Several SMFS list members
are published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine: July/ August 2020 issue. The
issue is available at the publisher
website, Amazon,
and other vendors. The published SMFS list members in this issue are:
Kevin Eagan with “Midsummer’s Night.”
Joeseph Goodrich with “On The Road With Manfred B.
Lee: the Same Bloody Imagination.”
G. M. Malliet with “Murder at Morehead Mews.”
Josh Pachter translates the Italian short story, “Manic Monday” by Barbara Baraldi.
Stacy Woodson with “Mary Poppins Didn’t Have Tattoos.”
Publisher Synopsis:
July/August 2020
The July/August 2020 EQMM has us thinking
about the powers that be—the forces that are behind mystery, crime, and
everyday life. Robert L. Fish Memorial Award winner E. Gabriel Flores
introduces one of these forces, “Mala Suerte” (bad luck), and other characters
feel the energy of bad-luck mixups in “The Scourging of Jimmy Blake” by David
Dean, “Manic Monday” by Barbara Baraldi, and “Ending It All” by A.J. Wright.
Meanwhile, a young man is unlucky in his
choice of part-time job in “The Death and Carnage Boy” by Steve Hockensmith,
and bait-and-switch identities affect the outcome of two procedurals: “The
Harder They Fall” by John Lantigua and “There Was an Old Woman . . .” by Peter
Turnbull.
Sometimes a force seems like magic, but
there’s something else behind the trickery, such as in “The Indian Rope Trick”
by Tom Mead and two other impossible-crime tales: “The King’s Gambit” by S.A.
Cosby, set in an art gallery, and “A Murder at Morehead Mews” by G.M. Malliet,
a locked-room murder mystery set at an English manor house. That setting is
echoed in an untraditional way in David Bridge’s haunting fiction debut “Feral
Flesh.”
The natural world is a powerful entity, as we
see in “The Thunderstorm” by Iris Hockaday from the Department of First
Stories. And characters take on almost superherolike qualities in “The Recipe
Box” by Claire Ortalda, “Mary Poppins Didn’t Have Tattoos” by Stacy Woodson,
and “That Which Is True” by Jacqueline Freimor.
Love, whether it’s young lust, a marriage of
comfort, or family ties proves powerful in “Midsummer’s Night” by Kevin Egan,
“Of Arms and Women I Sing” by Sheila Kohler, and “Rendezvous Time” by Brendan
DuBois.
And Joseph Goodrich takes us on another trip
of misadventure and luck (or lack thereof) from the lecture notes of Manfred B.
Lee, this time outlining the birth of Ellery Queen. We think you’ll be blown
away by the force of this compelling fiction!
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