Tuesday, May 7, 2024

SMFS Member Publishing News: Devil in the Rearview by Stephen D. Rogers


SMFS list member Stephen D. Rogers’s novella, Devil in the Rearview, was published last week. This is the fifth novella in the Chop Shop series created and edited by SMFS list member Michael Bracken. Published by Down & Out Books, the eBook is exclusively available at Amazon.

 

Publisher Description:

Synopsis … Car thieves and the chop shop that buys from them combine to create high-octane stories of hot cars, hot crimes, and hot times in Dallas, Texas.

Some vehicles are too expense to steal. By the time you figure that out, it’s too late. In “Devil in the Rearview,” Liza Lee escapes one monster only to find herself running from a worse one, wondering all along whether she will become a monster herself.

Monday, May 6, 2024

SMFS Members Published in Black Cat Weekly #140


SMFS list members are published in Black Cat Weekly #140. Published by Wildside Press, the issue is available here in digital format. The members that reported their stories are:

 

M.A. Blume with “Pretty Is As Pretty Does.”

 

Steve Liskow with “The Grifted Age.”

 

Publisher Description:

This time, we have a pair of original mysteries—tales by Steve Liskow (courtesy of Acquiring Editor Michael Bracken) and M.A. Blume, plus a terrific tale by Steve Hockensmith (which typography nuts like me will enjoy, courtesy of Acquiring Editor Barb Goffman). The mystery novel is by Avery Gaul, and of course we have a solve-it-yourself puzzler from Hal Charles.

   On the science fiction side, we have a novel by Golden Age author Arthur Leo Zagat, an early—and quite silly—fantasy from Harlan Ellison, space opera from Edmond Hamilton, and straight-up SF tales from John Victor Peterson and Manly Bannister. Lots of fun.

   Here’s the lineup:

 

Cover: Ron Miller

 

Mysteries / Suspense / Adventure:

  • “The Grifted Age” by Steve Liskow [Michael Bracken Presents short story]
  • “Deadly Reunion” by Hal Charles [Solve-It-Yourself Mystery]
  • “i” by Steve Hockensmith [Barb Goffman Presents short story]
  • “Pretty Is As Pretty Does,” by M.A. Blume [short story]
  • Five Nights at the Five Pines, by Avery Gaul [novel]

 

Science Fiction & Fantasy:

  • “Classified Object,” by John Victor Peterson [short story]
  • “The Annals of Aardvark,” by Harlan Ellison [short story]
  • “The Great Illusion,” by Manly Bannister [short story]
  • “The Star-Stealers,” by Edmond Hamilton [short story]
  • The Two Moons of Tranquillia, by Arthur Leo Zagat [novel]

SMFS Members Published in Private Dicks and Disco Balls: Private Eyes in the Dyn-O-Mite Seventies


Today is publication day for the anthology, Private Dicks and Disco Balls: Private Eyes in the Dyn-O-Mite Seventies. Published by Down & Out Books, the anthology was edited by SMFS list member Michael Bracken. The read is available from the publisher, Amazon, and other vendors. The SMFS list members that reported their stories in the book are:

 

N.M. Cedeño with "A Woman's Place."

 

Alan Orloff with "Stayin' Alive."

 

Gary Phillips with "The Darklight Gizmo Matter."

 

Stephen D. Rogers with "An Eye for an Eye."

 

Bev Vincent with "Houston, We Have a Problem."

 

Andrew Welsh-Huggins with "Cold Comfort."

 

Amazon Description:

The Sixties were a time of great cultural upheaval, and that upheaval continued into the 1970s. In the midst of all this, private eyes worked with clients across the generations, from those still clinging to the social mores of Nixon's "silent majority" to those who embraced the rapid societal changes that began in the 1960s.

From old-school private eyes to the Baby Boomers coming of age and entering the trade, these private eyes will take readers on a funky frolic through the Dyn-O-Mite Seventies.

Contributors include Ann Aptaker, N.M. Cedeño, Bill Fitzhugh, James A. Hearn, Laura Oles, Alan Orloff, Gary Phillips, Neil S. Plakcy, William Dylan Powell, Stephen D. Rogers, Mark Thielman, Bev Vincent, and Andrew Welsh-Huggins.

Saturday, May 4, 2024

SMFS Member Publishing News: Recipe for Betrayal by Debra Bliss Saenger


SMFS list member Debra Bliss Saenger’s short story, Recipe for Betrayal, was published at Punk Noir Magazine. You can read the piece for free online here.

Friday, May 3, 2024

SMFS Members Published in Pulphouse Fiction Magazine: Issue 28

  

SMFS members are published in the recently released, Pulphouse Fiction Magazine: Issue 28. Published by WMG Publishing, the read is available from the publisher, Amazon, and other vendors. The SMFS list members that reported being in the issue are:

 

David H. Hendrickson with “Bubba and the DeLorean.”

 

Annie Reed with “Every Day New, Bright and Beautiful.”

 

Publisher Description:

The Cutting Edge of Modern Short Fiction

A three-time Hugo Award nominated magazine, this issue of Pulphouse Fiction Magazine offers up ten 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.

Includes:

“When the Cows Come Home” by Keith West

“Bubba and the DeLorean” by David H. Hendrickson

“The Neighborhood Kook” by Don Webb

“Love and the Dead in the Life of Jack Joy Merryman” by Rob Vagle

“Good As Dead” by Nina Kiriki Hoffman

“Planet Dungheap” by Daemon Crowe

“Start Making Sense” by Robert Jeschonek

“Everyday New, Bright, and Beautiful” by Annie Reed

“Love and Murder” by O’Neil De Noux

“The Viral Video Guy” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

“Minions at Work: Choose or Consequences” by J. Steven York

 

SMFS Members Published in Mystery Magazine: May 2024


SMFS list members are published in the Mystery Magazine: May 2024 issue. The read is available at the publisher and at Amazon. The SMFS list members that reported their presence in the issue are:

 

John M. Floyd with “Bad Eagle Road.”

 

Julie Hastrup with “The Pool Boy.”

 

Bruce W. Most with “The Mysterious Woman in the Lifeguard Chair.”

 

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 

Our cover feature is “The Mysterious Woman In The Lifeguard Chair” by Bruce W. Most: Weegee, New York City's most famous crime photographer, photographs a mysterious woman one night on a Coney Island beach. When a woman's body turns up on the beach days later, Weegee finds himself investigating a possible murder.

“My Son, My Son” by Kathleen Gerard: In this comic mystery story a Southern woman becomes exasperated by her notorious, small-time criminal son, her ‘do-good’ of a husband, and the stifling nature of her small-town.

“Bad Eagle Road” by John M. Floyd: After the disappearance of a team of scientists in search of Bigfoot, a Native American woman stumbles upon an injured and escaped survivor—and discovers that he’s still being hunted.

“The Pool Boy” by Julie Hastrup: Three rules for running a pool cleaning business: 1) Don’t wake the wealthy. 2) Be invisible. 3) Nothing you do will ever be enough. The pool boy is forced to cover up a crime and winds up paying for it—literally.

“Villains, Vipers, And Dogs” by A.D. Price: A down-on-his-luck PI breaks into a rival PI's office, intending to steal incriminating photos for a rich, cash-paying client. When he discovers a puppy manning the office, however, what should have been an easy gig, turns weirdly dangerous.

“The Asphalt Bungle” by Jon Wesick is a noir parody in which grade school students plan a heist of Mad Magazines.

“A Failure To Communicate,” a You-Solve-It by John H. Dromey: Some eyewitness accounts are better than others, but can detectives afford to pick and choose?

Custom Cover Art By Robin Grenville Evans

 

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

SMFS Official Announcement: 2024 Derringer Award Winners


Since 1998, the Short Mystery Fiction Society has awarded the annual Derringers—after the popular pocket pistol—to outstanding published stories. The Short Mystery Fiction Society is proud to announce the winners of the 2024 Derringer Awards for works published in 2023.

 

As reported by Derringer Coordinator Joseph S. Walker…. 

 

FLASH

 

THE REFEREE by C. W. Blackwell

(Shotgun Honey, October 12, 2023)

 

 

SHORT STORY

 

LAST DAY AT THE JACKRABBIT by John Floyd

(The Strand, May 2023)


 

LONG STORY

 

GOOD DEED FOR THE DAY by Bonnar Spring

(Wolfsbane: Best New England Crime Stories, Crime Spell Books)

 

 

NOVELETTE (TIE)

 

MRS. HYDE by David Dean

(Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, March/April 2023)

 

CATHERINE THE GREAT by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

(WMG 2023 Holiday Spectacular Calendar of Stories)

 

 

EDWARD D. HOCH MEMORIAL GOLDEN DERRINGER

 

Barb Goffman

 

HALL OF FAME

 

Rex Stout

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

2023 Agatha Award Winners: Ticket to Ride by Dru Ann Love and Kristopher Zgorski

 

As announced Saturday evening at Malice Domestic #36, SMFS list members Dru Ann Love and Kristopher Zgorski won the 2023 Agatha Award in the Best Short Story category for their short story, "Ticket to Ride." The winning tale was published in the anthology, Happiness Is A Warm Gun (Down & Out Books).

For the full list of the winners and more information, please see the Malice Domestic Facebook Page.

SMFS Member Publishing News: A Fatal Reception: An Ella Shane Mystery by Kathleen Marple Kalb


Today is publication day for A Fatal Reception: An Ella Shane Mystery by Kathleen Marple Kalb. Published by Level Best Books, LLC., this fourth book in the series is available at Amazon.

 

Amazon Description:

Gilded Age trouser diva Ella Shane and her Duke are at long last headed for the altar…but they’ll confront a murder, a shipwreck, a questionable Polish prince, and any number of other complications on the way. Continuing the highly-praised series featuring a Lower East Side orphan who found fame and fortune as a singer of male soprano roles, this new installment follows Ella and her surprisingly diverse cast of family and friends through mystery and misadventure…and into the greatest challenge of all for an independent-minded woman and her Victorian swain: matrimony!

Monday, April 29, 2024

SMFS Members Published in Guilty Crime Story Magazine: Issue 011 - Spring 2024: The Detective Annual

 

SMFS list members are published in the Guilty Crime Story Magazine: Issue 011 - Spring 2024: The Detective Annual. Published by Full Speed Publishing, the read is available at Amazon. The SMFS list members that reported being in the issue are: 

 

Publisher/Editor Brandon Barrows with “Personal Business: A Sam Harrigan Story.”

 

Publisher/Editor Brandon Barrows with the short story reprint, “The Only One.”

 

M. E. Proctor with “Flame of the West.”

 

Amazon Description:

 

Guilty is a magazine of crime stories, of criminals, their motivations and their beginnings and ends.

In issue eleven, the detective annual:

"Personal Business"
 by Brandon Barrows - Her teenage son was dead--they told her it was a heart-attack, but she knew it was murder.

"Mapache"
 by Anthony Neil Smith - The cellblock's one untouchable was killed and Mapache needs to know why.

"Flame of the West"
 by M.E. Proctor - A missing sword, a missing wife... where's the connection?

"Little Slices of Life"
 by Robb T. White - When your sister calls for help, you come--even if it means traveling thousands of miles.

"The Only One"
 by Brandon Barrows - Murder is easy to understand, but sometimes motives aren't.

SMFS Member Publishing News: Bye-Bye, Jojo by Edith Maxwell


SMFS list member Edith Maxwell’s short story, Bye-Bye, Jojo, appears in Black Cat Weekly #139. Published by Wildside Press, the issue is available here in digital format.

Sunday, April 28, 2024

SMFS Member Guest Post: DOING GOOD AND DOING WELL by Kathleen Marple Kalb (SMFS Vice President)


Please welcome our Vice President to the blog today…

 

 

DOING GOOD AND DOING WELL


Guest Post by SMFS Vice President Kathleen Marple Kalb

 

 

            Charity anthologies are often good career moves as well as good karma.

            In the last few years, I’ve been fortunate to have stories in several, and every time, there’ve been concrete benefits beyond the pleasure of helping our fellow humans.

            First, if you’re early in your career, giving a story to a charity anthology can be a chance to work with an accomplished editor. To get their comments, and their thinking on your soundtrack for the current story, and every future project, is enough compensation right there.

            Almost all anthologies also give you an opportunity to reach new and different readers. Even if you’re a big seller, it’s unlikely followers of every other writer in the anthology will be familiar with your work. And if you’re still building a readership, it’s a real chance to widen your audience.

            That’s part of any anthology. Sharing the promotional effort is, too. Many of us don’t do as much promotion as we should (looking in the mirror here!) but if you’re out there with a bunch of other folks, suddenly the burden isn’t as heavy. It’s often a lot more fun, too.

            Charity projects, though, are special. The writers, of course, care about the cause enough to give their work and their promotional effort. Often, they’re willing to work harder because the charity is important to them.

            More, though, charity projects carry built-in goodwill that can lead to extra positive attention. Bloggers, reviewers, and others will often promote the project as a way to help the cause. Or just to make sure the writers are rewarded for doing good.

            All of that is good for the anthology and the charity.

            Sometimes, it’s good for you, too, bringing in additional readers for your other projects.

            And sometimes, you just get lucky.

            My most recent charity anthology story, “A Fatal Saint Patrick’s Day,” came out last month in LUCK OF THE IRISH.  The story involves my Irish-Jewish Gilded Age trouser diva Ella Shane, because she was the best fit for the theme. When I signed on, I just wanted to raise some money to help migrant children – and write a good story.

            As it turned out, though, the anthology came out just over a month before my next Ella Shane book, A FATAL RECEPTION, the reboot of the series at Level Best Books – due April 30th. Even better, the editors, Kate Darroch and Jessica Thompson, as well as some of the other writers, have different (and much larger) readerships than I do.

            We told some good stories, we sold a bunch of books, and we brought in a nice donation for kids who really need help. And, as it happens, I introduced Ella to lots of new readers right before the next book.

            The old saw is: “It’s better to be lucky than good,” but maybe it should be: “Look for chances to do good…and you just might be lucky, too!”

 

A FATAL RECEPTION: Gilded Age trouser diva Ella Shane and her Duke are at long last headed for the altar…but they’ll have to handle a murder, a shipwreck, a questionable Polish prince, and any number of other complications on the way. Continuing the highly-praised series featuring an Irish-Jewish Lower East Side orphan who found fame and fortune as a singer of male soprano roles, the latest installment follows Ella and her surprisingly diverse cast of family and friends through mystery and misadventure…and into the greatest challenge of all for an independent-minded woman and her Victorian swain: matrimony!

Buy at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Fatal-Reception-Ella-Shane-Mystery-ebook/dp/B0CXY8T735

 


Kathleen Marple Kalb ©2024

Kathleen Marple Kalb describes herself as an Author/Anchor/Mom…not in that order. An award-winning weekend anchor at New York’s 1010 WINS Radio, she writes short stories and novels including A Fatal Reception and the Old Stuff series, both from Level Best Books. As Nikki Knight, she writes the Grace the Hit Mom and Vermont Radio mysteries. Her stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Black Cat Weekly, and others, and been short-listed for Derringer and Black Orchid Novella Awards. She’s currently the Vice President of the Short Mystery Fiction Society and a co-VP of the New York/Tri-State Chapter of Sisters in Crime. She, her husband, and son live in a Connecticut house owned by their cat.

Website: https://kathleenmarplekalb.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Kathleen-Marple-Kalb-1082949845220373/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/KalbMarple

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kathleenmarplekalb/

Threads: @kathleenmarplekalb

Bluesky: @mysterymarple.bsky.social   

Friday, April 26, 2024

SMFS Member Publishing News: The Minor, Nine-Ton Dragon Problem by C. Dan Castro


SMFS list member C. Dan Castro’s short story, The Minor, Nine-Ton Dragon Problem,  is published in the Dragon Gems: Spring 2024 issue. Published by Water Dragon Publishing, the issue is available at Amazon and other vendors.

 

Publisher Description:

There’s something funny going on here …

Featuring stories by Chase Anderson, Pauline Barmby, C. Dan Castro, P.A. Cornell, Sarina Dorie, CJ Erick, Arvee Andaya Fantilagan, Eric Farrell, Ben Fitts, Philip Brian Hall, David Hankins, David A. Hewitt, Hall Jameson, Pamela Love, Anne Marie Lutz, Sean MacKendrick, Lena Ng, Kurt Pankau, Bethany Tomerlin Prince, Michael Allen Rose, KR Samp, Clark Mark Sodersten, Gary S. Watkins, and Nemma Wollenfang

Thursday, April 25, 2024

SMFS Members Published in Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries Volume III


Several SMFS list members are published in the recently released anthology, Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries Volume III. Edited by SMFS list member Michael Bracken and published by the Sisters in Crime North Dallas Chapter, the anthology is available from Amazon and other vendors. The SMFS list members that reported their stories in the book are:

 

Tiffany Seitz with “A Vague Threat.”

 

Shannon Taft with "Bitter Cold."

 

Kevin R. Tipple with “Whatever Happened To…?”

 

Joseph S. Walker with "Citizens Arrested."

 

Amazon Description:

It is true that there is violent crime to be found all over the country. But a particular brand of “Texas Noir” has taken root and flourished within the canon of contemporary crime fiction. And the award-winning writers included in this anthology are some of the best illuminators of Lone Star mayhem—whether it be committed on a lonely and far-flung cattle ranch, or in the luxurious dressing rooms of Neiman Marcus—it has a unique flavor that is purely Texas. —from the Foreword by Kathleen H. Kent
A Perfect Gift For Mystery Lovers!
Welcome to the third anthology by the chapter members of Sisters In Crime North Dallas. The cities of Dallas, Fort Worth, and surrounding locales offer great fodder for mystery writers—and readers. These have inspired the stories contained in Notorious in North Texas: Metroplex Mysteries Volume III.

·         THE UNTITLED GUNFIGHTER BALLAD, by Mark Thielman

·         DON’T GET CAUGHT, by Karen Harrington

·         OLIVER KOWALSKI, by Terry Shepherd

·         AMARILLO BY MORNING, by Dänna Wilberg

·         GRAVE NEWS, by Cindy Martin

·         LONGSHOT AT LONE STAR PARK, by ML Condike

·         TRULY, MADLY, DEEPLY, by Pam McWilliams

·         A VAGUE THREAT, by Tiffany Seitz

·         WHATEVER HAPPENED TO…?, by Kevin R. Tipple

·         HIGH WINDOW, by Amber Royer

·         BITTER COLD, by Shannon Taft

·         CITIZENS ARRESTED, by Joseph S. Walker

MICHAEL BRACKEN (www.CrimeFictionWriter.com), who edited this anthology, is the Edgar Award and Shamus Award nominated, Derringer Award winning author of more than twelve hundred short stories, including crime fiction published in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery MagazineEllery Queen’s Mystery MagazineThe Best American Mystery Stories, The Best Mystery Stories of the Year, and many other publications. Additionally, Bracken is the editor of Black Cat Mystery Magazine, associate editor of Black Cat Weekly, and editor or co-editor of thirty-one published or forthcoming anthologies, including the Anthony Award-nominated The Eyes of Texas: Private Eyes from the Panhandle to the Piney Woods. In 2024, he was inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters for his contribution to Texas literature.