From the group keeping mystery & crime stories in the public eye since 1996
Friday, January 31, 2020
SleuthSayers Blog: What's a Plot? by O'Neil De Noux
SleuthSayers: What's a Plot?: I was asked about plot often when I taught creative writing classes and put together a lecture from information obtained from too many sour...
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
SMFS Member Publishing News: Frank Zafiro
SMFS list member Frank Zafiro’s new book, In
The Cut: A SpoCompton Crime Novel is now out from Down & Out Books.
The read is available in both print and eBook formats from Amazon and
other vendors.
Synopsis:
Boone has been prospecting with the Iron Brotherhood outlaw motorcycle gang for almost a year, trying to earn his patch with the club. When a simple muscle job goes terribly wrong, his world changes forever.
He is quickly plunged deeper into a world of drug and intimidation,
and the lines between right and wrong blur. The bonds of brotherhood that he
forges with other members clash with the dark actions they take. His
girlfriend, Faith, represents a danger of another kind, but Boone can’t stop
himself where she is concerned, either.
Criminal Minds: Where Else? by Frank Zafiro
Criminal Minds: Where Else?: The crime and mystery fiction we tend to read can be very US and Europe centric. Where else in the world would you like to see a crime fi...
SleuthSayers: You've Tried The Rest; Now Read The Best by Robert Lopresti
SleuthSayers: You've Tried The Rest; Now Read The Best: This is my eleventh annual list of the best mystery stories of the year as chosen by me. They are selected from my weekly best-story-re...
Tuesday, January 28, 2020
Monday, January 27, 2020
SMFS Member Podcast: Alan Orloff
SMFS list member Alan Orloff’s short story, “Bark Simpson
and the Scent of Death” is currently the
subject of Mysteryrat’s
Maze Podcast. Actor Sean Hopper reads the tale.
Podcast Synopsis:
This episode features
the mystery short story, “Bark Simpson and the Scent of Death” by Alan Orloff,
read by local actor Sean Hopper. This story was published in Chesapeake Crimes:
Fur, Feathers, and Felonies in March or 2018. You can learn more about
Alan Orloff and his writing on his website alanorloff.com. In each episode, we share with you mystery
short stories and mystery novel first chapters read by actors from the San
Joaquin Valley. If you enjoyed this episode please review or rate it as that
helps more people be able to find us! Also, consider subscribing so you never
miss an episode. You can find more mystery fun on our websites Kings River Life Magazine and KRL News and Reviews.
Little Big Crimes Review: Head Over Heels by Craig Faustus Buck
Little Big Crimes: Head Over Heels, by Craig Faustus Buck: "Head Over Heels," by Craig Faustus Buck, in Murder-a-Go-Go's, edited by Holly West, Down and Out Books, 2019. This is th...
SMFS Members Nominated for the 2019 Agatha Awards
Established
in 1989, Malice
Domestic™ is an annual fan
convention in the metropolitan Washington D.C. area that celebrates the
traditional mystery, best typified by the works of Agatha Christie, containing
no explicit sex, excessive gore, or violence. Malice Domestic 32 (May 1-3, 2020)
sees seven SMFS list members up for an Agatha Award in three different
categories.
In the “Best
Short Story” category this year there are four members that are nominated.
Those members are:
Kaye
George for “Grist for the Mill” in A Murder of Crows (Darkhouse Books).
Barb
Goffman for “Alex’s Choice” in Crime Travel (Wildside Press)
Cynthia Kuhn
for “The Blue Ribbon” in Malice
Domestic 14: Mystery Most Edible (Wildside Press)
Art
Taylor for “Better Days” in Ellery Queen
Mystery Magazine: May/June 2019.
We also
have members up for Agatha Awards for longer works. Those members are:
Tara
Laskowski is up for the Agatha Award in the “Best First Mystery Novel” for One
Night Gone.
Ang
Pompano is up for the Agatha Award in the “Best First Mystery Novel” for When
It’s Time For Leaving.
Edith
Maxwell is up for the Agatha Award in the “Best Historical Novel” category for Charity’s
Burden: A Quaker Midwife Mystery (Midnight Ink).
SMFS
salutes our members on this honor and wishes them the best as they represent
SMFS at Malice Domestic. The full list
of nominees can be found at the Malice
Domestic website.
SMFS Members Nominated for the 2020 Edgar Awards
The nominees for 20209 Edgar
Awards, so named to honor Edgar Allen Poe, have been announced in the Mystery
Writers Of America. Winners will receive their awards on the evening of April 30,
2020 at the 74th Gala Banquet
in New York City. There are twelve categories in fiction and nonfiction and
SMFS list members have been nominated this year in three categories.
The nominated members and their categories are:
Susan Bickford for Dread
of Winter (Kensington Publishing) in the category of “Best Paperback Original.”
Tara Laskowski for One
Night Gone (Graydon House) in the category of “The Simon & Schuster Mary Higgins Clark
Award.”
Gigi Pandian for The
Alchemist’s Illusion in the category of “G. P. Putnam’s Sons Sue
Grafton Memorial Award.”
The SMFS salutes our list members
in this accomplishment and wish them all the best as they represent the SMFS.
The full list of all the nominees can be found on the MWA
website.
Sunday, January 26, 2020
A Short Walk Down A Dark Street: Issue 88
As posted by SMFS list member Peter DiChellis to our list….
This week’s blog lauds
short mystery and crime fiction with links to a wicked mix of reviews,
releases, free reads, and more.
Includes, Four free-to-read
stories in the new issue of Flash Bang Mysteries.
Plus, Tricks of the Trade:
the many different ways for characters to show anger and fear.
A short walk down a dark
street (#88).
Celebrating short mystery and crime fiction.
Best
wishes,
Peter
SleuthSayers Blog: Record Keeping by R. T. Lawton
SleuthSayers: Record Keeping: Two weeks ago, Travis posted his spreadsheet method for keeping track of his writing and his submissions. I can see how his method works fo...
Thursday, January 23, 2020
SMFS Members Published in Flash Bang Mysteries: Winter 2020
SMFS list members are published
in the just released Flash
Bang Mysteries: Winter 2020 issue. The members in this 18th issue are:
Herschel Cozine with “Generation
Gap.” This tale is the Cover Story as well as the “Editor’s Choice” selection.
Robert Petyo with “Time’s Up.”
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Little Big Crimes Review: The Righter Side by Reed Farrel Coleman
Little Big Crimes: The Righter Side, by Reed Farrel Coleman,: "The Righter Side," by Reed Farrel Coleman, in Down to the River, edited by Tim O'Mara, Down and Out Books, 2019. This is...
SleuthSayers Blog: Lessons Learned as a Freelancer by Michael Bracken
SleuthSayers: Lessons Learned as a Freelancer: I have been freelancing most of my life, but until April 2003 I did it as a side gig while gainfully employed. My initial attempts to freela...
Sunday, January 19, 2020
A Short Walk Down A Dark Street: Issue 87
As posted by Peter DiChellis to our SMFS list,
With my Wordpress access
back on track, this week’s blog keeps on rolling for short mystery and crime
fiction with links to reviews, releases, free reads, and more.
Includes: A collection of
previously uncollected stories by Patricia Highsmith (best known, of course,
for The Talented Mr. Ripley and Strangers on a Train).
Plus: The acquisitions
editor at Pulp Literature (paying market, open for submission
in all genres) gives quick tips on Developing Strong Characters, Forcing
Impossible Choices in Act II, and Two Exercises for Sparking Original Ideas.
A short walk down a dark
street (#87).
Celebrating short mystery and crime fiction.
Best
wishes,
Peter
SMFS Members Published in Mystery Readers Journal Private Eyes II
Several SMFS members have published
works in The Mystery Readers Journal: Private Eyes II (Volume 35, No. 4)
now out from Mystery Readers International. The read is in print and pdf formats on their website. The SMFS members in the issue are:
Jim Doherty with “Hard-Boiled Halley” as well as “The
Private Dicks Decalaogue.”
Paul D. Marks with “Knights in Tarnished Armor.”
M. A. Monnin with “A 30 Minute Dose of Gumshoe.”
Andrew Welsh-Huggins with “Discovering A Columbus Private
Eye.”
Website Synopsis:
Website Synopsis:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS II
§ Mr. Daly, Mr. Hammett and a Paternity Test by Kevin Burton Smith
§ Solving Life Itself: Why We Still Love Robert
B. Parker’s PIs by Jodi Compton
§ A 30-Minute Dose of Gumshoe by M.A. Monnin
§ Pushing the Private Eye Envelope by Jonathan Woods
§ San Francisco’s Finest—Candy Matson, Yukon
2-8209 by Jack French
§ Hard-Boiled Halley by Jim Doherty
§ The Private Eye as Cold-Warrior: Hammer vs.
the Hammer and Sickle by J. L. Abramo
AUTHOR! AUTHOR!
§ Best Places to Buy Burner Phones by Rona Bell
§ Natalie McMasters: A PI for the New Millennium by Thomas A. Burns, Jr.
§ Private Eyes: Past and Present by Grant Bywaters
§ My PIs, Me by Reed Farrel Coleman
§ The Danger of Mixing Truth and Fiction by Robin Donovan
§ The Accidental Crime Novelist by Howard Michael Gould
§ Obsessed with Writing by Joe Ide
§ How Weird Is My Private Eye? by Susan Kuchinskas
§ Today or Yesterday’s Private Eye? by Jerry Kennealy
§ Why Go Down Those Mean Streets? by Dana King
§ Knights in Tarnished Armor by Paul D. Marks
§ TV PIs Aren’t Real—You Know That, Right? by Steve Pease
§ I’m Baaaack! A Return to My First Love by Robert J. Randisi
§ Magic Eye by Janet Roger
§ Discovering A Columbus Private Eye by Andrew Welsh-Huggins
§ iPrivateEye by John Shepphird
COLUMNS
§ Mystery in Retrospect: Reviews by Lesa Holstine, John Dwaine McKenna,
L.J. Roberts
§ The Private Dicks’ Decalogue by Jim Doherty
§ The Children’s Hour: Private Eyes by Gay Toltl Kinman
§ Real Private Eyes by Cathy Pickens
§ From the Editor’s Desk by Janet A. Rudolph
Saturday, January 18, 2020
SMFS Member Publishing News: Ang Pompano
SMFS list
member Ang Pompano’s short story, “The Bucket List: A Mystery Short Story”
appears online today at King’s River Life Magazine. It was originally published
in 2015 in the anthology, New England Crime Stories: Red Dawn.
You can read the story here.
SleuthSayers: Writing for Fun by John M. Floyd
SleuthSayers: Writing for Fun: As mentioned in two of my earlier posts at this blog, I'm not one to stray far from my comfort zone in my writing, and I also don'...
Friday, January 17, 2020
Criminal Minds: House of Plots by Paul D. Marks
Criminal Minds: House of Plots: When it comes to your writing, what is the most important element to you: plot, theme or something else? by Paul D. Marks Pease, porridg...
Wednesday, January 15, 2020
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
SleuthSayers Blog: Copyediting tips by Barb Goffman
SleuthSayers: Copyediting tips: A lot of editors wear one hat or another. They do developmental editing or copyediting. Not both. But not me. While I prefer developmental...
Little Big Crimes Review: Catch and Release by Chris Knopf
Little Big Crimes: Catch and Release, by Chris Knopf: "Catch and Release," by Chris Knopf, in Down by the River, edited by Tim O'Mara, Down and Out Books, 2019. When I started...
Monday, January 13, 2020
SleuthSayers: 2020 Writing Worksheet by Travis Richardson
SleuthSayers: 2020 Writing Worksheet: It’s a new year. 2020. Already 12 days have passed. I’m hoping to attack new projects this year and finish up a few old ones and put them o...
Sunday, January 12, 2020
SMFS Member Publishing News: Diana Deverell
SMFS list member Diana Deverell reports today that her
story, “Clean and Godly in Denmark” was serialized in two recent issues of The
Norwegian American. Published online and free to read, the first part of her
story appeared on December 24, 2019 and can be read here. Part
two is found here
and was published January 9, 2020.
Friday, January 10, 2020
Jacqueline Seewald: Interview with Mystery Author Jan Christensen
Jacqueline Seewald: Interview with Mystery Author Jan Christensen: I’m interviewing author Jan Christensen who, like me, grew up in New Jersey . However, she bounced around the world as an Army wife, and in...
SleuthSayers: Politeness, a short lesson by O'Neil De Noux
SleuthSayers: Politeness, a short lesson: Perusing the previous SleuthSayer blogs, I see great advice and writing tips from so many writers. I'd like to add a comment or two abo...
Thursday, January 9, 2020
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Little Big Crimes Review: Black Friday by Steve Brewer
Little Big Crimes: Black Friday, by Steve Brewer: "Black Friday," by Steve Brewer, in Beast Without A Name, edited by Brian Thornton, Down and Out Books, 2019. On the day of t...
SMFS Member Publishing News: Stephen D. Rogers
The online zine of All Due Respect resumed operations
yesterday after a long hiatus and started things off with a short story by SMFS
list member Stephen D. Rogers. His short
story, “MAD DOG,” is free to read online and can be found here.
Sunday, January 5, 2020
A Short Walk Down A Dark Street: Issue 86
As
posted by SMFS list member Peter DiChellis…
Sunday. A fine day for
football and a fine day for a walk. A short walk down a dark street.
This week’s blog tackles
short mystery and crime fiction with links to a bruising blitz of reviews,
releases, free reads, and more.
Includes—hot off the
presses: links to the January issue of Mystery Weekly Magazine and
Issue #6 of Occult Detective Magazine (Formerly Occult
Detective Quarterly.)
Plus: A devotee of
“rejectomancy” (the arcane practice of divining hidden meaning from rejection
letters) reflects on three types of tough rejections and what to do about them.
Also: An essay in
appreciation of locked room mysteries. And three free stories from Crimson
Streets.
A short walk down a dark
street (#86).
Celebrating short mystery and crime fiction.
Best
wishes,
Peter
SMFS Member Publishing News: William Burton McCormick
SMFS list member William Burton
McCormick’s short story, “Fast Forward” appears in the Mystery Weekly Magazine: January
2020 issue. The read is available from the publisher
and at Amazon in both print
and digital
formats and other vendors.
Synopsis:
At the cutting edge of crime fiction, Mystery
Weekly Magazine presents original short stories by the world’s best-known and
emerging mystery writers.
The stories we feature in our monthly issues span every imaginable subgenre, including cozy, police procedural, noir, whodunit, supernatural, hardboiled, humor, and historical mysteries. Evocative writing and a compelling story are the only certainty.
Get ready to be surprised, challenged, and entertained--whether you enjoy the style of the Golden Age of mystery (e.g., Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle), the glorious pulp digests of the early twentieth century (e.g., Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler), or contemporary masters of mystery.
The stories we feature in our monthly issues span every imaginable subgenre, including cozy, police procedural, noir, whodunit, supernatural, hardboiled, humor, and historical mysteries. Evocative writing and a compelling story are the only certainty.
Get ready to be surprised, challenged, and entertained--whether you enjoy the style of the Golden Age of mystery (e.g., Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle), the glorious pulp digests of the early twentieth century (e.g., Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler), or contemporary masters of mystery.
In this issue:
“Fast Forward” by William Burton Mccormick: Mr. Gothe has rival split personalities. The first, "Jimmy" is a nondescript event planner. The second, "James" is a genius detective. Jimmy hates James. James loathes Jimmy. But which persona will solve the mystery of the murdered art thief?
“A Siege Of Herons” by Christie Cochrell: A well-known Mallorcan artist with a remote family tie to Cezanne goes missing, and Inspector Tomás Vilalta traces her to the Medieval walled town of Alcúdia.
“Murderer Bill” by John Grant: When Denny was small, his mom told him about Murderer Bill, the man who seeks out kids who've been bad. Now he's grown up, Denny sometimes wants to be bad, but the thought of Murderer Bill keeps him in check. Then Tabitha walks into his life ...
“The Beresford Case” by Ken Teutsch: A psychic detective who is not as he seems, a damsel in distress who is not as she seems and an English manor which is not as it seems.
“When The Circus Almost Came To Town” by John H. Dromey: It’s no laughing matter when a boomtown is overrun by clowns. Or is it?
“Murder In The Workplace” by Bruce Harris: An office supply company security director investigates the murder of a sales manager. Four salespeople had motive and opportunity.
SMFS Member Publishing News: Travis Richardson
SMFS list member Travis Richardson’s short story, “Lee
Marvin” appears in the recently released anthology, Trouble & Strife: Crime
Stories Inspired by Cockney Rhyming Slang. Edited by Simon Wood, the
read is published by Down
& Out Books. The read is available in both eBook and print format from
the publisher, Amazon,
and other vendors.
Synopsis:
Welcome to the world of
Cockney rhyming slang, where what is said means something completely different
than how it sounds. Originally, it was a coded language created by criminals
for deceiving undercover police officers during Victorian times. Common phrases
like septic tank, holy water, brown bread, tomfoolery and mince pies don’t mean
what you think they mean. Others, like Barnaby Rudge, gypsy’s kiss, smash and
grab, butcher’s hook, kick and prance and bubble and squeak paint a picture.
There are stories to be written about these phrases and in Trouble & Strife, the coded and colorful phrases of Cockney rhyming slang became the inspiration for eleven killer crimes stories from writers on both sides of the pond. A few choice words include:
Babbling Brook is a talkative inmate at the state penitentiary.
A hairdresser has to pay his dues for a crime that took place at Barnet Fair.
And you never want to meet a Lady from Bristol.
You don’t have to understand rhyming slang to enjoy this book. You just have to enjoy a damn good story. To see what the authors have come up with you'll have to turn the page and have a butcher’s.
Edited by Simon Wood with stories by Steve Brewer, Susanna Calkins, Colin Campbell, Angel Luis Colón, Robert Dugoni, Paul Finch, Catriona McPherson, Travis Richardson, Johnny Shaw, Jay Stringer, and Sam Wiebe.
There are stories to be written about these phrases and in Trouble & Strife, the coded and colorful phrases of Cockney rhyming slang became the inspiration for eleven killer crimes stories from writers on both sides of the pond. A few choice words include:
Babbling Brook is a talkative inmate at the state penitentiary.
A hairdresser has to pay his dues for a crime that took place at Barnet Fair.
And you never want to meet a Lady from Bristol.
You don’t have to understand rhyming slang to enjoy this book. You just have to enjoy a damn good story. To see what the authors have come up with you'll have to turn the page and have a butcher’s.
Edited by Simon Wood with stories by Steve Brewer, Susanna Calkins, Colin Campbell, Angel Luis Colón, Robert Dugoni, Paul Finch, Catriona McPherson, Travis Richardson, Johnny Shaw, Jay Stringer, and Sam Wiebe.
SMFS Members Published in Pulphouse Fiction Magazine: Issue 8
Several SMFS
members are published in the recently released Pulphouse Fiction Magazine: Issue
8. Published by WMG Publishing, the read is available in print and digital formats from Amazon, the publisher, and other vendors. The members in the issue are:
David H. Hendrickson with “Seeing
Him for the First Time.”
Robert Jeschonek with “Blackbeard’s
Aliens.”
O’Neil De Noux with “Pretty
Rita.”
Annie Reed with “Life, With
Cats.”
Publisher Synopsis:
The Cutting Edge of Modern Short
Fiction
A three-time Hugo Award nominated
magazine, this issue of Pulphouse
Fiction Magazine offers up eighteen fantastic stories by some
of the best writers working in modern short fiction. No genre limitations, no
topic limitations, just great stories. Attitude, feel, and high quality fiction
equals Pulphouse.
“This is definitely a strong start. All
the stories have a lot of life to them, and are worthwhile reading.”—Tangent Online on Pulphouse Fiction Magazine, Issue
#1
Includes
“The Hero of Calliope Springs: A Clockwork Cowboy Story” by J. Steven York
“The Hero of Calliope Springs: A Clockwork Cowboy Story” by J. Steven York
“Dirt Dancer” by Joslyn Chase
“Eternal Flame” by Rob Vagle
“Seeing Him for the First Time” by David H. Hendrickson
“No Common Scents” by Jim Gotaas
“With Light Years Between Us” by Robert J. McCarter
“Unfamiliar, Foreign, Outré” by Jerry Oltion
“Taking Care of Business” by Mary Jo Rabe
“A Night Under the Stars” by Lisa Silverthorne
“Pretty Rita” by O'Neil De Noux
“Leftovers” by B.A. Paul
“Degrading” by Ezekiel James Boston
“Thumpman at the Keys” by Kent Patterson
“Road Kill: A Dan Shamble, Zombie P.I. Story” by Kevin J.
Anderson
“A Warriors Death” by Stephanie Writt
“In-Class Assignment” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“Life, With Cats” Annie Reed
“Blackbeard's Aliens” by Robert Jeschonek
“Minions at Work: Head Case” by J. Steven York
Saturday, January 4, 2020
Writers Who Kill: Partying With Mame by Lisa Lieberman
Writers Who Kill: Partying With Mame by Lisa Lieberman: Life is a banquet and most poor suckers are starving to death. -Rosalind Russell, Auntie Mame Among the ...
SleuthSayers: Short Memories: 2019 in Review by John Floyd
SleuthSayers: Short Memories: 2019 in Review: Happy New Year, everybody! Since this is my first post for 2020, I figured I'd use it for a review and wrapup of my writing in 2019....