Seattle Mystery Bookshop
N e w s l e t t e r
117 Cherry St. Seattle,WA 98104
(206) 587-5737
e-mail: staff@seattlemystery.com WEBSITE: seattlemystery.com
Bill Farley, Founder / J. B. Dickey, Owner/ Tammy Domike, Manager
Susan Dennis / Sandy Goodrick / Karen Duncan
In this issue:
Author
Appearances
Signed
Copies Available
Announcement
New
Northwest Releases
Chandler
& Hammett Special Releases
SomeOther
New Releases
Some
Agatha Christie Releases
Some
Fall Paperback Reprints
Sherlockiana
Anthology,
Reference and Nonfiction
Fall
1999 Auction
Gone,
But Not Forgotten
Author
Appearances
Tues., Aug. 31, noon, jazz drummer Bill Moody signs Bird Lives!
Thurs., Sept. 16, noon Tess Gerritsen signs Gravity.
Tues., Sept. 21, time uncertain, Sara Paretsky signs Hard Time.
Sat., Sept. 25, noon Alaska’s Dana Stabenow signs So Sure of Death.
Mon., Oct. 4, noon, Linda Barnes signs Flashpoint.
Tues., Oct. 5, noon, Martha Grimes signs The
Lamorna Wink.
Wed., Oct. 6, noon, Vicki Hendricks signs Iguana
Love.
Fri., Oct. 8, noon, Ian Rankin signs Dead Souls.
Wed., Oct. 27, noon, Larry Millett signs Sherlock
Holmes and the Rune Stone Mystery.
Signed Copies Available:
D. W. Buffa, The Prosecution
James Lee Burke, Heartwood
Loren D. Estleman, Hours of the Virgin
Ann Rule, A Rage to Kill: Casefiles
No. 6
Trevor Scott, Extreme Faction
Important News of Little Value
J.B. Dickey, who’s been the #2 man at Seattle Mystery Bookshop since 1990, became the #1 man recently when he purchased the shop from founder Bill Farley. When Bill opened the shop by himself on July 1, 1990, one of the first customers to come in was J.B., who looked around and said, “I think you need help.” He was absolutely right. From that point on, the shop has been a de facto partnership between the two, with J.B. doing most of the work and Bill getting most of the credit. Now J.B. can claim ownership authority, and Bill can take a lot of time off (he will continue with the shop as advisor and part-time bookseller). Both Bill and J.B. thank you, our customers, and our colleagues Tammy, Sandy, Karen, and Susan, for making Seattle Mystery Bookshop a success beyond our wildest expectations.
—Submitted by
Shy-and-Semi-Retiring Bill Farley
April Christofferson, The Protocol (Oct., Forge
hc, 23.95). 2nd novel by the author of Edgewater. Attorney Jennifer Rockhill’s plans for revenge against
Dr. Fielding and his Seattle biotech firm for the death of her husband seem
complete when she’s hired by that same company. Signing.
James H. Cobb, West on 66 (Sept., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). Noir
mystery set in 1958. Sheriff Pulaski looks for a cup of coffee and
a hot meal at a truck stop, but finds a mysterious woman, a link to an old
murder and a chase down Route 66. Tacoma
author.
Catherine Coulter, The Edge (Sept., Putnam hc, 21.95). Baffled by suspicious circumstances
surrounding his sister’s injuries, an FBI agent heads to the Oregon coast to
unravel the mysteries. Signed Copies Available.
Mary Daheim, The Alpine Legacy (Oct., Ballantine pbo,
5.99). 12th in the series with Emma Lord, newspaper editor in the
small town of Alpine, WA. Signing.
Mary Freeman, Deadly Nightshade (Nov., Berkley pbo, 5.99).
While investigating the murder of a city councilman, landscaper Rachel O’Connor
unearths trouble. Oregon author. Signing?
Skye Kathleen Moody, Habitat (Nov., St. Martin’s
hc, 24.95). Fish and Wildlife
Agent Venus Diamond investigates Breedhaven, an elite research center on an
island off the coast of Washington. 4th in series. Signing?
Sharan Newman, The Difficult Saint (Oct.,
Forge hc, 23.95). Catherine LeVandeur goes to Germany to help her sister, who’s
been accused of poisoning her new husband and practicing witchcraft. Signing?
Thomas Orton, The Lost Glass Plates of Wilfred Eng (Oct., Harper Counterpoint hc, 24.00). A bit outside our usual field,
we are lucky to have signed &
dated copies of this beautiful, intricate first novel. Tom has been a long time Seattle
bookseller and now picks up the pen. Using Seattle’s Pioneer Square and
Chinatown as the setting for a tale of the cut-throat modern art world, this
19th century photographer’s life story gives a fascinating view
into the photography and racism of that time.
Tammy recommends.
James Powlik, Sea Change (Sept.,
Delacorte hc, 24.95). A ghost ship of dead men is found off the coast of
British Columbia and it is clear that some deadly, biological killer is
heading toward Seattle. A bio-techno-thriller by an oceanographer.
Kathryn Rantala, Missing Pieces (Aug.,
Ocean View tpo, 10.95). Noir poetry matched with King County crime scene
photos from the 1930s and 1940s, by a native Seattleite.
Fr. Brad Reynolds, Deadly Harvest (Oct.,
Avon pbo, 5.99). Father Mark Townsend travels to Eastern Washington to
investigate the report of miracles brought about by an evangelistic preacher. Signing.
Marjorie Reynolds, The Civil Wars of Jonah Moran (Nov., Morrow hc, 24.00). 2nd novel by the author of The Starlite Drive-In. Someone sets fire to a halfway house
in the small Olympic Peninsula town of Misp.
When the town suspects Jonah, his sister is worried. Signing.
Greg Rucka, Shooting At Midnight (Oct., Bantam hc, 23.95). PI Bridgett Logan made a promise years
ago—and now Bridgett must commit a murder if she is to keep her word. By the
author of the series with Atticus Kokiak, who is Bridgett’s friend and
lover. Portland author. Signed
Copies Available.
Ann Rule, And Never Let Her Go (Oct.,
Simon & Schuster hc, 24.00). Rule
traces the case of Anne Marie Fahey, who was murdered by Delaware attorney
Tom Capano. Signing.
Lights! Camera! Bookselling!
It was one of those hot July mornings, the kind that Seattle gets twice that
month, the kind of morning no G-man-FBI-joe would lift a finger to help a
dame shove a handtruck with three cartons of books uphill, but the cameras
kept rolling....Ann and I responded to the call: FBI agents in need of books! It was rapid-fire bookselling during
that conference break and then Ann & the camera crew headed off into the
Noonday sun to film the rest of a “Day in the Life of a Writer.“ Now
it's up to you, the viewer: tune in, turn on, watch:
48 Hours, Oct.14, 1999.
--Submitted by Special Agent
Tammy Domike
Riley St. James, Deception in the Rainshadows (June, Shadowcrest
tpo, 12.95). Convicted of killing a wealthy married woman who broke off their
affair, Portland mystery author Jonathan Timmers writes to outsiders for help
in finding the real killer.
Dana Stabenow, So Sure of Death (Sept, Dutton hc, 23.95).
State Trooper Liam Campbell is drawn into the heart of a family scandal of
adultery, tribal taboos and forbidden romance. Signing.
Nicholas van Pelt (aka
Richard Hoyt), Stomp ( Aug., Forge hc, 24.95). Forty years
ago, in NE Oregon, two high school kids sought justice when the system could
not help. Now, their choice has
come back to haunt them.
M. K. Wren, Neely Jones: The Medusa
Pool (Oct., St. Martin’s hc,
24.95). New series introduces
Sheriff-elect Cornelia Jones, the only woman and the only African-American in
her Sheriff’s Office. Oregon author.
…and now in paperback:
Anthony Bruno, Double Espresso (Nov.,
Forge, 6.99).
Robert Clark, Mr. White’s Confession (Sept.,
Picador, 12.00). Edgar Winner for Best Novel.
Laurence Gough, Shutterbug (Sept., McClelland &
Stewart, 5.95). British Columbia
author.
Dean Ing, The Skins of Dead Men (Sept.,
Tor, 6.99).
J.A. Jance, Breach of Duty (Nov.,
Avon, 6.99).
Tom Micheltree, Katie’s Will (Nov.,
Worldwide, 4.99). Oregon author.
Steve Oliver, Moody Forever (Nov., St.
Martin’s, 5.99).
Greg Rucka, Smoker (Sept., Bantam,
5.99).
Frank Smith, Stone Dead (Sept., Worldwide,
4.99). British Columbia author.
Raymond Chandler’s
Philip Marlowe, (Oct., Pocket tp, 16.00). 1st pb issue of The Centenary
Celebration from ’88, in which contemporary authors write new Marlowe short
stories, organized by decade (30s, 40s) and also write about what Chandler and
Marlowe meant to them as authors. Crais, Healy, Paretsky, Taibo, Brett,
Estleman, Collins and Healy—to name a few.
The book ends with Chandler’s last Marlowe story, The Pencil, published posthumously. A great collection
with the best pastiches.
Dashiell Hammett, Nightmare Town (Sept.,
Knopf hc, 25.00). 20 long-unavailable short stories: the Continental Op, Sam Spade and the first study for what
would become The Thin Man. (No
signing tour, we’re sure…)
Also, Dashiell
Hammett: Complete Novels (Oct.,
Library of America hc, 35.00). All 5 of Hammett’s novels, complete and
reissued in a single volume, on acid-free paper in a fine binding.
Harold Adams, Lead, So I Can Follow (Nov.,
Walker hc, 22.95). 12th in the Depression era, Award-winning series
set in the Dakotas. Carl Wilcox
and his bride hear a scream and a shot while enjoying a quiet fishing hole. Also, now available, (tp, 7.95 each) A Way With Widows and No Badge, No Gun.
Susan Wittig Albert, Lavender Lies (Oct.,
Berkley hc, 21.95). As China
prepares for her wedding, the only cold feet are those of a corpse. 8th in the series with
lawyer-turned-herbalist. Signed Copies Available.
Bruce Alexander, Death of a Colonial (Sept.,
Putnam hc, 23.95). After a nobleman is executed, a younger brother, who’s
been gone for 7 years, materializes. What is his connection to the suicide of
an American? Sir John Fielding investigates.
B Jo recommends.
Sarah Andrews, Bone Hunter (Sept., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). 5th
with forensic geologist Em Hansen.
At a paleontology conference in Utah, a dinosaur expert is stabbed to
death with a dinosaur bone.
Jake Arnott, The Long Firm (Sept.,
Soho hc, 25.00). In 1960s London, Harry Starks is a funny and feared hood who
dreams of becoming a nightclub impresario, like the Crays. His story is told
by five narrators to give a vivid portrait of the man and his time.
Nancy Atherton, Aunt Dimity’s Christmas (Oct.,
Viking hc, 21.95). Lori Shepard’s plans for a perfect holiday are ruined
when a mysterious stranger collapses on her driveway. Signed Copies Available. Karen recommends.
David Baldacci, Saving Faith (Nov.,
Warner hc, 26.95). DC’s two best influence peddlers have their bribery
scheme cracked by a zealous CIA chief. Then the FBI gets wind of it, and all
is left to a PI to settle.
Linda Barnes, Flashpoint (Sept.,
Hyperion hc, 22.45). Carlotta Carlyle returns at last, in her 8th case. After burglar-proofing a reclusive woman’s apartment,
Carlotta finds the elderly resident dead.
Signing.
Dave Barry, Big Trouble (Sept.,
Putnam hc, 23.95). Yes, it is THAT Dave Barry, writing a twisting tale of
embezzlement, New Jersey hit men and razor-sharp satire. Signed
Copies Available. Tammy and Bill
recommend.
M. C. Beaton, A Highland Christmas (Nov.,
Mysterious Press hc, 19.95). Alone for the holidays, Constable Macbeth tracks
a lost cat and stolen holiday decorations.
Illustrated with black and white line drawings, this 16th
adventure is a fine holiday gift for Hamish fans.
M. C. Beaton, Agatha Raisin and the Witch of Wyckhadden (Nov., St. Martin’s hc, 21.95).
9th adventure for the irrepressible Agatha, who here
retreats to a seaside resort to regrow her hair after an unfortunate encounter
with a hairdresser. Sandy recommends this series.
Alan Beechey, Murdering Ministers (Nov.,
St.. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 2nd
adventure for London children’s book author Olivier Swithin and his
Wodehousesque crew. His debut in An
Embarrassment of Corpses was a source of wonder and delight. Sandy recommends.
Carol Lee Benjamin, Lady Vanishes (Sept.,
Walker hc, 23.95). 4th in the series with Rachel and her pit bull
Dash, who come to the rescue when a therapy dog vanishes from a Greenwich
Village care center and the center’s owner dies soon after. Favorite
series of Karen’s.
Michelle Blake, The Tentmaker (Sept., Putnam hc, 23.95).
Lily Connor accepts the post of interim priest (a “tentmaker”) in Boston. She begins to doubt the official
reason of the last priest’s death and is drawn into the secrets of this
wealthy parish. A debut mystery that gives an interesting, insider’s view of
the modern Episcopal church and its engagement with contemporary issues. Signed Copies Available. B Jo recommends.
Barbara Block, Endangered Species (Sept., Kensington
hc, 20.00). 6th Robin Light.
Simon Brett, Mrs. Pargeter’s Point of Honour (Oct., Scribner hc, 22.00). A
reverse heist: the feisty widow must find a way to return stolen art.
Sandra Brown, The Alibi (Sept., Warner
hc, 25.95). Charleston’s ambitious prosecutor Hammond Cross has an encounter
with a mysterious woman who later turns into the prime suspect in a
high-profile murder case.
Edna Buchanan Garden of Evil (Nov, Avon
hc, 24.00) 6th with Miami reporter Britt Montero.
Carole Bugge, Who Killed Blanche DuBois? (Nov.,
Berkley pbo, 5.99). Editor Claire Rawlings investigates the murder of her star
author.
Stephen Cannell, The Devil’s Workshop (Sept.,
Morrow hc, 25.00). Hollywood moguls, hobos and a beautiful microbiologist race
to stop anti-government supremacists who have a new biological weapon, which
targets DNA.
Patricia Carlon, The Price of an Orphan (Oct.,
Soho hc, 22.00). 9 year-old orphan Johnnie, a city child, is placed with the
Heaths, a family in Australia’s outback.
Trouble from the start, he claims to have witnessed a murder, then
recants it. Karen recommends.
Paula Carter, Deathday Party (Oct.,
Berkley pbo, 5.99). 2nd
with the Southern “Decorating Duo of Detection.”
William Caunitz, Chains of Command (Sept.,
Dutton hc, 23.95). When a young cop is shot in his girlfriend’s apartment,
everyone is quick to believe he’s dirty.
But there are two who think otherwise. Late author’s last book.
Jill Churchill, A Groom with a View (Oct.,
Avon hc, 22.00). 11th Jane Jeffry has her catering a big society
wedding that turns into a killer of a party.
Margaret Coel, The Lost Bird (Oct.,
Berkley hc, 21.95). Father John suspects that the bullet that killed his
elderly assistant might’ve been meant for him. Signed Copies Available. Karen favorite series.
Max Allan Collins, Majic Man (Sept., Dutton
hc, 23.95). It’s 1949 and Nate Heller is called to DC to help retiring
Defense Secretary James Forrestal. Heller’s
investigation of death threats links up with some odd reports coming from a
little town in New Mexico called Roswell…10th
in a series that is a favorite of JB’s. ( See Gone, But Not Forgotten.)
Susan Rogers Cooper, Not in My Backyard (Nov., Avon pbo, 5.99). 6th
with sometimes sleuth E. J. Pugh, of Black Cat Ridge, TX.
Tom Corcoran, Gumbo Limbo (Sept., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). New Alex
Rutledge mystery by the author of The
Mango Opera. The Key West
crime-scene photographer is awakened by a drunk Navy buddy—who seems to be
in serious danger.
Elizabeth M. Cosin, Zen and the City of Angels (Oct.,
St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). An
easy case of finding a friend’s missing dog turns deadly when Zen finds a
faceless corpse.
Michael Crichton, Timeline (Nov., Knopf hc,
26.95). The publisher must assume
you need no further information, since there was no plot description in the
catalog.
Barbara D’Amato, Help Me Please (Oct.,
Forge hc, 23.95). 30 minutes after a 3 year-old is kidnapped, a new site on
the web appears – featuring the child.
Chicago cop Polly Kelly must find her before the girl is harmed.
Jeanne M. Dams, The Victim in Victoria Station (Sept., Walker hc, 23.95). 5th Dorothy Martin. Aboard a train to London, Dorothy
meets a young man who ends up dead before they reach their destination.
Dianne Day, Death Train to Boston (Sept.,
Doubleday hc, 21.95). 5th in series. Fremont vanishes after a train she and Michael are working on
blows up. He’s injured, but
where is she? B Jo recommends.
Edward Dee, Nightbird (Oct., Warner hc, 23.95). 4th
in the gritty NYC cops series with detectives Ryan and Gregory.
James D. Doss, The Night Visitor (Sept.,
Avon hc, 23.00). 6th in Shaman series.
Carole Nelson Douglas, Cat in a Jeweled Jumpsuit (Nov.,
Forge hc, 24.95). 11th cat caper with Midnight Louie.
Loren D. Estleman, Thunder City (Nov., Forge
hc, 22.95; signed copies, 23.95).
To get the funds to invest in the early car industry, Harlan Crownover is
forced to deal with the devil: the
Midwest’s most powerful political boss and a visionary mafiosa. Allies at first, they become mortal
enemies. Latest in the “Detroit
Series.” Bill can hardly wait.
Linda Fairstein, Cold Hit (Sept., Scribner
hc, 25.00). ADA Alexandra Cooper
gets involved in the murder of wealthy art collector Denise Caxton, whose
silk-clad body washes ashore at Manhattan Island’s northern tip. 3rd in series.
Connie Feddersen, Dead in the Hay (Sept.,
Kensington pbo, 5.99). 7th with CPA Amanda Hazard. Just settling
into marriage, Amanda’s life gets busy again when her least favorite client
is found dead on his ranch.
Monica Ferris, Framed in Lace (Oct.,
Berkley pbo, 5.99). 2nd Betsy Devonshire needlecraft mystery. Clues to a skeleton come from a
fragment of fabric.
Judy Fitzwater, Dying for a Clue (Oct., Fawcett pbo, 5.99). 3rd
with aspiring mystery author Jennifer March, amidst the world of authors,
agents and publishers.
Katherine V. Forrest, Sleeping Bones (Sept.,
Berkley hc, 21.95) 7th in the Lambda-Award-winning series with LA
cop Kate Delafield.
Frederick Forsyth, The Phantom of Manhattan (Nov.,
St. Martin’s hc, 19.95). A continuation of The Phantom of the Opera, set 20 years
after the events in Paris.
Dick Francis, Second Wind (Sept.,
Putnam hc, 24.95). British TV meteorologist Perry Stuart is respected for his
theoretical knowledge of hurricanes. A
chance to see one up close leads to threats and danger.
Michael Frayn, Headlong (Sept., Holt hc,
26.00). Witty, satirical story of a philosopher who believes that a boorish
neighbor has a lost painting by Bruegel.
He schemes to prove that he is right and to separate it from its owner
in a grand con in which he must bet everything he has. Karen says, “wonderful.”
Caroline Garcia-Aguilera, A Miracle in Paradise (Oct.,
Avon hc, 23.00). 4th with Miami PI Lupe Solano.
Elizabeth George, In Pursuit of the Proper Sinner (Sept., Bantam
hc, 25.95). Detectives Lynley and
Havers investigate two bodies found by Nine Sisters Henge, prehistoric stones
in Derbyshire. Signing?
Ron Goulart, Elementary, My Dear Groucho (Nov.,
St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). 3rd
in series set in Hollywood in the 1930s. Groucho and his sidekick Frank Denby
investigate a murder during the filming of Valley of Fear.
Sue Grafton, O is for Outlaw (Oct.,
Holt hc, 26.00). Kinsey gets an old, undelivered letter from her ex-husband.
Caroline Graham, A Place of Safety (Sept.,
St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). 6th Inspector Barnaby mystery. The English village of Ferne Basset is
in a fine uproar when the death of an unpopular resident and a missing girl
upset long-kept secrets. This is
a dazzling series. Bill, B Jo, Karen, and Sandy
recommend.
Martha Grimes, The Lamorna Wink (Oct.,
Viking hc, 22.95) Richard Jury returns in his 16th case. Signing.
Paul Griner, Collectors (Sept., Random
House hc, 19.95). Jean is drawn to a stranger who’s lost the last two women
in his life to mysterious deaths. Both
are collectors—he gathers binoculars, she looks for antique pens—and a
suspenseful and ominous relationship unfolds.
Batya Gur, Murder Duet (Nov., Harper
hc, 25.00). After a 5-year hiatus, Israeli cop Michale Ohayon returns to
investigate the deaths of the brother and father of a cellist with whom he has
become involved.
Jean Hager, Weigh Dead (Nov., Avon
pbo, 5.99) 6th cozy in the Iris House B & B series.
Parnell Hall, A Clue For the Puzzle Lady (Nov.,
Bantam hc, 23.95). Debut in new
series. When a teenager is found
murdered with a scrap of crossword puzzle in her pocket, Police Chief Harper
turns to Cora Felton, the town’s modern day Miss Marple. (And
see Gone, But Not Forgotten for
another series by Hall.)
Lauren Haney, A Vile Justice (Oct., Avon pbo, 5.99). 3rd
book in the Ancient Egyptian series with Lt. Bak.
Janet Hannah, The Wish to Kill (Nov.,
Soho hc, 21.00). Debut mystery. Biochemist
Alex Kertesz discovers the body of an unpopular fellow professor in their lab
at the University of Jerusalem. Being
a man of science, he must rationally discover the how and who.
Charlaine Harris, A Fool and His Honey (Sept., St.
Martin’s, 22.95). Aurora
Teagarden, newly married, returns in her 6th Southern adventure.
Fred Harris, Coyote Revenge (Nov.,
Harper hc, 24.00.) Set in 1930s Oklahoma,
Carolyn Hart, White Elephant Dead (Sept.,
Avon hc, 23.00). 11th Annie Darling. A blackmailer requires 5 prominent citizens to contribute to
the annual White Elephant sale or face the publicity of unsavory facts. When
volunteers for the sale begin to die, Annie steps in.
Ellen Hart, Hunting the Witch (Sept.,
St. Martin’s hc, 24.95). 9th
in series with restaurateur Jane Lawless, who reluctantly investigates the
death of her lover’s patient.
Tim Hemlin, Dead Man’s Broth (Nov.,
Ballantine pbo, 5.99). 5th with Houston chef/sleuth Neil Marshall.
Vicki Hendricks, Iguana Love (Oct.,
Serpent’s Tale hc, 23.00). Ramona
is a thrill-seeker who finds body-building, scuba diving and husband
insufficient. Enzo is one man she can’t dominate, and he leads her into a
violent world of sex, danger, heroin and murder. Finally,
a new book from the author of Miami
Purity, a staff favorite. Signing.
Reginald Hill, Arms and the Women (Sept.,
Delacorte hc, 23.95). Someone is after Pascoe’s family, and he and Dalziel
look into past cases for a lead. Karen highly recommends: “The best book I’ve
read this year.”
Reginald Hill, Singing the Sadness (Sept.,
St. Martin’s, 24.95). 4th
with black British P. I. Joe Sixsmith. On
a bus trip to Wales, Joe rescues a nude woman from a burning cottage that was
supposed to be empty; the owner hires Joe to find out who the mystery woman is—
the owner’s wife secretly hires
Joe for the same purpose.
David Housewright, Dearly Departed (Oct.,
Norton hc, 23.95). 3rd with St. Paul, MN private eye Holland
Taylor. The 1st in
this series, Penance, won the 1995
Edgar for Best First Novel.
Greg Iles, The Quiet Game (Sept.,
Dutton hc, 24.95). Prosecutor
Penn Cage returns, with his daughter, to his hometown of Natchez, MS, after
his wife’s death. Trying to
help his father out of trouble, he’s soon submerged in a 30 year-old case of
racial murder. Karen
highly recommends. A favorite author of Susan’s.
Bill James, Eton Crop (Nov., Norton
hc, 22.95). 15th in the noted Harpur & Iles series. A drug war explodes in London between
rival syndicates.
Robert Janes, Carousel (Nov., Soho tpo, 12.00). 2nd
in the WWII series with St-Cyr of the Sûreté and Kohler of the Gestapo (5th
to be issued by Soho). Now in trade paperback, Mannequin (12.00), 4th in the series.
Dolores Johnson, Wash, Fold, and Die (Oct.,
Dell pob, 5.99). 4th in the Mandy Dyer series. A laundry mark on a
dead man’s shirt leads back to Mandy’s shop.
Julie Kaewert, Untitled (Nov., Bantam
pbo, 5.99). Alex Plumtree acquires a rare book thought to have been destroyed
centuries ago. He’s invited to join a select society of book collectors—then
the book disappears.
Stuart
Kaminsky, Vengeance (Sept., Forge hc, 22.95). Debut of a
new series by the Edgar Award-winning author of the Inspector Rostnikov
series, and the Toby Peters series. Having fled Illinois and memories of his
late wife, Lew Fonseca ends up in Sarasota, Florida, doing investigative work
for local lawyers.
Carroll Lachnit, Janie’s Law (Oct.,
Berkley pbo, 6.50). 4th with lawyer Hannah Barlow.
Joe R. Lansdale, Freezer Burn (Sept.,
Mysterious Press hc, 23.95). Stand-alone thriller from the twisted pen that
produced Bad Chili and Rumble Tumble. Terminal loser Bill runs
from the botched robbery of a fireworks stand and, bitten from the neck up by
thousands of mosquitoes, joins a cut-rate traveling freak-show. Amidst the other freaks, a mysterious,
frozen man holds sway.
Janet LaPierre, Baby Mine (Sept., Daniel
& Daniel tpo, 12.95). 6th in Port Silva, Northern California
coast series.
Jonathan Lethem, Motherless Brooklyn (Sept.,
Doubleday hc, 23.95). A gritty, uproarious tale of a Brooklyn P. I. with trouble: a dead boss, women, and an uncontrollable case of Tourette’s
Syndrome.
Laura Lippman, In Big Trouble (Sept.,
Avon pbo, 6.50). 4th in the Edgar– and Agatha-Award-winning
series with Baltimore PI Tess Monaghan.
Mary Logue, Blood Country (Oct.,
Walker hc, 23.95). Debut in new series. Big-city cop Clare Watkins takes her
daughter to small-town Wisconsin after her husband dies in a hit-and-run
accident. Unknown to Clare, her daughter saw the driver, and he saw her. Trouble follows.
Marianne Macdonald, Smoke Screen (Nov., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). London
bookseller Dido Hoare offers to buy the collection of an eccentric Oxford
woman, and finds herself suspected of murder and the theft of a valuable
manuscript.
David Lozell Martin, Pelikan (Nov., Simon
& Schuster hc, 23.00). In New
Orleans, a scam artist gets entangled with a group of nuns, a hurricane and an
overabundance of clowns while trying to recover a stolen icon.
Julia Wallis Martin, The Bird Yard (Sept., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). A new
psychological thriller from the author of A Likeness in Stone, an Edgar-Award
nominee last year. Detective
Parker investigates the disappearance of young boys who seem fascinated by the
aviary attached to an abandoned house. “The next Minette Walters” ?
Adrian Mathews, Vienna Blood (Sept.,
Harper hc, 24.00). A future-noir thriller set in 2028 Vienna. In looking into
the hit-and-run death of a man he met once months earlier, reporter Sharkey
stumbles into a conspiratorial network of eugenics. Debut novel.
Archer Mayor, Occam’s Razor (Nov., Mysterious Press hc,
23.95). Vermont police detective Joe Gunther is faced with a man crushed on
the train tracks, witnesses who say he was placed there by three men, and an
abandoned truck with traces of toxic waste.
Ed McBain, The Last Dance (Nov.,
Simon & Schuster hc, 25.00). The
fiftieth 87th Precinct.
Lise McClendon, Nordic Nights (Nov.,
Walker hc, 23.95). In her 3rd Wyoming mystery, art dealer Alix
Thorssen tries to help her stepfather who is found standing over the dead body
of a Norwegian artist.
Mel McKinney, Where There’s Smoke (Oct.,
St. Martin’s hc, 22.95). First
novel by a retired trial lawyer. An unusual twist on the JFK assassination,
involving Pierre Salinger and 1100 cigars.
Annette Meyers, Free Love (Oct.,
Mysterious Press hc, 23.95). Beginning of a new series set in Greenwich
Village during the roaring '20s. Young
and beautiful poet Olivia Brown is determined to experience all of life,
including death when she looks into murder of a stranger.
Deanie Francis Mills, Torch (Oct., Signet pbo,
6.99). Tracking a serial arsonist, a reporter realizes that he seems to know
everything about her.
Miriam Grace Monfredo, Must the Maiden Die (Sept.,
Berkley hc, 21.95). 5th in the Seneca Falls series. In 1861, with
whispers of war, Glynis Tryon tries to help a slave girl accused of murder.
Walter Mosley, Walkin’ the Dog (Oct., Little Brown hc,
24.95). It’s nine years since Socrates got out of prison. A girlfriend, a steady job and a
two-legged dog give him hope, but the cops keep fingering him for every crime
in the area. Signed Copies Available.
Henry Mynton, The Pachinko Woman (Nov.,
Morrow hc, 25.00). Helim Kim is a
Korean woman raised in Tokyo and now living in LA. Her political ties are vast
and, now that she’s fallen for a liberal US lawyer, some Asian power has
sent an assassin.
Katherine Hall Page, The Body in the Big Apple (Nov.,
Morrow hc, 22.00). A prequel to the series brings Faith Fairchild to New York
City. 10th installment.
Charles Palliser, The Unburied (Nov., FSG
hc, 25.00). Part bibliomystery,
part academic investigation and part historical thriller, by the author of The Quincunx .
Sara Paretsky, Hard Time (Oct.,
Delacorte hc, 24.95). After stopping to aid a woman lying in the street, V. I.
Warshawski finds herself in a deadly game run by Global Entertainment and one
of the world’s largest security firms. Signed Copies Available.
Robert B. Parker, Family Honor (Sept., Putnam hc, 22.95). Boston PI Sunny Randall calls upon
underground contacts to find a runaway; then the girl refuses to return home. Signed Copies, we hope.
Owen Parry, Faded Coat of Blue (Oct.,
Avon hc, 23.00). Englishman Abel Jones gets to the US just as the Civil War
erupts; acting as a secret agent for Union General McClellan, he investigates
the death of a young officer.
James Patterson, Pop! Goes the Weasel (Oct., Little Brown hc,
26.95). Alex Cross’s fiancée becomes a target when he matches wits with a
British diplomat who’s the chief suspect in a series of ghastly murders.
Richard North Patterson, Dark Lady (Aug., Knopf hc, 25.95). In
a Midwest city, two prominent men are found dead; one a contractor building a
new baseball park, and one a drug dealer’s attorney of choice.
Eliot Pattison, The Skull Mantra (Sept., St. Martin’s hc,
24.95). The best man to
investigate a headless body on a Tibetan mountainside is in jail for offending
the Party. Eager to close the
case before a delegation of Westerners arrives, officials release him with an
ultimatum: solve the crime fast or priests in the work prison will suffer.
Joanne Pence, A Cook in Time (Oct., Harper pbo, 5.99). 7th culinary case for Angie
Amalfi, who’s asked to put on a dinner for a group of UFO chasers. Recipes included.Anne Perry, The Twisted Root
(Oct., Ballantine hc, 25.00). 10th
Victorian mystery with William Monk, newly married.
Ian Rankin, Dead Souls (Oct., St.
Martin’s hc, 24.95). Scottish
Inspector Rebus has his plate full: a
convicted murderer free on parole, a pedophile living near a playground, and
an old sweetheart whose teenage son is missing.
10th in the award-winning series. Signing.
Ruth Rendell, Harm Done (Nov., Crown
hc, 24.00). Insp. Wexford’s investigation into domestic violence merges with
his daughter’s work in a battered women’s shelter.
J. D. Robb, Loyalty in Death (Oct.,
Berkley pbo, 6.99). New York cop Eve Dallas faces an unknown bomber.
John Maddox
Roberts, SPQR V: Saturnalia (Oct., St. Martin’s hc, 23.95). 5th in the series and
never before available in English. Decius Caecilius Metellus the
Younger, the playboy detective of Ancient Rome, returns from his enjoyable
exile on Rhodes to help in a sensitive investigation of husband-poisoning in
one of Rome’s leading families. Also
being re-issued: SPQR III: The Sacrilege and SPQR
IV: The Temple of the Muses (Oct.,
tp,13.95 each). A favorite series of Karen’s.
S. J. Rozan, Stone Quarry (Sept., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). Summoned by an upstate reclusive artist, Bill is asked
to recover 6 stolen paintings. He and Lydia are soon hip-deep in rural
trouble. 6th in series.
Lisa See, The Interior (Oct.,
Harper hc, 25.00). Chinese cop Liu Hulan and attorney David Stark investigate
a factory owned by an American conglomerate but sited in China’s vast
interior.
Jane Shapiro, The Dangerous Husband (Sept.,
Little Brown hc, 22.95). To a new bride, her husband’s proclivity toward
horrific accidents grows from being bad luck to being dangerous. In this satire of every marriage, she
begins to wonder if she should kill him first…
Barry Siegel, Actual Innocence (Oct.,
Ballantine hc, 24.95). Lawyer Greg Monarch returns from The Perfect Witness to help his former lover Sarah Trant, who has
been convicted of murder and sentenced to death.
Shelly Singer, Royal Flush (Oct., Daniel
& Daniel tpo, 12.95). P.I. Jake Samson now works for Rosie Vicente, and
they go undercover into an East Bay gang to help a young warrior named Royal
escape. 6th in this series.
Carol Smith, The Neighbors (Nov., Warner hc, 23.95).
Fleeing an abusive relationship, Kate faces a grim Christmas. The neighbors in her London apartment
are an odd, but tight and friendly lot—until one of them is murdered.
Troy Soos, Hanging Curve (Sept.,
Kensington hc, 22.00). Mickey Rawlings gets a chance to do what few major
league players of the time could: play
against the often superior athletes in the Negro League. But racial trouble follows, and
murder.
Karen Sturges, Death of a Baritone (Nov.,
Bantam pbo, 5.99). Debut. Phoebe
Mullins is working in a Hamptons Summer opera colony when a singer is
murdered.
Thomas Swan, The Final Faberge (Sept.,
Newmarket hc, 23.95). Scotland Yard’s Jack Oxby faces killers hunting a
priceless Faberge egg commissioned by Rasputin.
Lou Jane Temple, The Cornbread Killer (Nov., St.
Martin’s hc, 23.95). Kansas
City chef Heaven Lee tackles soul food and murder when a jazz festival comes
to town.
Peter Tremayne, The Subtle Serpent (Oct.,
Signet pbo, 5.99). 4th in the medieval Irish series with Sister
Fidelma.
Margaret Truman, Murder at the Library of Congress (Nov., Random House hc, 25.00). A possible second diary by Columbus
leads Annabel Smith into more intrigue.
Scott Turow, Personal Injuries (Sept.,
FSG hc, 27.00). Robbie Feaver is a lawyer caught with a bribe account. FBI agent Evon Miller has secrets of
her own. Their stories converge
in a world of greed and failings.
Andrew Vachss, Everybody Pays (Sept.,
Vintage tpo, 13.00). The “neo-noir master’s” second volume of short
fiction.
Janwillem van de Wetering, The Amsterdam Cops: Collected Stories (Sept., Soho hc, 22.00). Complete collection of all 13 Grijpstra and
de Gier short stories. Five of the stories have never been collected in book
form before and three of those have never been published in the US.
Donald E. Westlake, A Good Story and Other Stories (Five Star hc, 21.95). A new collection of 18
stories, reprinted from magazines; selected by Westlake.
Some Special Agatha Christie Releases
The Unexpected Guest, by Agatha Christie, adapted by Charles Osborne, (Oct., St. Martin’s, 23.95). A
play written in 1958, adapted as a novel by Christie biographer Osborne, who
previously adapted Black Coffee. A traveler in rural Scotland runs
his car into a ditch in the middle of the night. When he seeks help at the nearest
house, he finds a murdered man and a woman holding a gun. And in pb, Black Coffee (Sept., St.
Martin’s, 6.99).
Getaway Guide to Agatha Christie, by
Judith Hurdle (Aug., RDR tpo,
16.95). As much an armchair
read as a travel book, it includes maps and itineraries for trips of 1 to 3
weeks.
The World of Agatha Christie, by Martin Fido (Nov., Adams Media hc, 20.00). A heavily illustrated gift book
devoted to the life, times and works of the Queen of Mysteries.
Doug Cushman, Aunt Eater’s Mystery Halloween (Oct., Harper pbo, 3.95). A seasonal mystery for very young mystery fans.
Edward Gorey, The Headless Bust (Oct.,
Harcourt hc, 15.00). The cast of The Haunted Tea-Cozy return for “A Melancholy Meditation on the False
Millennium.”
Kick Ass: Selectied Columns of Carl Hiaasen (Nov., Univ. of Florida Press hc, 24.95). For the many fans of Carl Hiaasen, here are some of his
newspaper columns.
The Book on the
Bookshelf, by Henry Petroski (Sept., Knopf hc, 26.00). Historian
traces the history of the book, book buying, and book collecting.
New York Noir: Crime Photos from The Daily News, by William Hannigan (Oct.,
Rizzoli hc, 29.95). 130 actual photos, 40 years of crime, documented from the
archives of The Daily News.
The Noir Style, by
Alain Silver & James Ursini (Nov.,
Overlook hc, 50.00). A 10”x11” photographic record of the classic noir style, with shots from movies from
1941 through 1958.
Pure Pulp, edited
by Ed Gorman and Bill Pronzini. (Nov., Carroll & Graf tpo, 12.95). Classic short pulp fiction from the
masters: Bloch, McBain, Goodis,
Hughes, John D., Brackett and Brown.
A Taste of
Murder, by Jo Grossman and Robert
Weibezahl (Sept., Delacorte tpo,
14.95). 150 recipes from famous mystery authors, such as Hillerman, Grafton,
Braun, Maron, McCrumb, and Parker.
Quinn Fawcett, The Flying Scotsman (Oct.,
Forge hc, 23.95). 3rd Mycroft Holmes mystery features a wedding and
an attempted assassination aboard the famous train.
Michael Hardwick, The Revenge of the Hound (Oct.,
Pocket tp, 14.00). Reissue.
More Holmes for
the Holidays, ed. by Greenberg et. al.,(Oct., Berkley hc, 21.95). New Holmes
short stories by today’s authors, including Perry, Estleman, Lovesey, Wheat
and Greenwood.
Larry Millett, Sherlock Holmes and the Rune Stone Mystery (Oct., Viking hc, 23.95). Holmes travels to Minnesota to authenticate
an ancient stone. And in pb, Sherlock
Holmes and the Ice Palace Murders (Oct., Penguin, 5.99).Signing.
Sherlock Holmes
in Japan, by Keith E. Webb (Available
now, Nextchurch Resources, tpo, 10.00). An
historical overview of the popularity of Holmes in Japan and a look at the
source of Japanese references in the Canon. Signed Copies Available.
Wayne Worchester, The Monster of Marylebone: The Journals of Dr. Watson (Nov., Signet pbo, 5.99). Dr. Watson tells all..
Susan Wittig Albert, Chile Death (Oct.,
Berkley, 6.50).
Bruce Alexander, Jack, Knave and Fool (Oct.,
Berkley, 6.50).
David Baldacci, The Simple Truth (Oct.,
Warner, 7.99).
Carol Lee Benjamin, A Hell of a Dog (Sept.,
Dell, 5.99).
Gail Bowen, Verdict in Blood (Oct.,
McClelland & Stewart, 7.95).
Lawrence Block, Everybody Dies (Nov.,
Avon, 6.99). 14th Scudder.
Patricia Carlon, Crime of Silence (Oct.,
Soho, 12.00).
Tom Corcoran, The Mango Opera (Sept.,
St. Martin’s, 5.99). JB & Tammy recommend this debut.
Jill Churchill, The Merchant of Menace (Oct.,
Avon, 6.50).
Elizabeth Cosin, Zen and the Art of Murder (Oct.,
St. Martin’s, 5.99).
Nora DeLoach, Mama Rocks the Cradle (Nov.,
Bantam, 5.99). Tammy recommends this series.
Carole Nelson Douglas, Cat in an Indigo Mood (Oct.,
Forge, 6.99).
Loren D. Estleman, The Witchfinder (Sept.,
Warner, 6.50). Amos Walker.
Bill Fitzhugh, The Organ Grinders (Sept.,
Avon, 6.50).
Dick Francis, Field of Thirteen (Oct.,
Jove, 6.99).
Kinky Friedman, Blast from the Past (Oct.,
Ballantine, 11.95).
Jonathan Gash, Prey Dancing (Nov.,
Penguin, 5.99).
Martha Grimes, The Stargazey (Oct.,
Onyx, 6.99).
Charlaine Harris, Shakespeare’s Christmas (Nov.,
Dell, 5.99).
Reginald Hill, On Beulah Height (Sept.,
Dell, 6.50).
Craig Holden, Four Corners of the Night (Oct.,
Dell, 7.50). JB says Best Book of ’99?
Maureen Jennings, Under the Dragon’s Tail (Oct.,
Harper, 5.99).
Joseph Kanon, The Prodigal Spy (Nov., Dell, 7.50).
Jonathan Kellerman, Billy Straight (Oct.,
Ballantine, 7.99).
Joe R. Lansdale, Rumble Tumble (Sept.,
Warner, 6.50).
Lia Matera, Havana Twist (Nov.,
Pocket, 6.99). Willa Jansson.
Archer Mayor, The Disposable Man (Nov.,
Warner, 6.50).
Ed McBain, The Big Bad City (Nov.,
Pocket, 6.99). 87th Precinct.
Walter Mosley, Blue Light (Oct., Warner, 6.99).
Darian North, Violation (Oct., Signet,
6.99).
Katherine Hall Page, The Body in the Bookcase (Nov.,
Avon, 6.50).
Robert B. Parker, Trouble in Paradise (Oct.,
Jove, 6.99).
James Patterson, When the Wind Blows (Sept.,
Warner, 7.99).
Iain Pears, The Last Judgement (Oct.,
Berkley, 6.50). Sandy and Karen recommend this
series.
George Pelecanos, The Big Blowdown (Sept.,
St. Martin’s, 14.95).
Sharon Kay Penman, Cruel As the Grave (Nov.,
Ballantine, 12.00).
Ian Rankin, The Hanging Garden (Sept.,
St. Martin‘s, 5.99).
John Ridley, Love Is a Racket (Oct.,
Ballantine, 6.99).
Peter Robinson, A Dedicated Man (Nov.,
Avon, 6.99). Reissue of the 2nd Banks, long out of print.
Tom Savage, The Inheritance (Oct.,
Signet, 6.99).
Richard Stark (aka Donald
Westlake), Backflash (Sept., Mysterious Press, 12.00).
On JB’s List of 1998 Best.
Lou Jane Temple, Bread on Arrival (Nov.,
St. Martin’s, 5.99).
Mary-Ann Tirone Smith, An American Killing (Nov.,
Fawcett, 6.99).
Kathy Hogan Trocheck, Midnight Clear (Nov., Harper, 5.99).
Randy Wayne White, The Mangrove Coast
(Nov., Berkley, 6.50).
Marc Behm, Eye of the Beholder (Nov.,
Ballantine, 5.99). Reissue of a long out-of-print 1980 classic, an obsessive
and hallucinogenic private eye novel. The
Eye watches a woman during a cross-country chase, and falls for her though
she’s a killer. Highly recommended by G. M. Ford – a terrific and odd
book.
This
issue’s item is a neat little book that has been around – literally –
for years. It is Al Capone: The Biography of a
Self-Made Man by Fred D. Pasley. It is a 6th printing of a
hardcover from 1930 in very nice shape (may we all look so good at 61), with
fading to the dj’s spine. What
is neat about this is that tucked into the back of the book are newspaper
articles and photos from the 30s, including the famous one of Al and son being
greeted by the Cubs’ catcher.
This is a
sealed-bid auction. One bid per
person. Bids may be submitted by
phone, in person, by e-mail or by regular mail.
Bidding begins at $30, and ends on Sept 20th.
No one bid on
our last item, Steve Martini’s first book, The Simeon Chamber – a great surprise
to us considering its scarcity – so it will remain in our glass case,
available to whatever lucky person didn’t see our Summer newsletter.
Gone
But Not Forgotten
Recently a customer who had
just discovered Ellis Peters’ Brother Cadfael series came into the store. He wanted to read the series in order,
and he had a long list of books he needed to complete his collection. We had them all, and he left with a
large bag of books, and many hours of reading pleasure ahead. And we were very happy—because as
well as being booksellers, we are also readers and fans of good mysteries, and
we don’t like to deliver the bad news that another favorite author is now
out of print. Since we stock the
backlist of mystery authors as long as possible, and have a large inventory of
used books to fill any gaps, we can postpone the bad news longer than most. But here are some authors and books we
would like to see readily available in fresh new printings:
Margaret
Scherf wrote over twenty mysteries between 1940 and 1979, including four
series and several stand-alones. One
series features Dr. Grace Severance, a retired forensic pathologist whose
adventures relieve the tedium she feels in company with her younger, stuffier
family members. In Banker’s Bones (1968), she is staying in a small Arizona desert
town with her niece when a missing banker from California is reported to be in
the area. Grace’s medical
skills and logical deductions are called upon, and her wry wit makes for an
enjoyable read.
Elizabeth
Daly was Agatha Christie’s favorite American mystery author. She began writing at age 62, then
wrote 16 mysteries between 1940 and 1954, all with the bibliophile sleuth
Henry Gamadge. Quiet, understated but with nice puzzles, these books provide a
window on a world gone, but interesting to visit. In Death and Letters (1950) Gamadge
receives a mysterious message encoded in a crossword puzzle that leads him to
a wealthy widow being held captive by her avaricious relatives.
--Sandy
Goodrick
____________________________________________________
While
there are any number of authors and/or books to nominate, these come to mind
since their newer books appear in this newsletter:
Max Allan Collins. I’d love to be able to stock the early Nate Heller books: the “Nitty Trilogy” (the first
three Hellers), Stolen Away (the
Lindberg kidnapping), and Neon Mirage
(Bugsy Seigel and Las Vegas). History
and mystery – real and fictional characters – and plausable solutions.
Richard Hoyt’s John Denson books. Seattle PI Denson was perhaps the
first of the “soft boiled” PIs. Witty
and sharp.
Loren D. Estleman’s
Amos Walker books. These Detroit
PI novels are THE FINEST
Chandleresque PI novels being currently written. The first 10 are out of
print.
--J. B. Dickey
I
could write a book about all of my favorite mysteries that are out-of-print,
but my book would go O.P. in an instant itself, so I’ll scratch that idea. And fortunately many O.P. titles are
available in used copies or British import editions at Seattle Mystery
Bookshop (we even have a section of out-of-print classics at $2 apiece,
featuring good stuff by Douglas Clark, and others, which we cunningly
stockpiled years ago). So I’ll
confine my list to a few of my favorites which we seldom see in any form.
1. Five books by Parnell Hall,
written under the pseudonym of J. P.
Hailey. They feature attorney
Steve Winslow, and generally involve genuinely funny comic courtroom scenes.
2. The Sergeant Cribb 19th century English police novels by the
very versatile Peter Lovesey. The best, Swing, Swing Together, is a riff on Jerome K. Jeromes’s classic
novel, Three Men in a Boat.
3. The Ben Perkins private eye novels by Rob Kantner. Ben’s
day job is maintenance supervisor at a large apartment complex outside
Detroit. (In one of Loren
Estleman’s Amos Walker novels, Amos is too busy to take on another case, so
he refers the client to Ben Perkins.)
4. The Murder of Miranda, by Margaret Millar. This is a very humorous mystery by the
respected author of many more serious works.
5. Blood on the Dining Room Floor,
by Gertrude Stein. Having read this, I’m not sure
whether it’s humorous or not, but it’s certainly different. Actually, I’ll stick with Margaret
Millar, thanks.
6.
Three books by Kenneth Hopkins
featuring 83-year-old Dr. Blow and his side-kick Prof. Manciple. The professor
has to do all the leg work, as he’s a mere 81 years old. Body
Blow, Dead Against My Principles,
She Died Because… Delightful British humour.
We rarely see these, but hey,
part of the fun of the used book business is that you never know what will
turn up next, so check with us. If
they’re not here right now, we’ll be glad to put your name in our Want
File, and let you know when we find them.
Meanwhile we have lots of good mysteries readily available—but that’s
another story.
--Bill Farley
————————————————————————————
Gar Anthony Haywood writes two series: Aaron Gunner, and the hilarious
Loudermilk books. Both volumes of the Loudermilk’s adventures in their
Airstream are readily available, as are his last two Gunners, It’s Not a Pretty Sight and When Last Seen Alive, both in paperback
at $5.99 each.
His first three Gunners have
been out of print for a while now. The first, Fear of the Dark (published 4 years
before Walter Mosley’s first book) was the winner of the St. Martin’s/ PWA
Best First Private Eye Novel
Contest, and the Best First Novel for the 1987 Shamus. The second, Not Long For This World, and the third,
You Can Die Trying do show up in
used paperback. Jump in wherever
you can with this contemporary L.A. PI who can be viewed as Easy Rawlins’
wise-acre little bro.
--Tammy Domike
_______________________________________________________
1. Caroline Graham (Insp. Barnaby series) and Reginald Hill (Dalziel and Pascoe
novels) are two of the finest
novelists now writing in English—but are the excellent beginnings of these
superb series still in print? Not
in the U. S. of A.
The Good News: New
novels by both authors are still being published here (see New Releases), and we are
often able to stock used or British editions of the out-of- Print titles. A reliable U. S. supply would be soooo
much more gratifying…
2. Donald E. Westlake’s Dortmunder series: The
Hot Rock, Bank Shot, Good
Behavior—titles from some of the funniest crime capers ever
written. Westlake’s hapless
crook John Dortmunder and his bizarre crew travel a road strewn with irony and
insanity, without the degrees of sleaze and violence that characterize darker
humorists.
The Good News: Trust Me on This and Baby,
Would I Lie?, Westlake’s more cynically humorous takes on tabloid
journalism, are still available!
3. Michael Malone, Time’s
Witness: Rich Southern
mystery by an accomplished mainstream novelist.
The Good News: Uncivil Seasons, the sequel, is still in print.
4. Ellis Peters’ non-series mysteries include The
Will and the Deed, Holiday with
Violence, and Most Loving Mere Folly,
excellent works rich with suspense and psychological insight.
The Good News: All of her medieval series
about Brother Cadfael are in print, as are many of the George Felse police
procedurals.
--Karen Duncan
_______________________________________________________
Outside the Rules, by Dylan Jones (1995).
If you can find this book
and you can stand grisly, drop everything and start on page one. It makes Silence of the
Lambs seem like a bit of a cozy. Tom Meridith was left alive after
watching a serial killer torture and kill his girlfriend. His memories and his life have stopped and the killer hasn’t. In comes forensic psychiatrist Natalie
Vine to help him recover and remember in hopes of finding this killer. There are scenes in this book that I
will never forget. Some research
on the author turns up that he is a physician in Wales and has written one
novel before this one and one after. The
first one is out of print, too. Bummer!
--Susan Dennis
Mail
and phone orders for these or any other books are welcome. We often have signed copies of
Northwest authors, and other authors who visit the shop. Prices subject to change without
notice. Seattle Mystery Bookshop, 117 Cherry St., Seattle, WA 98104. Phone:
(206) 587-5737.
Email: staff@seattlemystery.com
NEW WEBSITE: seattlemystery.com
The
SEATTLE MYSTERY BOOKSHOP NEWS is composed and produced by Sandy Goodrick, and
brought to you online by Susan Dennis.