Heather Seggel

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Three new mysteries gain extra depth from their settings in decadent Gilded Age New York, interwar London and rural World War II-era Britain.

Dowager countess Philomena Amesbury left England behind for the bright lights of turn-of-the-century Manhattan when the miserable husband she was practically sold off to finally had the good sense to die. Now Phil is determined to live life to the fullest—and it certainly helps that her bills are paid by a mysterious benefactor, Mr. X, who periodically leaves clues in her path. In Tell Me No Lies, author Shelley Noble turns Phil loose on a case with suspects to spare.

When the young heir to a fortune is found stuffed into a laundry chute after a party, investigating detectives would like nothing more than for Phil to butt out. But she received a heads-up about the case from Mr. X, and before long she’s on the intriguing trail. The clues lead her through the Plaza Hotel and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but much more is revealed at a country house where tempers grow short and the fog makes it dreadfully hard to see who’s milling about. Add in some tantalizing romantic potential (Lady Phil’s benefactor won’t show his face, but he does occasionally show up and spend the night) and a hot air balloon chase, and you’ve got suspense steeped in Gilded Age glamour, and a very good time indeed.

The Body on the Train pits investigator Kate Shackleton against, well, almost everyone by story’s end. Scotland Yard enlists her to help identify the titular body, which was found in a sack on a train carrying rhubarb. Kate finds credible information hard to come by among the Yorkshire residents she talks to. The train may have departed from there, but the community’s internal struggles have made them wary of outsiders. Soon Kate is investigating a second murder along with a labor dispute and a battle over land use—and trying to save her own neck in the bargain.

Author Frances Brody lets Kate wander at will, and it’s a pleasure to follow her. She stays at the home of a friend under the pretext of creating a local photography feature, and the photos she takes of people and places are described so vividly you can almost see them. The struggle to balance the rights of workers and the needs of an impoverished community makes for a tense backdrop, and Kate’s relationship with her friend is strained as she learns more about the friend’s role in both. When everyone’s motives are suspect, it’s impossible to know who to trust, and this thriller makes great use of that fact in a truly chilling climax.

Poppy Redfern is doing her bit for England’s war effort. Her family home and farm have been seized so the U.S. Air Force can use them, and Poppy serves as an air raid warden, helping with drills and checking the village for any glimpse of light through the blackout curtains. But when two young women who had been dating American servicemen are found strangled to death, suddenly wartime allies seem like potential enemies stationed too close to home. In Poppy Redfern and the Midnight Murders author Tessa Arlen layers suspicion on top of suspicion against a backdrop of privation and English resolve.

Local distrust of the “Yanks” runs so high that it may well divert attention away from a killer hiding in plain sight. But Poppy’s easy friendship with one of the Americans could be leading her to trust too readily. (It’s hard to be mad at someone who can get real beef in the midst of rationing.) She works out her theories of the case via a novel in progress whose protagonist always seems to have the answers she lacks. Vivid settings and high emotions keep the suspense at fever pitch, but it’s the characters that make Arlen’s series kickoff such a stunner.

Three new mysteries gain extra depth from their settings in decadent Gilded Age New York, interwar London and rural World War II-era Britain.
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Mystery novels are among the great escapist indulgences, or so you’d think. Two new espionage thrillers flip that theory on its head with stories that revolve around Russian interference in foreign elections. They may hit close to home, but they still pack in a lot of thrills.

In Agent Running in the Field, John le Carré masterfully moves chessmen around the board, subtly pocketing them while we’re distracted. The middle-aged Nat is preparing to leave (read: be let go from) a career in Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service but is surprised to be given a job keeping an eye on Moscow’s equivalent office. The Russians may try to influence Brexit and who comes to power in Britain, but it’s impossible to predict how or when it might happen.

To blow off steam, Nat plays badminton with Ed, an odd fellow who challenges Nat to a match at their athletic club and quickly becomes his weekly partner. There are a few scenes that are genre classics, like discovering a folded message hidden in a lipstick case, but the reader will be most drawn into this tangled tale by its richly drawn relationships among family, friends and colleagues. The scrappy office Nat works from feels more like a dying newspaper than the stuff of cinematic spy thrillers, but that close-knit environment is easily strained when it’s impossible to know who you can trust. Le Carré keeps the tension at a steady simmer that never bubbles over, and it’s an unsettling pleasure to follow this Agent as he persists in his duties.

The action in Tom Bradby’s Secret Service spikes and dips along with its emotional currents. Kate Henderson is a senior MI6 officer facing a nightmare scenario: Britain’s prime minister is ill, and one of his likely replacements may be acting on behalf of Russia. But is the news even true, or is it a fake story designed to sow chaos? Bradby pulls this premise in multiple directions.

Kate’s work relies on her being devoutly loyal to her team, but that allows family ties to fray. Strained relations with her husband and her aging mother have her constantly questioning her own judgment—which is especially dangerous when making the right call at work can mean life or death. A subplot involving her daughter’s new boyfriend shows just how difficult constant suspicion can be on a family. Those moments are human and all too real, nicely contrasting with scenes in which the MI6 agent is on the job. After hours of staring at a screen and eating cold pizza, Kate’s life can turn on a dime when suddenly there’s a firefight or a witness to nab. Tension piles on tension in what feels like a race against time, but the climactic scene is deliberately slow to reveal the answers—and it’s a heartbreaker.

It may skew close to events that feel real, but Secret Service includes a range of settings and dynamic action sequences that unfold with visual flair, making it an immersive, meaty thriller.

Mystery novels are among the great escapist indulgences, or so you’d think. Two new espionage thrillers flip that theory on its head with stories that revolve around Russian interference in foreign elections. They may hit close to home, but they still pack in a lot of thrills.

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It’s always a delight to celebrate the women who make us laugh, who have shaped popular culture and politics and who have defined (and redefined) aging. 


The League of Extraordinarily Funny Women by Sheila Moeschen
The League of Extraordinarily Funny Women: 50 Trailblazers of Comedy is a small coffee table book that’s a treat to explore. Sheila Moeschen provides thumbnail biographies of comics ranging from Moms Mabley to Tig Notaro, capturing a little of what makes each woman unique. Categories include “Snarky, Sassy, Super Smarties” and “Courageous, Creative, Character Comics.” (It’s a crime that Madeline Kahn is not among the comics included, but what’s a list without some controversy?) Artist Anne Bentley’s full-color illustrations bring Kate McKinnon’s feline grin and Robin Thede’s laser brilliance to life. If you’re a comedy fan, there’s a good chance you’ll discover some new favorites while connecting with women you already admire in this era-spanning celebration.

No Stopping Us Now by Gail Collins
New York Times columnist Gail Collins looks at the ways aging has both limited and liberated women in No Stopping Us Now: The Adventures of Older Women in American History. Lots of nuggets here are hilarious in hindsight, like a women’s magazine from the 1800s asserting that a woman is considered young at 17 but a “snubbed, spinster governess” at merely “nine-and-twenty.” Collins goes through four centuries of history, and doesn’t shy away from ugliness, such as the virulent racism of many early feminists. She tells the stories of still-famous women who achieved great things later in life (Sojourner Truth and Sandra Day O’Connor) as well as those who have faded into obscurity (Gilded Age actress Eileen Karl and Wild West stagecoach driver  Mary Fields). The suffrage movement in particular found older women coming into their own both socially and politically. This account is a moving tribute of the power and persistence of American women. 

Vanity Fair’s Women on Women edited by Radhika Jones
Vanity Fair’s Women on Women delivers exactly what the title suggests: 28 essays profiling women who stand out in politics, pop culture and society at large, all penned by women. A trio of first lady profiles—Barbara Bush, Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama—is a study in contrasts, offering views from inside and outside the White House. Royalty abounds, both British (Princess Diana, Queen Elizabeth II), and American (Lady Gaga, Meryl Streep). A section of essays by women “In Their Own Words” includes an analysis of the meaning of #MeToo by Monica Lewinsky. A particular delight is “Emily Post’s Social Revolution,” in which Laura Jacobs profiles the woman whose notions of etiquette still guide us today. Don’t miss this deep and dishy collection.

It’s always a delight to celebrate the women who make us laugh, who have shaped popular culture and politics and who have defined (and redefined) aging. 


The League of Extraordinarily Funny Women by Sheila Moeschen
The League of Extraordinarily Funny Women: 50 Trailblazers…

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Three standout cozies featuring smart and sassy heroines.


 ★ Dead in Dublin
Catie Murphy kicks off the Dublin Driver Mystery series with Dead in Dublin. Ex-military combat medic Megan Malone has started life over as a limo driver in Ireland—a pleasant enough gig until her client, a famous food blogger, keels over while she’s on the job. The restaurant where the blogger last ate is doomed if their food was the cause, and Megan is quickly enlisted to find out the truth. Murphy’s Dublin feels immersive and authentic, and even minor characters add depth and detail. Orla Keegan, Megan’s boss at the limo company and also her landlord, is a prickly delight, harsh and demanding but fair when the situation demands it. This is an auspicious series debut, and hopefully the luck of the Irish will hold for many more stories to come.

In the Shadow of Vesuvius
The ruins of Pompeii include plaster casts of people who died when Mount Vesuvius erupted, an arresting reminder that death can come at any time. When Emily Hargreaves visits the site, she finds a contemporary corpse encased in plaster, and the hunt for a killer begins. In the Shadow of Vesuvius, the 14th Lady Emily mystery, leaps between Emily in 1902 and a newly freed Roman slave during the year of Vesuvius’ eruption. Tasha Alexander brings both eras to life through meticulous research, and the dual stories come together in a chilling finale. Scenes set among the ruins of Pompeii and in the city pre-disaster have such depth that it feels like we’re walking directly into them. This is an urbane thriller with a big heart.

And Dangerous to Know
If London’s Regency era ran on anything (apart from tea, of course), it was manners. And Dangerous to Know finds Rosalind Thorne acting as a double agent of sorts, while curtsying at all the right moments. Working as Lady Melbourne’s personal secretary is just a cover for her real purpose: finding out who stole a cache of letters tied to the poet Lord Byron and digging for dirt about a body found on the lady’s grounds. Author Darcie Wilde gives Rosalind a keen mind and boundless curiosity, then tethers her to the polite maneuvers that society demands. It’s excruciating and hilarious to watch Rosalind feign interest in someone’s garden while having a surreptitious conversation about evidence. Rosalind carries the soul of Sherlock Holmes in the world of Elizabeth Bennet, and it’s a hard combination to beat.

The best cozy mysteries of January 2020.
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International settings unite these three superlative cozy mysteries.


★ The Body in the Garden

Lily Adler is a widow in mourning. Fortunately, dipping a toe back into the social whirl at Lady Walter’s ball should be a doddle; they are old friends, after all. But Lily overhears an argument and then a gunshot, which all leads just where you might expect considering the title: The Body in the Garden. First-time author Katharine Schellman tosses Lily into a moral conundrum, as after the body is found, Lily sees Lord Walter paying someone off to drop the investigation. Finding the truth is the right thing to do, but it might compromise her friends. Sensitive handling of class and race issues common to London in the early 1800s give the story depth, and there are some truly nail-biting moments as Lily finds her way as a sleuth. Readers will love her and be eager for more after finishing this smashing debut.

Murder in an Irish Cottage

Carlene O’Connor’s Irish Village series tangles with ancient superstitions in its fifth installment, Murder in an Irish Cottage. Garda Siobhán O’Sullivan fears that her fiancé, Detective Sergeant Macdara Flannery, may be too close to the crime to check his emotions, as the murder victim in question is his Aunt Ellen. Ellen’s daughter, Jane, appears to know more than she lets on, and their wee village doesn’t disguise its collective relief at being able to knock down the small home Jane shared with Ellen, which they believe to be cursed due to its location on a fairy path. A good old-fashioned finale in which the killer is exposed at a gathering of all the suspects closes this eerie tale with a bang.

Mrs. Mohr Goes Missing

In 1893 Krakow, Poland, class is everything, appearances must be kept up, and women should know their place. Zofia Turbotýnska does her best, volunteering for a charity auction while her professor husband rustles behind the daily papers. When one of the auction’s donors dies mysteriously, Zofia feels called to learn the truth. Mrs. Mohr Goes Missing is an unexpectedly hilarious whodunit from Maryla Szymiczkowa, a pseudonym for authors Jacek Dehnel and Piotr Tarczýnski. Szymiczkowa shows us Zofia’s world through her eyes. She isn’t afraid to critique a funeral for lacking in pomp, and she outdoes the police thanks to long hours in the library with Edgar Allan Poe and a desire to do more with her life than simply micromanage her household. Let’s hope this adventure is the first of many.

International settings unite these three superlative cozy mysteries.


★ The Body in the Garden

Lily Adler is a widow in mourning. Fortunately, dipping a toe back into the social whirl at Lady Walter’s ball should be a doddle; they are old friends, after all. But Lily…

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Two mysteries for middle grade readers take different approaches to investigations. One is a classic whodunit, while the other focuses more on the what, where and why of searching for a missing person.

Connect the Dots

Connect the Dots is as much a philosophy lesson as a mystery. Frankie and Oliver are dealing with the usual stresses of middle school when a new student, Matilda, hacks into their friendship (literally so, in one instance, appearing during a video chat they assumed was private) and suggests something sinister is taking place. In fact, there do seem to be a lot of unexplained coincidences, but what do they mean? Could it be karma? The hand of fate? Or something more complicated?

Author Keith Calabrese (A Drop of Hope) is a screenwriter, and it shows in these pages. Many scenes seem designed to visually pop as they unfold like Rube Goldberg machines. One subplot, about a bully whose comeuppance turns out to be his salvation, is especially fun to follow, and the story’s resolution makes a poignant point about the need for human connection. Calabrese takes an equally empathetic view of the mundane aspects of the kids’ lives, which include the ramifications of divorce and the aftermath of an incident of gun violence. This mystery is neatly plotted but as emotionally messy as real life.

★ Premeditated Myrtle

When Myrtle Hardcastle’s elderly neighbor dies, she suspects foul play, but her concerns are dimissed. Still, you can’t deter a 12-year-old with a passion for forensics and a governess generally inclined to take her side. Premeditated Myrtle is a book young readers will love and adults may well sneak out of backpacks and off of nightstands for their own enjoyment.

Set in a small English village in the late 1800s, Elizabeth Bunce’s first book for middle grade readers charmingly evokes the spirit of Harriet the Spy, if Harriet were a bit more inclined toward afternoon tea. Myrtle has an investigator’s tool kit and access to her prosecutor father’s law library; she is curious to a fault, brave and persistent. Bunce keeps secondary characters grounded in reality as well—even a cat has an interesting character arc—and the quest to determine who killed Miss Wodehouse is as keenly plotted as the best adult cozy. Readers will encounter plentiful red herrings along with lessons in jurisprudence, and Myrtle helpfully defines period-specific language via chatty footnotes.

Myrtle faces down scary moments, such as being locked in a coroner’s office as a prank, by leaning into her curiosity. Her frustration with her father and governess, Ms. Judson, who maintain professional boundaries despite a clear attraction to one another, speaks to the affection she clearly feels toward both—even as she rolls her eyes. Their household is warm, and a through-line about the cook who perpetually attacks the stove in an attempt to fix it will make readers feel like part of the family. Here’s hoping for more adventures with this delightful, heroic protagonist.

(Editor’s note: Premeditated Myrtle was originally scheduled for publication on May 5, 2020, but its publication was delayed until Oct. 6, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.)

Two mysteries for middle grade readers take different approaches to investigations. One is a classic whodunit, while the other focuses more on the what, where and why of searching for a missing person.

Connect the Dots

Connect the Dots is as much a philosophy lesson…

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LGBTQ+ characters are more visible than ever in young adult literature. The protagonists of these books navigate intersectionality, injustice and romance, and their stories are welcome additions to the growing canon of queer YA lit.

Felix Ever After is a love story that emerges in the aftermath of a frightening act of cruelty. Felix Love wants nothing more than to live up to his name by falling in love, but as a black, queer, trans guy, he worries that his labels sometimes make it hard for people to see his heart. When someone at school viciously outs him, Felix must uncover who did it—and who his true friends are.

Author Kacen Callender brings Felix’s New York City home to vibrant life, incorporating sensory details that make a day spent hanging out in the park feel like a grand adventure. Felix’s first-person narration is as intense as his emotional landscape, but Callender’s portrayal of what it feels like to be young and constantly playing defense against the world rings with truth. The book’s title hints at Felix’s happy ending, but getting there takes a harrowing journey across a social minefield, so witnessing Felix come out on top, with good people on his side, feels that much sweeter.

Robin Talley’s Music From Another World bounces between Northern and Southern California in 1977. Tammy lives in Orange County and is deep in the closet because of her conservative Christian family. Sharon lives in San Francisco, has a brother who is gay and is immersing herself in the city’s punk scene. The girls connect via a school pen pal project, and Talley relays their stories through diary entries and letters until destiny leads them to meet in person.

The history depicted here is well worth revisiting or, for teens, uncovering for the first time. Talley doesn’t pull any punches when she describes Anita Bryant’s hateful “Save Our Children” campaign or the activism it provoked. As with Felix’s New York, 1970s San Francisco is a star player here. Sharon lives in an uptight Irish Catholic neighborhood, but the Castro district is just a bus ride away, and change is in the air. This is a story of friendship, love and the ways music can fuel both, set at a pivotal moment in the struggle for gay rights. (This reader, who still owns Patti Smith’s Horses on vinyl, hopes teens will explore the music as much as the history.)

Kelly Quindlen’s Late to the Party is a perfect summer read. Codi and her two BFFs, Maritza and JaKory, are all queer and spend most of their time hanging out in her basement and watching TV 24/7. Lately, though, they’ve been feeling burned out on one another and have begun to seek out new experiences. Maritza and JaKory take for granted that Codi is more of a late bloomer than they are, but while they’re not paying attention, she slips away from them, makes new friends and falls for a girl. When they find out she’s done all this without telling them, there’s a reckoning to be had.

The pacing here is so relaxed, you can practically feel the sticky humidity of an Atlanta summer grinding the bustle of life to a halt. Scenes of summer parties and the slow process of Codi getting to know new people and letting her guard down around them—while keeping a tangled web of secrets—feel realistic. The tentative romance between Codi and Lydia is sweet and languid; they have time to warm to one another and work through their nervousness. Codi’s friendship with Ricky, who welcomes her into his social circle under complex circumstances (she did him a great kindness but also saw something he wants kept quiet), is simultaneously warm and fraught with insecurities on both sides.

The most radical thing about Late to the Party is its unabashed sentimentality, which never veers into sanctimony or didacticism. It’s just teens growing together, growing apart and growing up—but somehow that’s exactly enough.

Three novels tell the stories of queer teens and celebrate all the ways that love keeps winning.
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Resourceful amateur sleuths solve tricky mysteries against the backdrop of home renovations, small Southern towns and an Ohio ice cream shop. 

★ The Last Curtain Call

Juliet Blackwell’s refreshing The Last Curtain Call continues her Haunted Home Renovation series with a twist: Mel Turner is dealing with a ghost in the attic of the house she’s remodeling, and the spirit may be connected to her current work project, a remodel of the beautiful Crockett Theatre. On top of that, Mel must negotiate with a group of squatters occupying the theater, some eccentric historical preservationists and a faceless consortium steering the project, rich folk who smack of gentrification. Details of the San Francisco Bay Area make for a series of sensory delights, and a trip to a Fremont museum illuminates Northern California’s connection to Hollywood in the silent movie era.

Booked for Death

Charlotte Reed is starting life over. The young widow left her teaching career to take over her great-aunt’s North Carolina bed-and-­breakfast, and she’s keeping its literary theme and events afloat, complete with menus drawn from classic novels. A rare book dealer who’s staying at the B&B manages to rub everyone the wrong way and is soon found dead. Booked for Death has local color and a sizable suspect list but still makes time to talk about grief, family secrets and the limits of an intuitive hunch versus actual detective work. Author Victoria Gilbert combines a whodunit setup with Southern hospitality, which makes for smiles full of very sharp teeth and characters we’re glad to meet—but can’t turn our backs on.

A Deadly Inside Scoop

A freak storm hits Chagrin Falls, Ohio, but Bronwyn “Win” Crewse is committed to making handmade scoops of her grandmother’s finest recipes for her family’s ice cream shop. Then she discovers a body in the snow. Author Abby Collette fills series starter A Deadly Inside Scoop with details about Chagrin Falls, Crewse Creamery and Win’s family and friends. Were this not a story about murder, it could almost be a “Gilmore Girls” reboot. Police may be inclined to suspect Win’s dad because he’s African American. She must clear his name without drawing further attention to the family, all while keeping her fledgling business afloat. This balancing act keeps suspense high throughout, so readers will appreciate the sprinkles of silliness all the more.

Resourceful amateur sleuths solve tricky mysteries against the backdrop of home renovations, small Southern towns and an Ohio ice cream shop. 
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These two mysteries are tough on crime but sweet on dogs.

All Andy Carpenter wants is to put his law practice in his rearview mirror and enjoy retirement; his dog rescue foundation deserves all the love and time he can throw at it and then some. When a friend reaches out for a favor involving a stray dog, things quickly get complicated. Muzzled combines the worlds of tech startups, medicine and the mafia in an off-leash thriller.

This is Andy’s 21st outing, and author David Rosenfelt has a firm handle on the character. He imbues Andy’s home life with warmth and humor, but quickly shifts the tone as the search for the killers heats up. Once more bodies appear, his team of associates jumps in to help. The balance of action and levity is just right—Andy’s crew is hilarious, but some of the bad guys they take on are the stuff of nightmares.

The Tara Foundation and Andy’s dogs, Tara and Sebastian, appear periodically, but they don’t upstage the main story. Not even a cameo by a dog named Simon Garfunkel (!) can derail the pursuit of justice. But dog people and their essential goodness stay at the heart of this tale.

Spencer Quinn’s Of Mutts and Men takes quite a different approach. Washed-up PI Bernie Little is unlucky in love and money, but he hit the jackpot when he teamed up with Chet, his canine sidekick and the narrator of this wild ride. In their 10th adventure, the pair shows up to meet with a scientist with a secret, and are shocked to find that the man has been murdered.

Quinn gets inside the mind of a dog, making Chet a terrific tour guide through this absolute riot of a mystery. The tension ratchets up as Chet sniffs out details his human partner is oblivious to, but then he’s unable to communicate his findings. The plot involves water rights and wine grapes, and includes a femme fatale whose overtures toward Bernie overload Chet’s ability to sift through all the flying pheromones.

Amid frequent laughs and a crime story reminiscent of Chinatown, there’s also Bernie’s inability to get things right with the women in his life, and Chet’s quiet care for a hospice patient who he can sense is near the end. It would be easy to get mired in sadness, but all it takes is a glance at Bernie for Chet (and us) to fall in love all over again. 

Good dogs never bite—but these two mysteries have plenty of snap.
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Two new series entries play with the procedural format. One brings back a foe from a character’s past to settle a childhood score, while the other raises the tension by tangling related crimes with the secrets being kept by the detectives trying to solve them.

J.D. Robb’s Eve Dallas books were intended to be a trilogy but are now approaching 50 in number, a testament to a passionate fan base and incredibly assured author. Shadows in Death opens with a grisly murder brazenly committed in Washington Square Park. Eve wastes no time figuring out the murder for hire plot, but the killer turns out to be international assassin Lorcan Cobbe, sworn enemy of Eve's husband, Roarke, since their early days in Dublin. Bringing Cobbe to justice before he can strike out at her family has the entire force on edge.

Robb plays with the tension in this story to great effect; a lot of time is spent just doing the work of building a case, looking at evidence, interviewing suspects and creating files, but those ingredients accumulate and propel the action. The near future setting (in 2061) is an asset as well, familiar enough to readers but with cool flourishes, like a chase via space shuttle, that keep refreshing the story. Cobbe is a monster with a weakness for the finer things, and his passionate loathing of Roarke compels him to take chances outside the discipline his profession usually requires. Eve and Roarke hunt him together while each fears they may become either Cobbe’s next victim or bait for one of his traps, and Robb occasionally pours gasoline on their high-pressure situation when they’re alone; the sex scenes add to the story nicely and raise the stakes yet again. It’s futuristic and sometimes gory, but this is ultimately a tale of families looking out for their own, whether those connections are blood ties, work relations or spouses who are deeply in love.

Every Kind of Wicked sets its compelling opening scene in a graveyard where a young man’s body has been found. Whether it’s an unfamiliar type of wound or nearly invisible feather particles, Maggie Gardiner follows the forensic evidence and begins to unspool two fraud schemes that dangerously intersect. Lisa Black’s sixth book pairing Maggie and vigilante cop Jack Renner is packed with revelations readers can barely process as the body count increases. It’s a breathless, stay-up-late page turner.

Black knows her characters well enough to have fun at their expense. Maggie and Jack are keeping big secrets from their co-workers; pretending to date would be ideal cover for their frequent private conversations, but they are terrible at the ruse and come across as a super weird couple. Maggie’s ex-husband, Rick, is working a case that looks like a drug overdose but ends up connecting it to the first body that was found; he is also on Jack’s tail, suspicious of his extracurricular activities and investigating on his own time, a pursuit that could blow up in a number of ways. There’s a crisis around every bend, but some of the best scenes find Maggie in the lab, studying the minutiae collected from a victim’s clothing and teasing out the story of their last hours on earth. The attention to detail and desire to see justice done give this gleefully amoral series its heart, and a white-knuckle ending leads to yet another unexpected connection that will leave readers a lot to look forward to in the next installment.

Two new series entries play with the procedural format. One brings back a foe from a character’s past to settle a childhood score, while the other raises the tension by tangling related crimes with the secrets being kept by the detectives trying to solve them.

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A tiny Minnesota town, an Irish golf course and an abandoned New England home are all host to murder most foul in this month's cozy column.

★ Death on the Green

Megan Malone’s job as a limo driver allows her to explore Dublin with fascinating clients like champion golfer Martin Walsh. But when she spies a man facedown in a water hazard, her U.S. Army medic training has her jumping in straightaway to help. It’s Martin’s friend and rival, and his death was no accident. There is so much to like about the cozy perfection that is Catie Murphy’s Death on the Green, from the lush Irish travelogue to the precise balance between comic relief and crime. Megan’s friendships and romantic life—dating a woman but also crushing on a male detective—give the story a lived-in feel. And while murder is nasty business, there are cuddle sessions with the Jack Russell pups that Megan keeps telling herself she’s fostering, not adopting. All this plus seeing justice done? Megan (which is to say, Murphy) makes it look easy.

15 Minutes of Flame

Nantucket candle-shop owner Stella Wright is transforming a friend’s abandoned house into a Halloween wonderland, with help from the local Girl Scouts. A separate building on the property reveals an old chandlery . . . and a skeleton. Christin Brecher’s 15 Minutes of Flame combines a historical mystery with present-day murder, all against the spooky backdrop of New England in autumn. The deep bench of suspects includes an ambitious producer who wants to film the skeleton for a Netflix special and a local woman who claims to speak for the spirits of the dead. The history of candle clocks (and the way they feature in the story’s conclusion) is a fascinating bonus.

In a Midnight Wood

Ellen Hart’s 27th Jane Lawless mystery finds Jane and BFF Cordelia headed to Castle Lake, Minnesota, to meet up with an old friend. But while they’re there, a grave exhumation reveals a second set of remains stashed beneath a coffin, belonging to long-missing local Sam Romilly. In a Midnight Wood flashes back to when Sam disappeared in 1999 and slowly reveals what actually happened to him. The shifts between storylines let the pressure build, and an impending high school class reunion means many characters are confronting many different ghosts at once. Jane and Cordelia, both lesbians, tread lightly in conservative Castle Lake, but Jane is able to earn the trust of a few suspects . . . and maybe find love.

A tiny Minnesota town, an Irish golf course and an abandoned New England home are all host to murder most foul in this month's cozy column.

★ Death on the Green

Megan Malone’s job as a limo driver allows her to explore Dublin with…

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A mystery can unfold anywhere at all, but there’s something about England—with its fascinating history, class divisions, that ever-present fog—that makes it a consistent favorite setting. Two books cover three eras in England between them, and you can be confident that things get dark and stormy throughout.

Moonflower Murders, Anthony Horowitz’s sequel to Magpie Murders, opens with Susan Ryeland living on Crete and running a hotel with boyfriend Andreas, having retired from her career in publishing and with England well behind her. She’s done and happy. Or is she? When a couple visit the hotel and ask her to investigate a disappearance that may be linked to a novel by her old client Alan Conway, she agrees to travel back to England. She needs the money, and the job includes a stay in a much fancier hotel than her own. From there, this nested mystery only gets more twisted.

The neat trick of clues to a current dilemma being salted away in a fictional novel is as delightful here as it was in Magpie Murders. This split narrative keeps the reader hyperalert as they bounce between Susan’s investigation and the Conway mystery that might hold the key to it all. Susan has mixed feelings about Crete, the hotel, maybe even Andreas, and is nostalgic for the world of publishing. Revisiting her old haunts and connecting with friends lifts her spirits, and that high sometimes blinds her to red flags. Alan Conway based the Atticus Pünd mystery in question on the owners and guests at the hotel where Susan is now staying—and where a grisly murder once sent a young employee to prison. His brutal caricatures of an already twisted cast of characters made nearly everyone angry, and Susan makes a handy target for that rage, since her edits to the novel did not soften the blow.

Both stories play dead straight, but there’s glee under the surface in the way Horowitz uses the tropes of modern and cozy mysteries. The pursuit of justice gets rather messy, but in both stories, unraveling means and motives leads to satisfying, highly traditional reveals, one by a seasoned fictional detective, the other by a woman in midlife, weighing her future options.

In Death and the Maiden, Adelia Aguilar, Mistress of the Art of Death, has also comfortably retired and is teaching her daughter, Allie, the trade—a combination of anatomy, forensics, and the subtleties of detection, medieval-style (1191, to be exact). Allie excels at the work and bristles at her parents' pressure to marry. When a family friend becomes ill, she’s honored to be able to help and unaware of a matchmaking scheme that leads her to meet the dashing Lord Peverell. There’s scarcely time for romance, though, as the village is being terrorized by the serial kidnapping and murder of young women. Masterfully written, this series closer is a creepy wonder.

Samantha Norman has finished the series begun by her mother, Ariana Franklin, based on ideas Franklin had laid out prior to her death. The story has some poignant mother-daughter moments that resonate even more powerfully in context. But even beyond that, it’s a stellar bit of storytelling. Allie’s family ties are strong and part of why she’s in no rush to marry. That independence can make her cocky, though, and when she sees evidence on the body of a victim that is disregarded, following the lead means putting herself in danger. The village is having other problems as well: Visiting royalty and religious edicts that won’t allow burials for the dead (who are then left in trees or by the side of the road) give a real sense of the gulf between rich and poor.

While this is a true nail-biter of a mystery, many of its best moments are quiet ones, when characters have a moment alone to talk while waking up in the morning or gathering plants for medicine. Series fans will love this volume even as they grieve Franklin’s passing. Norman has done her mother proud.

A mystery can unfold anywhere at all, but there’s something about England (maybe it's the ever-present fog?). In two books, things get dark and stormy indeed.
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A priest, a Regency lady and a snippy private investigator are all faced with fiendish puzzles in this month's cozy mystery column.

★ Hope, Faith & a Corpse

Laura Jensen Walker’s Hope, Faith & a Corpse begins a promising new series. Hope Taylor has moved to the quaint town of Apple Springs in Northern California to start over. The young widow is the first female pastor of Faith Chapel Episcopal Church, which not all parishioners are comfortable with. When she finds a widely disliked church elder dead on the grounds, she quickly becomes a suspect. After all, Stanley King had said a woman would preach there over his dead body. Walker makes great use of Hope’s job: Pastors are sworn to confidentiality when people share information, and a gossipy small town has plenty to share. By the end, justice has been served, along with English tea (for which recipes are provided) and several diner meals that are the stuff of dreams. Readers will finish this mystery already hungry for more.

Hot to Trot

If you’re a cozy fan, then you know how often a knitter or bookstore owner stumbles onto a crime and solves it, launching a new side hustle as a sleuth. So the beloved Agatha Raisin is a breath of fresh air simply because she’s an investigator by trade. Hot to Trot finds Agatha fuming as her friend (and ex) Charles Fraith prepares to marry a mean-spirited socialite. When the woman turns up dead, Agatha and Charles are both suspects. Agatha’s creator, M.C. Beaton, died in 2019, but prior to her passing, she worked with author R.W. Green to ensure the series would continue as she intended. Hot to Trot would have made Beaton proud, with no fewer than three brawls as Agatha flits between exes and new loves before returning to her cottage and cats. Brew a pot of tea and join her.

A Lady Compromised

Rosalind Thorne is on the move in A Lady Compromised, the latest entry in Darcie Wilde’s series set in Regency England. A trip to help plan a friend’s wedding also means a chance to visit old flame Devon Winterbourne, but Rosalind is soon investigating whether an aristocrat’s suicide was actually murder. Wilde writes about high society social codes the same way Phoebe Waller-Bridge makes cheeky asides in “Fleabag.” A storyline involving Rosalind’s faithful maid, Mrs. Kendricks, whose security relies upon the decisions of her impulsive, independent employer, is a harsh reminder of the class differences concealed beneath the period’s polite veneer.

A priest, a Regency lady and a snippy private investigator are all faced with fiendish puzzles in this month's cozy mystery column.

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