The following Mystery Books will be released in July 2014:
Lorna Barrett (aka Lorraine Bartlett & L.L. Bartlett): Book Clubbed (This will be the 8th in the Booktown Mystery Series.)
To go back to the Cozy Mystery New Book Release page, click here.
Cozy Mystery (and Other Favorite) Books, Movies, and TV
The following Mystery Books will be released in July 2014:
Lorna Barrett (aka Lorraine Bartlett & L.L. Bartlett): Book Clubbed (This will be the 8th in the Booktown Mystery Series.)
To go back to the Cozy Mystery New Book Release page, click here.
I have been anticipating this entry for almost an entire month. It is the time of the month when I ask you all to recommend your favorite Cozy Mystery book read of this past month. This should be the book you read during May 2013 that you think the rest of us have absolutely got to know about >>> so that we can read it also. Of course, if you read more than one Cozy Mystery that you loved, let us know about those. Please tell us why you enjoyed the book (books). This makes it easier for the rest of us to decide whether we want to give the authors/books a try.
The Cozy Mystery book I read this month which I thought was a really good book is Susanna Calkins’ A Murder at Rosamund’s Gate. I am hoping that Calkins has many more Lucy Campion mysteries in store for us. (Here is the link to my entry explaining why I like this first mystery novel in Calkins’ new Lucy Campion Mystery Series so much.)
[As usual, I ask that you don’t tell us about the books you read that you didn’t like.]
What Cozy Mystery book (or author) have you read during Mayl 2013, and why did you enjoy it (or him/her)?
Here are the current recommended authors who some of you have read this past month:
Victoria Abbot (aka Mary Jane Maffini & Victoria Maffini): Book Collector’s Mystery Series
Ellery Adams (aka Jennifer Stanley, J. B. Stanley, & 1/2 of Lucy Arlington): Charmed Pie Shoppe Mystery Series
Susan Wittig Albert: China Bayles Mystery Series
Laura Alden: PTA Mystery Series
Lucy Arlington (Duo: Jennifer Stanley & Sylvia May): Novel Idea Mystery Series
Nancy Atherton: Aunt Dimity Mystery Series
Ella Barrick (aka Laura DiSilverio & Lila Dare: Ballroom Dance Mystery Series
C. C. Benison: Her Majesty Investigates Mystery Series
Heather Blake (aka Heather Webber): Wishcraft Mystery Series
Janet Bolin: Threadville Mystery Series
Jacklyn Brady (aka Sherry Lewis): Piece of Cake Mystery Series
Emily Brightwell: Mrs. Jeffries Mystery Series
Duffy Brown: Consignment Shoppe Mysteries
Rita Mae Brown: Mrs. Murphy Mystery Series
Lucy Burdette (aka Roberta Isleib): Key West Food Critic Mystery Series
Susanna Calkins: Lucy Campion Mystery Series
Kate Carlisle: Bibliophile Mystery Series
Ann Charles: Deadwood Mystery Series
Erika Chase: Ashton Corners Book Club Mystery Series
Laura Childs: Scrapbooking Mystery Series
Laura Childs: Tea Shop Mystery Series
Edie Claire: Leigh Koslow (Never) Mystery Series
Mary Jane Clark: Piper Donovan Wedding Cake Mystery Series
Sheila Connolly (aka Sarah Atwell): County Cork Mystery Series
Jeanne M. Dams: Dorothy Martin Mystery Series
Laura DiSilverio (aka Lila Dare & Ella Barrick): Mall Cop Mystery Series
Joanne Dobson: Karen Pelletier Mystery Series
Alice Duncan: Mercy Allcutt Mystery Series
Laura Durham: Annabelle Archer Mystery Series
Sara Hoskinson Frommer: Joan Spencer Mystery Series
Anne George: Southern Sisters Mystery Series
Sally Goldenbaum: Seaside Knitters Mystery Series
Kerry Greenwood: Phryne Fisher Mystery Series
Carolyn Haines: Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery Series
Victoria Hamilton: Vintage Kitchen Series
Rosemary Harris: Dirty Business Mystery Series
Anna Lee Huber: The Anatomist’s Wife
Julie Hyzy: White House Chef Mystery Series
Julie Hyzy: Manor of Murder Mystery Series
Diane Kelly: Tara Holloway Death and Taxes Mystery Series
Joyce and Jim Lavene (aka J. J. Cook): Peggy Lee Garden Mystery Series
Sherry Lewis (aka Jacklyn Brady): Senior Sleuth Fred Vickery Mystery Series
Karen MacInerney: Grey Whale Inn Mystery Series
Charlotte MacLeod (aka Alisa Craig): Peter Shandy Mystery Series
Katherine Hall Page: Faith Fairchild Mystery Series
Nancy J. Parra: Gluten for Punishment
Cynthia Riggs: Martha’s Vineyard Series
Joanna Campbell Slan: Kiki Lowenstein Scrap-N-Craft Mystery Series
Dorothy St. James: White House Gardener Mystery Series
Ann Summerville: Lowenna Mystery Series
Shirley Tallman: Death on Telegraph Hill
Lea Wait: Shadows Antique Mystery Series
Edith Wharton: The Age of Innocence (not a mystery)
Livia J. Washburn: Literary Tour Mystery Series
Heather Webber (aka Heather Blake): Lucy Valentine Mystery Series
Jacqueline Winspear: Masie Dobbs Mystery Series
♦To access more Cozy Mystery Books Recommendations, click on this link♦
I am always happy when I read a new-to-me author and enjoy his/her book so much that I add the author to my Favorite Authors list. Susanna Calkins is the newest author I am adding to this “exclusive” list.
Before I started reading Susanna Calkins’ A Murder at Rosamund’s Gate, I knew that it would be historically accurate. I knew this because Calkins has her doctorate in British History, and teaches at Northwestern University – which is no small feat! Calkins has attached an “Historic Note” at the very end of this mystery explaining any liberties she took in order to ensure the reader a pleasurable mystery read.
I would definitely label Calkins’ A Murder at Rosamund’s Gate as an historical Cozy Mystery. While it does deal with adult themes (it is written for adults) there is no graphic language or sex, and it is also lacking in excessive gore. I am hoping that the Agatha Awards’ new Historical Novels category has this book listed as one of this year’s best!
A Murder at Rosamund’s Gate follows Lucy Campion, a chambermaid in the London home of a 17th century magistrate. As a chambermaid, Lucy’s time is not her own. She is fortunate to work for a particularly kind magistrate; however she still has to perform the daily chores those times dictated she perform.
Calkins’ London is not a sugar-coated version; there is poverty, sickness, and over-crowding outside of the magistrate’s house. Lucy knows she is lucky to work in a fair man’s home, and tries not to jeopardize her job – which forces her to find clever ways to follow the mystery’s clues.
Calkins’ characters are three-dimensional and very believable. She not only introduces us to her very likeable Lucy, but also to Lucy’s family, coworkers, and friends. Even the secondary characters in A Murder at Rosamund’s Gate are people I look forward to seeing again.
Lucy’s sleuthing makes perfect sense in the context of the story. It is not simply an interest that this very busy and (more than likely) tired young chambermaid devotes her time to. There’s a reason Lucy wants to solve this mystery. (I don’t want to say too much and give away any of the plot, so that others can enjoy the book.)
Calkins shows us how the British class system in the 17th century dictated every aspect of a Londoner’s life – including the way he/she would be treated by the judicial system. Calkins is able to weave London’s 17th century judicial system into the mystery in a way that piqued my interest.
Susanna Calkins‘ A Murder at Rosamund’s Gate has plenty of red herrings, a delightful young sleuth, a very solid mystery, and very enjoyable easy-to-read writing. (I was so interested in the characters and plot that I actually read this 357 page book in three days, which is a record for me!)
I hope Susanna Calkins will be releasing the second book in the Lucy Campion Mystery Series soon. I am definitely looking forward to spending more time with Lucy Campion as she solves many more mysteries.
P.S. I liked this book so much that I bought another copy as a gift for my adult daughter. (That’s a first for me for Kindle books!)
If you’re interested in reading more of these brief revisits of some of the more popular Cozy Mystery Series that I’ve written in the past, you can find them at the Most Recommended Cozy Mystery Series page on my site.
Congratulations to all of this year’s Bouchercon mystery author nominees!
Most of you already know that Bouchercon is a huge convention that celebrates mystery authors and their books. This year, Bouchercon XLIV will be held in Albany, New York (at the Empire State Plaza) during the September 19 – 22 weekend.
The awards they present at the Bouchercon conventions are the Anthony Awards, which are named after Anthony Boucher, one of the founders of the Mystery Writers of America organization.
Lifetime Achievement: Sue Grafton
International Guest of Honor: Anne Perry
American Guest of Honor: Tess Gerritsen
Toastmaster: Steve Hamilton
Fan Guests of Honor: Chris Aldrich & Lynn Kaczmarek
Dare Me by Megan Abbott
The Trinity Game by Sean Chercover
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
The Beautiful Mystery by Louise Penny
The Other Woman by Hank Phillippi Ryan
Don’t Ever Get Old by Daniel Friedman
The Professionals by Owen Laukkanen
The Expats by Chris Pavone
The 500 by Matthew Quirk
Black Fridays by Michael Sears
Whiplash River by Lou Berney
Murder for Choir by Joelle Charbonneau
And She Was by Alison Gaylin
Blessed are the Dead by Malla Nunn
Big Maria by Johnny Shaw
Mischief in Mesopotamia by Dana Cameron
Kept in the Dark by Shelia Connolly
The Lord is My Shamus by Barb Goffman
Peaches by Todd Robinson, Grift
The Unremarkable Heart by Karin Slaughter
Books to Die For: The World’s Greatest Mystery Writers on the World’s Greatest Mystery Novels by John Connolly and Declan Burke, eds.
Blood Relations: The Selected Letters of Ellery Queen, 1947-1950 by Joseph Goodrich, ed.
More Forensics and Fiction: Crime Writers Morbidly Curious Questions Expertly Answered by D.P. Lyle, M.D.
The Grand Tour: Around the World with the Queen of Mystery Agatha Christie by Mathew Prichard, ed.
In Pursuit of Spenser: Mystery Writers on Robert B. Parker and the Creation of an American Hero by Otto Penzler, ed.