1. Search
  2.  

156 results for ( issue-id: 404187 ) ( type: review )

If you can't find what you're looking for, read through our search cheat sheet to learn how to use our search.

Return to First Page

Book Review

Sinking Suspicions

by Allyce Amidon

In Sara Sue Hoklotubbe’s newest Sadie Walela mystery, "Sinking Suspicions", Sadie is trapped in Hawai’i after an earthquake hits, leaving her far away from her Oklahoma home at a time when she’s most needed. Her neighbor, Buck... Read More

Book Review

The Richebourg Affair

by Allyce Amidon

Parisian police commander Charlemagne Truchard is called back to his family’s vineyard in the small village of Nuits-Saint-Georges after the death of his older brother, in R. M. Cartmel’s fascinating debut, "The Richebourg Affair".... Read More

Book Review

Eyewitness to Murder

by Allyce Amidon

Hollywood publicist Joe Bernardi is back, in the ninth book of Peter S. Fischer’s eminently entertaining Hollywood Murder Mysteries series, "Eyewitness to Murder". The year is 1955, and Burt Lancaster and Harold Hecht want Joe to do... Read More

Book Review

The Ice Cap and the Rift

by Allyce Amidon

When the shifting of tectonic plates up and down the Atlantic opens up a huge fissure in a glacier in Iceland, a long-dormant volcano is revealed and, embedded in an interior wall, a cave filled with technology that is far too advanced... Read More

Book Review

Weirdo

by Allyce Amidon

After Detective Sergeant Sean Ward is wounded in the line of duty and forced into a very early retirement from the force, he decides to take up work as a private detective specializing in cold cases. Retained by a lawyer intent on... Read More

Book Review

How to Unfeel the Dead

by Kristine Morris

These haunting, even shocking, stories linger in the mind with the power of the shower scene in Hitchcock’s Psycho. Gathered over the span of Lance Olsen’s career, and experimental in style, they run the gamut of odd characters and... Read More

Book Review

Now We Can All Go Home

by Kristine Morris

Catherine Browder’s "Now We Can All Go Home" gives lovers of Chekhov’s plays the opportunity to follow some of his beloved characters home after the curtain comes down. In “A Visitor from Kharkóv,” based on Uncle Vanya, Yelena... Read More

Load More