“A Line to Kill” by Anthony Horowitz – Festival of Reckoning

“A Line to Kill” by Anthony Horowitz (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 7 minutes

Short Summary

Anthony Horowitz has solved some serious crimes as Daniel Hawthorne’s sidekick in A Hawthorne and Horowitz Mystery series, and in the third book, A Line to Kill, they get embroiled in a murder mystery with a classic setup. The story has Daniel and Anthony staying at guests on an idyllic island off the coast of England for a literary festival, one harbouring a cold-blooded killer ready to set his plan in motion.

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“Nine Days in Vegas” by Brian O’Sullivan – The Investigator’s Instinct

“Nine Days in Vegas” by Brian O'Sullivan (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Brian O’Sullivan has put Quint Adler through three cases already, but only in this fourth one, titled Nine Days in Vegas, does he finally take up the official mantle of private investigator. His first case has him travelling to Sin City in search of Emmy Peters, a missing showgirl from a rich family, who also happened to be an aspiring novelist.

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“Bury Your Dead” by Louise Penny – A String of Tragedies

“Bury Your Dead” by Louise Penny (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

Louise Penny has defied time and time again any doubters as to her proficiency for coming up with more original mysteries for Chief Inspector Gamache to solve, and in the sixth book of the series, Bury Your Dead, he finds himself pushed to his limits. Recovering from a horribly-failed police operation, Gamache is drawn into the murder investigation surrounding a historical society in Quebec, and most surprisingly, Samuel de Champlain himself.

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“The Bookman’s Promise” by John Dunning – One Last Request

“The Bookman's Promise” by John Dunning (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

John Dunning has recently written a few mysteries revolving around books with a flair for the genre few can match. More precisely, he penned the Cliff Janeway Novels, and in the third entry in the series, The Bookman’s Promise, a complex mystery is afoot involving an old and lost collection of rare books, as well as a killer quite intent on letting secrets remain in the deep past.

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“Flicker” by Theodore Roszak – The Celluloid Underground

“Flicker” by Theodore Roszak (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 8 minutes

Short Summary

Theodore Roszak was a significant literary figure in his heyday, publishing quite a few materials relating to the counterculture revolution. He also dabbled quite selectively in the realm of fiction, with Flicker being one of his more unique and outstanding works.It takes us into the now-forgotten realm of underground cinema before the advent of modern technology, following a movie buff’s search for a forgotten genius of the silver screen.

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“The Brutal Telling” by Louise Penny – Into the Woods of Antique Mystery

“The Brutal Telling” by Louise Penny (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

Louise Penny has created an unforgettable protagonist through A Chief Inspector Gamache Mystery series, and in The Brutal Telling, the fifth book, the titular inspector returns to his favourite idyllic village of Three Pines. Yet another murder has shaken the community, this time the victim being a complete stranger found on the floor of the local bistro. The stories presented to the inspector are full of holes, and he soon finds himself wrapped in a spiderweb of mystery.

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“A Rule Against Murder” by Louise Penny – Domestic Summer Storm

“A Rule Against Murder” by Louise Penny (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 7 minutes

Louise Penny seems determined never to give Chief Inspector Gamache a moment of respite, and in the fourth book of the series, titled A Rule Against Murder, he finds himself drawn into an investigation while celebrating his wedding anniversary with Reine-Marie. The isolated manor they’re staying at is also host to family reunion, one which leaves a dead body behind in the wake of a storm.

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“The Cruelest Month” by Louise Penny – Fatal Fright at a Seance

“The Cruelest Month” by Louise Penny (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 7 minutes

Louise Penny has certainly drawn the little community of Three Pines from its relative forgotten obscurity in A Chief Inspector Gamache Mystery series, and the third entry, The Cruelest Month, brings it right back to the foreground of Quebec news. Celebrating Easter, the people of Three Pines decide to hold a seance to clear the evil spirits, when one of them dies of fright. Foul play is nowhere to be found, but Gamache’s experience tells him otherwise.

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“The Bookman’s Wake” by John Dunning – The Edition Worth Killing for

“The Bookman's Wake” by John Dunning (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

John Dunning has become known in recent years for his ability as an author to integrate his love for books into his stories as pivotal plot elements. In The Bookman’s Wake, the second entry in the Cliff Janeway Novels series, we follow the cop-turned-bookdealer on his adventure to reign in a fugitive from Denver, one who possibly stole a priceless edition of Poe’s “The Raven”. To find the mysterious woman, he’ll have to delve deep into the strange past surrounding the book.

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“A Fatal Grace” by Louise Penny – An Open Death Nobody Saw

“A Fatal Grace” by Louise Penny (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

Louise Penny has brought the quaint streets of Quebec to the forefront of the literary world with her Chief Inspector Gamache Mystery series, and it was in large part due to the second novel, A Fatal Grace, winner of the 2007 Agatha Award for Best Novel. Following Chief Inspector Gamache once again, we are treated to his investigation into macabre Christmas murder in a picturesque Quebecois village.

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“Still Life” by Louise Penny – No Accidents in Three Pines

“Still Life” by Louise Penny (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 7 minutes

Short Summary

Louise Penny, back in 2008, began something I’m sure even she had trouble anticipating, creating the first novel in the Chief Inspector Gamache Mystery series (now with sixteen entries and counting), titled Still Life. For his first time out under the sun, the inspector is tasked with a deceitful case, appearing like an open-and-shut tragic accident. Gamache, however, can feel there’s something dark and rotten hiding in the remote woods of Three Pines.

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“The Day of the Jackal” by Frederick Forsyth – The Pinnacle of Professional Killing

“The Day of the Jackal” by Frederick Forsyth (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

Frederick Forsyth might have very well written one of the absolute best criminal espionage novels when he published The Day of the Jackal back in 1971. Following a nameless English hitman known only as The Jackal, the story focuses on his methodical preparation to carry out what might be the most ambitious assassination of all time: killing Charles de Gaulle.

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“Booked to Die” by John Dunning – The Bookseller’s Justice

“Booked to Die” by John Dunning (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

John Dunning has been working on his award-winning book-centered mystery series, the Cliff Janeway novels, for over two decades at this point, offering a taste of something unique in a sea of thrillers. The first novel which started it all, Booked to Die, introduces us to the Cliff Janeway as he first loses his badge by taking a bit of revenge on a murder suspect, and then opens a small bookshop while still searching for evidence to take the man down for good… and this is when more bodies start appearing.

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“The Guest List” by Lucy Foley – The Perfect Ruination

“The Guest List” by Lucy Foley (Header image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

Lucy Foley has decided to treat us to yet another instant classic, this time drawing inspiration from the timeless works of Agatha Christie in her latest novel titled The Guest List. A whodunit murder mystery at heart, it takes us to a remote wedding celebration between a rising television star and a magazine publisher. Everything seemed slated for perfection, until a body suddenly turns up, sparing none from the lens of suspicion.

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“The Sentence is Death” by Anthony Horowitz – Enemies of the Deceased

“The Sentence is Death” by Anthony Horowitz (Header Image)

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Short Summary

Anthony Horowitz has decided to take us back to a simpler time for straightforward murder mysteries with his Detective Daniel Hawthorne series, with the second book having seen the light of day recently, titled The Sentence is Death. In it, we follow the detective on another curious case, this time involving the murder of a celebrity-divorce lawyer, Richard Pryce, via a bottle of wine worth three thousand pounds.

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