Showing posts with label SMFS Members. SMFS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SMFS Members. SMFS. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2019

SMFS Members Published in Mystery Weekly Magazine: November 2019


Two SMFS list members are published in the Mystery Weekly Magazine: November 2019 issue. The read is available from the publisher  and at Amazon in both print and digital formats and other vendors. The SMFS members in this issue are:

Peter DiChellis with “Disappearing Diamonds” as “A You-Solve-It Mystery.”

Robert Mangeot with “Murder  On The First Night’s Feast.”

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 story “Giving Up The Ghost” by Shea E. Butler, Belle Lopez, an ex-hooker working as a neophyte private investigator, is obsessed with solving the murder of her ex-boss and mentor, Leo Gillepski. Things get complicated when Leo's ghost appears and starts interfering in the case.
“Cold Feet” by Nils Gilbertson: When a prominent scholar weds a powerful lobbyist, suspicion prompts her to enlist her brother, a former fed, to investigate. As he chases leads around D.C., truth, suspicion, and its consequences begin to blur.
In “Midnight In A Sea Of Marble” by D.V. Bennett, Washington D.C. police detectives Mike Ryan and Hayley Michaels are tasked with investigating a double-murder. When they begin to suspect two rich upstanding citizens living in a pricey neighborhood along the Potomac River, the citizens push back.
In “Digging Up Bones” by Brandon Abbott, Nathan Shields is haunted by the skeleton in his past. But he soon learns the real threat lies beneath the surface, where he least expects it. As he uncovers the truth, Nathan discovers a frightening reality: sometimes what you bury will bury you.
“Murder On The First Night’s Feast” by Robert Mangeot: Since Charlemagne, a gathering of elite gourmands in French chateaux country has taken on rules and a reputation all its own. Except this year the host is hauled off for murder, and it’s up to Madame Feubert to save the season.
In “To Whom It May Concern” by Kathleen Gerard, the power of the written word snowballs into unexpected rewards.


Sunday, June 9, 2019

SMFS Members Published in NO WAY: Totally Twisted Tales


SMFS members have stories in the latest collection from Pulphouse Fiction Magazine titled NO WAY: Totally Twisted Tales. Edited by Dean Wesley Smith, the read is available in print and digital formats from the publisher as well as Amazon and other vendors. The SMFS members in the short story collection are:

David H. Hendrickson with “Looking For The Bastard.”

Robert Jeschonek with “Time, Expressed as an Entrée.”

Annie Reed with “The Old Guy.”

Synopsis:

The Most Twisted Stories from Pulphouse Fiction Magazine
What gives the “twist” to these stories? They wouldn’t fit in any other magazine, for one thing. They leave readers shaking their heads in amazement that they read that story, let alone anyone wrote it.
Twisted stories often make you laugh, or make you tear up because they always surprise the reader. And that makes them very memorable.
This volume, the second collection from Pulphouse, filled bumper to bumper with stories from some of our favorite writers.
Includes:
“The Wereyam” by Kent Patterson
“The Old Guy” by Annie Reed
“Playing With Trains” by J. Steven York
“Hand Fast” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
“The Time Cop” by Patrick Alan Mammay
“Catastrophe Baker and the Cold Equations” by Mike Resnick
“Time, Expressed as an Entrée” by Robert Jeschonek
“Savage Breasts” by Nina Kiriki Hoffman
“Fiction” by Jerry Oltion
“Group” by Ray Vukcevich
“Looking for the Bastard” by David H. Hendrickson