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Stuff and Nonsense

Showing posts with label Jenn McKinlay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jenn McKinlay. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2024

2024 Favorites (so far)

Since we're now officially halfway through the year, I'm sharing my favorites of the books I've read so far. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did!

(Books are listed alphabetically by author.  Most of them are e-books from the library, Kindle Unlimited.)





The Body in the Bookstore (A Secret Bookcase Mystery #1) by Ellie Alexander. Storm Publishing, 19 June, 2024. (Kindle Unlimited)

The Book of Doors by Gareth Brown.  Harper Collins, 13 February 2024.

Death Through a Dark Green Glass (A Writer's Apprentice Mystery) by Julia Buckley.  Merrill Books, 20 April 2024).

The Fellowship of Puzzle-makers by Samuel  Burr.  Doubleday Books, 9 April 2024.

Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands (Emily Wilde #2) by Heather Fawcett.  Del Rey Books, 16 January 2024.

The Night in Question (An Agathas Mystery #2) by Kathleen Glasgow and Liz Lawson.  Ember, 21 May 2024.  

Stay Dead by April Henry.  Christy Ottaviano Books, 28 May 2024.


The Lost Book of Bonn by Brianna Labuskes.  William Morrow, 19 March 2024.

Recipe for a Charmed Life by Rachel Linden.  Berkley Books, 9 January 2024.  

The Last Hope (Maggie Hope #11) by Susan Elia MacNeal.  Bantam Publishing, 21 May 2024. 

Fatal First Edition (Library Lovers' Mystery #14) by Jenn McKinlay. Berkley Books, 13 February 2024.

Lula Dean's Little Library of Banned Books by Kirsten Miller.  William Morrow, 18 June, 2024.

Holmes, Marple, and Poe by James Patterson.  Little, Brown Books, 8 January 2024.

Mind Games by Nora Roberts.  St. Martin's Press, 21 May 2024.




Monday, January 22, 2024

Mystery Monday

Fatal First Edition (Library Lovers’ Mystery #14) by Jenn McKinlay.  Berkley Books, 13 February 2024.


This is one of my very favorite cozy series, and I’m always thrilled when a new installment is released.

Here, newlyweds Lindsey Norris and her husband Sully are at a rare book conference in Chicago.  One of the presenters is Brooklyn Wainwright, protagonist of Kate Carlisle’s Bibliophile Mysteries.  Lindsey is, of course, a huge fan (as am I!) and welcomes the chance to meet one of her idols while showing her a first edition of Patricia Highsmith’s Strangers on a Train that she’s stumbled across.

The book is whisked away for safekeeping by the director of the conference, although the astute reader is already aware that it will reappear later in the story.

On the train trip back home, Lindsey and Sully learn that the Highsmith book is valuable enough that someone would kill for possession of it.  

Along with Police Chief Emma Plewicki and their Briar Creek friends, Lindsey and Sully are once more called upon to solve a murder.

This is a wonderful homage to locked-room mysteries, Patricia Highsmith, and Agatha Christie. Jenn McKinlay is to be congratulated!

 


Many thanks to NetGalley for the egalley.

 

 


Monday, January 3, 2022

Cozy Monday


 Yes, it's that time again!

Here are my 10 favorite cozy mysteries published in 2021, listed alphabetically by author
.

Murder in the Cookbook Nook (Book Retreat #7) by Ellery Adams.  Kensington paperback, 27 April 2021.

Six chefs are preparing to compete in an outdoor tent at Storyton Hall in Virginia for prizes that will boost their careers—but is there someone who can't stand the heat? It looks that way when one of the contestants is found dead in a pantry packed with two centuries' worth of cookbooks, among other treasures and rarities.

Could there be a connection to other recent events in town, like tampering with the costume of a local mascot? Jane isn't sure, but after someone serves a second course of murder, the kitchen must be closed and the killer must be found . . 



Murder Most Fowl (Meg Lanslow #29) by Donna Andrews.  St. Martin's Press hardcover, 3 August 2021.

Meg Langslow’s in for a busy summer. Her husband is directing a production of Macbeth, and most of the cast and crew are occupying spare bedrooms in their house. She also has to keep an eye on Camp Birnam, where a group of medieval reenactors are commemorating the real-life Macbeth by setting up what they fondly believe is an authentic medieval Scottish military camp.

And then there’s Damien Goodwin, a filmmaker who has been hanging around, trying to document the production. When Goodwin hosts a showing of some of the footage he’s taken, he manages to embarrass or offend just about everyone. The next morning Meg isn’t exactly surprised to find that someone has murdered him.


But who?  Unfortunately, whoever murdered Goodwin also destroyed all the electronic devices on which his video was stored. So Caerphilly’s chief of police—and Meg—must rediscover the same secrets the filmmaker did if they want to catch a killer.


Murder by the Bookend (Antique Bookshop #2) by Laura Gail Black.  Crooked Lane Books, 7 September 2021.

The quaint warehouse district of Hokes Folly, NC, is hopping despite the drizzly November chill. The occasion? The mountain town’s beloved antiquarian bookstore, Twice Upon a Time, is throwing a bash for its grand reopening. But bookseller Jenna Quinn’s peace of mind is shattered when the local library’s Director of Antique Books turns up dead in the parking lot–his head bashed in by a glittering pair of vintage glass bookends.

Alas, finding the killer won’t be so easy, even though this is not Jenna’s first murder investigation–indeed, she inherited Twice Upon a Time from her slain uncle. The suspect list is voluminous–the late librarian had not-so-friendly run-ins with numerous guests–but suspicion eventually centers on three unsavory individuals who left the party shortly before the victim did.


God Rest Ye, Royal Gentlemen (Her Royal Spyness #15) by Rhys Bowen.  Berkely, 12 October 2021.

Georgie is excited for her first Christmas as a married woman in her lovely new home. She suggests to her dashing husband, Darcy, that they have a little house party, but when Darcy receives a letter from his Aunt Ermintrude, there is an abrupt change in plans. 

Aunt Ermintrude hints that the queen would like Georgie nearby. Georgie had not known that Aunt Ermintrude was a former lady-in-waiting and close confidante of her royal highness. The letter is therefore almost a royal request, so Georgie, Darcy, and their Christmas guests all head to Sandringham.


Little Black Book (Bibliophile #15) by Kate Carlisle. Berkley, 29 June 2021.

Brooklyn and her hunky husband, security expert Derek Stone, have just returned from a delightful trip to Dharma, where the construction of their new home away from home is well underway, when a little black book arrives in the mail from Scotland. The book is a rare British first edition of Rebecca, and there’s no return address on the package. The day after the book arrives, Claire Quinn shows up at Brooklyn and Derek’s home. Brooklyn met Claire when the two women worked as expert appraisers on the television show This Old Attic

Claire reveals that during a recent trip to Scotland she discovered her beloved aunt was missing and her home had been ransacked. Among her aunt’s belongings, Claire found the receipt for the package that wound up with Brooklyn and Derek. Claire believes both her own life and her aunt’s are in danger.

But just as Brooklyn and Derek begin to investigate, a man who Claire thinks was following her is found murdered, stabbed with a priceless jeweled dagger. With a death on their doorstep, Brooklyn and Derek page through the little black book, where they discover clues that will take them to the shadows of a medieval Scottish castle on the shores of Loch Ness.


Deadly Ever After (Lighthouse Library #8) by Eva Gates.  Crooked Lane Books, 11 May 2021.

They’re getting married! Lucy Richardson and Connor McNeil have announced their engagement. Their friends throw a party for the couple at Coquina Beach, close to Lucy’s beloved Bodie Island Lighthouse Library.

As they’re packing up the presents and the (few) leftovers from Josie’s Cozy Bakery, who should arrive, but Richard Eric Lewiston III, Lucy’s former almost-fiancĂ© and his overbearing mother Evangeline. Push comes to love when Evangeline makes no secret of why she’s here: to get Lucy and Ricky back together.

Lucy isn’t temped in the least, and Ricky is nothing but embarrassed at his mother’s desperate ploy. Before returning to Boston Evangeline throws a dinner party at Jake’s Seafood Bar for a reluctant Lucy and her family. Lucy hopes to get the dinner over with and see Evangeline and Ricky returning to Boson. But when a body is found at the restaurant’s kitchen door, Lucy is again forced to unwillingly put on her detective’s hat and do what she can to save her family and her engagement. 


A Fatal Footnote (The Open Book #2) by Margaret Loudon.  Berkley, 6 July 2021.

The wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Upper Chumley-on Stoke has all the makings of a fairy tale, complete with a glowing bride and horse-drawn carriage. But it wouldn't be much of a story without a villain, and as American Gothic novelist Penelope Parish is coming to learn, happy-ever-afters are as fraught in this charming British town as they are in her books.

When the Duke's former girlfriend is found murdered at the reception it's up to Penelope and her newfound family at the Open Book bookshop to catch the killer before they strike again.


Killer Research (Library Lover's Mystery #12) by Jenn McKinlay.  Berkely, 2 November 2021.

Ms. Cole, a librarian and current candidate for town mayor, is shocked when she opens her trunk to discover a murder victim who just so happens to be a guy she dated forty years ago and the founder of the baking empire Nana's Cookies. As the town gossip mill turns, a batch of rumors begins to circulate about Ms. Cole's rebellious youth, which--along with being a murder suspect--threatens to ruin her life and her budding political career. But Ms. Cole is one tough cookie who will not go down without a fight.

Has the campaign for mayor turned deadly? It is up to Lindsey, Sully, and the rest of the crafternoon pals to see how the cookie crumbles and figure out who is trying to frame Ms. Cole for murder and why.


The Broken Spine (Beloved Bookroom #1) by Dorothy St. James.  Berkley, 19 January 2021.

Trudell Becket, book-loving librarian, finds herself in a bind when the library where she works is turned into a state-of-the-art bookless library. In a rare move of rebellion, Trudell rescues hundreds of her library's beloved books slated for the recycle center. She sets up a secret book room in the library's basement and opens it to anyone who shares her love of the printed book.

When the town councilman, who was the vocal proponent of the library's transformation into a "futuristic technological center," is crushed under an overturned shelf of DVDs, Trudell becomes the police's prime suspect for his murder. She was the only person in the library at the time of his death, or so the police believe. But that's not true. For the past month, Trudell had been letting a few dozen residents into the building through the basement entrance so they could read and check out the printed books.

But if she tells the police about the backdoor patrons who were in the library at the time of the murder, she'd have to explain about the secret book room and risk losing the books. In order to protect herself from being arrested for a murder she didn't commit, Trudell--with the help of a group of dedicated readers--decides to investigate. She quickly discovers you can't always judge a book by its cover.



Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Please welcome Jenn McKinlay!


Twenty years ago, The Catcher in the Rye was checked out to Candice Whitley, a teacher, on the day she was murdered. When the book is returned to the Briar Creek Public Library during its fine amnesty day, librarian and amateur sleuth Lindsey Norris can’t help but think it might be a clue to the cold case that has haunted the small coastal town for decades. And so starts Better Late Than Never, the seventh title in my Library Lover’s Mystery series.

Why The Catcher in the Rye? This has probably been the question I’ve been asked the most since I wrote the book. It’s a really good question. I wish I had a really good answer. But I don’t. Frankly, my relationship with the novel has been a love hate relationship over the years.

I first read Salinger’s story about Holden Caulfield when I was in high school. Full disclosure, I hated it. I thought Holden was a whiner and his ceaseless complaining about everyone being a phony grated on my nerves. Of course, in high school, I was heavily into genre fiction (that has never changed) so I wasn’t really enjoying any of the literature I was reading. Faulkner gave me fits!

Like a bad penny, Catcher showed up again in my college years. I hated it less as I was feeling rather anti-establishment myself and Holden’s angst and confusion, as I dipped my toe into adulthood, made more sense to me. He seemed to be able to read people with a clear-eyed gaze and was frequently disappointed in them and their lack. By that time, I had met a few disappointments myself. We were not friends but I felt less animosity towards the book. 

Then I began my library career. Reader’s advisory was my jam so I read anything and everything I could get my hands on. I was lucky enough to be the fiction selector for three years in my first library job in Cromwell, CT, so I read every issue of the New York Times Book Review, Publisher’s Weekly, Library Journal, Kirkus Reviews, etc., all in my quest for the best the fiction world had to offer. (Side note: some of these publications could be very harsh to authors and the fact that Publisher’s Weekly gave me a starred review for one of my first mysteries still makes me Snoopy dance). 

In addition to keeping up with the latest and greatest, I also encouraged my patrons to read the classics and as a librarian I became a big promoter of encouraging people to read banned books. Well, guess which book in the twentieth century is one of the most frequently challenged and banned? Yes, you got it – The Catcher in the Rye.

Why was it banned? Vulgar language, drinking, promiscuity, not fit for children, yada yada, the same old noise that is always made when something challenges preconceived notions of appropriateness. 

As I look at my own journey with the book, I realize it was not a novel I could appreciate as a teen but when I read it again before writing Better Late Than Never, I actually fell a little in love with the damaged Holden Caulfield. I had finally lived enough life, known pure joy and tremendous sorrow, to understand him and his desire to be “the catcher in the rye” the keeper of children’s innocence. So, that’s why I chose to use The Catcher in the Rye as the book that was checked out to the victim in Better Late Than Never.

Now the only question is, does the book help Lindsey solve the case of who murdered high school English teacher Candice Whitley?

Thanks for letting me visit!

Happy Reading,

Jenn






Jenn McKinlay
is the New York Times 
bestselling author of the Cupcake Bakery Mysteries
the Hat Shop Mysteries
and the Library Lover’s Mysteries
As Josie Belle, she writes the Good Buy Girls Mysteries
and as Lucy Lawrence, she wrote the Decoupage Mysteries
She lives in Scottsdale, Arizona, with her family.*





*Biography from publisher's website

Monday, November 7, 2016

Cozy Monday

Better Late Than Never (Library Lover's Mystery #7) by Jenn McKinlay (Berkley Prime Crime hardcover, 1 November 2016). 

It's wonderful to visit Lindsey Norris, director of the Briar Creek Public Library, again.  

We arrive at the library just in time to witness Briar Creek's very first library amnesty day, 24 hours during which library patrons can return overdue books with no fines being charged. Lindsey and her staHff are overwhelmed by the sheer volume of books returned; it's necessary to empty the overflowing bookdrop several times, and all of the book trucks are filled.

To reward her staff for all the work the've been saddled with, Lindsey is running a contest: the person who finds the most overdue item gets a free pizza.  Paula Turner, a recenly hired clerk, comes across a copy of The Catcher in the Rye that is twenty years late.

Out of curiosity, Lindsey searches the library's records (of course they go back that far!) and finds that the peron who'd checked out the book was a local high school teacher named Candice Whitley.  

She's shocked to learn that Candice was murdered, and on the very day that the book was checked out.  Certain that the book can help to identify the killer, Lindsey turns it in to the police chief.

But the small Briar Creek police force is strained to the limit by a spate of burglaries, and Lindsey knows that a late library book will certainly be given little attention, so she decides to ask a few questions herself.

But there's plenty going on in the small town besides murder and robbery investigations. New babies, new friends, new romances... it's astounding!

The back of the book contains craft ideas, recipes, and an excerpt from the fifth
 book in Ms. McKinlay's Hat Shop mystery series, Assault and Beret, due in January.



The publisher has generously offered a copy of Better Late Than Never to one of my readers.  Please comment below before 12:01 a.m. on Monday, November 14th.  Entries from the US only, please.  
Please don't forget to include an email address where I can contact you if you win!


FTC Full Disclosure:  Many thanks to the publisher for providing me with a review copy of this book.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Welcome Guest Blogger Jenn McKinlay!

London.  

Was there ever a place that beckoned you, that called to you as if it knew you belonged there?  London is that for me.  I love everything about it.  The history, the rain, the palaces, the fog, the pub grub, the underground, the Thames, you name it, I love it

This love affair began with a book, naturally.  I have been fascinated by London and the United Kingdom since I started reading Victoria Holt when I was twelve.  The very first novel I checked out of the adult section of the public library was Holt’s Mistress of Mellyn.   A governess, the cliffs of Cornwall, a brooding hero, it’s great stuff.  The librarian in me feels compelled to mention that Holt also wrote under the names Jean Plaidy, Phillipa Carr, and Kathleen Kellow, among other pseudonyms, penning over two hundred historical and romantic suspense tales, and I’m pretty sure I devoured every one. 

When I started writing my own mysteries, I stayed within settings that I knew, New England where I grew up and Arizona where I’ve lived almost as long.  It was easy to write about these places because I knew the landmarks, the people, the culture, the flora and fauna.  After several mysteries, however, I felt like I needed a challenge.  I wanted to try and write about a place that was totally new and different.  Now my clever plan was to take a vacation to London, indulge my Anglophile self completely, and then write about it.   Life being life, the trip got postponed and the book was due before I put one foot on Portobello Road.

Fear not, the Internet to the rescue!  For my first book, I walked the streets virtually and read every book I could about an American’s perspective on London.  It all fell into place and the book came out pretty well, I think.  And then it was time to write the second one.  The well was dry.  I couldn’t Google Earth my way out of this one.  And so, I packed up my hooligans and my mom and we headed to London.
  
The trip is long when you’re traveling all the way from Arizona. We tried to sleep on the plane, there was a stop in Dublin that I don’t really remember, and then we were landing at Gatwick Airport. The train took us to Victoria Station but again it was all a bit of a blur. What I learned right away was that Londoners are without a doubt the most gracious hosts, every time we stopped and stared about us with puzzled expressions on our faces, someone would approach with a kind word and excellent directions. We checked into our hotel on Hyde Park and passed out. As I fell asleep, I couldn’t believe I was really in London.

The next day we had tickets for the London Eye. We wanted to start our trip with the big view of the city. And it was there, when I walked out of the station toward the Thames River, that I caught my first sight of Big Ben. My heart expanded so big in my chest that I thought I’d pop a rib. My entire life I had dreamed of standing on the banks of the river gazing at the iconic clock face, and there I was. It was a moment I will never ever forget because it was just as amazing as I had imagined it would be. How often in life does that happen?

Death of a Mad Hatter was written during my stay in London while I gorged myself on the sights and sounds of the city with which I am now completely smitten. It comes out on May 6th and here’s a little description so you can decide if you’d like to join me on the trip. Scarlett Parker and her British cousin, Vivian Tremont, are hard at work at Mim’s Whims—their ladies’ hat shop on London’s chic Portobello Road—to create hats for an Alice in Wonderland themed afternoon tea, a fund-raiser for a local children’s hospital. It seems like a wonderfully whimsical way to pass the hat, and Scarlett and Viv are delighted to outfit the Grisby family, the hosts who are hoping to raise enough money to name a new hospital wing after their patriarch.

Unfortunately, the Grisby heir will not live to see it—he’s been poisoned. When traces of the poison are found on the hat Scarlett and Viv made for him, the police become curiouser and curiouser about their involvement. Now the ladies need to don their thinking caps and find the tea party crasher who’s mad enough to kill at the drop of a hat.…

Thanks so much for letting me visit today! Cheerio, Pip pip, and all good things, 


Jenn




Jenn McKinlay is the New York Times bestselling 
author of several mystery series. 
She lives in sunny AZ in a house overrun with kids, 
pets, and her husband’s guitars. 
You can visit her website at www.jennmckinlay.com.




     
Berkley Prime Crime has generously offered a copy of Death of a Mad Hatter to one of my readers. Please comment here before midnight on May 15, and
please don't forget to include an email address where I can contact you if you win.