BloodLaw (Vampire Chicago #1) by Blaise Ramsay-a review

BloodLaw (Vampire Chicago #1) by Blaise Ramsay-a review

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release date November 25, 2020

Former ADA Alastair Maddox pursues Prohibition Chicago’s most dangerous monsters after witnessing the deaths of his parents and grandparents as a boy. When a former colleague in Chicago PD comes to ask Alastair for help, he comes face to face with the mysterious Alexandra DeLane. But something’s off. DeLane is way too calm and her eyes are the color of blood. After she escapes, Alastair goes on the hunt only to find himself the prey of an ambitious and mysterious mob boss who plots to have him murdered. The problem? Alastair doesn’t stay dead and comes back as something else. Something more dangerous and straight out of a horror novel.

••••••••

REVIEW: BLOODLAW is the first instalment in Blaise Ramsay’s historical, adult VAMPIRE CHICAGO paranormal, mystery series focusing on former Chicago ADA Alastair Maddox.

Told from first person perspective ( Alastair Maddox) following two timelines, BLOODLAW focuses on former Chicago ADA Alastair Maddox, before his death, and after he rises as a new born vampire. Former detective turned ADA, Alastair Maddox has faced down his enemies more times than he can remember but always lived to tell his tale. With Al Capone and Dean O’Bannion ruling Chicago’s underworld, Alastair Maddox, one of the few members of law enforcement not on the take by the Chicago mob, continues to clean up when and where he is able but a suspected serial killer, a woman named Alexandra DeLane, becomes the object of Alastair’s obsession, an obsession that renders our hero vampire and dead. Struggling with his new powers and need to feed, Alastair will be befriended by a stranger, Mason Downing, a mysterious man who knows about the who and what of our story line hero. As Mason and Alastair begin an investigation into Alastair’s death and subsequent rising, the Chicago mobsters target the former ADA, and in doing so, Alastair begins to piece together the story of his demise. Along with Mason Downing, Alastair Maddox works behind the scenes in an effort to solve the crimes riddling Prohibition era Chicago, and the mob’s stranglehold of law enforcement and the docks.

We are introduced to Alastair’s girlfriend and reporter Charlaine ‘Charlie’ Ware; Alistair’s former partner with the ADA Paul Stone; attorney Bill Thomas; vampire Alexandra DeLane; Mason Downing; and several members of the Chicago PD. The requisite evil has many faces.

BLOODLAW reads like a script for a Saturday afternoon detective series- think Sam Spade or Phillip Marlowe only our hero has special abilities, drinks blood and sleeps during the day. Alastair Maddox narrates the story of his new life, and the adventures of a former detective turned attorney turned vampire, struggling to make sense of his new world and his new powers. There were a few ‘eye rolling’ scenarios, and a few more questions regarding Alastair’s apparent acquiescence and easy acceptance of his new life style ( with little to no explanation about some of the how and why) although Alastair’s need for revenge is what fuels the new-born vampire forward. An interesting and imaginative story with over the top, 1920’s gangster/ law enforcement slang interspersed with modern day language –a bit awkward but not unexpected.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

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Falling Into Magic by Elizabeth Pantley – a Review

Falling Into Magic by Elizabeth Pantley – a Review

 

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Description:
When Hayden was a child, she lost her cat. Adults told her the cat ran away, but she knew the truth. The mirror had taken her. She knew because the mirror had given her a glimpse of an alternate world and had nearly pulled her in, so she was certain the cat had suffered that fate.

Twenty years later Hayden discovers the secret of the mirror when she is thrust into it. She learns of a world she never knew existed, and a family she never knew she had. But danger brought her here, and it followed her. Now, Hayden is on a mission to remove the threat, so that she can begin her magical, meaningful new life in this enchanted world.

 

 

Review:

Falling into Magic by Elizabeth Pantley is the 1st book in her new Destiny Falls Mystery & Magic series. We meet our heroine, Hayden when she was a child, who was afraid of a large mirror in her room.  Seems her cat disappeared, and though her family said the cat must have escaped outside, Hayden was sure the cat escaped through the mirror.

Twenty years later, Hayden, who lives with her grandmother, great grandmother and works at home with her best friend, Lulu, and her cat, Sassy. While walking outside with her cat, a man comes rushing at her, and shoves her through a hole. When Hayden wakes up, she sees a young man, who turns out to be the brother she never knew.  She learns she is in an alternate and somewhat magical world, Destiny Falls, and her brother, Axel helps to bring her to the beautiful mansion his family lives in. 

Hayden gets to meet all the members of the Caldwell family, and is greeted by the father she never knew.  Her father left Destiny Falls for a different life, fell in love, married and had two children.  After Hayden’s birth, he and his young son, Axel were pulled back into Destiny Falls, with no way to return. Hayden begins to learn how magical Destiny Falls is, especially when her cat (now called Latifa) can talk to her telepathically.  There conversations between each other was fun and cute. 

Though she is enjoying her time meeting all members of her family, she sends emails to her family back home explaining she is on a work assignment in Denmark.  In a short time, Hayden will notice some strange happenings, including seeing the man who had pushed her into that hole, and realizes someone is behind the dangerous attempts on her. She is determined to investigate who is the culprit, which puts her own life in danger.

Falling into Magic is a lighthearted mystery, in a magical and enchanted realm.  To say too much more would be spoilers; there is a satisfying conclusion, but somethings were left open.   It was a fun story, and I adored Latifa, who was a blast; and enjoyed many of the secondary characters created by Pantley.  I look forward to more of what Elizabeth Pantley has in store for us in future books.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy supplied for Review

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Prove It: Murder in the Mix by Hannah R Kurz-Review & Guest Post

Prove It: Murder in the Mix (A Likable Daisy Mystery 1) by Hannah R Kurz-Review & Guest Post

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date September 3O, 2020

When a tragic mixer mishap results in the closing of a beloved bakery, new mom and upstairs neighbor Stephanie Wu is sure of two things: One, she misses their cappuccinos. And two, it was no accident. But time is running out for the sleep-deprived sleuth. Can she solve the murder and figure out pumping before her maternity leave is up? With a baby at her breast and a killer at her back, life and living above The LikEable Daisy will never be the same again.

•••••••

REVIEW: Prove It: Murder in the Mix is what it’s designed to be. A cozy mystery with just a small bit of danger.

Stephanie and Henry Wu are brand new parents living in an apartment above the Likable Daisy. Great pastries are made daily and the smell is wonderful to wake up to, even with a new baby doing the waking.

They love their apartment and love their neighbors and those working in the Likable Daisy. They like the area so much they waited for a two-bedroom apartment to open so they could live and raise their child here.

Sameed Ishaaq Haddad, owns the bakery and his head baker Charlotte are wonderful people, giving and kind. They are all excited to see the new baby, Madeline. Things are going great, when one morning Charlotte came into the bakery to start the day and found Sameed dead. Everyone is devastated and it’s ruled an accident. But Steph just can’t believe it was an accident. Sameed was always careful and prepared. There are lots of details as to why she feels he was murdered, but you need to read them yourself, it’s part of the fun of this story.

Author Hanna R. Kurz has written a lovely story of new motherhood, with all the funny and frustrating things anyone who has had a child can relate to. Not only are the couple adjusting to their new baby, but they also have the in-law issues so many have. In all this, she still finds time to find clues and get involved trying to get justice for Sameed.

Grab a snack and a favorite beverage and cuddle up for a lovely read with a little excitement on the side!

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Georgianna

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What Makes A Cozy

I’m embarrassed to admit that my perception of cozies was, until recently, rather narrow, but my expectations were rooted in deeper values that I believe a cozy must satisfy. Let’s investigate.

Expectation #1: Single, amateur female sleuth and outsider

Why readers love it: A single lead builds the potential for romance, a dynamic sleuthing duo, and an HEA/HFN ending. Plus, an outsider MC’s trust issues automatically create tension.

Ways to break the mold: Pursue romantic storylines with side characters. Develop pre existing couples. Explore other kinds of relationships. Create resolution in the emotional story arc.

If the lead isn’t an outsider, let new facts, or new people, emerge instead to create tension.

Expectation #2: Small town setting

Why readers love it: People love the community feel, falling for a whole cast of characters in a series. Also, a violent death upsets the idyllic quality that small towns claim and later reclaim.

Ways to break the mold: Create a tight knit group with distinct personalities in any setting. Give characters a common cause or struggle and readers the satisfaction of putting things to right.

Expectation #3: Contemporary history

Why readers love it: Readers understand the rules, technology, and forensic science of their own world and, based on that knowledge, feel suitability up to the task of solving a mystery.

Ways to break the mold: Want to explore a different world or time period? Build it well, immerse readers, and don’t let them get lost. Sci-fi and fantasy aspects blend fabulously into the genre.

Expectation #4: Two words, clean read.

Why readers love it: Whether they please personal preferences and/or support mental health by avoiding graphic descriptions, cozy standards bring comfort and, I believe, deserve respect.

Ways to break the mold: Tread carefully. Warn your audience. Surprising readers with hardboiled scenes in a book marketed as “cozy” is a surefire way to get lambasted in reviews.

To sum, while the cozy genre comes with expectations, they can be satisfied without falling into stereotypes. Explore space cozies, magic cozies, period cozies, brozies, and more. That said, there’s nothing wrong with a well-written, classic cozy. Enjoy.

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What We Bury by Carolyn Arnold – a Review

What We Bury by Carolyn Arnold – a Review

 

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Description:
She’s dying, and she knows it. If only she can stay alive long enough to leave one last message. As the rain beats against the metal roof, she uses her blood-soaked fingertip to scrawl on the floorboards… The letters GB.
 
Detective Madison Knight has been house hunting, but a call from her real estate agent has nothing to do with finding the perfect property. She’s found a woman’s body, stabbed multiple times. Madison arrives on scene and is presented with an unknown Jane Doe and two letters written in blood. There’s no murder weapon, and it seems Doe was attacked somewhere else.
 
As Madison works to find justice for the victim, Madison’s own life is put at risk. What she comes to discover is some people will go to extreme lengths to protect their secrets—even as far as murder. But will learning that lesson come too late for her?

 

 

Review:

What We Bury by Carolyn Arnold is the 10th book in her Detective Madison Knight Mystery series.  As noted, many times in previous books, Carolyn Arnold always gives us exciting suspenseful murder mysteries, lead by a great detective like Madison Knight; and Arnold’s knowledge of police procedurals makes these investigations perfect.

Madison, our heroine, is a tough detective, who will let nothing stand in her way to find the guilty, as well as trying to find proof of corrupt police officers within the Stiles Police Department.  Madison is called by her real estate agent friend that a body was found in the garage. When she arrives with her partner, Terry, they discover the body of a female, stabbed multiple times, and no identity on her; the only clue is the initials of GB written in blood by the victim before she died.

While working on this case, Madison is also having problems with her boyfriend Troy, whom she has been waiting impatiently for him to propose with a ring.  At the same time, she alienates both Troy and Cynthia (her best friend), since she suspects some of their detective friends possibly working with the Russian Mafia. A few times while working on her case, she finds her life threatened, even suffering serious injuries that keep her from her case; Terry steps up to work on the case, keeping Madison on top of things.  Once she is released from the hospital, she does push herself too much, but together with Terry they will discover a number of twists and turns that changes the game.

What follows is an exciting, tense, action filled thriller with many suspects, twists, as well as Madison finding true love with Troy.  I also love her friendship with Cynthia.  I could not put the book down; especially with new developments changing constantly.  This story was very exciting and well written.  If you enjoy mysteries, murder cops, police procedurals and a tough as nails cop, then you need to be reading this series.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy supplied for Review

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In The Deep by Loreth Anne White-a review

In The Deep by Loreth Anne White-a review

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / Amazon. uk / B&N paper / Chapters Indigo paper /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date October 25, 2020

I hope you don’t find him. And if you do, I hope he’s dead and that he suffered…

Real-estate mogul Martin Cresswell-Smith is the best thing that has ever happened to Ellie. After her daughter’s devastating death, a divorce, and an emotional breakdown, he’s helped her move as far as possible from the grief, the rage, and the monsters of her past. Ellie imagines her new home with Martin in an Australian coastal town will be like living a fairy tale. But behind closed doors is another story—one that ends in Martin’s brutal murder. And Ellie seems almost relieved…

Naturally, everyone thinks Mrs. Cresswell-Smith is guilty.

Senior Constable Lozza Bianchi has reasonable doubt. She sees evidence of a twisted psychological battle and a couple who seemed to bring out the worst in each other—adultery, abuse, betrayal, and revenge. If anything Ellie says can be believed, that is. As the case takes twist after spiraling twist, Lozza can’t shake the gut instinct that she’s being manipulated. That Ellie is hiding something. That there are secrets yet to surface. Lozza has no idea.

•••••••

REVIEW:IN THE DEEP by Loreth Anne White is a contemporary, adult, psychological thriller focusing on Canadian heiress and children’s book artist Ellie Hartley Cresswell-Smith, and the investigation into the murder of her husband, real estate mogul Martin Cresswell Smith.

Told from several first and third person perspectives including Ellie Hartley and Senior Constable Laurel ‘Lozza’ Bianchi, IN THE DEEP follows Canadian heiress Ellie Hartley in the months following her whirlwind romance with Australian real estate mogul Martin Cresswell Smith. Within days after meeting Martin Cresswell, Ellie Hartley reluctantly agrees to a working European vacation culminated by their marriage in Las Vegas, Nevada. Four months will pass before Ellie joins Martin in Australia where her life is about to spiral out of control. Frequent unexplained blackouts blamed on the use of alcohol and drugs finds our heroine the prime suspect in her husband’s murder, a murder predicated on secrets and lies. As the investigation, by Senior Constable Detective Lozza Bianchi, into Ellie’s husband’s murder takes on a life of it’s own, the author pulls the reader into the backstory and history of Ellie’s life including her first marriage, her controlling father, her friendship with Dana Bainbridge in Vancouver BC, and her descent into madness at the expense of her own happiness and sanity.

IN THE DEEP takes place in Agnes Basin, New South Wales, Australia where Ellie becomes suspicious within minutes upon arrival. Although welcomed into the bosom of small town life, Ellie finds herself on the outside looking in, and the unenviable target of her new husband’s anger and rage. Not all is well in Ellie’s less than well-ordered life but she never expected to find herself on the defensive with strangers who meant more to her husband than she could ever have imagined.

Loreth Ann White pulls the reader into a suspense filled, psychological thriller of murder, deception, secrets and lies, intricate games of life and death. With a colorful, energetic and eclectic cast of secondary and supporting characters, IN THE DEEP is a complex and detailed story with so many twists and turns- you won’t be able to stop reading until the very end.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

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Battle Ground by Jim Butcher – a Review

Battle Ground by Jim Butcher – a Review

 

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Description:
Harry has faced terrible odds before. He has a long history of fighting enemies above his weight class. The Red Court of vampires. The fallen angels of the Order of the Blackened Denarius. The Outsiders.

But this time it’s different. A being more powerful and dangerous on an order of magnitude beyond what the world has seen in a millennium is coming. And she’s bringing an army. The Last Titan has declared war on the city of Chicago, and has come to subjugate humanity, obliterating any who stand in her way.

Harry’s mission is simple but impossible: Save the city by killing a Titan. And the attempt will change Harry’s life, Chicago, and the mortal world forever.

 

 

Review:

Battle Ground by Jim Butcher is the 17th book in his excellent urban fantasy The Dresden Files series.  I have read a few of the books in this series, since most of Butcher’s books are huge, it is hard to catch up; especially since its been a number of years having passed without a new addition of The Dresden files, though in July Peace Talks was released giving fans two Dresden File book in one year.  Even though I did not read Peace Talks, I had no problem as I loved Battle Ground; which was an amazing nonstop action filled adventure from start to finish.

Harry Dresen, our Wizard hero, is star of this series.  Harry is the Winter Knight, beholden to Mab, who is the Queen of Air and Darkness. We knew something big was on horizon when Peace Talks ended, and Battle Ground begins immediately after, with a ultra-powerful Titan, Ethniu, is on her way to destroy Chicago and all humanity. Ethniu is filled with hatred of humans and Mab, and will stop at nothing to cause utter chaos and destruction to all of Chicago with her creatures and army of thousands. From the immediate start, Harry was attacked by some of those creatures, and manages to survive with the help of Lara, Molly and Murphy. But this is only the beginning, as the battle to come is epic, and constant, with death defying situations having us holding our breaths so often, we were exhausted by the time this book ended. 

I loved that in Battle Ground we get to see just so many of the regulars we have come to know, such as Murphy, Mab, Lara, Molly, Marcone, Butters, Sanya, Michael, Sarissa, River, Titiana, with a few surprises along the way. Mab was amazing in this story, as her faith in Harry excels, and she pulls her team together to help fight what is a desperate attempt to survive.  Poor Harry, each time he was able to stop one thing, so much more kept coming. Battle Ground was one of the most exciting books I have read this year, and I have read a few.  No surprise, as Jim Butcher is such a terrific writer.  There is so much action throughout the book, you don’t have a moment to blink.  Just when you think …whew, he got through that one, damned if you are not hit again, and again and again. 

This is a difficult review to write, as everything that happens is a spoiler.  Harry is phenomenal, and he suffers badly, but like the energizer battery, he keeps going.  I cannot say the last half of the book was wild, crazy, mind-boggling; since the entire book was nonstop action all the way to the end.  Amazing ride… If you have not read The Dresden Files, it is time to do so.  Harry Dresden is one of the best heroes, and it is hard pressed to find a writer such as Jim Butcher, who can keep this story fresh, and the hero still awesome.  Battle Ground is a must read.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

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Murder Ballad Blues by Lynda McDaniel-Review & Interview

Murder Ballad Blues (Appalachian Mountain Mysteries #4) by Lynda McDaniel-Review & Interview

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date September 15, 2020

Laurel Falls, N.C. 2005 A mysterious death in the North Carolina mountains. Then a second. By the third, the FBI finally gets involved. Trouble is, they’re looking in all the wrong places.

Abit Bradshaw has a theory, but of course the FBI doesn’t take him seriously. When he teams up with musicologist Wallis Harding, bluegrass music becomes more than something to practice and perform. It’s key to finding the serial killer.

Della Kincaid, a former crime reporter in Washington, D.C., can’t seem to escape her past. Now living in the small town of Laurel Falls, she’s busy investigating a fraud case that gets darker at every turn. She’s about to give up when a secretive whistleblower pulls her in again—and back to D.C.

Abit and Della team up once again to convince the FBI to help them with both their crime investigations.

Will Abit and Wallis discover the killer’s pattern … before he strikes again?

Can Della make sense of the whistleblower’s clues before the fraud case is closed for good?

You’ll love this suspenseful mystery because everyone longs to find justice in this crazy world.

Get it now.

This is the fourth novel—a standalone novel—in the Appalachian Mountain Mysteries series. All the favorite characters return, along with the debut of several colorful new ones.

••••••

REVIEW: I like a good murder/mystery and this one wasn’t too bad. In fact I could see it as a movie or tv series.

Della is a reporter digging around for the next big story, married/divorced/still seeing her ex/husband/now boyfriend (yeah I got confused too! She’s known Abit for years and counts him as a close and dear friend.

Vesper junior (Abit) or Rabbit as his wife calls him is happily married with kids and plays in a band with his wife and friends. Life might be dull, but Abit likes it that way thank you. I felt so sorry for Vesper, he got the nickname because his father always called him “a bit slow”, which got shortened over time. I don’t know if I could be called Abit and know it’s nasty and not a cute nickname!

So we have Wallis and Abit bonding over music and using it to track killers, rather ingenious if you ask me.
Della uses her contacts in the paper to dig deeper, hoping to get a story out of it. But wanting to help the FBI (who she shared a sizzling kiss with!)

Reading the cover I did think a ménage. Sadly no, but in a way I’m glad, I don’t think it would have worked out?

The killer was pretty smart, and catching up with him was good. And a couple of clues might have you guessing who it might be.

I liked how we came along for the ride, we saw all the thought processes and saw glimpses of their lives. But it all gets a little too close to home when Abit’s kids get kidnapped by the killer! Will he be able to raise the ransom money in time?

I think there we just a few too many characters in this book, not sure we needed all those extra’s. But other than that, they were all pretty solid.

This book worked backwards, we see Abit running away from the killer, we don’t see who it it, we just see him run…..

Told mainly in Della’s and Abit POV. It needed just a little polishing, I felt something was missing. The connection between Abit and Della was good, the connection between Abit and Wallis wasn’t as well felt.

But I’d happily read another book with these characters in. They did make me smile, and at one point I did get a “scooby doo” moment ?

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Julie ?

TRC: Hi Lynda and welcome to The Reading Café. Congratulations on the release of MURDER BALLAD BLUES.

We would like to start with some background information. Would you please tell us something about yourself?

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Lynda: I’ve lived all over this country—from the Midwest to the Deep South to Appalachia to the Mid-Atlantic to the Pacific Northwest and finally California—and yet I find I often start stories and recollections with “When I lived in the mountains of North Carolina ….” My interests in so many things—writing, hiking, nature, mountain music, organic gardening, ecology—took root while I lived on a small farm there, an eager participant in the back-to-the-land movement of the 1970s. I made mistakes by the wheelbarrowful, but I learned just about everything that matters to me today.

I was lucky to live near the Campbell Folk School, an amazing center for art, craft, and music (and featured in my novels as The Hickson School of American Studies). That’s where I was introduced to the music of my heritage. The first time I walked into the school’s wood-paneled community room where fiddlers played, it was like finding a lost relative.

My writing career also started at the Campell Folk School. One day the director asked if I’d like to learn public relations. To be honest, I should have answered, “What’s that?” Instead, I said, “Sure,” and took to it like ink to newsprint. I haven’t stopped writing since. These days, I spend my time writing my Appalachian Mountain Mysteries series. I started them as a way to share some of the unforgettable stories from my years in the mountains.

Before my novel-writing days, I crafted 1,200 articles for arts and culture magazines such as Southern Living, Country Living, AmericanStyle, Southwest Art, Yoga Journal, American Cinematographer, Chile Pepper, and Restaurants USA. Newspaper articles about art, food, and business ran in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Charlotte Observer, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, washingtonpost.com, among others. I’ve also written 15 nonfiction books, including several on the art and craft of writing.

I moved to the mountains of North Carolina on a whim. Why not? Let’s see what it’s like, we thought during those adventurous times. But decades later, I believe I was drawn to that place, signing on to a graduate program in life I didn’t realize I needed. By comparison, my life today seems so tame, but that doesn’t worry me. In the mountains of North Carolina, I also learned there is a season for everything.

TRC: Who or what influenced your career in writing?

Lynda: In addition to my lucky break at the Campbell Folk School, I credit my mentor Dick Simms in Atlanta, Georgia for supporting my interest in writing. For writers, self-doubt is never far away, like a grumpy uncle who lives in the basement, poised to come upstairs at the most inopportune times. Dick gave me the encouragement I needed believe in myself. Later, Anne Lamott’s book Bird by Bird shared invaluable advice that I still draw from today.

TRC: What challenges or difficulties did you encounter writing and publishing this story?

Lynda: I wanted to incorporate bluegrass and old-timey music into the story, and while I loved the sound, I didn’t know that much about the stories behind murder ballads. I did a lot of research and worked many hours to develop the logistics that Abit Bradshaw and Wallis Harding also work on in Murder Ballad Blues.

TRC: Would you please tell us something about the premise of MURDER BALLAD BLUES?

Lynda: Abit Bradshaw worries about the safety of his family when he hears about the first murder in the mountains of N.C. He struggled through his own childhood, thanks to unloving parents and a restrictive community that labeled him “slow.” But he’s found his rightful place in the world as an accomplished woodworker and mandolin musician in the bluegrass band The Rollin’ Ramblers. By the second murder, he has an inkling that music plays a role in the killer’s pattern. He can’t prove it, though, so he reaches out to Wallis Harding, a self-taught mountain music expert. Together they work to discover the killer’s pattern. Their hardest challenge, however, arises after the third murder when they go to the FBI with their theory.

Della Kincaid, Abit’s best friend, is still running Coburn’s General Store in Laurel Falls, N.C. She hasn’t been a crime reporter for years, ever since she left D.C., but she hasn’t lost the curiosity and bravado that made her such a success there. She gets involved in a real-estate fraud case in the N.C. mountains that takes her back to D.C. for help.

TRC: How many books do you have planned for the APPALACHIAN MYSTERY series? Do the books have to be read in order?

Lynda: Murder Ballad Blues is the fourth book in the series, and I have two more books planned. Murder Ballad Blues is a standalone. I paid close attention to backstory that needed explaining, but in a way that wasn’t too repetitive for fans of the series. I’ve tried to make each of the books a standalone, but I have to say I think the experience is enhanced by reading the first three in order.

TRC: What kind of research/plotting did you do, and how long did you spend researching /plotting before beginning MURDER BALLAD BLUES?

Lynda: I spent several months mulling over the plot of Murder Ballad Blues. It’s more complex than the first three books in the series. I found it particularly challenging to get the dates and circumstances of the contemporary crimes to jibe with those of the murder ballads.

Fortunately, I have a muse who comes sweeping in, anytime day or night, to offer ideas. The key for any writer is to listen and capture those gifts ASAP before they evaporate like a dream. For example, the character Wallis Harding came to me like that, and I think he’s one of the most successful characters I’ve ever developed. He’s funny, ornery, and kind, all wrapped in one.

TRC: Do you believe the cover image plays a deciding factor for many readers in the process of selecting a book or new series to read?

Lynda: I do, especially with online sales and all the competition for readers’ time and money. I believe a cover’s appeal to a potential buyer is as much subconscious as conscious, which adds to the challenge of getting it right. The publishing gurus all say to test your covers, and I have done that with the first three books. I especially like the cover for Murder Ballad Blues; it’s got the misty-mountain-moonlit-river-thing going just right—straight out of one of the crime scenes in the book.

TRC: When writing a story line, do the characters direct the writing or do you direct the characters?

Lynda: We work together. Like I mentioned about the muse, while I’m writing about any of my characters, they come swooping in. Abit told me many times what he wanted to say, especially when he talks about his son, Conor, and his fears about his family’s safety. He’s the kind of father he longed to have when he was young. And Della, well, she’s sassy and says things I wish I could say!

TRC: The mark of a good writer is to pull the reader into the storyline so they experience the emotions along with the characters. What do you believe a writer must do to make this happen? Where do you believe writer’s fail in this endeavor?

Lynda: I can only speak for myself, but I think we need to write more from our hearts, rather than our heads. When I do that, the scenes always work better. It’s hard, though, because these days there are so many so-called experts bandying about rules and restrictions. I find that draws us back into our heads, and the results are more wooden. Yes, we need to know the rules, but edicts like “don’t use ‘was’ or ‘ing words’” swirling in our heads can smother the creative spirit. I like to think of my readers and imagine that my words are like throwing my arms around them.

TRC: Do you listen to music while writing? If so, does the style of music influence the storyline direction? Characters?

Lynda: I usually don’t listen to music when I’m writing fiction. When I wrote nonfiction magazine articles and books, I could listen to music—but not with fiction writing. I need to hear the muse and characters when they make the scene. That said, for Murder Ballad Blues I did listen to a lot of bluegrass and old-timey music so I knew what I was writing about (and I loved every minute of it).

TRC: What do you believe is the biggest misconception people have about authors?

Lynda: That they write beautiful first drafts. Anne Lamott was one of the first authors who helped me debunk that myth in her book Bird by Bird. That book was a godsend, as I mentioned earlier.

TRC: What is something that few, if anyone, knows about you?

Lynda: I was a traveling artist/weaver for a number of years while living on the farm in N.C. I learned to weave at the Campbell Folk School, and for about five years I traveled the art-show circuit selling my wall hangings.

TRC: Who is your favorite author (living or dead)?

Lynda: Graham Greene.

TRC: On what are you currently working?

Lynda: I’m musing about Book Five in the series as I work on marketing Murder Ballad Blues. I plan to set it in a place a little different from Laurel Falls, N.C. More to be revealed later …

TRC: Would you like to add anything else?

Lynda: I hope anyone who longs to write—whether that’s a memoir, book, article—will listen to his/her heart and do it. The world is full of naysayers, but you can do it. Humble yourself to learn more about your genre and the art of writing in general, but listen to that voice within.

LIGHTNING ROUND

Favorite Food: Cheese, almost any kind

Favorite Dessert: Cookies, almost any kind

Favorite TV Show: “Rectify,” beautifully written by Ray McKinnon

Last Movie You Saw: I’m having trouble with this one, given the shelter-in-place order and the dearth of good movies. The last good movie I saw was “Barbara,” a German movie I re-watched because of its tragic but beautiful story of selfless love.

Dark or Milk Chocolate: Milk

Secret Celebrity Crush: Matthew Rhys

Last Vacation Destination: Mendocino, California

Do you have any pets? Late last year I lost my beloved dog, Mollie, at only 4 years old. Murder Ballad Blues is dedicated to her, and she’s memorialized in the book as Abit Bradshaw’s dog, who he describes as “precious like no other.”

Last book you read: Fallen Mountains by Kimi Cunningham Grant. Exquisite writing.

TRC: Thank you Lynda for taking the time to answer our questions. Congratulations on the release of MURDER BALLAD BLUES. We wish you all
the best. Thank you!

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Shadows in Death by J.D. Robb – a Review

Shadows in Death by J.D. Robb – a Review

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Description:
Lt. Eve Dallas is about to walk into the shadows of her husband’s dangerous past.

As it often did since he’d married a cop, murder interrupted more pleasant activities. Then again, Roarke supposed, the woman lying in a pool of her own blood a few steps inside the arch in Washington Square Park had a heftier complaint.

When a night out at the theatre is interrupted by the murder of a young woman in Washington Square Park, it seems like an ordinary case for Detective Eve Dallas and her team. But when Roarke spots a shadow from his past in the crowd, Eve realises that this case is far from business as usual.

Eve has two complex cases on her hands – the shocking murder of this wealthy young mother and tracking down the shadow before he can strike again, this time much closer to home. Eve is well used to being the hunter, but how will she cope when the tables are turned? As Eve and the team follow leads to Roarke’s hometown in Ireland, the race is on to stop the shadow making his next move . . .

 

 

Review:

Shadows in Death by J.D. Robb is the 51st book in her fantastic Eve Dallas series.  As I have noted many times, I am a big fan of this series, having read every single book, including novellas.  Eve Dallas and her husband, Roarke are the best couple in the literary world; they are so great together, not to mention their wonderful chemistry.  Even though this is the 51st book, I still cannot get enough of them and this series.

Shadows in Death is somewhat different than most of Robb’s stories, as Roarke becomes the center of an old grudge, putting Eve, his Irish family, and himself in danger. Eve is called to the scene of a violent murder of a woman, and as she is in the process of investigating with Peabody, Roarke, who is standing not far away, notices a face he has never forgotten from his Ireland days as a youth. Roarke later tells Eve that this man is the one who killed the woman, as it was his motto, using sharp knives to gut his victims.

Eve, Peabody and their fantastic team, manage to learn that the woman murdered, was a paid hit, and early on we discover who ordered the hit.  Once this person is arrested and offered a small deal to give all information on the hit man, who has committed more than 400 plus deaths worldwide, and has eluded police in all countries for 30 years.  Lorcan Cobbe, is the villain in this story, and his hatred of Roarke becomes his goal to kill Roarke, Eve, and their Ireland family. 

What follows is an intense, exciting, action-packed race to find Cobbe, as he continues to kill and threaten them along the way.  What I loved was how all the members of Eve’s police team, were determined to help find the killer, as well as to protect Roarke and Eve.  Over time, Eve has built such a fantastic team and their loyalty was awesome.  I also enjoyed seeing Summerset again, as he knew of this terrible villain back in their Ireland days, also knowing his own life was in jeopardy.  Eve and Summerset still have those fun zingers, loved seeing Galahad.  It was also great to see Nadine, as I miss her. 

The last 1/3 of the book was intense, and mindboggling, with the entire team, including the Commissioner, Feeny and Interpol inspector raced to stop the villain from hurting Roarke’s family in Ireland.

Shadows in Death was very exciting, tense, intriguing, nonstop action from start to finish, with never a dull moment.  J.D. Robb once again gives us a fantastic addition to this wonderful series, which I hope keeps on rolling for many years to come.  I thought that Shadows in Death was one of the best ones yet, which proves that J.D. Robb will continue to give us many more Eve and Roarke books.   J.D. Robb created a masterpiece addition to this fantastic series.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

 

 

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