Tag Archives: mysteries

Mystery Writers Share their Expertise on Series Writing on Nov 11 with HPL

6 Nov

We can’t wait for November 11, when we have four mystery authors from the Mystery Writers of America New York Chapter scheduled along with moderator Mark McNease talking about how to start writing a series and keep it going. If you are an established author looking to learn some additional tips and tricks or if you are a new aspiring writer looking to find out where to get started, this is sure to be an enjoyable and insightful event. You can check out a variety of their works in print and as ebooks.

Annamaria Alfieri writes the Vera and Tolliver stories, which are set in British East Africa and explore the evils of colonialism. It began with Strange Gods. The Richmond Times-Dispatch praised the series as having “the flair of Isak Dinesen and Beryl Markham, the cunning of Agatha Christie and Elspeth Huxley.”

Tom Coffey signed a three-book deal with Level Best Books in 2023. Public Morals is the first novel in The Devine Trilogy, which is named after the family at its center. The series examines the arc of law enforcement in New York from the 1980s to the present. The second book, Special Victim, will be released in late November.

Peggy Ehrhart is currently writing the Knit & Nibble mysteries for Kensington Books. Her amateur sleuth, Pamela Paterson, is the founder and mainstay of the Arborville, New Jersey, knitting club, nicknamed Knit and Nibble. Knit & Nibble #10, Knitmare on Beech Street, was a December 2023 release; “Murder Most Irish” appears in Kensington’s 2024 St. Patrick’s Day novella anthology, Irish Milkshake Murder; and A Dark and Stormy Knit will appear in the fall of 2024.

Gerri Lewis is the author of the Deadly Deadlines mystery, The Last Word, about an obituary writer who solves murders in her hometown of Ridgefield, Connecticut. When she is not helping her protagonist solve mysteries, she writes magazine features and is the Public Information Officer for the Ridgefield Office of Emergency Management. 

Mark McNease is the author of the Kyle Callahan Mysteries, the Marshall James Thrillers, and the Maggie Dahl Mysteries. He has won two Emmys for Outstanding Children’s Program for Into the Outdoors, and he currently serves on the board of the Mystery Writers of America, New York Chapter.

Posted by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager

Marvelous Mysteries: The Examiner & Death and Croissants

11 Sep

The Examiner
by Janice Hallett

The Examiner is one of those books that you can’t put down. Told through an online chat network modeled after discord or slack, email addresses, and texts, The Examiner is an epistolary novel for our modern era. The novel begins with the characters taking an experimental masters degree program that attempts to create a learning experience that will not just have them creating beautiful art, but also give them marketable skills for working in the real world. I like that Hallett is able to make the early texts and chats mundane enough that they seem realistic and grounding for the novel, but gossipy enough that they keep the reader hooked. There is also a sense of gothic in the novel looming that something negative has happened, but we at first are unsure what and then to whom. There were several interesting twists which were well balanced in that I didn’t see fully coming, but were built up enough that they didn’t feel as if they came out of nowhere. None of the characters are who they at first seem. The novel will appeal to those who like mysteries and thrillers. Those who work in academics should find Hallett’s satirical takes on the field amusing; I found as someone with an MFA in writing some of the situations very relatable despite the very dramatic ending. If you enjoy this whodunit, you can also check out The Appeal, The Twyford Code and The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels.

Death and Croissants
by Ian Moore

In Death and Croissants, Richard is a middle aged, British expat, French B&B owner on the verge of divorce. He wants nothing more than to ensure his guests have a relaxing vacation and leave him some four star reviews, but that seems unlikely when a bloody hand print shows up on the wall and an elderly guest who lived in a nearby village goes missing. Valerie a recently widowed, stylish French woman with a small pocketbook pooch, Passepartout always in tow, believes they can solve the mystery, but his cynical housekeeper, Madame Tablier, is pessimistic as usual. But when Richard’s beloved hen, Ava Gardner, is murdered, he becomes a man driven to get to bottom of the funny business occurring in the Loire Valley. Although a more traditionally written novel than The Examiner, it shares a similar quirky sense of humor, engaging characters, who are also much more than they seem, and a quick moving plot. This a cozy with a lot of heart and chuckles. The fact that the book is so funny is probably partially due to Moore’s career as a stand-up comic in the UK, as well as being an author. I’m looking forward to reading the other’s in the series.

Written by:
Aimee Harris
Information and Digital Services Manager