All Blog Posts (12,730)

New Anthology On The Way!

Crime and Suspense Anthology I

For anyone who doesn't know, I'm also the chief editor (cook and bottlewasher) for the ezine, Crime and Suspense. We've been around since October 2005, putting out a monthly ezine that just keeps getting better!



I recently decided to select some stories from the 2005/2006 issues and put them together into an… Continue

Added by Tony Burton on April 10, 2007 at 6:06am — No Comments

Re-reads & A Case of Weird Synchronicity

When Paper Trails was published a couple of months ago I decided that I was going to

re-read Paris Trout. It had been a long time since I read it; in

fact it had been a long time since I read any Dexter. He's such a low key

guy, damn near invisible in fact, that I have a tendency to forget about him

sometimes.…



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Added by BrianLindenmuth on April 10, 2007 at 6:00am — No Comments

A Little Whine with My Cheese, Please

I have just spent a weekend consuming more sugar and chocolate than one human being should have in six months and I feel terrible. It's like I carb-loaded for the Iditarod and then went to take a nap. This is not good.



Last night, I pretty much put the manuscript for Surreal South, the anthology of bizarre Southern fiction and poetry that I'm editing with my husband, Pinckney, to bed. Manuscripts, story notes and bios are delivered, the publisher's putting checks in the mail,… Continue

Added by Laura Benedict on April 10, 2007 at 4:59am — No Comments

A review, a lot of laziness and some scribbling

Hell, that's what Bank Holidays are for, surely? I've been soooo lazy today that I haven't even been out of the flat, and I've spent a glorious two hours this afternoon napping on the sofa. Bliss. I am well up there for the shortlistings for the Lydia Languish Lethargy Awards. If they make it an Olympic sport, I'm going for Gold.



I've also been much cheered by a very kind and also very balanced review from Erastes (…

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Added by Anne Brooke on April 10, 2007 at 4:19am — No Comments

Why I'm a Fanjaya

OK, this has nothing to do whatsoever with mysteries unless of course you're one of those people baffled by the allegedly mysterious appeal of American Idol contestant Sanjaya Malakar. But since I mentioned on my CrimeSpace page that I'm an American Idol addict, more than a few people here have wanted my views. (Not suprising. Talking to other AI viewers is probably the best thing about watching AI.) Well, I admit it. I'm a fan of Sanjaya. And, no, not because I listen to Howard Stern or…

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Added by Alafair Burke on April 10, 2007 at 1:06am — 5 Comments

Book signing, author events, or book parties?

As long as I have been reading, I love going to author events and books signings. I used to own a bookstore and that was one of my favorite things to do...I've hosted events by tons of authors including Susan Elizabeth Phillips and Denise Swanson. I just love chatting with the authors and getting to know them and I love getting books signed. I have autographed copies from James Lee Burke, Alifair Burke, Joe Konrath, Robert Goldsborough, Jill Barnett, Tasha Alexander, Julia Buckley, David…

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Added by Karen Syed on April 10, 2007 at 12:37am — No Comments

My blog at Fusion View

I blog at Fusion View, an East/ West blog on writing, culture and the arts at www.fusionview.co.uk where I post something most weekdays. It's great that there's a blog facility here on Crimespace but I have my hands full with my blog at Fusion View so I hope you'll take the time to visit me there instead!

Added by Yang-May Ooi on April 9, 2007 at 11:53pm — No Comments

Big Numbers World Tour, #3

RED BANK, NJ -- Did you ever feel like the last pickle in a jar, or that one untouched cheeseburger, cold on the plate after a big family picnic?



Doesn’t SOMEbody want me?



I knew I was taking a chance when I agreed to this appearance--not exactly a prime location for a reading and book signing--but my apprehension ratchets higher as I pull up to the valet parking sign. Thunder, lightning, and steady rain have been assaulting the Jersey Shore since dawn, but now it’s a… Continue

Added by Jack Getze on April 9, 2007 at 11:00pm — No Comments

A-Z Killing Spree - Verses N-T

N is for Norman, from Loch Ness, a Ned

With a Nylon clad body, and empty space in his head,

Fell out of a window while escaping detection,

Not murder, just Darwinian Natural selection.



O is for Oswald - Optometrist from
Oklahoma

Who was found in his Office…

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Added by Donna Moore on April 9, 2007 at 4:59pm — 4 Comments

The Best Crime Drama of 2006 on DVD

Cross-posted from my website.



Barreling toward a deadline means no new blog fodder for the weekend. Instead, here’s a heads up about an old favorite.



The best crime drama of 2006, not to mention one of the finest films of the year, comes to DVD on Tuesday. I speak of Argentina’s El Aura, or in English, The Aura. (Pretty good, huh?…
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Added by Vince Keenan on April 9, 2007 at 1:01pm — No Comments

Catch Larry D. Sweazy's Post Today

Today I'm pitching someone else's post. Larry D. Sweazy has a very thought provoking post at http://acmeauthorslink.blogspot.com about what happens when murder hits too close to home in a mystery writer's life.

Morgan Mandel

www.morganmandel.com

Added by Morgan Mandel on April 9, 2007 at 9:04am — No Comments

Hoag, Tami – ALIBI MAN

ALIBI MAN (Unlicensed Investigator-Florida-Cont) – VG

Hoag, Tami – 2nd in series

Bantam, 2007 – US Hardcover – ISBN:

9780553802016



First Sentence: She floated on the face

of the pool like an exotic water lily.

Elena Estes is a former…

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Added by LJ Roberts on April 9, 2007 at 9:00am — No Comments

A New York State of Mind

Easter Sunday's winding down, and one week from today I'll be winding down from Omega Institute's "Being Fearless" conference in New York City. The older I get, the more fearless I become. I wonder if this conference will make me even more so? If so, I may become over-the-top obnoxious. But so what? At over 60, I'm entitled. It's no longer so important that everybody like me and find me nice. This week I'll make some more T-shirts with my book cover emblazoned on the front, thanks to my…

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Added by Julie Lomoe on April 9, 2007 at 8:23am — No Comments

Con Ed by Matthew Klein - review

From Mystery Book Spot

Con Ed is a little on the thin side but ultimately it is a quick fun read. The characters are there to serve the story and their
relationships and interactions with each other don't give you much to
hang your hat on. But a book about con men pulling a job is almost
always about the con.

Read More

Added by BrianLindenmuth on April 9, 2007 at 4:42am — No Comments

Deadstock by Jeffrey Thomas - review

From Fantasy Book Spot



MY biggest complaint about Deadstock is that I just couldn’t shake the feeling that Thomas was talking down to me as a reader. I don’t need an

author to hold my hand all the time. In this book there are multiple

instances where Thomas uses the same exact group of words and sentences

to describe people, places and events. This isn’t done as a haunting

refrain or as a link between what would… Continue

Added by BrianLindenmuth on April 9, 2007 at 4:40am — No Comments

Stealing the Dragon by Tim Maleeny - review

From Mystery Book Spot

Once, in a conversation about the movies of John Woo, I told someone that the trick was to not count the bullets. I think that the same
advice applies to Tim Maleeny's novel, Stealing the Dragon.

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Added by BrianLindenmuth on April 9, 2007 at 4:38am — No Comments

Murdaland Issue #1 - review

From Mystery Book Spot



In the introductory passage to the reprint of the David Goodis novella Professional Man it is said that Goodis was the "poet of the

losers." I'd like to quote a line from a story, included here, written

by another modern poet, Ken Bruen as an apt description for all the

stories contained in issue #1 of Murdaland.



"Serious as sin, the darkest…
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Added by BrianLindenmuth on April 9, 2007 at 4:36am — No Comments

Dope by Sara Gran - review

From Mystery Book Spot



Gran is capable of condensed moments of characterization. Those nutshell moments contain a wealth of information. She presents for you some dots

in a picture and then leaves it to you connect them. If she held your

hand and led you to the conclusion this would be lesser fiction but

instead she wants you to actually engage the book. Because you

participate in the process of characterization the… Continue

Added by BrianLindenmuth on April 9, 2007 at 4:32am — No Comments

Saved by the National Trust

Ye gods, but going to church on Easter Sunday was a bloody mistake. I knew the moment I walked in to be faced by countless hordes of people that I really should have stayed at home and - if my mood felt good and the wind was in the right direction - had a few private moments with God. Instead, I had to run the gauntlet of the service whilst wishing I was as many miles away as possible. God only knows why I felt like that - and please don't ask me to explain it as I don't think I can - but I…

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Added by Anne Brooke on April 9, 2007 at 3:52am — No Comments

Pattern of Vengeance by C. Hyytinen

Pattern of Vengeance (Maria Sanchez Thriller)

Pattern of Vengeance

A Maria Sanchez Thriller

By C. Hyytinen

Echelon Press Publishing

9735 Country Meadows Lane 1-D

Laurel, MD 20723…

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Added by QualityBookReviews on April 9, 2007 at 1:30am — No Comments

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