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/

And a review and giveaway of "Death Comes to Jane Austen Town" by Rosemary Stevens, along with an interesting interview with Rosemary https://kingsriverlife.com/12/13/death-comes-to-jane-austen-town-by-rosemary-stevens/

And a review and giveaway of "Road Trip With a Vampire" by Jenna Levine. It's a vampire rom-com with a touch of mystery https://kingsriverlife.com/12/13/road-trip-with-a-vampire-by-jenna-levine/

We also have a review of a new Acorn TV mystery show called "Murder Before Evensong" and a review of "The Madame Blanc Mysteries Christmas Special" that goes up on Acorn on December 15 and 20 https://kingsriverlife.com/12/13/murder-before-evensong-madame-blanc-christmas-special-on-acorntv/

Up on KRL News and Reviews this week we have a review and giveaway of "Hot To Talk To Your Dog About Murder" by Emily Soderberg https://www.krlnews.com/2025/12/how-to-talk-to-your-dog-about-murder-by.html

And a review and ebook giveaway of another Christmas mystery, "Yule Regret It" by Annie McEwen- https://www.krlnews.com/2025/12/yule-regret-it-by-annie-mcewan.html

And a review and giveaway of "Catering To The Dead" by Kim Davis, https://www.krlnews.com/2025/12/catering-to-dead-by-kim-davis.html

And a review and giveaway of "Bone Chilling" by Sara E Johnson https://www.krlnews.com/2025/12/bone-chilling-by-sara-e-johnson.html

Happy holidays!
Lorie

YouTube: Billy Joel - WE DIDN'T START THE FIRE (Sung by 257 Movies!)

YouTube: Billy Joel - WE DIDN'T START THE FIRE (Sung by 257 Movies!)

Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of December 21, 2025

 Dru's Book Musings: New Releases ~ Week of December 21, 2025 

A Writer's Life....Caroline Clemmons: How I Write by Caroline Clemmons

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Literary Hub: Six Writers on the Most Surprising Parts of Their Writing Routines

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Beneath the Stains of Time: An English Murder (1951) by Cyril Hare

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Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Death at a Castle Christmas by Veronica Bond

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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

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Crimson Thaw by Bruce Robert Coffin

Writer Beware: Kindle’s New Gen AI-Powered “Ask This Book” Feature Raises Rights Concerns

 Writer Beware: Kindle’s New Gen AI-Powered “Ask This Book” Feature Raises Rights Concerns

The Hard Word: THE RED AND THE DEAD: CON LEHANE'S THE RED SCARE MURDERS

 The Hard Word: THE RED AND THE DEAD: CON LEHANE'S THE RED SCARE MURDERS

TP&W: Wildlife Health Alert: Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Detected in Multiple Areas Throughout Texas

 TP&W: Wildlife Health Alert: Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Detected in Multiple Areas Throughout Texas

MWA: New Books and Short Stories by MWA Members – December 2025

 MWA: New Books and Short Stories by MWA Members – December 2025

The Hard Word: TOP TWENTY-FIVE CRIME NOVELS OF THE LAST TWENTY-FIVE YEARS (20-25)

 The Hard Word: TOP TWENTY-FIVE CRIME NOVELS OF THE LAST TWENTY-FIVE YEARS (20-25)

Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Mystery of the Cape Cod Tavern by Phoebe Atwood Taylor

 Happiness Is A Book: Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Mystery of the Cape Cod Tavern by Phoebe Atwood Taylor 

In Reference to Murder: Friday's "Forgotten" Books: Death of a Dutchman

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Jerry's House of Everything: FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE JOHNNY MAXWELL TRILOGY

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Patricia Abbott: FFB: THE DEAD LINE, Philip McCutchan

 Patricia Abbott: FFB: THE DEAD LINE, Philip McCutchan

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

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

 Lesa's Book Critiques: What Are You Reading?

The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Stocking Stuffers from the Short Mystery Fiction Society

The Short Mystery Fiction Society Blog: Stocking Stuffers from the Short Mystery Fiction S...: With the holidays coming, it's a great time to pick up some of the exciting new publications from the multi-talented authors of the Shor...

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange

In Reference to Murder: Mystery Melange: The Wolfe Pack, the Official Nero Wolfe Literary Society, announced that Agony Hill by Sarah Stewart Taylor (Minotaur Books) has won the an...

Criminal Minds: Some Great Books I’ve Read Recently from James W. Ziskin

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In Reference to Murder: Author R&R with M.B. Courtenay

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Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Mystery Fanfare: CHANUKAH (HANUKAH) MYSTERIES

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George Kelly: WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #254: WHO KILLED FATHER CHRISTAS? AND OTHER SEASONAL MYSTERIES Edited by Martin Edwards

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Short Stories from Christmas Stalkings

Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: Short Stories from Christm...:   The subtitle for this book of Christmas short stories is "Tales of Yuletide Murder." Based on the cover, you might think the sto...

Lesa's Book Critiques: Who Killed Father Christmas edited by Martin Edwards

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Mystery Fanfare: CHRISTMAS MYSTERIES: Authors F-L // Christmas Crime Fiction

Mystery Fanfare: CHRISTMAS MYSTERIES: Authors F-L // Christmas Crim...: Today, I continue my Christmas Mystery/Crime Fiction list, with books by Authors F-L. It's amazing how many mysteries are set durin...

Happiness Is A Book: The Knavish Crows by Sara Woods

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Beneath the Stains of Time: The Moving House of Foscaldo (1925/26) by Charles Chadwick

Beneath the Stains of Time: The Moving House of Foscaldo (1925/26) by Charles ...: Charles Chadwick was an American author, lawyer, sportsman and a former college athlete, a Yale strongman, who competed in the 1904 Summer O...

Bookblog of the Bristol Library: Christmas at the Women’s Hotel: A Biedermeier Story by Daniel M. Lavery

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Tuesday, December 09, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: A Beautiful Blue Death by Charles Finch

 Lesa's Book Critiques: A Beautiful Blue Death by Charles Finch

Review: The Fatal Saving Grace: An Ed Earl Burch Novel by Jim Nesbitt

 

Some would call it justice. Some would call it revenge. No matter what you call it, the concept has been a long running theme of the Ed Earl Burch series. The same is very much true in the fifth book of the series, The Fatal Saving Grace: An Ed Earl Burch Novel by Jim Nesbitt.

 

This novel picks up a few months after The Dead Certain Doubt. This read addresses those events and brings some of the characters back while also addressing events earlier in the series. That means that it is impossible to review this read without referencing some spoilers if you have not read the previous book. I am doing my best to minimize that aspect of things. But, if you keep reading you were warned….

 

This is a novel of tying up loose ends and settling scores. It begins with Ed Earl Burch barely surviving a far Southwest Texas ambush. These days he carries a shield as an investigator for the Cuervo County District Attorney. Technically that would make the DA his boss, but the reality is that he reports to the Cuervo County Sheriff Sudden Doggett as well as a retired Texas Ranger by the same of Dub McKee. McKee has connections to powerful people and made it happen and roped Sudden Doggett into the plan to give Burch a badge again despite what happened with the Dallas Police way back when. Burch tends to be a burr under Doggett’s saddle as the two men don’t mesh well for a variety of reasons.  

 

Based out of the Sherrif’s Office in Faver, and within a couple of hours drive down to Marfa and Presidio, Burch is teamed up with Deputy Sheriff Bobby Quintero as the two chase down leads on who might have tried to ambush Burch on his way home.

 

Not only is Bobby good company, he has great skills as he was a Ranger and worked in some of the worst trouble spots on the globe. Still, Burch would prefer to go it alone. Because Burch does his own thing. Always.

 

Being a one-man band fits his personality best. Having the badge back after losing it many years ago in Dallas is great and all, but it has not been as good as he thought it would be. He is feeling a bit suffocated by being forced to work with others, go through a chain of command, follow orders, and control his outlaw impulses. He was brought in to get things done as he had the reputation of being a loose cannon that got results, and now he is supposed to work with others after years of going his own way to get justice and settle scores.

 

He is also missing the heck out of Carla Sue Cantrell who recently took off and said she might be back whenever. He has found solace in the arms of a couple of local women, but they are a poor substitute. Inleading the certain lady that can make one heck of a chicken fried steak.

 

(Don’t read this while your hungry as food comes up a lot. Especially if you have not had a good chicken fried steak in years.)

 

In the here and now, Burch was chasing leads on one Lonny Dalrymple and apparently that stirred up somebody to try the ambush. There was a big murder case awhile back and it was believed there were three killers involved. Two are dead. One is death row where he belongs. The case was supposed to be closed and done.

 

But, the supremely talented County Crime Tech, Katie Navarro, was able to identify some additional latent prints from the victim’s Airstream trailer. They belonged to Lonny Dalrymple. Burch had been going around Presidio asking questions and was headed back to his isolated home when a flash of light off of nearby rocks made him react. He jerked the wheel of his old truck and the first shot of many to come hit the roof of his truck instead of his head.

 

The resulting gun battle left the shooter dead and Burch fuming. He is going to go back and brace the people he already talked to, for starters, to track down the parties involved. He wanted to go alone, but Sheriff Doggett told him Quintero was going with him, and that was that. He didn’t want company, but if he has to have some, Quintero is good to have along.

 

Especially when the dead and gone don’t stay either way.

 

As always in this crime fiction series, there is nearly constant graphic violence and quite a lot of graphic sex. There is also a lot of settling scores as this novel winds up several different story arcs. A fast moving read that is over all too soon, The Fatal Saving Grace is also a mighty good read.

 


Strongly recommended.

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3Xtq3mn

 

 

My ARC digital reading copy came from the author with no expectation of a review.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2025

Monday, December 08, 2025

Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Edge by Tracy Clark

 Lesa's Book Critiques: Kevin’s Corner Annex – Edge by Tracy Clark

Mystery Fanfare: MIDSOMER MURDERS, Series 25, starts streaming today!

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Bitter Tea and Mystery: Six Degrees of Separation: From Seascraper to Tokyo Express

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Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: The Masked Band: A D. I. Jim Garibaldi Novel by Bernard O'Keeffe

  

The Masked Band (Muswell, 2025) is the fourth book with Detective Inspector Jim Garibaldi, who lives and works in Barnes, a pleasant London suburb on the Thames. It’s an engaging read with a novel premise. Garibaldi is well read and is given to quoting bits of literature during serious team discussions, throwing his colleagues off and irritating his boss, with whom he has exchanged confidences of a personal nature in the past. Garibaldi’s parents were killed in a car accident and he has never learned to drive. He may be the only contemporary detective on a bicycle I have encountered. (I think Father Brown rode a bicycle.)

The Okay Boomers is a group of celebrities from various parts of the media world who wear masks of David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Debbie Harry, Bob Dylan, and Mick Jagger and play occasional gigs in the local pub. They gather at one member’s house after a successful performance and the next morning a young man is found dead in the garden wearing one of the masks. No identification on the victim and band members all deny knowing him. The remaining masks are missing.

The more the police press the members of the band to find a link between the dead man and the group, the more the individuals begin to crack. On the surface they are all congenial; behind closed doors they don’t much like each other and don’t hesitate to throw each other under the proverbial bus. One member is especially venomous, he has stabbed each of the others in the back; they all heard about it and haven’t forgotten. To see him on the law enforcement hot seat doesn’t bother them at all.

The killer didn’t exactly come out of the blue but it was certainly an unexpected if reasonable resolution.

O’Keeffe works some sly digs about the concept of celebrity into the story and how overrated some individual media stars are. No need to read the earlier books in this police procedural for this particular storyline to make sense. Overall, a satisfying read!

This book is only available in paperback, unfortunately. I had to order it from Waterstone’s in England earlier in the year when it first came to my attention. While I see it is listed on Amazon now, the seller that is offering it is in England so expect slower than usual shipping. A potentially good use for that Amazon gift card you might find in your stocking.


·         Publisher: ‎Muswell Press

·         Publication date: ‎February 20, 2025

·         Language: ‎English

·         Print length: ‎368 pages

·         ISBN-10: ‎1738452883

·         ISBN-13: ‎978-1738452880

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link:  https://amzn.to/4a0x1qv

  

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025 

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.