SMFS list members are published in the Mystery
Magazine: March 2024 issue. The read is available at the publisher and at Amazon.
The SMFS list members that reported their presence in the issue are:
Peter W. J. Hayes with "Yellow Tulips.”
David Krugler with “The
Cold Case Geniuses.”
Robert Mangeot with "Someone Went and Killed
Tickly Thomason."
Paul Ryan O'Connor with "No One Will Believe You."
Amazon Description:
At the
cutting edge of crime fiction, Mystery 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 Five Wives Book Club” by Victor Kreuiter, book club
members—long-time friends—are inspired by their favorite fictions to manage
their lives.
“Someone Went And Killed Tickly Thomason” by Robert Mangeot: Detective S.R.
Jefferson senses foul play behind a country gold legend’s conveniently
unsurprising heart attack. The path to police glory runs through a squabbling
family, a party barge, and a fateful hoedown showdown.
In “Solitary” by Leland Neville, a work release program offers an inmate a
long-awaited opportunity to start over in life. His past, however, has other
plans.
“Yellow Tulips” by Peter W. J. Hayes: Sent to Ankara to save a missing CIA
source, Levon Grace finds himself at dinner with one of Turkey's most senior
intelligence officials, who has a story to tell and a deadline to keep.
In “Four To Go” by Richard Ciciarelli, mystery writer Sheryl Case decides to
murder her demanding writing partner, Myra Borne, and go it alone.
In “The Cold Case Geniuses” by David Krugler, two coders have a million-dollar
idea: an app that enables armchair sleuths to crack unsolved murders on their
phones. Just before they launch the app, an armed intruder breaks in. Could he
be one of the killers?
“The Princess” by Janice Law: Amber is a chilly beauty who is not only looking
for a prince but expects one to preform some difficult and dangerous task to
win her. Such an occasion arises, and to the narrator's surprise, murder
follows.
In “No One Will Believe You” by Paul Ryan O'Connor, a down-on-his-luck
dishwasher is mugged at gunpoint by the most famous movie star in the world.
“The Wisdom Of Solomon,” a You-Solve-It by Eric B. Ruark: If Solomon had had to
deal with three pre-teens in a snit, who knows how much wisdom he would have
accumulated.
Cover Art by Robin Grenville Evans
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