so excited to bring their stories back to life in this book.

That book was originally slated to come out in March of 2022, but thanks to certain pandemic-driven childcare snafus, you’ll be seeing it in March of 2023 instead. (Please blame my 3- and 7-year-old for the delay, and direct all complaints to them.)

In my other writing life as one-third of “Team W,” Karen White, Beatriz Williams, and I are currently working on our fourth collaborative novel, a multi-generational saga set around a grand old mansion in Newport, Rhode Island, in the Gilded Age, the 1950s, and the present day. That one—still untitled—will be coming your way in autumn 2022.

Lauren Willig is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of historical fiction. Her works include The Other Daughter, The English Wife, The Forgotten Room (co-written with Karen White and Beatriz Williams), and the RITA Award winning Pink Carnation series. An alumna of Yale University, she has a graduate degree in history from Harvard and a J.D. from Harvard Law School. She is currently hard at work on her next book.

 

Teri Duerr
2021-06-14 19:22:41
More Than Malice Offers Much More
Oline H Cogdill

Anyone who has attended the Malice Domestic conference knows what a great event it is—focusing on the amateur sleuth mysteries.

But as we all know, things have changed a lot during the past year and a half.

Normally held during the first week of May, the 2020 Malice had to be, of course, canceled. As was the live 2021 conference.

But the tradition of Malice must continue—for the readers and the authors.

So the organizers and board have come up with a different kind of Malice—virtually, of course—with another name.

More Than Malice is being billed as is a festival-style crime convention. It launches July 14 to 17.

More Than Malice is “specially designed to fill the void left when the 2021 live Malice Domestic had to be canceled.

It is a new entity designed to entertain a large audience by bringing together a unique collection of authors exploring every avenue on the crime fiction map,” according to the organizers’ emails.

What’s the difference between the Malice conference and a festival-style crime convention?

According to the Malice website, “The festival format is popular in the United Kingdom. On the surface, a festival works much like most other crime fiction events: there are panels of authors discussing . . . myriad . . . topics, interviews between authors, and special events with wide appeal. The primary difference is that panelists are invited to participate by the organizers.”

The organizers added: “This is not a recreation of the Malice in-person convention in virtual format. The authors, panels, and events offered will be different than a typical Malice, while also incorporating some of the elements and authors you are familiar with.”

Indeed the authors who will be at More Than Malice are a combination of those who regular attend and those who normally would not attend.

This should make for an exciting “festival” as authors of amateur sleuths, cozies, mysteries, thrillers and more will be represented.

Authors attending include C.J. Box, Rhys Bowen, Jasper Fforde, Lisa Gardner, Abir Mukherjee, Peter Robinson, Laura Lippman, Brad Thor, Hank Phillippi Ryan, Linda Castillo, Marcia Clark, William Kent Kruger, Sujata Massey, Lisa See, Victoria Thompson, PJ Vernon, Tasha Alexander, Mia P. Manansala, Laura Joh Rowland, Kate White, and DM Whittle, among others.

There will be about 20 or so panels and special events spread out through the weekend. These have been pre-recorded but the plan is to have some of the participants on hand during the initial airing of the panels to answer questions from readers.

The Agatha Awards will be presented during a live event on Saturday evening.

More Than Malice kicks off at 6 p.m. Wednesday, July 14th, with opening ceremonies followed at 6:30 p.m. with a conversation between Louise Penny and Verena Rose. Then Author Speed Dating (Round 1) begins at 7 p.m.

But as a bonus, the Agatha Nominee Panels will begin at 3 p.m. June 30 that can be accessed from the Malice website. These are widely available for viewing and not limited to registrants of More Than Malice.

The nominee panels are June 30th:  Best Contemporary Novel; July 1st:  Best Short Story; July 2nd:  Best First Novel; July 3rd:  Best Nonfiction; July 4th:  Best Children's/YA; July 5th:  Best Historical Novel.

Registration for More Than Malice is $60—considerably less than for an in-person, live event.

And of course, no airfare, hotel or other expenses to worry about. Any money raised helps Malice Domestic deal with the financial hit from cancelling two live conventions, and the costs of filming the panels.

(Frankly, I can't wait to have to pay for airfare, restaurants, hotels, etc. I am so ready to see people in person! Though Zoom events have been great.)

I am moderating the panel “It Takes a Village: A Cast of Characters” in which we discuss those secondary and supporting characters the authors use to build a series.

And I was so pleased with the panel’s authors: Ann Cleeves, Deborah Crombie, Elly Griffiths, Michael Nava and Peter Robinson.

We had a great time, and I am sure the readers will have a great time at all the carefully thought-out panels.

I think we all hope we can again meet in person next year. But for now, we have More Than Malice.


Oline Cogdill
2021-06-29 20:17:32