Today is publication day for the new anthology, Edgar & Shamus Go Golden: Twelve Tales of Murder, Mystery, and Master Detection from the Golden Age of Mystery and Beyond. Published by Down & Out Books, the read is available at the publisher, Amazon, and other vendors. The SMFS list members in the book are:
John Floyd with “Old Money.”
O’Neil De Noux with “A Jelly of Intrigue.”
Art Taylor with “The Invisible Band.”
Website Synopsis:
Edgar & Shamus welcomes mystery connoisseurs to
the Golden Age of Mystery and Murder…Have we ever really left? Has the Golden
Age ever really slipped over the falls? The puzzle, the who-dun-it, the
why-dun-it, the how-dun-it, and the unshakable alibi are as much afoot today as
they were when Dr. Watson documented Holmes’s exploits under the glow of
gaslight. As if picking up where the early masters of detection left off, Edgar
& Shamus features twelve original mystery tales written exclusively by
Edgar Allan Poe Award and Shamus Award-winning authors.
Edgar winner Martin Edwards promises a few relaxing
days at a quiet and respectable English resort with criminologist Darius
Fortune—or does he? Shamus winner John Floyd’s private detective Luke Walker
reserves a 1940s seat for you in the New Orleans Quarter—paid for with old
money. To save a friend from a murder rap Shamus winner P. J. Parrish’s
“Salvage Consultant” Mavis Magritte must untangle an unshakable alibi with a
set of risqué bunny ears. Shamus winner Brendan DuBois rebuilds Boston’s historic
and famed Scollay Square without pulling a single building permit. It’s
anybody’s guess which master detective might solve the big caper in Edgar
winner Art Taylor’s “The Invisible Band”—Nero Wolfe, Miss Marple, Charlie Chan,
Lord Peter Wimsey, Father Brown, and even Mr. Holmes are among the all-star
sleuths assembled to solve the baffling mystery. In post WWII Havana, “vices
are annuities” for Shamus winner Carolina Garcia-Aguilera’s veteran P.I. Sophie
Stevenson. Thanks to Tennessee Williams, Shamus winner O’Neil De Noux’s private
dick Lucien Caye is up to his hip-pocket in extortion. Edgar winner Doug
Allyn’s major crimes detective and WWII combat veteran Dolph LaCrosse returns
home only to be called the “new guy” by fellow cops. The war to end all wars
may be over, but political skullduggery is still afoot in Shamus winner Lia
Matera’s “The Party.” When a “riverboat” gambler washes up dead, Shamus winner
Kristen Lepionka’s LA homicide dicks Hewitt and Carmichael are up to their
necks in suspects all capable of dealing from the bottom of the deck. It’s
trouble with a capital “T” when a Tyrone Power look-a-like saunters into Shamus
winner Lori Armstrong’s Marlow Detective Agency.
In Edgar winner John McAleer’s “The Case of the
Illustrious Banker,” 1920s London-based detective Henry Von Stray and his able
collaborator in the detection of crime Professor John W. Dilpate are up against
a “nippy bit of work” in one of their most baffling cases yet. Discovered more
than eight decades after first penned, “Illustrious Banker” makes its debut in
Edgar & Shamus. McAleer—forty years before he would win the Edgar Award
unanimously beating out Christie’s autobiography—created Von Stray and Dilpate
in 1937 during the Golden Age of Mystery.
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