The Black Jersey
Vanessa Orr

One of the delights of reading a book about a subject you know nothing about is how much you learn. Having never paid much attention to the Tour de France or bicycling in general, I didn’t expect to be as swept up in the story of The Black Jersey as I was. Part murder mystery, part bike tournament how-to, I found the inner workings of the world’s most famous biking competition to be just as intriguing as the search for the story’s killer.

Marc Moreau and Steve Panata are elite cyclists, best friends, and teammates on Fonar, one of the teams competing in the Tour de France. As the domestique (the person second to the leader), it’s Marc’s job to make sure that Steve wins—something that doesn’t sit well with the person killing off cyclists. He must also deal with his own pressing issues, which includes a girlfriend and mentor who believe Marc can, and should, step out of his longtime supporting role to Steve and win the yellow jersey for himself. A former military policeman, Marc agrees to help the French police with their investigation, while still competing in one of the world’s toughest races, alienating those around him even as he needs their support to stay in the lead.

Author Jorge Zepeda Patterson embedded himself with professional cycling teams for a year before writing this novel, and it shows. The research is meticulous, and there are many behind-the-scenes references that could only be gleaned from spending time with people who live and breathe cycling. The action is intense—not just in the hunt for the murderer, but on the 3,350-kilometer bike route as it winds through the French Pyrenees and the Alps. Teams have to work together to win, with some competitors willing to die trying.

In an already intense competition, the introduction of a murderer is just one more obstacle that riders have to outwit in their quest for the coveted yellow jersey. The real question is whether the loss of a friend, or even a life, is worth it.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 15:55:11
The Woman in the Blue Cloak
Matt Fowler

In the latest Benny Griessel mystery set in South Africa, Deon Meyer weaves a story that centers on a lost painting newly rediscovered. The novella begins with a body turning up on the edge of Cape Town. Over the course of the story, it is revealed to the reader that the woman was Alicia Lewis, who traveled to the region to procure a painting. The piece of art is valuable because it is thought to have been created by a pupil of Rembrandt’s. The question of who killed Alicia and Lewis and why proves hard to figure out, and so Benny Griessel and his partner, Vaughn Cupido, are put on the case.

This short tale sometimes feels like an exercise in packing a punch in as few pages as possible. Griessel and Cupido are effective characters that are worthy of a reader’s time. Both of them are strong voices that recall classic detectives found in past literature. They are distinct enough to keep the pages moving, even when the plot doesn’t build as effectively as it might. Most of the limitations of the story seem to come from its form. There isn’t enough time in the back end of the story for it to build to the fulfilling conclusion it needs. The story devotes a few pages to the subject of celebrity and how that might help one in life, but the idea isn’t really elaborated on enough to make a lasting impact. And yet, the novella remains a sufficient read for those who want to dip their toe in the shallow end of the mystery genre rather than dive all the way in.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:00:13
The Perfect Fraud
Sharon Magee

Claire Hathaway lives in Sedona, Arizona, with her boyfriend Cal and works as a psychic at Mystical Haven. But she’s a fraud, something she admits only to herself. She really doesn’t have the “gift” as her mother, the great Miss Madeline, does. Instead, she’s developed the ability to read her clients and intuit the answer they’re looking for. She’s also a fraud in her personal life. Cal has asked her to marry him more than once, but she can’t seem to fully commit.

Thousands of miles away on the East Coast, Rena Cole is a struggling single mother, whose daughter Stephanie has debilitating stomach problems that no doctor has been able to diagnose or treat. Every time Stephanie seems to be getting better, she relapses. They’ve been in and out of doctors’ offices and ERs more times than Rena can count. She regularly blogs about her heroic efforts to find help for her little girl, as any good mommy would, and revels in the gushing words of support she receives from her readers. She’s planning on taking Stephanie to Denver to consult with a doctor who’s renowned for treating stomach problems.

On the plane heading to Phoenix, her path crosses with Claire’s, who’s been on the East Coast attending her father’s funeral. Neither quite likes the other, but a series of events are put into motion that will forever change them both. As Claire struggles to help the ailing Stephanie, she discovers she’s not as much of a fraud as she thought, and that Stephanie’s illness may have a dark side that only she can expose.

In her page-turning inaugural thriller, author Ellen LaCorte spins a tale about the evil that resides in some people, and how love can defeat it. An excellent debut.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:03:46
Necessary People
Vanessa Orr

With friends like Stella Bradley, Violet Trapp certainly doesn’t need enemies. Vivacious and gorgeous, spoiled rich girl Stella has been overshadowing Violet since college, while at the same time providing just enough support—emotionally and even monetarily—to keep Violet at her side.

After graduating, the two women move to New York and share an apartment, though Stella spends most of her time traveling the world. Violet works her way up the ranks to become a TV producer, only to have Stella return and use her family’s connections to become the star of the show, once again pushing Violet into the background.

Reading this story is like watching the Mean Girls’ Olympics. Though from wildly different backgrounds, both women are insecure, manipulative, and competitive, and their battle for supremacy is addictive. Add to this the fast-paced, high-stakes world of TV news and a battle for the attentions of the same man and the drama really ramps up.

One of the strengths of the story is that it’s told from Violet’s point of view, which reveals just how calculating she really is. While it’s hard to forgive the fact that Stella and her parents basically treat Violet as a family pet, she uses them in her own way, living a life that a poor Florida student could never afford and studying them to learn how to live like the rich. She has no intention of giving up everything she’s earned without a fight, and this sets up a terrifying confrontation that shows just how far both women will go to win everything—and keep it all.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:09:38
Murder at Morrington Hall
Joseph Scarpato, Jr.

Get ready for an entertaining combination of Pride and Prejudice, the game of Clue, and an Agatha Christie-type plot.

It’s 1905 in the English countryside when feisty young American heiress Stella Kendrick, her wealthy, but lowbrow father, and her great-aunt Rachel arrive at the imposing but financially troubled Morrington Hall. Close behind them are three of their racing horses, including her favorite, Tully.

While Stella believes they are simply on a brief visit and vacation, she soon discovers that she and the three prized stallions are part of a transaction for which her father will receive a sought-after British title. Her intended groom, Viscount Lyndhurst, although good-looking, initially appears a bit too haughty for her taste, as do his parents. Fortunately for Stella, the vicar who was invited to the estate to marry the unlikely pair is found bludgeoned to death with a poker in the library shortly after their arrival.

What follows is a traditional mystery with a distinct group of suspects and with Stella playing the Miss Marple character, trying to help the authorities uncover the murderer. Compounding the investigation is the disappearance of her favorite horse from the stables. Are the two crimes related or is it a fluke?

What adds to the reader’s enjoyment is the growing relationship between the intended bride and groom, who are both lovers of horses and horse riding. The denouement is both surprising and satisfying.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:16:52
Man of the Year
Matt Fowler

In Caroline Louise Walker’s debut novel, we are thrown into a world where perception is everything. Our main character, or at least one of them (as this is a story that offers a few perspectives) is Dr. Robert Hart of Sag Harbor, New York. Robert is the kind of person who does virtuous things because of how it will make him look. Maybe that’s why he allows his son’s friend Nick to crash in the pool house for the summer. All of this would be fine, except for the fact that Robert has a jealous streak. Even the Man of the Year is susceptible to pettiness, resentment, and lies. Before long, Robert is thrown into a confluence of twisty events that leaves the persona he has worked to cultivate fractured.

At its most basic level, Man of the Year is a character study. That’s not to say there aren’t a series of twists that subvert the expectations of the reader, but the story is hyper-focused on the way in which its characters relate to one another, and the way they perceive the situations in front of them. Walker smartly doles out her characters’ points of view gradually. We start with Robert and then, as the novel unfolds, we get to see the narrative through the eyes of others: his son, his wife, as well as a couple others. This structure leads to a surprising ending, one that forces the reader to reconsider the events leading up to the novel’s climax.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:19:59
Speaking of Summer
Katrina Niidas Holm

Three months ago, on a snowy December night, 34-year-old Summer Spencer vanished from the rooftop of the Harlem brownstone in which she lived with her twin sister, Autumn. There were no signs of a struggle—just a single set of footprints leading up to the edge—and the police have yet to find a body. The detective on the case claims he’s doing everything he can, but Summer knows the truth: “Women of color don’t matter in America unless [they] are rich or famous.” The girls’ parents are dead and their remaining family lives in Illinois, leaving Autumn to investigate on her own. She spends her days distributing fliers and her nights reading news stories about murdered black women. As her obsession deepens, she begins neglecting her work, her friends, her boyfriend, and her health. Autumn insists she’s incapable of moving on when half of her is missing, but while uncertainty torments her, the truth may prove her undoing.

Boldly drawn characters and a strong sense of place distinguish this sinuous, slow-burning fusion of mystery and literary fiction from acclaimed author and true-crime expert Kalisha Buckhanon (Upstate). Poetic prose and an intimate first-person narrative engage as Buckhanon uses Autumn’s search to tackle themes of race, culture, identity, gentrification, and the far-reaching effects of systemic racial injustice. A jaw-dropping reveal resolves the central puzzle relatively early on, but the sisters’ story beguiles and intrigues all the way through to the insightful, hope-filled epilogue.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:23:40
The East End
Eileen Brady

Townies hate those rich summer tourists who live in fancy houses and create more seasonal traffic for regular working people. Go to Woodstock, or Bar Harbor, or in this case the Hamptons on Long Island, New York, and see for yourself. They hate them, but they rely on their dollars, so they hate them even more. This is the underlying dynamic for The East End by Jason Allen, a self-confessed former Hamptons townie.

His enjoyable book begins on Memorial Day weekend with drugged-up rich folks being waited on by drugged-up poor folks, who every year drift into the same pattern of working crazy hours during the “season” to tide them over until the next. Bored townie Corey Halpern is indulging his habit of breaking into big houses in the East End and pranking the owners by putting salt in their milk and setting off the security alarms. He’s kept to the petty stuff—until he decides to break into the Sheffield mansion where he and his mom work. Thinking the place is empty, he prowls around, only to discover the owner’s spoiled daughter, Tiffany, and her best friend Angelique have arrived a day early. Then Corey makes a bad decision. He decides to light a joint, climb up on the roof, and spy on the girls. Once they fall asleep he witnesses something strange. Later that night, the owner, billionaire Leo Sheffield, arrives with a companion—not his wife—but a handsome young man he calls Henry. Their cocaine-saturated, amorous party for two turns deadly when Henry is killed in a drug-related pool accident. Up on the roof Corey sees everything. Should he tell the police? Or maybe he should milk the situation for everything he can get?

Author Jason Allen is spot-on in his characterizations of the toxic codependent relationships of the very rich and the barely getting by. It’s fun to peek behind the scenes on how a mansion really works—a sort of American Upstairs, Downstairs.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:33:38
Green Valley
Kevin Burton Smith

No matter where you sit on the tech divide, you’re bound to squirm at some point in this unsettling, slow-burning thriller.

Set in a near (and uncomfortably familiar) future, society has reached a major turning point. Goaded on by the dreams of a Steve Jobs/Elon Musk-like visionary, a sizable chunk of tech elites and early adapters have moved into the Zeroth Corporation’s Green Valley, a picture-perfect paradise, to live the vida virtual. They leave friends and family behind, sequestering themselves in a 24-7 idyll of a completely plugged-in paradise called the “I,” where your avatar can cavort with unicorns, there’s always an empty seat waiting for you at the world’s most perfect coffee shop, and everything is groovy.

Meanwhile, outside in the “real” world of Stanton, the scrappy little town that surrounds the walled-off Green Valley, people have rebelled against the increasingly invasive juggernaut of technology. They’ve retreated to a simpler, defiantly low-tech era, when pneumatic tubes sent messages back and forth, and Rolodexes were considered cutting edge. In Stanton, even the slightest hint of technology can get you in big trouble.

Unless you’re Lucie Sterling, a police consultant secretly working for Sentinel, a clandestine organization not above using illegal technology themselves (including hidden cameras and electronic tracers) to spy on Green Valley.

But now dead children are turning up in Stanton, bearing evidence of surgically implanted “spinal transponders” that could only have come from one place.

Lucie’s assignment? Infiltrate Green Valley and take a look around, posing as a concerned relative, anxious to visit Kira, the beloved young niece she’s never seen. The twist is that Lucie actually is worried—particularly after she discovers that Kira seems to have disappeared—and back in Stanton more dead children have been found.

There’s some shaky world-building here that may require a few leaps of faith for some, but once Lucie and her cop buddy discover a lawyer possibly involved in dumping the bodies and the human element finally kicks in, the pace picks up. And when Lucie must return to Green Valley once more to confront the ultimate, disturbing truth, all bets are off.

I tell ya, it’s enough to make you put your iPhone down for a min—oh, sorry, I have to get this….

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:38:33
The Suffering of Strangers
Craig Sisterson

Scottish author Caro Ramsay doesn’t go easy on her readers in her Glasgow-set series starring detective duo Costello and Anderson. Ramsay boldly tackles some tough, gritty issues. In this ninth installment, the pair have been separated by their bosses, and each is plunged into a testing case. Suffering aplenty.

DI Costello is still smarting from her sidelining and is now focused on domestic abuse and looking for a missing six-week-old baby, snatched from her mother’s car. Bizarrely, a baby with Down syndrome was left behind. Anderson is reviewing the cold-case rape of a young mother back in the mid-1990s. When the victim dies, Anderson’s superiors want him to convince his old college girlfriend, another victim of an unsolved rape, to do a television appeal for people to speak out about violent and sexual crime.

Unexpected connections begin to appear, and with the help of a force-of-nature social worker, Costello realizes something far deeper and more organized is going on than just one randomly snatched baby.

Ramsay writes in a straightforward manner with little frills, delivering via character and plot and some mind-pricking themes. She takes readers into places most British police procedurals avoid. There’s some nice action and a multilayered story line with memorable supporting characters and situations that really test our two protagonists. They, and readers, are put through the emotional wringer. A good, solid crime read unafraid to address some tough subjects.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:45:14
Cherry Scones & Broken Bones
Debbie Haupt

Number two in Darci Hannah’s Very Cherry Mystery cozies finds Whitney Bloom ready for some good luck after the recent grisly murder that brought her home to her family’s Wisconsin bed-and-breakfast. And since business is slow, she is ecstatic to learn that renowned artist Silvia Lumiere has chosen her family’s Cherry Orchard Inn for her annual summer stay in Cherry Grove. But dreams of “no vacancy” signs, art showings, and full dining rooms at the inn wither when the insufferable woman arrives with tons of luggage, outrageous demands, and constant complaints. Whitney wishes out loud that the horrid woman would choke on one of her trademark cherry scones, and when that is exactly what happens, Whitney becomes Officer Jack MacLaren’s prime suspect. Whitney knows she’s innocent, but as nasty as the artist was, isn’t surprised someone wanted to murder her. With the help of her friends, she has to find the real killer so she can convince officer Jack Mac-Hottie that she didn’t do it.

Set in a quaint cherry-themed B&B in a small Wisconsin tourist town, Cherry Scones & Broken Bones is a hoot, featuring ex-Chicago ad exec turned innkeeper and amateur sleuth Whitney. The inventive author presents readers with a zany cast of meddling townsfolk, a couple of adorable goats named Thing One and Thing Two, and numerous suspects that will keep readers guessing whodunit until a surprising culprit is revealed. The evolving romance between Whitney and Officer Jack MacLaren is sweet, and the quasi-love triangle including Whitney’s ex adds a bit of relationship drama. But it’s the myriad of red herrings and dangling carrots this imaginative author uses on the path to solving this puzzling case that are definitely the standouts in this novel.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:51:49
Blood Relations
Trey Strecker

Divorced, disbarred, and down on his luck, PI Lee Crowe lives “between the lines,” not above digging up dirt on a federal witness to blow up the government’s case against a powerful drug boss or selling lurid photos to the tabloids. When a picture he snaps of a dead heiress splayed across the roof of a Rolls Royce in San Francisco’s Tenderloin goes viral, it attracts the attention of Olivia Gravesend, the girl’s mother, who hires Crowe to investigate whether Claire Gravesend’s death was suicide or murder. Crowe can’t figure out what the girl was doing on Skid Row or what caused the mysterious scars the coroner found on the dead blonde’s back.

Crowe flies to Boston to check out Claire’s Beacon Street mansion, where he scuffles with a knife-wielding intruder and learns the Harvard journalism student was researching stem cell technologies for a class project. Upon returning to San Francisco, the detective is stunned when he sees a woman who is Claire’s mirror image, and what he learns from the dead girl’s doppelganger only draws him deeper into Claire Gravesend’s mysterious past.

Like Moore’s five previous novels, Blood Relations is a deftly plotted, engaging read, stylistically sophisticated, with a taut balance between character and action. As Crowe uncovers more clues and the mystery mutates, drawing readers deeper into Moore’s meditation on time and identity, the complexity of the novel’s plot, its breakneck pace, and its smart use of cutting-edge science enhance the characterization of the detective and the shady secondary characters he encounters. Moore’s private eye is a direct descendant of Philip Marlowe, but while Blood Relations deploys many of the tropes of classic hardboiled detective stories, Moore writes noir for the 21st century.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 16:55:10
At the Scene, Summer #160

160 Summer cover, Lori Roy

Hi Everyone,

It was a visit to Georgia’s Stone Mountain that sparked Lori Roy’s interest in the Ku Klux Klan, and became the catalyst for her new novel Gone Too Long. While writing, Roy found painful parallels between the early 20th century—when the KKK was revitalized— and now. “White supremacy has an ebb and flow.... It’s always there, waiting to rise up again, given another set of circumstances,” she says.

Dennis Lehane is one of the giants of modern crime fiction and Tom Nolan’s conversation with him covers, among other things, developing an ear for dialogue, the difference between writing short stories and novels, and creating three-dimensional characters.

Step right up, ladies and gentlemen and children of all ages! Ben Boulden explores Murder under the Big Top in his review of circus mysteries. One versatile writer examines another as our Michael Mallory provides an engaging look at the work of Mignon G. Eberhart.

John B. Valeri catches up with S. J. Rozan whose new mystery features her Chinese-American PI Lydia Chin and her sometimes partner, Bill Smith. It’s the first in this beloved series since 2011, so there’s lots to catch up on.

Nancy Bilyeau takes a look at Philip Kerr’s Bernie Gunther novels in this issue. Sadly, Kerr died last year, but his novels of a man caught in the barbed wire of mid-20th century German history will live on.

“Southern wit was a staple in our household, along with Sunday fried chicken,” says G.A. McKevett. Her sleuth, Savannah Reid, shares the author’s Southern heritage and sense of humor. John B. Valeri talks to her in this issue.

Craig Sisterson, who is originally from New Zealand, has a special treat for us in this issue: an overview of Southern Cross brime. Australia and New Zealand have spawned some of the brightest new talents in the genre recently and Craig gives us the inside scoop on death Down Under. Don’t miss his list of recent novels to get you started.

Hope you enjoy the issue! We’ll be back in September with more criminous fun.

By the time you read this our new Readers Forum will be up and running at our website. Stop by, say hello, ask questions, visit with fellow fans, and join in the discussions— we’ll be waiting for you!

Kate Stine
Editor-in-chief

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 17:37:19
Summer Issue #160 Contents

160 Summer cover, Lori Roy

Features

Lori Roy

The award-winning author’s latest book became “painfully timely” with its plot centering on white supremacy.
by Oline Cogdill

Mignon G. Eberhart: Mystery’s Enigmatic Mistress

From the late 1920s to the late 1980s this author managed to catch the mystery zeitgeist.
by Michael Mallory

Dennis Lehane’s Practical Toolbox

On developing an ear for dialogue and creating dimensional characters.
by Tom Nolan

Hey Rube! The Mystery Is at the Circus

Novels with the big top and carnival midway as their backdrop.
by Ben Boulden

S.J. Rozan

The author found the working methods of architecture transferred to writing when she decided to switch careers.
by John B. Valeri

Berlin Noir: Philip Kerr’s Novels of the Third Reich

A German detective during the Nazis’ rise to power, World War II, and Europe’s postwar recovery.
by Nancy Bilyeau

G.A. McKevett

Plus-sized PI Savannah Reid returns, this time with marital woes.
by John B. Valeri

Southern Cross Crime

An overview of writers both new and old from Australia and New Zealand.
by Craig Sisterson

My Book: A Death at Tippitt Pond

by Susan Van Kirk

The Hook

First lines that caught our attention.

“Trust Me on This” Crossword

by Verna Suit

Departments

At the Scene

by Kate Stine

Mystery Miscellany

by Louis Phillips

Hints & Allegations

The 2019 Edgar and Agatha Award
winners, 2019 Thriller Award
nominations

Reviews

Small Press Reviews: Covering the Independents

by Betty Webb

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
2019-06-17 18:20:15
Summer Issue #160
Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 18:39:52
HEY RUBE! The Mystery Is at the Circus

We’re all attracted to the unknown. Our eyes desire to be fooled, our hearts to be thrilled.

Step right in, ladies and gentlemen! See the trapeze flyers defy gravity! See a beautiful woman cut in half!

The big top’s colorful promise pulls us through the surrounding carnival midways, past the barkers and hucksters who are selling the promise of easy games.

Everyone’s a winner!

The calliope music dances on the summer breeze. There’s the click and rattle of hastily assembled rides—coasters and spinners, Ferris wheels and swings. The eclectic odors of cotton candy, popcorn, churros, and corn dogs mingle with the pulse and beat and sweat of the crowd. The brightly painted signs—splashed yellow and red and white and blue—promise a glimpse at the world’s largest alligator, a three-headed snake, a bearded woman, the world’s smallest man and the strongest, too.

You won’t believe your eyes, folks!

The magic of the circus and its close relation, the carnival, is that it functions as an emotional doorway into our past. It’s a glimpse at the world through our younger eyes, before we understood how everything works. The tricks. The unfairness. The us and them. It’s this us and them—the insider and the outsider—that defines both our cultural lives and the circus. For an evening we volunteer to be the rubes, the marks, the outsiders, in a glittering and sensational world created by other outsiders—carny and circus folk—for no other purpose than our entertainment and their survival.

This friction of us and them is the catalyst that makes the traveling circus a perfect setting for a mystery story. It’s a setting that has been used to great effect in the genre, in both the hardboiled and traditional forms. There are the classics (my classics, anyway), Nightmare Alley, by William Lindsay Gresham, and Ride the Pink Horse, by Dorothy B. Hughes, but there are other novels that are far less familiar and yet worthy of our attention.

One such novel is Kerry Greenwood’s Blood and Circuses, the sixth Phryne (“rhymes with briny”) Fisher traditional mystery set in the roaring 1920s of Melbourne, Australia. Phryne, ever the debutante, is bored and the hours pass grudgingly. It’s a welcome surprise when her old acquaintance Alan Lee, a gorgeous half-gypsy carousel operator traveling with Farrell’s Circus and Wild Beast Show, arrives on a hot Sunday afternoon. Accidents have followed Farrell’s like a bad charm. Its best trick pony, “a real bonzer… Could do everything but talk,” was found dead, a tightrope broke under a walker’s feet, and the carnival’s strongman, Samson, was ambushed by five “assassins” with knives.

Phryne, compelled by her attraction to Alan Lee, quickly offers to help. She gets a job as a trick rider, a vocation she’s never before tried. She does surprisingly well and earns a ticket to the main performance. On a parallel track, the fresh-faced Constable Tommy Harris is investigating the locked-room murder of Mr. Christopher, an intersex who had a “half-man and half-woman” show with Farrell’s. The two investigations collide, generating the expected sparks, and a few unexpected sparks, too.

Blood and Circuses is at its best when Phryne is front and center, the circus as her backdrop. Phryne’s horse-riding scenes are exciting and feel authentic. The mystery is big, perhaps too big since, at times, the plot is a tad confusing. But in this novel, the circus is everything, with its vivid characters—an educated dwarf working as a carny because there is no other place for him, a singing clown who croons love sonnets at Phryne, a candy-stealing elephant, a bear that fancies the debutante—and its politics: the circus people (those performing in the big top) are the upper class with the carnival people lower, and the gypsies lower still.

While Blood and Circuses’ action occurs mainly at the circus, Margaret Maron’s Slow Dollar is all about a modern traveling carnival. Judge Deborah Knott, in her ninth mystery, is enjoying a Friday night at the Dobbs Annual Harvest Festival in Colleton County, North Carolina. The carnival has brought Colleton’s rural residents out to enjoy the rides and games, “against a cacophony of music, clacking machines, and hucksterism.”

Deborah is milling through the amusements and celebrating autumn’s arrival—even if it’s still hot as blazes—when she steps into an unmanned booth and discovers a corpse with a mouthful of quarters. The victim’s mother, Tally Ames, owns a handful of carnival joints. The murder hits the traveling carnies hard, but it does little to quiet the midways and arcades of its marks and rubes.

This is a leisurely mystery that, at times, is overrun by Deborah’s personal life, including a budding romance with deputy sheriff Dwight Bryant and the mysterious connection between Tally Ames and Deborah’s family. There are enough suspects and blind curves to keep it fresh but Slow Dollar’s real brilliance is in its evocative carnival setting. There is a wonderful three-page glossary of carny terms at the back which includes “the patch—the go-between for a carnival and the local authorities.” My favorite, and where this article’s title came from, “Hey Rube!” is defined as “The call for help when a carny is in serious bodily danger from outsiders.”

Stuart M. Kaminsky takes us back to the big top with his seventh Toby Peters novel, Catch a Falling Clown. It’s a medium-boiled private eye whodunit that is a sterling example of both Kaminsky’s amiable voice and a well-plotted mystery that perfectly portrays the insider/outsider circus vibe.

The Rose and Elder Circus—“a thin idea held together by favors, hope, and a few dollars…”—has had bad luck since starting its tour. When a circus clown witnesses an elephant’s electrocution, he thinks someone is trying to ruin the circus (elephants are expensive and hard to replace) and worse, trying to kill him before he can identify the perpetrator. When Toby arrives to investigate the elephant’s death, he’s greeted with a murdered trapeze flyer, a runaway elephant, and an unexpected suspect, the famous Alfred Hitchcock.

Catch a Falling Clown, set during a dreary Southern California winter in 1942, is a darker version of the circus. An elderly carny tells Toby: “I’ve seen a few murders. Not with this circus, but others. I’ve even helped cover them up.” The outsider status of the carnies and performers is played well. They protect Toby from the local law by sheer will, and when his usual sidekicks arrive (a dwarf, a nudnik dentist, and a 250-pound wrestler-poet), the story crashes into a surprising climax.

We stay with the big top in Alan Melville’s Golden Age whodunit, Death of Anton. Inspector Minto, an off-duty Scotland Yard detective, is ensnared in a perplexing murder case when he and Carey’s World-Famous Circus and Menagerie arrive in a small English village. The circus is in town to perform and Minto is there for his sister’s wedding. In short order, Anton, the circus’s headliner, is found mauled to death by his seven Bengal tigers. At first glance it appears to be an accident, but when Minto discovers the bullet lodged in Anton’s head it becomes a simple murder. Minto finds the mystery irresistible and he has plenty of material to play with since almost everyone has a motive to kill Anton, including the jealous trapeze flyer, Lorimar, Dodo the Clown, and the shady circus owner, Joe Carey.

But it’s not the mystery that makes Death of Anton so enjoyable. Instead it’s the witty dialogue and the exuberance of the narrative. It reads like an eager teenager reciting an especially wonderful event. The playful circus performers, with their petty rivalries, and the odd situations Melville creates for Inspector Minto elevate Death of Anton from the ordinary to the unusual.

These are only a few of the mystery novels with a circus as setting, and they should be seen as nothing more than a sampling. After all, it’s the pitchman’s deep and velvety voice—step right in, folks!—that stimulates our sense of wonder, our excitement, rising and falling with the cadence of his words. And it’s that mystery of what we’ll find on the other side of the canvas barrier, or inside a book’s dusty cover, that keeps us returning again and again.”

Ben Boulden is the author of two Western novels, both with a criminal slant. His stories have appeared in mystery and science fiction magazines.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-17 19:31:58
Murder in Bel-Air
Robin Agnew

PI Aimée LeDuc hits the streets of Paris again and this time it’s personal. Aimée, in the course of Cara Black’s 20 books, has acquired a baby (Chloé), and an awkward relationship with her long-absent mother (thanks to Chloé). Her mother has turned out to be a doting grandmother. As the book opens, Aimée is scheduled to give a keynote speech at a tech conference—expanding the horizons of LeDuc Investigations—but she’s interrupted mere moments before with a frantic call from Chloé’s school, saying her mother has not appeared to pick her up.

Aimée quickly hands off her speech and speeds off on her pink scooter to pick up her baby. When she gets there, the school is adamant that Chloé is not welcome to return, and worse, there’s no hint of what may have happened to Aimée’s mother.

Aimée is annoyed, as her mother has a long history of disappearing, but she would never abandon Chloe and that has her worried. Following up on the slimmest of leads, Aimée leaves Chloe with her nanny and heads off into the night in search of a homeless woman with whom her mother was last seen.

As usual in a Black novel, the plot is political, this time involving a radical from the Ivory Coast. It’s served up with a good helping of espionage, with Aimée negotiating between different government agencies, both covert and otherwise. While this story in particular is an especially personal quest for her, it’s never sentimental.

One great thing about an Aimée LeDuc novel is the setting—Paris! Black’s readers get to visit every gorgeous, historic corner that Aimée’s quests take her to. In Murder in Bel-Air, a convent and cemetery are front and center. What’s also great is Aimée herself. Aimée’s life is complicated in so many ways: she’s a working, single mother running her own business—one that involves complex and often dangerous cases, and she has a love life to tend, too. Luckily, she has supportive friends, a great nanny, and a more-than-patient business partner, the brilliant René.

Aimée is trying, like all white knights in detective fiction, to fulfill her quest and do the right thing. Best of all, she’s doing it in vintage Chanel, St. Laurent, and borrowed Laboutin booties. At one point she’s tied up with her own scarf, which she has to destroy to get free, but pauses: “She hated ruining vintage Hermès.” This is a character for the ages.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 14:36:39
The Shallows
Eileen Brady

Minneapolis isn’t the first setting I’d think of for a murder mystery, but the Midwest delivers a surprising punch in Matt Goldman’s third PI Nils Shapiro novel, The Shallows. The crime that draws in Stone Arch Investigations is particularly disturbing.

Lawyer Todd Rabinowitz is found murdered, hooked like a fish, his body submerged off his own dock. Suspicion immediately focuses in on his wife Robin, who insists her husband’s death is connected to his work at the Halferin Silver Law Firm. The Greater Lake Minnetonka Police Force are doubtful, since the not-too-bereaved widow has been having an affair with dishy sculptor Arndt Kjellgren. However, that would be too simple a plot for author Goldman. Instead, he gives the reader a complex story, stocked with interesting characters like right-wing politician Karin Tressler, a client of Todd’s firm, and legal assistant Celeste Sorensen, who is sure something fishy is going on at her office.

Meanwhile, Nils has problems of his own. It seems everyone involved in the case wants to hire him to represent them—definitely multiple conflicts of interest. The behavior of his on-again, off-again rich girlfriend Micaela mystifies Nils, and a bomb that goes off at the Halferin Silver Law Firm muddies the investigative waters. This is a fun read, which also throws in a timely ethical and political question among the clues—just how far will you compromise basic values for the sake of your religion?

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 14:45:09
The Rumor
Vanessa Orr

One of the powers of a rumor is that it takes on a life of its own, whether or not the story is true. Joanna Critchley quickly discovers this when, trying to fit in with a moms’ group in her new hometown of Flinstead, she mentions that a woman who committed a childhood murder might now be living in the small seaside village.

It doesn’t take long for mob mentality to set in, with neighbors accusing neighbors, and a woman’s business targeted because she is believed to be the murderer, despite the fact that the original crime happened more than 30 years before. Though Joanna wants to take the rumor back, it is too late, and the tale spreads and grows, destroying relationships in its wake.

What’s interesting about this story is that it’s hard to determine who is more guilty—the woman who committed the crime as a child and who is still paying for it, or the people who are ruining innocent lives as they try to ferret out the truth. Joanna is caught up in the search, which not only threatens the town’s stability, but also her own family.

Loosely inspired by the real-life case of British woman Mary Bell, who strangled two toddlers and has lived under a series of pseudonyms since her release from prison, the story is realistic in its portrayal of what happens when a criminal tries to rejoin an unaccepting society. Suspicion abounds, and when the killer is finally unmasked, it comes as a shock to Joanna and the reader alike, resulting in a dramatic climax that yields even more surprises. Once events are set in motion, they can’t be stopped—just like the rumor that started it all.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 14:53:43
Seven Ways to Get Rid of Harry
Matt Fowler

It would be a disservice to the often-quiet devastation within the pages of Seven Ways to Get Rid of Harry to say that the title is exactly what Jen Conley’s young adult novel is about. It’s not. However, to say the story is about a teenage boy trying to get rid of his mother’s awful boyfriend wouldn’t be untrue. The narrative thrust of Jen Conley’s novel follows Danny Zelko as he thinks up schemes to rid his family of the hard-drinking, inconsiderate, and downright mean Harry. However, the novel’s great strengths occur on the margins of the story, separate from the conceit of the book.

What makes Conley’s prose work is her ability to capture the experience of a teenage boy who is forced to grow up faster than he should. His interactions with friends, bullies, and his sister all help to create a full picture of a person trying to do his best with the cards he has been dealt. At times we can see the obvious narrative gears turning in the writing—the ticking clock of an impending marriage for example—but Conley’s novel is best when it allows Danny the freedom to develop. Conley seems keenly aware of this fact and doesn’t let plot get in the way of Danny’s maturation.

By the end of the novel, Conley has made us see that while the narrative hook of the story (getting rid of Harry) offers a way in for readers, it is Danny’s characterization that ultimately makes this story effective and winning.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 14:59:10
Borrowed Time
Kevin Burton Smith

Rookie private eye Cass Raines was a proud member of the Chicago police force until she got shot, courtesy of an excitable, less-than-competent fellow officer. Now she runs a one-woman investigation agency on the South Side, struggling to keep herself above water. Mind you, she owns an apartment building, a neat little three-flat in Hyde Park bequeathed to her by her grandparents, so she’s not exactly sleeping in a cardboard box—yet.

At least she won’t get shot at again. Well, maybe...

In this, the hard-charging sequel to last year’s acclaimed debut, Broken Places, the “lean, leggy and caramel colored” PI is celebrating the conclusion to a particularly difficult process serving with pancakes at Deek’s, a hole-in-the-wall diner she can “practically spit on” from her office, when she’s approached by twitchy, geeky Jung Byson, perennial university student and delivery boy. Seems young Jung wants to hire Cass to look into the death of his good buddy Tim.

The body of Tim Ayers, the estranged son of a powerful Chicago family, was found floating in Lake Michigan miles from his yacht, full of booze and and pills. Supposedly bipolar and terminally ill, the cops don’t need much convincing to quickly peg the death a suicide. Initially, Cass isn’t interested in the case—and Jung’s exasperating behavior (he tries to break into a police station to gather “evidence”) doesn’t help. But after speaking with a police friend, Cass realizes there just might be something to Jung’s suspicions after all.

There’s a nice working-class vibe to Borrowed Time, and the author has a definite flair for characterization. She serves up an entertaining, vivid reminder of what we love about the shamus game in the first place: the street-level gaze, the sardonic running commentary, gobs of local color, characters nailed in a pithy wisecrack or two, and a grand tour of society (warts and all) from dives like Deek’s up to the rarefied stomping grounds of “our betters.” And a determined hero tough enough to get the job done.

Sometimes you don’t need to reinvent the wheel, you just need one that rolls. And Clark rolls this baby all the way home to a satisfying, action-packed conclusion.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 15:03:09
Conviction
Craig Sisterson

Scotland’s Denise Mina burnished her “Crown Princess of Crime” reputation with her previous novel, the historic inspired-by-a-true-story tale The Long Drop, wowing readers, critics, and awards judges. After celebrating the 20th anniversary last year of her striking debut, Garnethill, Mina now underlines her versatile talents and doyenne status with a zesty tale imbued with plenty of up-to-the-minute issues.

A sparkling standalone, Conviction centers on Glasgow wife and mother Anna McDonald, who lives a fairly domestic existence with her lawyer husband Hamish and two young daughters. She makes lunches, listens to true-crime podcasts, and gets the kids ready for school. It’s a life that’s comfortable and feels safe, but that may be what Anna needs given the very public trauma she suffered years before. Now living under a new identity, Anna’s lukewarm reality is upturned in a single day when Hamish leaves her for her best friend, and she learns on her latest podcast that an old acquaintance is dead. Even worse, a powerful woman who made Anna’s past life hell could be involved in some way. Untethered and desperate for a distraction, Anna becomes obsessed with the podcast, and starts picking at the case, finding an unlikely ally in the form of the anorexic ex of her former best friend. Together they follow a trail from the Scottish Highlands to continental Europe, hunting for truth while visiting hideaways of the rich and the wretched and trying to stay ahead of some dangerous people.

There’s a real verve to Mina’s storytelling, which blends gut-punch moments with great characterization, a clever structure, and nice touches of black humor. Conviction is a whirlwind, in the finest way.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 15:09:45
Dead Big Dawg
Sharon Magee

In the 19th installment of Victoria Houston’s Loon Lake Mystery series set in Northern Wisconsin, retired dentist and acting coroner (the “real” one is usually too drunk to function), Doc Osborne and his lady love, Chief of Police Lew Ferris, find themselves with a double homicide on their hands.

A Chicago industrialist and his wife are found shot in their summer home on the lake. At first it’s thought it might be an outside job—the industrialist was involved in several ugly lawsuits. But when a second person ends up in Loon Lake with her head bashed in by a cast-iron skillet and an old woman disappears, Doc’s and Lew’s suspicions turn local. They set out to solve the murders with their good friend, neighbor, and lady’s man Ray Pradt, a fishing guide who often takes their crime-scene photos.

At the same time, Ray is trying to avoid the advances of Judith Kerr, a prodigal daughter who has returned home. Ray is happy when she turns her attentions to Bill Kimble, a local who, while married, cuts a wide swathe through the ladies of Loon Lake. As Lew, Doc, and Ray try to disentangle truth from rumor, they can only hope they find the killer before another murder takes place.

Author Victoria Houston seems very comfortable with her Loon Lake characters, so much so that a new reader may have a difficult time keeping the huge cast of characters straight. Her use of local lingo, such as “razzbonya” (nincompoop), may send those same readers scurrying to the dictionary. On the plus side, readers will come away with a wealth of fishing information—her characters are all avid fishermen and women and jump in a boat with a rod and reel whenever possible. All in all, an enjoyable read indeed.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 15:17:05
Bone Deep
Ben Boulden

Bone Deep, British writer Sandra Ireland’s first appearance in the United States, is a brooding psychological thriller set in rural Scotland. Margarita Muir, who is “Mac” to anyone that wants her to respond, is a retired folklore professor living alone in her family home while working on a fictional retelling of local legends.

Mac has a grudge against computers and she writes everything in longhand. At the urging of her adult son, Arthur, she hires a young woman named Lucie as an assistant to help transcribe her handwritten notes. When Lucie arrives, she takes up residence in a cottage at the edge of Mac’s property near a mill that has been shuttered since Mac’s husband died years earlier. Both women have their secrets. Lucie left her parents’ home after an indiscretion with her sister’s boyfriend and Mac is becoming confused about reality. Her past is intermingling with the folktales she studies. When Mac discovers Lucie’s indiscretion, Mac’s deteriorating mind weaves Lucie into a local folk legend about two sisters who love the same man. The folktale ends with betrayal and murder. And for Mac, everything comes back to the abandoned mill: the death of her husband, Lucie’s cheating heart, and her lonely son Arthur.

Bone Deep is an unsettling and atmospheric modern gothic tale told from the alternating perspectives of Mac and Lucie. The first several chapters read like diary entries, but as the characters develop into relatable and realistic people, the narrative gains a marvelous intensity. The landscape is perfectly ominous. The old mill is threatening and dark, and the looming past, for both Lucie and Mac, is suspenseful. And even better, the secrets aren’t fully revealed until the final few pages.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 15:23:53
One More Lie
Margaret Agnew

English author Amy Lloyd returns with her second novel, One More Lie, a page-turning thriller about a young woman recently released from prison. Known only by her government-bestowed name, “Charlotte,” she struggles with her new identity, as well as life on the outside. A parallel narrative occurs in the past, following the path that led her and her friend Sean to murder a grade school classmate.

Charlotte and Sean share the narrative, and the book opens with Charlotte’s description of her first step forward in a long time—a job working retail. Though she manages the semblance of a normal life, she feels empty inside, drawn relentlessly back to the moment of her crime. Despite years of therapy and Sean’s importuning, she can’t remember the act itself. She finds herself missing the structure and regimen of prison and the maternal ministrations of her therapist there, Dr. Isherwood.

Sean appears to be the more obvious criminal. Taught computer science while incarcerated, he chooses to use his newfound skills to sell drugs. He tracks down and haunts Charlotte at every opportunity. There is never any question of whether or not the two of them are guilty, but rather of how much responsibility each bears for the crime.

The balance between the narratives, as well as the balance between past and present is well done. The reader never feels that one story or the other falls short. The writing is quick and engaging, and although Charlotte’s world can be dark and sordid, the major mysteries are satisfyingly resolved. Her story isn’t at an end, but now that she can see her past clearly, she may be able to envision a future.

Teri Duerr
2019-06-19 15:28:00