Category: Mystery/Detective Fiction/Crime Fiction/Thriller Page 3 of 152

Kickstarter Announcement: Book Blasts: Short, Thrilling Fiction for People on the Go

I’ve talked about some of Troy Lambert’s over the last couple of years, and now he’s teaming up with Vincent Zandri for a new project.

Book Blasts: Short, Thrilling Fiction for Readers on the Go

A year-long journey of bite-sized, heart-pounding stories delivered straight to your hands.

What if you could unwrap a brand-new thriller every six weeks?
With Book Blasts, bestselling authors Troy Lambert and Vincent Zandri bring you fast-paced, short fiction duets designed for busy readers who still crave excitement, intrigue, and unforgettable characters.

This Kickstarter makes you part of the action from the very beginning—and guarantees your seat at the front of the ride.

What Are Book Blasts?

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  • Duets of short stories (two per release) every six weeks throughout 2026.
  • Thrilling, noir-inspired tales for readers who love quick but powerful fiction.
  • Multiple formats available—digital, paperback, or collectible hardcovers.
  • Think of it like a literary subscription box: always fresh, always thrilling, always on time.

    This campaign is going for another 6 days (until November 24 at 7:29am MST), and it could use the support. If you think the idea is as promising as I do, kick that start and throw some money at the project!
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    Mushroom Blues by Adrian M. Gibson: The Future is Fungal

    I keep getting distracted from working on this post, but when I saw this on the schedule for BBNYA Spotlight posts, I figured it was about to time to force myself to write something. If I’m doing one post about this novel today, I might as well do two, right?


    Cover of Mushroom Blues by Adrian M. GibsonMushroom Blues

    by Adrian M. Gibson

    DETAILS:
    Series: The Hofmann Report, Book One
    Publisher: Kinoko Book Co.
    Publication Date: April 2, 2024
    Format: Paperback
    Length: 371 pg.
    Read Date: August 20-26, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    What’s on the back cover of Mushroom Blues?

    In addition to glowing blurbs from people who know what they’re talking about, we get this description:

    BLADE RUNNER, TRUE DETECTIVE, AND DISTRICT 9 meld with the weird worlds of JEFF VANDERMEER, PHILIP K. DICK, AND CHINA MIÉVILLE in Adrian M. Gibson’s award-winning fungalpunk noir debut.

    TWO YEARS AFTER a devastating defeat in the decade-long Spore War, the island nation of Hōppon and its capital city of Neo Kinoko are occupied by invading Coprinian forces. Its fungal citizens are in dire straits, wracked by food shortages, poverty, and an influx of war refugees. Even worse, the corrupt occupiers exploit their power, hounding the native population.

    As a winter storm looms over the metropolis, NKPD homicide detective Henrietta Hofmann begrudgingly partners up with mushroom-headed patrol officer Koji Nameko to investigate the mysterious murders of fungal and half-breed children. Their investigation drags them deep into the seedy underbelly of a war-torn city, one brimming with colonizers, criminal gangs, racial division, and moral decay.

    In order to solve the case and unravel the truth, Hofmann must challenge her past and embrace fungal ways. What she and Nameko uncover in the midst of this frigid wasteland will chill them to the core, but will they make it through the storm alive?

    The Worldbuilding

    My biggest—probably only (or only worth writing down)—complaint about this book is that we just don’t get told enough about the Hōpponese/Human relations before the war. I’m having a hard time understanding what things were like, what kind of cultural/technological/commercial relationships/understandings existed. I also have a hard time believing that there wasn’t anything worth talking about before the war started.

    Now, let’s set that all aside for a moment—I don’t want to spend more time on it, it’s not worth it, and if the novel itself can, I can. The rest of the worldbuilding, the Hōpponese culture, the despicable way that the humans are treating them, the way the Human-Occupier mini-culture is operating, the Hōpponese resistance (s), the Hōpponese themselves, the way that humans risk some kind of infection every time they breathe the air, the…yeah, the list is getting out of hand. So let’s just sum it up with “everything I didn’t mention in the above paragraph” are close enough to perfect that you can’t tell me not to consider it.

    As you read this book, you can see the city, you can smell the environs, taste some of the food described, feel the atmosphere, you can hear the language, and you can viscerally sense the non-humanness of the Hōpponese and just how off-putting it is. Gibson utterly nailed this.

    I’ve Just Gotta Say This…

    I know I haven’t read everything out there about this book—even if I ignore Goodreads, online retailers, The Story Graph, etc.—so maybe I missed this. If I did—I’ll happily eat my hat and credit others. But I haven’t seen anyone talk about Alien Nation in relation to this book—the movie, the TV series, the tie-in novels (and, yes, I watched and read them all). I don’t get it—other than age (we’re talking late 80s/early 90s), these are the perfect comparisons to this work.

    Sure, Gibson’s book is so much better—if only because the Fungal people don’t get drunk off of something as silly as spoiled milk. But the prejudice, the cultural mixes, the attitudes (both within the police and both races) toward the non-human partner, and the attitude of the human detective about the whole partnership…these works are of a piece.

    Anyway, I just had to say something about it because I couldn’t stop thinking about it for a moment.

    So, what did I think about Mushroom Blues?

    Just by talking about it as little as I have already, I want to set everything (book, employment, family obligation, writing project—including this post) aside for the next few days and re-read the book; it’s got its hooks in me that deeply. Something I didn’t realize until now.

    Most of the time, I don’t really think about how unnerving it has to be for a human to walk around in a fictional world and encounter an elf, a Vulcan, an orc, or a…whatever it was that Rocky from Project: Hail Mary was. At least after the first encounter. But there’s something about a mushroom-person that gives me the willies—Gibson has filled this species with a lot of facts and theories about how mushrooms on our planet live and communicate, just put them in humanoid bodies capable of speaking English (or Common).

    The other-ness, or non-humanness, of the Hōppon is as much part of the atmosphere of the book as is the tobacco smoke that Hofmann fills the air around her with. And I do feel a little speciesist just saying that. And then once you learn what it is—beyond bringing some diversity to the force—that Koji does for the police? It’s worse. But I don’t for a second lose any affection for or curiosity about Koji. It’s just one more reason that I feel unnerved by the Hōppon.

    I had guessed the who—but not most of the why—behind these crimes pretty early on—and I’m not sure that Gibson’s herrings were of a red-enough color to capture my attention. But the way that Koji and Hofmann go about their investigation and slowly reveal the truth—and what that truth means? Gibson was near-perfect again on that front.

    I really just want to keep going on about all the things about this book that I loved—note how I haven’t talked about the characters, because that’d be another few hundred pages just to start.

    The mystery/police procedural part of this was great. The alternate world was outstanding. The worldbuilding is top-notch. The primary and secondary characters were drawn so wonderfully. The motives for the crimes (and the crime fighting) were complex and messy—and almost entirely understandable. The genre-hybrid of this feels entirely natural to an extent that you can almost wonder why anyone hasn’t been approaching these genres in a similar fashion for decades.

    I’m just babbling now—I don’t have anything coherent to say anymore (assuming I started that way). If you haven’t taken the plunge with this book, you really should. That’s all I’ve got to say.


    4 1/2 Stars

    This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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    BBNYA SEMI-FINALIST SPOTLIGHT: Mushroom Blues by Adrian M. Gibson

    I’m very pleased today to welcome The BBNYA Semi-Finalist Spotlight Tour for Adrian M. Gibson’s dynamite Mushroom Blues! This book has made it to the semi-finals, so you know there’s something good going on–but before getting to this Spotlight, let’s start with a word about BBNYA.

    Also, come back in few hours when I will finally get my post about the book up–almost 3 months after I read it.

    BBNYA:

    BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 badge

    If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on Twitter @BBNYA_Official.

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    Book Details:

    Title: Mushroom Blues by Adrian M. Gibson
    Genre: Mystery, Fantasy, Science Fiction
    Age Category: Adult
    Format: Hardcover/Paperback/Ebook/Audiobook
    Length: 408 Pages
    Publication Date: March 19, 2024
    Cover of Mushroom Blues by Adrian M. Gibson

    About the Book:

    Blade Runner, True Detective and District 9 meld with the weird worlds of Jeff VanderMeer and China Miéville in Adrian M. Gibson’s fungalpunk noir debut.

    NKPD homicide detective Henrietta Hofmann begrudgingly partners up with fungal patrol officer Koji Nameko to investigate the mysterious murders of fungal and half-breed children, a case that drags them deep into the seedy underbelly of a war-torn city.

    Book Links:

    Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

    About the Author:

    Adrian M. GibsonAdrian M. Gibson is an award-winning Canadian SFF author, podcaster, illustrator and tattoo artist. In 2021, he created the SFF Addicts podcast, which he co-hosts with fellow authors M.J. Kuhn and Greta Kelly. The three host in-depth interviews with an array of science fiction and fantasy authors, as well as writing masterclasses. Mushroom Blues is his debut novel.

    Website ~ Twitter ~ Instagram ~ Bluesky


    My thanks to The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

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    BBNYA SEMI-FINALIST SPOTLIGHT: My Dark Self by Jessica Huntley

    I’m very pleased today to welcome The BBNYA Semi-Finalist Spotlight Tour for Jessica Huntley’s My Dark Self! This book has made it to the semi-finals, so you know there’s something good going on–but before getting to this Spotlight, let’s start with a word about BBNYA.

    BBNYA:

    BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 badge

    If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on Twitter @BBNYA_Official.

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    Book Details:

    Title: My Dark Self by Jessica Huntley
    Genre: Thriller, Mystery
    Age Category: Adult
    Format: Paperback/Ebook/Audiobook
    Length: 395 Pages
    Publication Date: July 1, 2021
    Cover of My Dark Self by Jessica Huntley

    About the Book:

    A dark and addictive psychological thriller that will have you turning the pages long into the night. Meet Josslyn and Alicia … your new best friend and your worst enemy.

    Josslyn is a mild-mannered vet who prefers animals to people. Alicia is a ruthless and psychotic killer. But there’s a problem … They are the same person.

    When Josslyn finds a clue as to who Alicia really is, she sets out on a mission to discover the truth and hopefully get rid of the psychopath in her head before she kills again.

    However, Alicia has her own agenda and isn’t afraid to mess things up for Josslyn. She wants control of their body and won’t rest until she gets her way.

    Someone is stalking them and clearly knows more about them than they do. Will Josslyn and Alicia ever be able to see eye to eye and work together to overcome adversity?

    My Dark Self is the first book in the My … Self series, a gripping thriller series with a big difference … the two main characters are one person. If you like fast-paced psychological thrillers with plenty of twists and turns and witty banter then you’ll love this dramatic series from Jessica Huntley.

    Book Links:

    Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

    About the Author:

    Jessica HuntleyJessica Huntley is an award-winning and best-selling psychological thriller author. She’s an ex-British soldier and Personal Trainer and has been writing almost non-stop for the past four years.

    She is now the author of nineteen books. She is both self-published and traditionally published with Inkubator Books and Joffe Books.

    She writes books for thriller readers who like their stories dark and twisty with complex, yet memorable characters, who often suffer from relatable mental health disorders.

    When she isn’t writing, Jessica is either keeping fit, walking her dog or looking after her young son.

    Website ~ Twitter ~ Instagram


    My thanks to The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 Semi-Finalist badge

    The Broken Detective by Joel Nedecky: The Lost. The Broken. The Missing.

    Cover of The Broken Detective by Joel NedeckyThe Broken Detective

    by Joel Nedecky

    DETAILS:
    Publisher: Runamok Books
    Publication Date: October 15, 2025
    Format: ARC
    Length: 262 pg.
    Read Date: October 29-30, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    What’s The Broken Detective About?

    Our protagonist-narrator is a PI who just lost his license (a felony conviction will do that to a guy) and who is headed to prison in a couple of weeks (a felony conviction will do that to a guy). Jake’s major concern at this moment is his mother—she’s disabled and addicted, and cannot be trusted to pay her bills or feed herself anything but alcohol. Jake’s it—but Jake’s thrown all that away (also, related to his mom, but mostly because of dumb choices).

    So Jake needs to make as much money as he possibly can over the next two weeks—he has a figure in mind, one he probably can’t meet. But he has a goal—bank robbery is probably the most likely way to meet it, but there are problems there (aside from the legality)—he’d probably get caught (I should mention that he’s a barely functional addict—which led to the dumb choices above) and then things would be worse for mom.

    Thankfully, someone has a case for Jake, and she doesn’t care about the licensing. Her sister has been missing, she can’t go to the cops, but her sister needs to be found before it’s too late for her. This woman wasn’t even referred to Jake because of his skills (which is probably good). She’s sent to see Jake because Jake will go to the wretched hives of scum and villainy that this woman’s sister traveled in, because he belongs there, too. He won’t stick out like a sore thumb, and people will talk to him.

    One broken detective looking for a missing and broken woman.

    This will lead him into the paths of drug dealers, questionable authorities, a cult (or is it?) that the sisters once belonged to, other questionable associates of both sisters, and possibly a shot at hope for Jake and the missing woman.

    The Title

    I have several thoughts about the title—first, it’s incredibly fitting. On the other hand…

    There’s part of me that wonders who the definite article is referring to—obviously, Jake’s the “The” in view, we know he’s broken from the get-go, and we never get anything but reinforcement of that fact. However, over the course of the novel, we meet more than one detective who fits that description. A Broken Detective or The Broken Detectives would work just as well as a title

    But really, that just means the detectives we encounter are just like everyone else in the book. Everyone is broken (yes, like in reality, but it’s a bit easier to see here). From the witnesses, the bystanders, the victims, the complicit, and the guilty—from the first page to the last, this book could—and possibly should—simply be called The Broken. Don’t mistake broken for morally bent (or worse), but life and others have taken these people and have left them as other than they started, other than they could’ve been. Not whole, not intact, but broken.

    But it’s not, it’s The Broken Detective, and it’s probably up to the reader to decide if it’s Jake or another candidate.

    So, what did I think about The Broken Detective?

    I hemmed and hawed about if I should say more about the plot and characters—but after a few tries, I opted not to. Everything I tried to say felt like a spoiler—it’s best if you learn about all involved the same way Jake does (or when he tells you about them, in the case of people he knows already). Because, sure, the book is about Jake looking for this woman. But really, it’s about Jake figuring out who he is, who he wants to be, and if he wants to do the required work to get from here to there. So it’s best for the reader to take the journey with Jake and come in with few preconceived notions.

    Or so I think, anyway.

    One critique I have is that I’m not sure that bringing in an church/cult from “the real world” as a comparison/parallel to the one in this book was necessary—or that the stone that Jake turned over as a result of his research was necessary. It turned a murky and questionable group (up to some horrible, repugnantly illegal stuff) into a creepy murky and questionable group (up to some horrible, repugnantly illegal stuff). Just a step too far. There was no ambiguity about the church already—I don’t see what he gained by making them worse.

    Early on, I noticed something—and then backtracked to check to make sure I was right, and then watched for it going on. Nedecky cares about the last line/paragraph of a chapter. Obviously, he cares about every line and paragraph, but it feels like he puts extra care into those. Not in the way that some do to propel you into the next chapter (not that there’s anything wrong with that), but it’s like he knows that a chapter end is likely to be where someone puts the book down for one reason or another—and Nedecky wants to leave his reader with something to think about. It’ll either be an emotional punch or a line to chew on.

    I had things I needed to accomplish the night I started this, so I forced myself to put it down—but this could’ve easily been a one-sitting book. This novel got its hooks in me and didn’t want to let go.

    The ending—and the final revelations—will not make anyone happy. Well, it shouldn’t. But it will satisfy and gratify you—because of the storytelling involved, because it’s fitting, because it’s as noir as you can get. You won’t walk away with a smile on your face and a song in your heart, but you’ll walk away with that satisfaction that comes from a near-perfect execution.

    I highly recommend this.


    4 Stars

    This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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    BBNYA SEMI-FINALIST SPOTLIGHT: Saving Grace by Jon McConnell

    I’m very pleased today to welcome The BBNYA Semi-Finalist Spotlight Tour for Jon McConnell’s Saving Grace! So, this book has made it to the semi-finals, so you know there’s something good going on–but before getting to this Spotlight, let’s start with a word about BBNYA.

    BBNYA:

    BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 badge

    If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on Twitter @BBNYA_Official.

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    Book Details:

    Title: Saving Grace by Jon McConnell
    Genre: Horror, Thriller
    Age Category: Adult
    Format: Paperback/Ebook
    Length: 357 Pages
    Publication Date: October 31, 2022
    Cover of Saving Grace by Jon McConnell

    About the Book:

    Middle school English teacher Gabriel Walker always joked that his students were going to kill him; he never thought it might actually happen. After a mysterious epidemic turns children into psychotic killers, the world descends into chaos.

    Gabriel and a small group of survivors are alive because they hide in plain sight; they broke down their own door, busted in their windows and they don’t take risks. The survivors have a system. And it works. But when they run into Grace, the rules change.

    Book Links:

    Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

    About the Author:

    Jon McConnell is a high school English teacher at Nipomo High School in California. He makes his home in Orcutt, nestled in the Central Coast with his wife/co-author, Dayna, and two rambunctious sons, Declan and Ezra. He has loved the zombie genre ever since he stayed up with his brothers to watch George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead, but enjoys a good romantic comedy as well.

    Website ~ Twitter ~ Instagram


    My thanks to The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 Semi-Finalist badge

    BBNYA SEMI-FINALIST SPOTLIGHT: Shadows of Old Town by T. Olsen

    I’m very pleased today to welcome The BBNYA Semi-Finalist Spotlight Tour for T. Olsen’s Shadows of Old Town! So, this book has made it to the semi-finals, so you know there’s something good going on–but before getting to this Spotlight, let’s start with a word about BBNYA.

    BBNYA:

    BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 badge

    If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on Twitter @BBNYA_Official.

    Pilcrow

    Book Details:

    Title: Shadows of Old Town by T. Olsen
    Genre: Fantasy, Mystery, Heist
    Age Category: Adult
    Format: Paperback/Ebook
    Length: 370 Pages
    Publication Date: March 28, 2024
    Cover of Shadows of Old Town by T. Olsen

    About the Book:

    Legend says there was once a labyrinth where the city of Sangarie now stands. Each year on the Night of Shadows the populace stays inside while gateways to the labyrinth appear in the streets, and shadows wait to devour the brave, or the foolish. Gray was both, and it still haunts him.

    He deals with his nightmares through sarcasm and overconfidence, and has risen in the ranks of the criminal guild to wrangle the most unruly district in the city: Old Town. He cheats at dice, drinks too much, and flirts as naturally as he breathes. When he finds the body of a fellow guild member, rumors spread that he’s the killer and he does what he does best—ignores authority and tries to handle it himself.

    His investigations leave him on the run from both the guild and the guards, and he’s blackmailed into one last heist. One that will plunge him into the bowels of urban legend and force him to face his own traumatic past. The city’s future depends on the wit and bluster of the greatest thief ever to run across its rooftops, but can he survive the labyrinth a second time?

    Book Links:

    Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

    About the Author:

    T. OlsenShe’s the weird lady in Small Town USA who wears pajamas to the grocery store to buy cake. She’s always been drawn to the stories in her head, and spends most of her time with one foot in the real world and one foot in her own worlds. She finally built her dream house and lives there with her husband, where swords feature prominently in the interior decor and she has her own witchy medieval themed kitchen.

    Website ~ Twitter ~ Instagram ~ Threads ~ Bluesky


    My thanks to The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 Semi-Finalist badge

    Catch-Up Quick Takes — Some Recent Mysteries

    It’s been a while since I’ve done one of these (have another two in the pipeline). This time, I’m looking at a few mystery novels that I just don’t have the time/will to do a “full” post on, as deserving as they are. I recommend all of these, and you’d do well to pick them up in one format or another. As always, the point of these quick takes posts is to catch up on my “To Write About” stack—emphasizing pithiness, not thoroughness.


    Cover of The Keeper of Lost Causes by Jussi Adler-OlsenKeeper of Lost Causes

    by Jussi Adler-Olsen, read by Erik Davies

    DETAILS:
    Series: Department Q, #1
    Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
    Publication Date: August 23, 2011
    Format: Unabridged Audiobook
    Length: 15 hrs., 36 min.
    Read Date: August 22-26, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    (the official blurb)
    This is a novel about a broken—psychologically, emotionally, and physically—detective obsessed with remaining professionally active. He’s assigned to a new cold case squad and hampered bureaucratically at every turn. Saddled with what seems to be the worst assistant possible (but turns out to be anything but), he starts looking into the cold case surrounding the disappearance of a politician five years ago.

    The characters are really well drawn, the story seems to meander a bit—but really never does (something you can only know in retrospect), and the pay-off is really satisfying. I didn’t love it, but I couldn’t stop listening, either.
    The accents used by the narrator seem to fade in and out at times—and I wonder what someone from that part of the world would have to say about them (I’m prepared to be informed that [narrator’s name] is a native and this American doesn’t know what he’s talking about).

    So obviously, this is significantly different than the adaptation—and in a way that makes me both admire the adaptation more, and realizing the way this was a stronger work, too. (I’m probably more interested in the second series of the show than in the second book, but I’ll probably give it a shot, too.)
    3.5 Stars

    Cover of Lloyd McNeil's Last Ride by Will LeitchLloyd McNeil’s Last Ride

    by Will Leitch, read by Chris Andrew Ciulla

    DETAILS:
    Publisher: Harper 
    Publication Date: May 20, 2025
    Format: Unabridged Audiobook
    Length: 8 hr., 59 min. 
    Read Date: August 27-28, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    (the official blurb)
    This Better Off Dead-influenced Police Procedural didn’t really match my expectations. This is both good (the novel was much more rewarding and emotionally-rich than I’d anticipated), and bad (while definitely amusing and sometimes downright funny, I’d been hoping for more ridiculous humor rather than the grounded stuff the book delivered).

    Absolutely worth the time. The most feel-good police procedural I can think of (unless you count Backman’s Anxious People, which I don’t).
    3 Stars

    Cover of Death at the White Hart by Chris ChibnallDeath at the White Hart

    by Chris Chibnall, read by Jessica Gunning

    DETAILS:
    Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
    Publication Date: June 10, 2025
    Format: Unabridged Audiobooks
    Length: 9 hrs., 32 min.
    Read Date: September 5-9, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    (the official blurb)
    I have two big take-aways from this book.

    1. Let Chibnall do this kind of thing—murders in a small town without much violent crime.
    2. Keep him away from things like Doctor Who.

    This is such a rich book—the setting was fantastic. Chibnall populates this town with a wonderful assortment of characters from several walks of life—and you feel like you get to know them well. The police characters are the kind I’d like to see again (but, I just don’t see a sequel working). The mystery at the book’s heart was so cleverly laid out and the reveal was as good as you could hope for.

    There’s a young girl character who will break your heart, and you will want to adopt her. Even if I didn’t so much like the book, I’d have been glad for her storyline alone.

    3.5 Stars

    Cover of The Silver State by Gabriel UrzaThe Silver State

    by Gabriel Urza

    DETAILS:
    Publisher: Algonquin Books
    Publication Date: July 8, 2025
    Format: Hardcover
    Length: 304 pg.
    Read Date: September 17-19, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    (the official blurb)
    Ohhhh, there’s so much to talk about with this one. There’s the discouraging, disheartening, troubling behind-the-scenes at the Public Defender’s Office material. All of which feels so true-to-life that I can only imagine that the reality is worse. What it says about our Criminal Justice System is even worse. The personal story about this one lawyer is pretty stark, too. You hope that things get better for him and his family, too.

    Then there’s the murder, the court maneuverings, the way the lawyers’ lives are changed by this. It’s just so…bleak. Wonderfully done—it’s supposed to be bleak, it’s supposed to make you wonder about what we’re doing with criminals/the accused/those defending them right now. The author pulled off what he set out to here, but you’re going to want something light on-deck to read after this.

    So why am I covering the book in a quick-take instead of a longer post where I can expand all that? Honestly, I just don’t care enough. That’s not a slight on the book, it’s just my energy levels and picking what I want to invest energy in. I’ll definitely pounce on anything else Urza puts out and recommend you do the same.
    3 Stars

    Cover of The Edge of the Crazies by Jamie HarrisonThe Edge of the Crazies

    by Jamie Harrison, read by Justin Price

    DETAILS:
    Series: Jules Clement, #1
    Publisher: Highbridge Company  
    Publication Date: November 5, 2024
    Format: Unabridged Audiobook
    Length: 9 hrs., 43 min.
    Read Date: September 18-19, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    (the official blurb)
    This is a very odd book, and hard to pin down. I like that about it, but it’s difficult to talk about. This is possibly the least effective, least qualified, small-town sheriff I can think of. It doesn’t matter how small his community is (still a sprawling metropolis compared to Longmire’s), he really shouldn’t have anything to do with law enforcement. Yet, I really like him—he seems like a decent guy, who’ll probably grow into the job (based on the number of books in the series)—assuming he can stay sober and keep his pants zipped.

    The county and its residents…boy howdy. A great setting, that’s going to be rewarding. I don’t know if I have much else to say—maybe after another couple of books in the series.

    Entertaining, puzzling, a nice mystery (hidden beneath so many wonderful misleading clues and red herrings), a good cast (decent narrator, too, I should add). Check it out.
    3 Stars

    This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase from any of them, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.

    BBNYA SEMI-FINALIST SPOTLIGHT: The Night Counsellor by L K Pang

    I’m very pleased today to welcome The BBNYA Semi-Finalist Spotlight Tour for by L K Pang’ The Night Counsellor! So, this book has made it to the semi-finals, so you know there’s something good going on–but before getting to this Spotlight, let’s start with a word about BBNYA.

    BBNYA:

    BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

    The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 badge

    If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on Twitter @BBNYA_Official.

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    Book Details:

    Title: The Night Counsellor by L K Pang
    Genre: Fantasy, Science Fiction
    Age Category: Young Adult
    Format: Hardcover/Paperback/Ebook
    Length: 256 Pages
    Publication Date: February 23, 2023
    Cover of The Night Counsellor by L K Pang

    About the Book:

    When silence dawns, only dusk will break it.

    In the shadowy corridors of The Beaumont, a mental hospital haunted by its dark history as an asylum, a disturbing mystery unfolds when in 1953, a woman is found mute, naked, and drenched in blood on the outskirts of West Yorkshire. With no memory of her past and no one to claim her, she is dubbed Patient A and placed under the care of the institution’s staff.

    Counsellor Jane Galloway, is drawn to Patient A’s case with a resolve to restore her ability to speak, no matter how unorthodox her methods appear to be. However, her efforts to penetrate the silence meet with stark opposition from the hospital’s rigid hierarchy. The situation takes a spine-chilling turn when whispers in the night link Patient A to a recently discovered corpse.

    As Jane edges closer to unravelling the eerie connection between her patient and the mysterious death, she must challenge a web of institutional resistance and hidden agendas. With time running against them, Jane’s quest to help Patient A reclaim her voice grows desperate. But in the harrowing halls of The Beaumont, speaking up can be deadly.

    Will Patient A find her voice before the shadows of her past come to silence her forever?

    Book Links:

    Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

    About the Author:

    L K PangL K Pang is a writer whose works are deeply influenced by the gothic classics of Jane Eyre, Rebecca, and Wuthering Heights. She made her debut in 2023 with Moat Hill Hall, a romantic thriller published by Chronos Publishing. It was during this debut that she discovered her passion for exploring the darker corners of the human psyche.

    In 2024, she released The Night Counsellor, a gripping 1950s thriller set in a mental hospital in West Yorkshire, which further solidified her love for psychological suspense.

    Formerly an architect, L K Pang now dedicates her time to writing, painting, and caring for her family in North Yorkshire, where the haunting landscapes often inspire her creative work.

    Her Instagram and Facebook profile handles are @lkpang.author

    Facebook ~ Instagram


    My thanks to The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

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    PUB DAY POST: Righteous Trash by Nick Kolakowski: A Chaotic Family Reunion

    Cover of Righteous Trash by Nick KolakowskiRighteous Trash

    by Nick Kolakowski

    DETAILS:
    Series: Jake Halligan, #3
    Publisher: Rock & a Hard Place Press
    Publication Date: October 23, 2025
    Format: eARC
    Length: 232 pg.
    Read Date: September 24, 2025
    Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

    What’s Righteous Trash About?

    Jake Halligan’s sister, Frankie, has come back to Idaho after a time in Mexico. She wants to start her business again—there’s always a market for guns, right? Especially of the extra-legal variety. But first, she wants to take care of some business for an old friend. With Jake’s help, of course. It’s messy and…well, never mind that.

    But before they can really get into that, they find themselves at the scene of the nuttiest (gutsiest?) robbery—that promises to wreck Jake’s life. There’s some involvement with the FBI, some political corruption and cover-ups, and so many people pointing guns at the siblings that it’d be too hard to count.

    All in all, a good time.

    Action

    One thing you expect from a Jake Halligan novel is some good action scenes—and boy howdy, does Kolakowski deliver here. There are some intense—almost cinematic—action scenes here.

    But the first big gun fight in particular is the one I want to focus on for just a moment—there are multiple groups, with varying alliances (the exact number is hard to determine in the moment). You need someone like John Woo or Chad Stahelski to bring this to life—you’ve got the bullets, the quips, some stupid and useless deaths, and a couple of good twists. If you haven’t been fully engaged in the novel to that point, you will be after it.

    The other action scenes are more grounded. I’m not saying they’re all that realistic, I don’t think (who reads these novels for hyper-realism?). But they seem a little more like what would happen to actual people, not stuntmen, in the situations. Just as compelling, just a little less eye-candy.

    Stand By Your Man

    One of the more interesting things through this series has been tracking the relationship between Jake and his wife. Or maybe it should be phrased as the relationship between Janine and her husband and sister-in-law’s lifestyle. She’s not comfortable with it (to undersell it), she doesn’t want it anywhere near their daughter, she’s barely tolerant of Frankie at all. And who could blame her for any of that? The number of bullets I want flying anywhere near my spouse is far lower than what Jake sees in the first book—never mind the others. And as for their kid? Forget it.

    That’s not to mention how often Janine’s life has been in danger. That alone should drive her away.

    Nevertheless, she stands by her man. I’m not sure if she should be admired or pitied, really. Either way, it makes her the kind of character you want to watch, and gives you something to think about in the midst of everything else.

    The Missing Sequel?

    Back in 2018, the first time I got to ask Kolakowski some questions, he mentioned a sequel to the first Jake Halligan book set in New Orleans. We ended up getting a very different sequel. Now in book three, we get a flashback to an adventure that Jake and Frankie had in The Big Easy.

    I don’t know if any of the material he’d prepared for that would-be sequel ended up as that flashback, but it’s fun to think about (and fun to imagine what would happen after it). Obviously, it could just be a coincidence, and he needed a non-Idaho place for the siblings to get into trouble—and New Orleans works well for both of those criteria.

    So, what did I think about Righteous Trash?

    Again, Kolakowski nails the local geography. I really think I could drive to each location he describes—and for those who aren’t from around these here parts, he describes them in a way that conveys a good feel for the place. The fact that I could give a tour of the series locations to a reader who dropped by is just a bonus. (and I can absolutely see the Idaho political scene function the way he depicts it, although I think that could be easily ported into the other 49, too).

    I enjoyed both the change—and utter lack of it—that we see in Frankie. She’s aged a bit, got some perspective (maybe wisdom), and knows what she wants. She’s also enough of a realist to understand what’s possible for her (you might read a little pessimism into that, too—but she’d deny that).

    I’m a little worried about our friend Jake, at least where he was at the beginning of the novel. He’s a survivor, and he has Janine and his daughter to worry about, so I assume he’ll find a way to get it done. These novels have taken their toll on him (and everyone else), which I appreciate because these kind of books can gloss over that kind of impact. But, he’s such a nice guy (most of the time), that you hate to see it.

    Great action, a clever story, characters that you just can’t get enough of. This is a fast-moving novel that will keep you turning pages longer than you should (plan your sleep accordingly; the adrenaline can only do so much). This is a fun thrill ride that will satisfy fans of the series and probably create some new ones, too. (It is absolutely not necessary to read the earlier novels before this, but you will appreciate some things more if you have.)


    4 Stars

    This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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