Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

March News from the Short Mystery Fiction Society

 March of 2025 was another exciting and productive month for the writers belonging to the Short Mystery Fiction Society!  Readers looking for the best crime and mystery short stories being published today had a lot to choose from.  Let's take a look at some of the highlights!

It's been a fantastic month for anthologies!  First up, from White City Press, we have A KILLING AT THE COPA: CRIME FICTION INSPIRED BY THE MUSIC OF BARRY MANILOW, edited by J. Alan Hartman and featuring a range of terrific writers including SMFS Vice President Linda Kay Hardie and such members as John Floyd, Christine Verstraete, Shari Held and Karen Keeley.  Manilow may be filed under "easy listening," but this collection provides 13 hard-hitting tales of love, life, relationships, and other situations gone horribly wrong.  He writes the songs, SMFS writes the thrills!


Stephen Sondheim might seem like an even less likely inspiration for crime fiction than Manilow--until you remember that he cowrote a classic film whodunit (The Last of Sheila) and that many of his musicals revolve around murder.  In EVERY DAY A LITTLE DEATH: CRIME FICTION INSPIRED BY THE SONGS OF STEPHEN SONDHEIM, edited by Golden Derringer winner Josh Pachter for Level Best Books, one song from each Sondheim musical becomes the basis for a masterful tale, some by the best crime writers working today and some from Broadway insiders.  SMFS members in the cast list include Pachter, President Joseph S. Walker, Jeffrey Marks, John Floyd, and Marcia Talley.  Josh says there are literally hundreds of Easter eggs here for dedicated Sondheim fans--how many can you find?


Two terrific music-based anthologies not enough for you?  You're in luck!  The hits just keep on coming, as Down & Out Books is proud to present IN TOO DEEP: CRIME STORIES INSPIRED BY THE SONGS OF GENESIS, edited by SMFS's own Adam Meyer.  The seventeen stories presented here span the whole history of this iconic group, from prog rock to pop, Peter Gabriel to Phil Collins.  And once again, SMFS members are well represented, with standout stories from our own stars--including Barb Goffman, Michael Bracken, Joseph S. Walker, Tom Milani, Alan Orloff, Josh Pachter and Stacy Woodson.


Of course, not every collection of stories has to be based on music!  March also saw the release of ELEMENTARY, MY DEAR MARPLE, a special issue of The MockingOwl with seven fabulously fun cozy shorts for your reading pleasure, including SMFS members donalee Moulton and Arthur Vidro.  Classic mystery never goes out of style!


donalee Moulton is also among the SMFS members represented in CRIMEUCOPIA: CHICKA-CHICKA BOOMBA!, a special edition of the regular anthology series celebrating four years of publication with an all-women lineup of nineteen fabulous Countesses of Crime.  Let these talented scribes, including N. M. Cedeno, Vera Brook, Denise Johnson, Ruth Morgan, and many more, take you on a tour of every corner of today's mystery landscape!


The anthology THUGGISH ITCH: SCHOOL collects stories set in the world of school, and Robert Petyo's "Endless Recess," about a teacher who finds a strange little boy on the playground, would be a standout in any volume.  Don't miss it!


Looking for a good listen?  Check out the Mysteries to Die For podcast, in which listeners are challenged to beat the detective to the solution of a devilishly complicated case.  In the episode "Clipped," from Robert J. Binney, Henri Beauchamp, hairdresser extraordinaire, is forced to play sleuth when a wedding is burglarized.  Can you solve the case before Henri?


Meanwhile, the online magazine BULL hosts M. E. Proctor's "Back Seat Surprise," in which a hitman makes a discovery that changes everything.  Not for the faint of heart!


Over in SHERLOCK HOLMES MYSTERY MAGAZINE #34, globetrotting Josh Pachter gives us "X Marks the Spot," in which a Kansas police chief has to grapple with the kidnapping of his own wife.  With this story's release, Josh has officially published stories with titles starting with every letter of the alphabet.  Time to dive into titles that start with numbers, Josh!


GUILTY plays host to "Yellow Bird," by Zakariah Johnson, a flash piece about a man who decides that robbing his employer sounds like more fun than working for him.  Not many words, but plenty of power!


"Taking the Plunge," by the prolific Steve Liskow, is the cover story for BLACK CAT WEEKLY #186.  In this story, PI Tatiana Kova wonders what reason a handsome, wealthy, and healthy man would kill himself just before his wedding to a supermodel.  You won't soon forget the answer!  And hey, it's worth noting that BCW is closing in on 200 issues of the providing the best crime, sf and pulp reading you could ask for at a bargain price.  Why not reward them, and support the writers and genres you love, with a subscription?


TOUGH is another venue regularly turning out great work for anyone who loves crime fiction.  In Vinnie Hansen's "Justice Served," they offer the chance to see how a long-ago LSD trip plays out today.

Finally, SMFS members don't just write fiction--they review it, too.  You'll find even more great reading through the regular reviews published on the invaluable blog Kevin's Corner by Kevin Tipple and his guests, like this take on Leo Bruce's "Our Jubilee is Death" by SMFS Derringer Coordinator Paula Messina.

That's just a sampling of what the SMFS had to offer in March!  If you're looking for more, remember that membership is free and offers a host of benefits, including the chance to rub (virtual) elbows with some legends of mystery writing.  April promises to be another fantastic month, so don't miss out!  

  

  



Monday, October 31, 2022

SMFS Members Published in Paranoia Blues: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Paul Simon


Today is publication day for the new anthology, Paranoia Blues: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Paul Simon, which includes short stories by several SMFS list members. Edited by SMFS list member Josh Pachter, the read is published by Down & Out Books. It is available in digital and print formats from Amazon and other vendors. The SMFS list members in the book are:

 

Eve Fisher with “Cool Papa Bell.”

 

Debra H. Goldstein with "So Beautiful or So What."

 

Tom Mead with "The Only Living Boy in New York."

 

Editor Josh Pachter with "Paranoia Blues."

 

Gabriel Valjan with “The Sound of Silence.”

 

Andrew Welsh-Huggins with "Once Upon A Time There Was An Ocean."

 

Frank Zafiro with "A Hazy Shade of Winter."

 

Synopsis:

Across five studio albums with Art Garfunkel (1964-1970) and fourteen solo albums (1965-2018), Paul Simon’s music and lyrics have inspired generations of listeners. For Paranoia Blues, nineteen masters of contemporary short crime fiction wrote new stories, each inspired by one of Simon’s songs: one from each of the five Simon and Garfunkel studio albums (plus a bonus second story inspired by a song from Bridge Over Troubled Water) and one from each of the fourteen solo studio albums.

The contributors include award-winners E.A. Aymar, Martin Edwards, Cheryl A. Head, Edwin Hill, Tom Mead, Raquel V. Reyes, Gabriel Valjean, and a dozen more—plus the first new story by Robert Edward Eckels in more than forty years!

This is the fifth “inspired by” anthology edited by Josh Pachter, a recent winner of the Short Mystery Fiction Society’s Golden Derringer Award for Lifetime Achievement; the previous books drew on the music of Jimmy Buffett, Billy Joel, and Joni Mitchell—and the films of the Marx Brothers.

Monday, October 3, 2022

SMFS Members Published in Carolina Crimes: Rock, Roll, and Ruin: A Triangle Sisters in Crime Anthology


Today is publication day for the digital version of Carolina Crimes: Rock, Roll, and Ruin: A Triangle Sisters in Crime Anthology. Published in the middle of last month by Down and Out Books in the print format, the read is now available in print and digital formats at the publisher, Amazon, and other vendors. The three SMFS list members in the book are:

 

Toni Goodyear with “The Vigil.”

 

Karen McCullough with “Rock ‘n’ Roll Never Forgets.”

 

P.M. Raymond with “The Day The Music Died.”

 

Synopsis:

In Rock, Roll, and Ruin, twenty-seven mystery writers serve up musically-themed crime stories around situations as unique as your inky fingerprints. There’s the bad-boy rock star, dumber than dirt, evading all attempts to keep him out of jail. Casino robbers undone by tribal flutes. A 1950’s jukebox that summons the dead and disappears the living. Jealousy drives girl band shenanigans, while a victim of botched plastic surgery seeks vengeance. Untimely deaths abound: at the prom, on a soap opera set, on a mountain-side hike. Several domestic “disagreements” are far from cliche: one wife is impatient and greedy; another wants her Stevie Nicks albums back; a third is desperate to get her husband to turn down the volume. Elvis fans will be tickled by the many mentions of the King himself, including an over-the-top fan club and a side-kick named after his dog. Whether trudging through snow in an Alaska forest, humming country music at a boatyard in Florida, playing sleuth at an assisted living facility, or stumbling backstage at the opera, irate, despairing, and deceived characters step into crime with barely a second thought.

Rock, Roll, and Ruin is a music-themed anthology of the Triangle, North Carolina chapter of Sisters in Crime. Some stories are cackling-out-loud funny, others are wickedly dark, but all are entertaining, original, un-putdownable. As Hank Phillippi Ryan writes in the Introduction, “Dip in to this concert of mystery, open to any story, and you’ll sing a chorus of approval.”

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

SleuthSayers: P.I. Nocturne by Paul D. Marks

SleuthSayers: P.I. Nocturne: by Paul D. Marks Benny Goodman and Gene Krupa In a couple of recent SleuthSayers posts O’Neil and Leigh talked about pre-rock music. I...