Eleven Hours to Murder by D.B. Borton

Today on Celtic Connexions, I’m reviewing Eleven Hours to Murder by D.B. Borton.

 

 

A cold case from the Swinging Sixties. A sassy senior sleuth. If Cat Caliban’s not your favorite crime-solving grandma, you just haven’t met her yet.

Meet Cat Caliban: former housewife, widow, cat lady — and private eye in training. Who said fifty-something was too old to start again?

But if Cat’s not old, the case that lands on her desk sure is. Back in the summer of ’69, rebellious teen Leila Perle secretly boarded a bus to Woodstock, and never came home.

What really happened at the legendary music festival — if the missing girl even made it there at all?

Some say that if you can remember the Sixties, you weren’t there. But Cat’s certain someone from the hazy, drug-addled era of peace, love and rock ‘n’ roll remembers exactly what happened to the missing music-lover.

And they’ll do anything to keep their terrible secret buried.

ELEVEN HOURS TO MURDER — a whip-smart, witty mystery featuring Cincinnati’s sharpest tongued sleuth, three cats, one retired Black cop friend with a very unruly beagle, and a case where justice is long overdue.

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/243115029-eleven-hours-to-murder-a-brand-new-gripping-and-witty-cozy-murder-myster

Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/elevenhours-zbtbuy link(s)

My Review

This is the first book by D.B. Borton that I’ve had the pleasure of reading. It was well-written, and I loved the characters of Cat and Moses, as well as their friends. This is the eleventh book in the series, but I didn’t need to read any of the previous ones in order for this one to make sense to me.

The premise of the book is that a teenage girl goes off to Woodstock in August 1969 and never returns home. Cat and Moses (private detectives) are hired by the girl’s family to investigate the cold case.

I can’t tell you anymore because that would create a. spoiler and we don’t want that. If you want to know more, you’ll have to purchase the book.

About the Author

D. B. Borton is the author of two mystery series—the Cat Caliban series and the Gilda Liberty series —as well as the standalone mystery novels Smoke and Bayou City Burning and the humorous science fiction novel Second Coming.

In graduate school, Borton converted a lifetime of passionate reading and late-night movie-watching into a doctorate in English. She is Professor Emeritus of English at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Borton currently lives with Zoe the cat in Cincinnati, Ohio, where she gardens, practices aikido, a martial art, and, of course, reads.

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/dbborton
Website https://dbborton.com/

Love like the (Real) Reel thing by Sharon Black

I can’t believe how much time has gone by since Sharon Black visited Celtic Connexions. I would have been ten years ago on St. Patrick’s Day. You can read that post here.

Reel Thing

BLURB FOR LOVE LIKE THE REAL REEL THING

When Hollywood comes to Mayo’s Linford Castle in the west of Ireland to make a romantic comedy, hotel group marketing manager Jess Bradley is asked to troubleshoot.

Keen to escape a failed relationship with colleague Adam Rourke, Jess jumps at the chance to decamp to the country for six weeks. And when charming local resident Robert asks her out, it seems she’s finally moving forward with her life.

When a series of mishaps start to unfold at Linford – threatening the outcome of the movie and the reputation of the hotel – Jess must manage the situation as best she can.

Just as she’s starting to get a handle on it all, however, Adam shows up – and to Jess’s shock it appears that he’s moved on too.

But when one of the stars of the movie goes missing, it seems Jess must decide exactly who she can trust to help her get everything back on track – and maybe find her own happy ending in the process.

Love like the Real Reel Thing is published on November 5, 2025 by Poolbeg Books.

It is available as a Kindle/print copy from Amazon and at sharonblackwriter.ie.

About Sharon Black

Reel Thing

A recovered journalist, Sharon Black is a member of Writing.ie, Writers Ink and the Romantic Novelists Association. She is also a Curtis Brown Creative alumna and was long-listed for the 2023 Retreat West ‘Opening Lines’ Competition. She has published short stories in women’s magazines.

When she’s not writing, she catches up with family and friends and drinks a lot of coffee. She is a grateful member of a long-running book club in her village, where books and wine are consumed in roughly equal amounts. She loves theatre, old Hollywood films, romantic comedies and live stand-up comedy.

In recent years, she has developed a close relationship with Google Maps, thanks to her appalling sense of direction. She is highly allergic to shopping. Except for bag shopping. She lives in Dublin with her husband and the youngest of her grown-up family.

Love like the (Real) Reel Thing is her third novel and can happily be read as a standalone or as a sequel to The Last Saturday in July.
To find out more about Sharon, visit her website at sharonblackwriter.ie.

Re-Connections by Miriam Drori #RECONNECTIONS

Today on Celtic Connexions, I’m sharing two excerpts from Miriam Drori’s collection of short stories, Re-Connections.

Miriam

Miriam

Blurb

Why are we attracted to certain individuals and repelled by others? Why do we fall out of contact with former friends, or fall out with them altogether? Why do we crave friendship?

The answers to these questions are many and varied, and some of them reveal themselves in the stories of this collection. Not all these connections desire to lead to friendship; some are business-related. Yet, even those connections work better with friendly comments and gestures. What happens to people who struggle with such social norms? Are they destined to remain friendless?

Without realising it, Miriam Drori has been interested in this topic for many years. That’s evident in the fact that these tales were written throughout her writing career. Some of them are completely or partly autobiographical, while others are purely fictional. Which ones are which is a question she declines to answer.

Buy Link

AMAZON –https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0FN7MJHRN

Excerpts

This excerpt, from the story called “One Thing Leads to Another”, shows how the narrator’s troubles began.

It was great to be able to escape the nest for a while and go off to uni. I had a whale of a time from morning to night – well, mostly night and hardly any mornings. I missed most of my lectures and flunked my exams. They made me take the first year again. I fully intended to tell Mum and Dad about that. It was just that I wanted to do it in my own time and not when they came to take me home for the vacs, and in front of my mates – even though my mates knew.

“How did your exams go?” Mum asked as I heaved my case into the car boot.

“I passed with flying colours,” I said, laughing.

The mates who’d gathered round laughed, too. Heartily. I thought even Mum would understand the joke.

When we arrived home, I took the case upstairs and unpacked. And I decided I’d better let her know the worst. As I came downstairs, I realised I was too late. Mum was on the phone. I heard her say, “Oh yes. He passed with flying colours. He told me so today.”

This excerpt is from the story called “Who I Am”. A strange woman is standing on the narrator’s doorstep.

“Are you Sarah Levy?” she asked in English, pronouncing Sarah the British way to rhyme with airer.

“Yes…”

The woman smiled. “I’m Dina, your sister.” She spread out her arms as if she expected me to release the chain and hug her. A long-forgotten letter came to mind. At the time, I’d torn it up, never expecting the writer to turn up in person.

“I’m sorry, but you’ve made a mistake. I don’t have a sister.” I expected her to look despondent, especially after having dragged that body up four floors. There are advantages and disadvantages to having a common name. It’s easy to hide behind it. Mistaken identity is one of the disadvantages.

The woman didn’t look despondent. Her frown and partly open mouth reflected shock. “You mean they didn’t tell you?”

About Miriam

Miriam

Miriam Drori, author, editor and social anxiety warrior, worked as a computer programmer and a technical writer before turning her attention to full-time writing. Her novels and short stories cover several genres, including crime, romance and uplit. She has also written a non-fiction book about social anxiety. Her short stories have appeared in various anthologies and several now form a new collection, called Re-Connections.

Born and raised in London, Miriam now lives in Tel Aviv having moved from Jerusalem, where the cosy crime mysteries are set. She has travelled widely, putting her discoveries to good use as settings in her writing. Her characters are not based on real people, but rather are formed from an amalgam of the many and varied individuals who have embellished her life.

When not writing, Miriam enjoys reading, hiking, biking, dancing and touring.

Author Links

Website/Blog – https://miriamdrori.com

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/AuthorMiriamDrori

Youtube – https://www.youtube.com/@miriamdrori

X – https://x.com/MiriamDrori

Good Reads – https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/4829682.Miriam_Drori

Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/miriam.drori/

Bookbub – https://www.bookbub.com/authors/miriam-drori

Wattpad – https://www.wattpad.com/user/MiriamDrori

Bluesky – https://bsky.app/profile/miriamdrori.bsky.social

Amazon Author Page –  https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Miriam-Drori/author/B00L11J6D4

The Hole in Your Life by Bob Rich – interview

Bob, welcome to Canada. You have recently published your 20th book. What is it about?

Thank you, Melanie. We Australians look on Canadians as our cousins. (Well, for me, all sentient beings in the universe are family, but of course some are closer than others.)

This book, The Hole in Your Life: Grief and Bereavement, joins five of my previous books in helping people to cope with suffering: psychological self-help. It took flight in June, in response to the death of my daughter, Natalie, last December.

hole

Was your daughter’s death the only driving force behind you writing The Hole in Your Life?

My computer is a sort of a coolstore with LOTS of clutter on the shelves. I have more ideas than time to develop them, so there they sit, waiting for sunlight before they can sprout and flower.

After I completed From Depression to Contentment: A self-therapy guide and its companion volume, Lifting the Gloom: Antidepressant writings, the next logical step was to continue the series with a book on dealing with grief. So, I did.

One of the greatest joys of my counseling psychology practice was being of service to a young couple. They had separated, each consumed by both blame of the other and guilt, to the point of contemplating suicide. Yes, both of them, and I won’t tell you why, so there. After nine separate sessions with each, then three joint sessions, they reconciled, and as far as I know, they lived happily ever after beyond my six-month follow-up.

Being a storyteller, I based the book around their story, with other clients illustrating points that I couldn’t tie to them.

A necessary part of the book is “what is grief?” I wanted to use extended quotes from an excellent book by an author I admire, and having written the relevant section I emailed it to her, asking for her permission and endorsement. To my surprise what I got in return was hostility. “You keep your sticky fingers off my words!”

I didn’t feel like rewriting tens of thousands of words, so the book went into the coolroom. I focused on fiction, which is more fun anyway.

When Natalie was diagnosed with cancer, I excavated the draft and read it to refresh my memory on the best way to process grief. Rewriting the whole thing was part of the process of doing this processing. (I do love English.)

It is now something like the double helix of DNA. One strand is that young couple’s story. The second is my progression along the grief journey.

In our insane world, a book instructing you on the best way to grieve is a life-saving tool. Sooner or later, all of us lose a person important in our lives. The ways of thinking and doing (“techniques”) that work for bereavement also work for other serious losses, like, say, a stroke, your employer going broke, becoming homeless… insert your personal disaster. And anyone with a shred of empathy is likely to be traumatized by second-hand grief from the ongoing horror story of the news.

And if nothing much bothers you right now, change is the only constant. You can enjoy my writing while you can concentrate on it, and know what to do when, inevitably, heaven flips into hell.

One of the techniques of processing grief is to be of benefit to others as a direct result of your loss. I give several examples in my book, but hey, I’ve given you an example right here. Because The Hole in Your Life reduces the suffering of its readers, it helps me to reduce my suffering. One of the rules of the universe is “The more you give the more you get, and the more you give the more you grow.” And guess what. Being of benefit is one of the techniques validated by research in positive psychology.

So, the more people benefit from my book, the more I benefit. I’d give it away for free, except for two considerations. One is that my publisher quite reasonably expects to have a return on his investment. The second is that people don’t value something free.

I can prove this. Someone near where I live put a fridge outside his house with “Free to a good home” on a sign. It stood there for a week. So, he replaced the sign with “$50. Please knock on my door.” You’ve guessed it. The fridge was gone in the morning.

Therefore, I do the generosity another way. Send me proof of purchase of this book, or any other listed at https://bobrich18.wordpress.com/bobs-booklist/ and you have earned a free electronic book of one of my other titles. Well, if you insist, it can be the same one.

Similarly, if you have earned a free book if you subscribe to my blog, Bobbing Around https://bobrich18.wordpress.com

 

You’ve had a varied career. Which job did you enjoy the most? What was the one you most disliked?

Oh yes, I careered (dictionary definition: move swiftly and in an uncontrolled way—told you I love English) from career to career, managing to enjoy my stay in each.

I did not dislike any of them until I stopped the activity. Then, looking back, I was grateful for not having to do that anymore.

You can read lost about Buddhist psychology at Bobbing Around, and this is part of it. Whatever is, is, and is all right. Time is an illusion. Only this moment exists. You can live a good life by being contented with this moment, whatever it is.

Right now as I type, I have several points of physical pain. As always, 24/7, I have a ringing in my ears, thanks to too many rifles fired in the army, and too many power tools doing their thing near me. My wife is in hospital, and my son-in-law is waiting for an operation for cancer. And yet, if you read over my rave so far, have you noticed the fun, contentment, laughter?

If I can live this way, so can you.

What career did I enjoy the most? You may find it shocking that it is the current one. Whatever I am fully engaged in is electrifying. This is more of living in the Now.

Right now, I have careered into being a Professional Grandfather.

That started in 1972 when I enjoyed the company of a toddler and a baby whenever I went home from work. This was the year for writing up my PhD thesis, and while research is fun, the literary follow-up is stultifying. Being Mr. Rich, their lecturer, to 709 students meant I couldn’t fall asleep in the library, so I did some side research to forecast the kind of world I had brought my two lovely children into.

The results were horrifying: I accurately predicted today’s world. I have been a humanitarian and environmental activist since. Trouble is, money outvotes passion, so my efforts have failed to unconfirm my predictions.

So, my remaining occupation continues to be striving for a tomorrow for today’s youngsters, and a tomorrow worth living in. The second part is as important as the first: transforming global culture into one ruled by empathy, decency, fairness, generosity, cooperation, taking the long-term view.

What’s next for Bob Rich?

Death of course.

Greedy moneybags can escape taxes, but…

If I die today, I’ll be content with having lived a good life and achieved an enormous amount of spiritual growth, which is the purpose of life. If I live another 20 years, OK, I can put up with it. After all, death is not the end of the book, only of a chapter. If you want the scientific evidence for this, have a read of “The other side of death,” which you’ll find at https://wp.me/p3Xihq-3oq

I have a great deal of personal experience, plus this evidence, which has led me to a theory of the nature of our universe, our role in it, and what life is for.

There is only one way to get 100% proof one way or the other, and that’s to get rid of the body and see what’s after.

My fictionalized autobiography, Ascending Spiral, includes the account of five of my previous lives. If it is accurate, I am here on earth at this time to witness the extinction of humanity, or to be an effective agent in stopping that extinction.

So, Melanie, please join my team and encourage everyone you know to do the same.

 

All About Bob

hole

Bob Rich, PhD, is a visitor from a faraway galaxy, where he is an historian of horror. So, Earth is his favorite place in the universe. Nowhere else do sentient beings engage in a game of killing non-combatants (war). Nowhere else are child raising practices designed to harm children. And delicious for an historian of horror: nowhere else is the entire global economy designed to destroy its life support system.

Here on Earth, he is disguised as an Australian storyteller, with 20 published books, six of which, and over 40 short stories, have won awards.

He has retired five times so far.

Above all, he is a Professional Grandfather. Anyone born since 1993 is his grandchild. Everything he does strives for a survivable future for them, and one worth surviving in. This means environmental and humanitarian activism: an attempt to change a worldwide culture of greed and aggression into one of compassion and cooperation.

When he was 23, a minister of religion told him he was a Buddhist. On checking, he found his philosophy set out in beautiful words. He decided not to sue the Buddha for plagiarism, as an act of metta (lovingkindness).

A Bloody Banquet by Gail Meath #extract

Today at Celtic Connexions, I’m sharing an extract from Gail Meath’s novel, A Bloody Banquet.

banquet

Blurb

Now you see a murder, now you don’t…

The Golden Age of Hollywood, 1938. It’s the annual Awards Banquet at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub, and Vivian Steele can’t wait for the star-studded event. She’s attending with her best friend, Carole Lombard, and several acclaimed actresses will be wearing her fashion designs. What she doesn’t expect is for the night to turn deadly.

During the awards ceremony, Carole finds an actress stabbed to death in the restroom. She quickly alerts the staff, but when they return, they can’t find a body. An hour later, another guest screams bloody murder that an actor drowned in the pool outside. Again, the body disappears.

While the guests have a good laugh, Vivian is convinced the murders took place and reluctantly asks Preston Stone, Hollywood’s notorious playboy, for his help in proving her suspicions.

Together, they uncover a sinister killer who has mastered the art of illusion and set his sights on two Oscar-winning stars. Can Vivian and Preston stop the killer in time…and without revealing their well-kept secrets?

A Bloody Banquet is the second book in this exciting new 1930s Stone & Steele mystery series starring a great cast of characters ranging from the rich and famous to Bella and Boris, the canine costars, and a few other endearing folks. (A pretty clean read – series or standalone)

banquet

Book Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/221031404-a-bloody-banquet

Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/bloodybanquet-zbt

Extract

As Vivian sipped her coffee, someone tapped on the front door.  She had half a mind to ignore the person.  It was only ten minutes after eight on a Sunday morning, and the boutique was closed until Tuesday.  Then she heard an all-too-familiar voice followed by a loud howl.

She was livid.  “I told you to call me at nine o’clock, Preston!”

“Unless you want Boris to wake the neighbors, I suggest you open the door,” he shouted back.

With a groan nearly loud enough to wake the neighbors, Vivian gathered her drawings, flipped them upside down on the table, and stormed into the display room.  She opened the door just a crack and peeked out.

Preston grinned at her.  “I’m ninety-nine percent sure the whole thing was a hoax last night, but I didn’t want to make a final decision until you told me what happened in the restroom.”

Her eyes narrowed.  “I can’t do that.  It’s not my story to tell.”

“That’s very gallant of you.  All right, let’s turn this around.  Why don’t I show you what I found in the pool, and maybe you’ll change your mind?  Before we get into that, here’s the complete guest list from last night.”  He stuck a sheet of paper through the crack.

Vivian took it from him and skimmed through it.

“Missus Eleanor Peterson is the woman who claimed she saw a dead man in the pool.  She was married to Charles Peterson, a movie director at Paramount.  He died of a heart attack a year ago.”

“What did you find at the pool?”

“It was in the pool.  Do I smell coffee?”

Boris started pushing on the door, trying to squeeze himself inside, so Vivian opened it.  “There’s a fresh pot in the backroom.”  She patted Boris on the head.  “Bella is next door, but she should be home soon.”  They walked through the display room, and she told Preston to have a seat.  She filled a bowl of water for Boris and put a few bite-sized Milk-Bones on the floor for him.  When she finished, she poured Preston a cup of coffee.  “Okay, tell me what you found in the pool?”

“After you left the nightclub, I went back to search the patio,” he told her.  “Lo and behold, there was a striped necktie wrapped around the ladder in the deep end of the pool.  It was floating in the water.”

Vivian set the coffee cup down in front of him.  “The woman mistook the tie for a dead body?”

About the Author

Banquet

Award-winning author Gail Meath writes historical romance novels that will whisk you away to another time and place in history where you will meet fascinating characters, both fictional and real, who will capture your heart and soul. Meath loves writing about little or unknown people, places and events in history, rather than relying on the typical stories and settings.

Author Links

Facebook https://facebook.com/Gail-Meath-Author-121289219261348
Instagram https://instagram.com/gailmeathauthor
X (formerly Twitter) https://twitter.com/GailMeathAuthor
Website https://www.gailmeath.com

A Fighting Chance DS Jane Renwick Book 2 by Val Penny #AFIGHTINGCHANCE

Today at Celtic Connexions, I’m welcoming author Val Penny and her second book in her DS Jane Renwick series, A Fighting Chance.

fighting chance

Blurb

In the second Jane Renwick Thriller by Val Penny, drug cartels collide as crime boss Connor O’Grady returns to Scotland to protect his turf from rival Peggy Cheney, newly released from prison.

DS Jane Renwick and DC Brian Harris are sent to Stirling, where Jane discovers two tragic deaths—a young man and a girl—raising suspicions of a single killer.

O’Grady denies involvement, but can a drug lord be trusted?
Set in Stirling and Gartcosh, this tense police procedural thrusts Jane into the heart of a deadly turf war.

fighting chance

Book Links

PAPERBACK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Fighting-Chance-Jane-Renwick-Book/dp/1917611161

EBOOK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Fighting-Chance-Jane-Renwick-Book-ebook/dp/B0FHQ49SVJ

My Review

I first met DS Jane Renwick in Val Penny’s DI Hunter series. She’s now working at MIT. This assignment takes her and her team to Stirling, where she ends up embroiled in not one, but two murder cases.

I like Jane’s character. She’s smart, feisty, and someone you wouldn’t want to make angry.

It was nice to see some of the characters from the DI Hunter series mentioned as well. The Thompson family from Thompson Top Cars in Edinburgh.

I really hope there will be more DS Jane Renwick books.

fighting chance

This is the Wallace Monument in Stirling, as shown on the cover of Val’s novel. You can tour the monument and climb the 246-step spiral staircase to the very top. The view is spectacular from there.  Looking straight up into the open dome also offers a good view. I’ve toured the monument, and you should add it to your bucket list.

About the Author

Val Penny has an Llb degree from the University of Edinburgh and her MSc from Napier University. She has had many jobs including hairdresser, waitress, banker, azalea farmer and lecturer but has not yet achieved either of her childhood dreams of being a ballerina or owning a candy store.

Until those dreams come true, she has turned her hand to writing poetry, short stories, nonfiction books, and novels. Her novels are published by SpellBound Books Ltd.

Val is an American author living in SW Scotland. She has two adult daughters of whom she is justly proud and lives with her husband and their cat.

Val’s Links

Website – https://www.valpenny.com

Amazon Author Page – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Val-Penny/e/B07C4725TK

Author Facebook Page – https://www.facebook.com/valerie.penny.739

Author Twitter Page – @valeriepenny

Author Instagram Page – https://www.instagram.com/valerieepenny/

A Scottish Love Story by Gwen Kirkwood #coverreveal

I’m beyond thrilled to be part of this cover reveal for Gwen Kirkwood’s latest novel,  A Scottish Love Story.

Blurb

She came to Scotland for a fresh start — but found a love she never expected.

When Roxanne Carr accepts a job as a companion to elderly Amynta Baxter, she hopes the beautiful Highlands of Scotland will offer peace after the heartbreak of losing her father and her family farm. But her arrival doesn’t go as planned. Her first meeting with Amynta’s son, Ciaran, is anything but welcoming.

Ciaran Baxter is a dedicated dairy farmer with no time for complications — especially not a spirited young woman who disrupts his routine and challenges his guarded heart.

But as winter sets in and Christmas approaches, Ciaran begins to see a different side to Roxie: capable, kind and as passionate about the farm as he is.

Soon their relationship turns from wary allies to something deeper. But when Roxie is called back to Derbyshire to save her brother’s failing farm, she must choose between the family who cast her aside and the man who makes her believe in second chances.

This heartwarming romance is perfect for fans of Katie Flynn, Nadine Dorries, Rachael Lucas, Natalie Fergie, Anne Douglas and Emma Blair.

 

Scottish

Who is Gwen Kirkwood?

Scottish
Author Gwen Kirkwood at her Mouswald home with Criffel in the background.

All my life has been connected to farming, first in Yorkshire and then in Scotland, so authentic farming details help colour my writing in most of my thirty published books. The family sagas feature two, and sometimes three, generations, with changing times, clothes and customs, transport, communication, or lack of it, with life’s joys and problems, plus love of course. We all need some love in our lives despite the ups and downs. They have believable characters and settings. A few are shorter romances. The sagas are available as audio books as well as in print, and all are now available as e-books.

I was born on a Yorkshire farm and went to school there. After attending agricultural college and a short spell working for the Ministry of Agriculture in England, I have spent most of my adult life on a Scottish dairy farm with my late husband, who was a well known breeder and judge of Clydesdale horses. We have three children and now another generation to keep me up to date with changing times and customs.

I enjoy gardening, local history, cookery, and of course reading, as well as my writing.

You can follow Gwen on Facebook at this link:

https://www.facebook.com/gwen.kirkwood.7

Finding the Source by Joan Livingston #FINDINGTHESOURCE

Today I’m sharing an excerpt from Joan Livingston’s novel, Finding the Source.

finding the source

Blurb

A homeless man. His murdered mother. A book could be the clue.

Isabel Long’s next case begins during a chance encounter with a homeless man, who says he was 12 when he found his mother murdered in their home.

Abby McKenzie was a well-liked seller of vintage books who owned a store in the hilltown of Dillard. That was 43 years ago and the case was never solved.

One obstacle is that several of the suspects are dead, including an avid book collector, a former town official who stalked her, and the man who last saw her alive. Another is that, once again, Isabel must deal with Dillard’s police chief, who ran interference in her other cases.

But that doesn’t deter Isabel nor her mother Maria, her partner in solving crime. She just needs to find the source who will unlock this case.

finding the source

Buy Links

Amazon USA – https://www.amazon.com/Finding-Source-Isabel-Long-Mystery-ebook/dp/B0F8JLJ5CW

 Amazon UK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Finding-Source-Isabel-Long-Mystery-ebook/dp/B0F8JLJ5CW

Excerpt

In this scene, Isabel Long, meets Tom McKenzie, a homeless man, by chance on a city street. She is with her mother to have lunch.

My attention refocuses on a man who walks fast across the library’s lawn. He has mostly white hair long past a decent cut that hangs almost to his shoulders, a full beard, and a purpose in his step. That determination makes me wonder if he is going to ask us for directions or more likely spare change since he appears rather under-dressed for today’s weather in a hooded sweatshirt instead of a heavy jacket. His jeans are worn at the knees. A backpack is slung over one shoulder.

The man stops a few feet in front of us, startling my mother who was concentrating on the library. As usual, I plan to take charge. 

“My mother was murdered forty-three years ago, and her case was never solved,” the man announces in a loud voice.

Ma and I glance at each other. This was unexpected.

“Your mother was murdered?” I say, and the man needs no invitation to take another step closer.

“Her name’s Abigail. Abigail McKenzie. Mine is Tom, Tom McKenzie,” he says. “She was found beaten and strangled in our home. The cops back then did a lousy job investigating.”

Frankly, I am a bit stunned. I believe it’s the same for my mother because her mouth hangs open like she wants to say something but doesn’t know what. I study the man’s face, noting the stubble of whiskers and deep lines. Perhaps if I step closer, I might smell booze on his breath, but hold on, Isabel, let’s not jump to any conclusions. Keeping an open mind served me well as a reporter and now, as a private investigator. Maybe my mother and I simply appear approachable.

“I’d like to hear more,” I say.

About the Author

finding the source

Joan Livingston is the author of novels for adult and young readers, including the Isabel Long Mystery Series, featuring a longtime journalist who becomes an amateur P.I. solving cold cases in rural New England. Finding the Source is the eighth book in the series.

Joan draws upon her own experience as a longtime journalist in Massachusetts and New Mexico to create Isabel Long, a sassy, savvy widow who uses the skills she acquired in the business to solve what appears to be impossible cases. She also relies on her deep knowledge of rural Western Massachusetts, where she lives, to create realistic characters and settings.

WEBSITE AND SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS

 

WEBSITE www.joanlivingston.net

 SUBSTACK https://joanlivingston.substack.com/

FACEBOOK www.facebook.com/JoanLivingstonAuthor/

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finding the source

 

A Claim to Murder by Jean G Goodhind

Today on Celtic Connexions, I’m reviewing A Claim to Murder by Jean G Goodhind

Jean G Goodhind

Blurb

Life couldn’t be sweeter for Honey Driver, floating around the Med on her own private yacht, with her dishy detective husband Steve.

But dark clouds are gathering on Honey’s perfect horizon. And the forecast looks like murder!

When Honey’s love boat sinks in a freak accident, she has no choice but to return to rain-drenched Bath. But now that Honey needs him, her insurance broker, silver-tongued Norman Glendower, is nowhere to be found.

He’s not at his luxury offices in town and he’s not answering his phone.

Honey could kill Norman for leaving her in this fix. But what if someone got there first?

Behind the gates of leafy Regency Gardens, the exclusive complex where Norman lives, something is terribly amiss. Norman’s mewling cat leads a curious neighbour straight to his dead body!

He’s been bludgeoned and left for dead on the pristine tiles of his designer kitchen. Which of his many enemies was the one to strike the fatal blow?

Honey’s on the case — with a  killer watching her every move . . .

Jean G Goodhind

Book Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/237115239-a-claim-to-murder

Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/claimtomurder-zbt

My Review

This book started as a slow burn for me. I loved the premise and most of the characters, but ultimately, it fell flat.

There were characters and plot lines that never went anywhere. I did enjoy the character Gladys Faversham, even though she was a nasty piece of work.

Coming into this series as far as I did may have contributed to why it fell flat for me.

Still, I’m willing to give this author the benefit of the doubt and will read more of her books.

Who is Jean G Goodhind?

Jean G Goodhind

Jean, the alter ego of bestselling historical author Lizzie Lane, has lived in and around the Bath area for some time and was indeed a member of Bath Hotels and Restaurants Association — so well in touch with the hospitality trade in that fair city. However, unlike Bath hotelier Honey Driver, she was never asked to be Crime Liaison Officer and neither does she collect antique underwear! However, her daughter assures her she is just as zany as the quirky Honey Driver and will never grow old gracefully.

The Midwife in the Middle by Jennifer Drewett

 

 

My Review

I read this book in one afternoon. It had me hooked from the beginning, and I loved the characters, especially Tegan.

After a breakup, Tegan returns to her hometown to begin a new job at the hospital there. Her roommates and circle of friends are fun.

But not everything is fun and games for these folks. There is someone who wants to destroy everything.

It’s well worth an afternoon of relaxation! I’ll be looking for more books by this author. I hope this story turns into a series.

My Scottish roots and writing by Melanie Robertson-King