Monday, June 8, 2020

SMFS Members Published in Mystery Weekly Magazine: June 2020


SMFS list members are published in the Mystery Weekly Magazine: June 2020 issue. The read is available from the publisher in both print and digital formats as well as at Amazon and other vendors. The SMFS members in this issue are:


Peter DiChellis’ short story, “Gallery Thief” is the “You-Solve-It” mystery for the issue. The solution will run in the next issue.

Robert Lopresti with “In Praise Of My Assassin.”


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.


In this issue:


In our cover feature, “The Calculus Of Karma” by M.C. Tuggle, Deputy Malcolm Lamb takes on his first solo case after the discovery of a dead miner on the asteroid Psyche. Lamb must determine who killed the miner and stop a deadly turf war between corporation and wildcatter miners.
In “Afterglow” by Martin Hill Ortiz, Phillip Prince promises to try to track down the mysterious disappearance of a woman's ex-husband. A mob hit? Or was he killer? Nothing is what it seems.
“Seat 9b” by Luke Foster is a psychological thrill ride placing a reporter in the window seat on an airplane. In the middle seat is a serial killer. The killer knows that the reporter knows who he is.
In “Nothing Doing” by Carl Robinette, Daisy Belle isn’t a detective and there is no mystery here, at first it seems, but that doesn’t stop her from being on the case. An unlikely partnership will help her get to the bottom of things, even if from the bottom of a bottle.
“Ancient Cypress” by Allan Durand, takes us to a Louisiana swamp where some twenty-dollar gold pieces are found when ancient sunken cypress logs are being recovered, and a deputy sheriff threatens to plant heroin on the crawfisherman who found them unless he gives them to the deputy.
In “Gli Or Nogt?” by Arthur Vidro, a court employee is working at a trial concerning a murder she witnessed. But why has she kept mum about it? And what is her role in the trial?
“In Praise Of My Assassin” by Robert Lopresti tells the tale of an assault victim as he is questioned by the police. He claims he was attacked by a time traveler. Well, a would-be time traveler, anyway …
“Angels Stirring” by Tammy Huffman: A young preacher is missing and old, forgotten myths have reawakened in this 1930s era mystery. What treasures have yet to be discovered beneath the mist of Hickory Grove pond?

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