The Hard Word: TOP TWENTY-FIVE FOR FIRST TWENTY-FIVE (20-16)
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
Lesa's Book Critiques: Interview with Veronica Bond
Market Call Facebook -- One Eyed Press
Shotgun Honey is relaunching this and they want novellas 8k to 30K. More info at https://submissions.shotgunhoney.com/publication/one-eye-press/
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: More Stories from Christmas Stalkings
Jerry's House of Everything: ALMOST SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: MURDER PICTURE
Beneath the Stains of Time: The Clock House Murders (1991) by Yukito Ayatsuji
SleuthSayers: Half-Topless?
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: The Twelve Jays of Christmas by Donna Andrews
Mystery Fanfare: CHRISTMAS MYSTERY SHORT STORY ANTHOLOGIES AND NOVELLAS
Monday, December 15, 2025
Jerry's House of Everything: BIT & PIECE -- INCOMING ONLY
Bitter Tea and Mystery: The Satan Sampler: Victor Canning
Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Softly Calls the Devil by Christopher Blake
Softly
Calls the Devil (Echo, November 2025) by Christopher Blake is the second
book about New Zealand cop Matt Buchanan. The first book was shortlisted for
the Best First and the Best Novel of the 2018 Ngaio Marsh awards.
Here Matt is
happier in his new job, an ostensible demotion from his high-powered Criminal
Investigation Bureau role to the rural community of Haast, where he is doing
routine small-town policing. After a year he’s settled in to the slower pace of
life and has grown to like the people of the area. Breaking up the intermittent
teenage party and warning the local pothead about his marijuana crop and
navigating the occasional traffic snafu is right up his alley these days.
Matt is good
friends with his predecessor Gus, who retired when Matt took over the job but
stayed in the area. Over a beer or two Gus tells Matt that he’s been looking
into an old case of murder-suicide that wasn’t what it seemed, and he wanted to
tell Matt about it some time. A day later Gus is found shot in the head. No
chance of a hunting accident. Matt had to wonder if Gus was killed because of
what he had learned about the old case. And just who heard Gus tell Matt he
wanted to hand off his research to him.
The murder
investigation was the province of the CIB and therefore out of Matt’s
jurisdiction but nothing kept him from looking at that old case, an especially
ugly story of a father killing his daughter and wife and then killing himself,
to try to find the new information that Gus had uncovered. It led him to a
forgotten commune and to an older gang, both of which had ties to some of the
present-day Haast locals.
Blake is a
serving police officer himself and he knows what he writes about, which gives
the story more than superficial realism. He runs the Behavioural Science unit
of the New Zealand Police in Wellington, see https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/new-zealand-cop-makes-stunning-killer-admission/news-story/d9aff330076fe36b13dcd1fa00ff9ff9.
I particularly like that Blake has made Matt a team player who follows the
rules and respects his management, who in turn appear to respect Matt. I am really
tired of the lone wolf cop.
What starts
out as a police procedural turns into so much more: a multi-faceted cold case, a
meditation on mid-life re-invention, a scenic tour around the Haast region of
the island, and a reminder that old sins can come to light long after the
evildoer thinks they are buried.
A complicated
and fascinating read. Highly recommended.
·
Publisher: Echo
·
Publication date: November 4, 2025
·
Language: English
·
Print length: 278 pages
·
ISBN-13: 978-1786585417
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4rP613P
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
Sunday, December 14, 2025
Little Big Crimes: Picture Palace Blues, by Colin Campbell
Saturday, December 13, 2025
KRL Update 12/13/2025
Up on KRL this week reviews and giveaways of 3 more Christmas mysteries-"O, Deadly Night" A Year-Round Christmas Mystery by Vicki Delany, "The Snow Lies Deep" by Paula Munier, and "Miss Winter in the Library with a Knife" by Martin Edwards https://kingsriverlife.com/12/13/trio-of-christmas-mysteries-for-the-holidays/
A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: How I Write by Caroline Clemmons
Literary Hub: Six Writers on the Most Surprising Parts of Their Writing Routines
Beneath the Stains of Time: An English Murder (1951) by Cyril Hare
Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Death at a Castle Christmas by Veronica Bond
Scott's Take: Red Hulk Vol. 1: Prisoner of War by Benjamin Percy and Geoff Shaw (Illustrator, Cover Art)
Red Hulk Vol. 1: Prisoner of War by Benjamin
Percy and Geoff Shaw (Illustrator, Cover Art) is a tie in series to One
World Under Doom. Doctor Doom has conquered the world and kidnapped
various people including military strategists like Thunderbolt Ross aka Red
Hulk. He is forcing these people into working in a think tank on how to
maintain Doctor Doom’s power. Of course, Red Hulk wants to escape. But, even if
he does. he is far from home in the country of Latveria and Doom owns America
now too.
The art is good and this is an action
packed series where the odds are against Red Hulk. Joining him on this journey
is Deathlok and Machine Man. A Deathlok is a zombie cyborg solider and there
have been a lot of them. I am not even sure which one this was. Machine Man is
an android. I have never cared about any of them before this read, but this was
still a fun read.
There will be a second collected book in
this series titled Red Hulk Vol. 2: Mission: Latveria. That will
be the last volume that Red Hulk will tie into the current Captain
America Series and probably be a part of the aftermath of One
World Under Doom.
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3KkdXZO
I read this through Marvel Unlimited.
Scott A. Tipple ©2025
Friday, December 12, 2025
Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Crimson Thaw by Bruce Robert Coffin
TP&W: Wildlife Health Alert: Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Detected in Multiple Areas Throughout Texas
The Hard Word: TOP TWENTY-FIVE CRIME NOVELS OF THE LAST TWENTY-FIVE YEARS (20-25)
In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Death of a Dutchman
Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE JOHNNY MAXWELL TRILOGY
FFB Review: A Bad Day For Sunshine: A Novel by Darynda Jones
From the archive….
Sunshine
Vicram is back in Del Sol, New Mexico, with her teenage daughter, Aurora,
better known as Auri. She is also less than thrilled about living in the small
tourist town of Del Sol again. Even if it is home for her parents and she and
Auri are in the guest house about fifty feet from their backdoor. She is also
not thrilled about being the newly elected sheriff. Especially when she wasn’t
even running for sheriff far as she knew.
But, being elected in
Del Sol when you are not even running for sheriff is not the strangest thing to
happen in Del Sol as Sunshine Vicram well knows. She has been gone for nearly
fifteen years and now that she is back, she is reminded again that Del Sol has
a sun that never quits and neither does the strange.
While her fourteen year
old daughter deals with her first day at Del Sol High School, Sunshine Vicram
arrives at the station in her full uniform to see what her first day will
bring. It soon brings a visit from the Mayor and a basket of muffins. The mayor
is a problem, but nothing she can’t handle at this point. The muffins are
another and, according to everyone else, a far more serious problem. Homemade
by Ruby Moore, they certainly look and smell good. Ruby Moore can certainly
bake as all can attest. The problem is that when she sends in food, trouble
always follows. It does not matter if they eat the delicious offering or not,
trouble is coming. They just do not know it yet.
Minutes after consuming
the delicious goodness, they soon find out that they have a major problem on
their hands. Wealthy new resident Mrs. St. Aubin reports that her daughter,
Sybil, same age as Auri, is missing. She vanished during the night. Mrs. St. Aubin
woke up this morning and realized that her daughter was missing. Having
searched the house in an increasing panic she came to town in a full panic
looking for help. If that is not enough, then comes word that an incarcerated
prisoner known for kidnapping has escaped custody and could be in the area. Are
the two situations linked? Does he have Sybil? Or is something else going on?
At about the same time
as her Mom has her hands fill with her job, Auri has her hands full with her
own issues at school. Being the daughter of the newly elected sheriff on top of
being the new girl in school comes with a lot of pressure. A number of her
fellow classmates are being less than welcoming. Three or four are being
downright hostile as they take a page of the mean girls playbook. Her first day
is turning into a real doozy and just like her Mom’s situation, thiings are
only going to escalate.
A Bad Day for Sunshine:
A Novel by Darynda Jones
is a really good book. It reminds this reader of J. A. Janice’s Sheriff Joanna
Brady series with considerably more humor and a tad more romantic intrigue. It
shifts at the start of each chapter as well as occasionally in a chapter between
Sunshine and Auri as they deal with various events and situations. The
backstory, told through memories and dialogue discussions, is very complicated
and applies to both Auri and Sunshine.
At its heart, it is
still a police procedural in many ways and that fact is not sidelined by the
backstory, the personal dramas, and potential romantic entanglements. Plenty is
at work in A Bad Day For Sunshine: A Novel is a fun and
fast read that lays an excellent foundation for the series. A Good Day for Chardonnay is
currently scheduled to be released in late July 2021.
A Bad Day for Sunshine:
A Novel by Darynda Jones
is strongly recommended.
Amazon Associate
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4aFiYqE
My large print reading
copy came from the Lakewood Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2020, 2025





