#Giveaway and New Campus Murder Mystery: Failure is Fatal by Lesley A. Diehl

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Someone at Professor Laura Murphy’s college appears to be playing a joke on her by planting sexually explicit stories in her research results…Failure is Fatal Cover

but the joke turns deadly when one story details the recent stabbing murder of a coed. Eager to search out clues, Laura ignores warning signs that playing amateur sleuth may jeopardize her newly developing romance with Guy. And of course her usual intrusive manner puts her at odds with everyone on campus—colleagues, the college administration, the head of campus security and fraternity members. Is there no one Laura can’t offend in her eagerness to find the truth?


Setting Inspires my Work
Guest Post by Lesley Diehl

Failure Is Fatal is the second book in the Laura Murphy mystery series. In this book, Laura is, as we have come to know her: an impulsive, smart, chocolate-addicted advocate for taking down the bad guys especially those threatening the values she holds to be important—education, protection of the environment and justice for the victims of crimes. And she accomplishes all this while trying to hold together a long-distance love relationship. Of course, she has friends to help her as well as her sense of humor.
My novel length work and my short stories all have a strong sense of setting. I like to think of it as another character, one I can use in various ways. The setting can become the backdrop for the mystery. In the case of Failure Is Fatal the book is set in a small community in Upstate New York. The town houses a public university where my protagonist, Dr. Laura Murphy is a professor of psychology. The size of the community and the college allows me a limited area for the events in the story to unfold and affords me the opportunity to explore the geographical as well as the social setting where my characters live and work. And kill. I like my readers to be able to develop a mental map of the vicinity so that the reader moves around with as much familiarity as do the characters. I think this familiarity sets the stage for all of the changes made in the story, e.g., the murder, the search for clues, changes in relationships and the catastrophes I introduce into the setting. I want my reader to say, “Oh, yes. I know where she’s going. I’d do that too,” as the reader forms a sleuthing partnership with Laura.
Another way I like to use setting is to turn it on its ear, i.e., introduce some form of friction into the setting. For example, many of the scenes in the book take place in Laura’s house on a small lake outside of the college town. The conversations among Laura, her love interest, Guy, and the detective who enlists her aid in the case bristle with the tension of the killing but are set against the beauty of woods turning their autumn colors. As much as the setting might lull us into a feeling of normalcy, the threat of the coming winter and the tragedy of the murder work together to propel Laura forward in her search for the killer, forecasting the possibility of disaster yet to come.
As the promise of snow is realized, the story leads the reader into the blizzard of conflicting clues that toss Laura backward into events in her past that she must unravel and forward toward confrontation with the killer. Laura fights oncoming winter in terms of what it means for her long distance relationship with Guy as well as its impact on her ability to dig out clues to the murder in a community buried under ice and snow. The final resolution of the crime takes place during a deadly snowstorm. Laura could find her way through the snow to the killer or lose her way in the whiteout.
As I did with the first book in the series, Murder Is Academic, in Failure Is Fatal, I use the building tension of worsening weather as the culmination of a final meeting between Laura and the killer. Depending upon the season, Upstate New York can be subject to weather disasters such as floods, tornados, thunderstorms, blizzards and ice storms. The threat of bad weather can make for a great tension building device especially if it is used in parallel with the protagonist’s difficult path to finding the identity of a killer. A murder mystery is always better during a storm, especially if the writer pairs bad weather with a devious killer bent taking out the protagonist. Will the weather do her in? Will the killer? And if she defeats the killer, will the weather take her out? What fun for creating ultimate tension and anxiety, and, finally, as the reader expects in a good cozy mystery, a satisfying solution to the mystery.


About the Author
Lesley Diehl
Lesley retired from her life as a professor of psychology and reclaimed her country roots by moving to a small cottage in the Butternut River Valley in upstate New York.  In the winter she migrates to old Florida—cowboys, scrub palmetto, and open fields of grazing cattle, a place where spurs still jingle in the post office, and gators make golf a contact sport.  Back north, the shy ghost inhabiting the cottage serves as her literary muse.  When not writing, she gardens, cooks and renovates the 1874 cottage with the help of her husband, two cats and, of course, Fred the ghost, who gives artistic direction to their work.
She is the author of a number of mystery series (Microbrewing Series, Big Lake Mystery Series, Eve Appel Mystery Series and the Laura Murphy Mysteries), a standalone mystery (Angel Sleuth) and numerous short stories.   
Visit her on her website:  www.lesleyadiehl.com
Webpage: www.lesleyadiehl.com
Blog: www.lesleyadiehl.com/blog
Twitter: @lesleydiehl
Facebook: [email protected]


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Spotlight: Decanting a Murder

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Katie Stillwell focuses on two things in her life: work and practicing for her Sommelier Certification with her blind tasting group.

Decanting a Murder
 
The exam was supposed to be the hardest part of her week, but that was before a body was found at an exclusive Napa Valley winery party. 
When all the evidence points to Katie’s best friend, the outspoken and independent Tessa, Katie drops everything to clear Tessa’s name. Using her deductive wine skills, she tries to track down the real killer. But when repeated attempts are made on her life, Katie discovers that everyone’s secrets must be uncorked―including her own.
 


About The Author  
Nadine Nettmann, a Certified Sommelier through the Court of Master Sommeliers, is always on the lookout for great wines and the stories behind them. She has traveled to wine regions around the world including Chile, South Africa, Spain, Germany, and every region in France. When she’s not visiting wine regions or dreaming up new mysteries, her travel articles have appeared in AAA Hawaii, New Mexico Journey, Modern Luxury Hawaii, and Inspirato. Nadine is a member of Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, Romance Writers of America, and International Thriller Writers. She lives in California with her husband.

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Jim Lavene has passed


Jim Lavene has passed away; his wife and writing partner Joyce Lavene passed away Tuesday, October 20, 2015, at her home. Joyce and Jim were married 44 years, and since 1999, they’ve written award-winning, bestselling mystery fiction as themselves, J.J. Cook, and Ellie Grant. Their collaboration resulted in more than 70 novels for Harlequin, Berkley, Amazon, and Gallery Books along with hundreds of non-fiction articles for national and regional publications.Their Christmas mystery A Dickens of a Murder was featured on this blog.

In memory of Joyce Lavene: Author interview and giveaway, A Dickens of a Murder | Island Confidential

Interview: Radine Nehring, A Portrait to Die For

Carrie discovers two versions of a supposedly original portrait in a loan exhibition at Crystal Bridges of American Art, where she does volunteer work. When the reporter who interviewed Carrie at the museum is abducted, Carrie must choose between honoring her promise to stop crime-solving–or work to find the woman who was her son’s college friend.


Q: Tell us about your protagonist Carrie. Who is she, what motivates her?
A: Carrie’s parents were both school teachers, and she–an only child–was born when they were in their 30’s and their marriage was well established. This established life extended to household work and meal preparation. While Carrie was encouraged in all intellectual pursuits, she did not learn housekeeping skills, and, when she married at age 30 she had never cooked a meal. Her husband, Amos McCrite, was a highly regarded criminal lawyer in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He had been seeking a suitable wife when he met Carrie in the Tulsa City-County Library after she, a research librarian, was assigned to help him find needed information. He observed her on several returns to the library and eventually proposed, explaining his need for an educated, presentable companion to share his life and accompany him to business-related social events. Carrie wanted a home of her own and children, so, though he promised friendship but no love affair, she accepted, moving into Amos’s luxurious home and enjoying the services of his long-time cook and other household staff. Throughout the mystery series featuring Carrie, the fact she can’t cook becomes a source of ongoing humor, and some of her excessively simple recipes are featured in the back of each book.
The McCrite’s son Rob was born a couple of years after their marriage and following that, Amos’s interest in sharing any physical relationship with Carrie disappeared, though friendly companionship blossomed.
After Amos’s death, Carrie’s friends and family urged her to sell her home and move to an apartment or retirement community in Tulsa. She balked, and, showing the beginnings of a streak of independence, said she was going to move to Arkansas and build a home on land in the Ozarks she and Amos had purchased for future retirement.
That’s when her adventures begin.
Q: How much of you is in Carrie? How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
A: People have asked me if Carrie is at all like me. At first I said a firm “No,” but now I would waver. There are a lot of my own life observations that are mirrored in her. Of course she is more daring, smarter, and opinionated than I am (!) but, since I have spent many, many hours inside her thoughts and speech over the years I understand her, and suspect that there is more of me in Carrie than even I am aware of now. Her “busy-body” interest in seeing if she can help people in trouble is familiar to me, though, in my case, it’s never led me into danger from anyone on the wrong side of the law.
Meet her in real life? Ooh, I’d love to. I think her surface self-assurance would awe me–though once we got past formalities, I believe we could be good friends.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A: Well, of course they do, they’re human after all. What? Oh, well naturally I mean, though they only exist in fiction, I try to make them as real as possible. Henry is coming to terms with trauma experienced during his long career as a homicide detective in Kansas City. He’s also learning (after a disastrous first marriage) what love really means. Carrie is learning to not be so self-focused. She’s more open, and her religious faith is increasing.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean?
A: No, and it shocked me the first time I heard a mystery writer say they had done so. Now I realize that some authors do think of a specific antagonist when they commit murder (in a story) but I never have. For one thing, I’ve never met anyone I’d like to kill. (S’truth.)
 

Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A: Settings in my novels are real down to the last doorknob and wildflower, and that means I need to pick story locations I consider worthy of this attention. Yes, it makes extensive research necessary, but I feel honor-bound to do my chosen locations justice. Anyone visiting one of these places could follow my story on site with book in hand.
Settings are always one of Arkansas’s special locations. For example, I have set two novels and several short stories in various state and national parks here.
I spend quite a bit of time choosing a setting, and it’s only after ascertaining that the setting says “story” to me that I begin to write. The plot and crime in each of my novels arise from what is plausible in the chosen setting.
Angela_Lansbury
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A. Ho, ho. . . what a delicious dream. But, you know, I can’t think of how I’d cast my people, especially Carrie and Henry. I am not a movie-goer today, and my favorite TV characters have moved beyond a plausible age range for my people. Angela Lansbury as I knew her in the “Murder She Wrote” series would have made a perfect Carrie, though Carrie is shorter and rounder than Ms. Lansbury.
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A: Best: “Don’t be afraid to be yourself–write what only you can write.” Worst: “Never write dialect.”
 


About The Author
For more than twenty years, Radine Trees Nehring’s magazine features, essays, newspaper articles, and radio broadcasts have shared colorful stories about the people, places, events, and natural world near her Arkansas home.
 

 
In 2002, Radine’s first mystery novel, A VALLEY TO DIE FOR, was published and, in 2003 became a Macavity Award Nominee. Since that time she has continued to earn writing awards as she enthralls her original fans and attracts new ones with her signature blend of down-home Arkansas sightseeing and cozy amateur sleuthing by active retirees Henry King and Carrie McCrite King.

Follow Radine

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#Giveaway and Guest Post: Annette Dashofy, author of With a Vengeance

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Paramedic Zoe Chambers and the rest of rural Monongahela County’s EMS and fire personnel are used to wading into the middle of trouble to rescue the sick and the injured.
But when someone with an ax to grind seeks retribution by staging accident scenes and gunning down the first responders, Zoe finds herself forced to not only treat her own brethren of the front lines, but also, in her role as deputy coroner, seek out whoever is killing her friends. At the same time, Vance Township Police Chief Pete Adams races to track down a gun, a mysterious all-terrain vehicle, and the sniper before Zoe goes back on duty, placing herself—and Pete—firmly in the gunman’s crosshairs.


 

 


When I started writing the Zoe Chambers mystery series a few years back, one of the first things I decided on—besides the main characters of Zoe and Pete—was the location. I knew I wanted to set the series here in rural southwestern Pennsylvania, but I opted against using the real towns and municipalities.
My reasons for setting the stories locally were numerous. I know the area. No need to travel for research. No need to learn about quirky customs or manners. I grew up around them! And although we’re in the middle of farm country, crime exists. I liked the idea of writing about small town crime being as deadly as anything you’ll find in the city. I can write about corrupt politicians. I can also write about a body discovered in a bin of potatoes in a farmer’s root cellar.
My reasons for creating a fictionalized version of my corner of the world are less numerous. One: I wanted to be able to move things around and merge three different townships into one. If I had done this using the correct names for places, my readers who live around here would have nailed me to the wall. As is, they take great pleasure in announcing that they recognize that store or that road! Two: I’m not a police officer, but I write police procedure. While I try to stay accurate, if I do get something wrong, I can always say, “That’s how it’s done in Monongahela County!”
One thing that’s very real is the Kroll farmhouse, where Zoe lives in the first three books. It’s the house in which I grew up. My grandparents’ house. While the real structure was razed years ago, having Zoe live there has allowed me to keep my memories alive. Having said that, let me tell you I had not intended for Bridges Burned to end the way it did. Sometimes we authors write the stories. Sometimes they take over and write themselves. Such was the case, and I wasn’t at all happy about it. However, I’ve gone through the seven stages of grief and have moved on.
Zoe’s still working on it.
In With a Vengeance I bring back a number of locations that have shown up or been talked about in earlier books. The reclaimed strip minds known as the Cuts are real. I’ve always thought there was something vaguely sinister about them. A great place for a murder! Same with the State Game Lands. Easy access, and yet desolate. It’s one of my favorite places to drop a body.
Fictionally, of course.
Locations aren’t the only reason I chose to write about this area. The people are as varied as the topography. In With a Vengeance, the characters range from attorneys to mechanics to farmers to survivalists. Hunting is big business around here, so even knowing the murder weapon is a specific kind of deer rifle doesn’t narrow down the list of suspects.
 
Finally, I admit I’m obsessed with setting. I love reading books that take me someplace I’ve never been—or take me someplace I know quite well. I hope my readers have the same experience with my series, whether they’re experiencing Pennsylvania for the first time, or whether they think of Pete and Zoe as their neighbors.


About The Author  

Annette Dashofy is the USA Today best-selling author of the Zoe Chambers mystery series about a paramedic and deputy coroner in rural Pennsylvania’s tight-knit Vance Township. CIRCLE OF INFLUENCE, published by Henery Press, was afinalist for the Agatha Award for Best First Novel and for the David Award for Best Mystery of 2014. LOST LEGACY, was released in September 2014 followed in April 2015 by BRIDGES BURNED, which has been nominated for the Agatha for Best Contemporary Novel. WITH A VENGEANCE, the fourth in the series, will be available May 3.
Keep up with Annette

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#Giveaway and Interview: Christina Freeburn, Framed to Death

>>>ENTER TO WIN a copy of Framed to Death. Two print books and two e-books up for grabs!<<<
Eden has turned into a hotspot of crime, and Faith finds herself smack dab in the middle of the flare-up. When a favor for a friend links Faith to the synthetic marijuana problem invading her town, no good deed goes unpunished becomes the theme of her life. The town accuses the police of favoritism toward her, putting a strain between Faith and Ted, and a new officer is determined to prove Faith’s guilt.
 

Framed to Death
by Christina Freeburn

Framed to Death Cover - Copy
When the criminal is outed, Faith’s relief is short-lived. A fire takes out the store—along with the suspected dealer—and she’s now number one on an officer’s suspect list. Faith sets out to prove her own innocence, and her digging sparks the truth to life. Instead of the truth setting the town free, Faith finds out it might destroy Eden and the friends she holds dear.


 
Q: Christina, thanks for joining us today at Island Confidential. Tell our readers a little bit about your protagonist, Faith Hunter.
A:  Faith Hunter moved back to her home town of Eden, West Virginia to work in her grandmothers’ scrapbooking store when her life of adventure abroad left her bruised, broken, and almost spending the rest of her life in prison. One person stood by Faith and made she wasn’t wrongly convicted of a crime, and Faith finds herself wanting to show her gratitude by helping those who find themselves in a similar circumstance.
Q: How much of you is in the Faith?  How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
A:  I think there is a little bit of me in Faith, though I know a friend of mine would say there’s much more of me in her than I realized. Faith’s guilty conscience is definitely a characteristic she shares with me. I’m sure Faith and I would get along pretty well and we’d have an awesome time scrapbooking together.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A:  Yes. At the start of the Scrap This Mystery Series, Faith is so terrified of people learning her secret that she keeps everyone at arm’s length. Her fear controls her life and decisions. Faith has grown over the last three books and in Framed to Death, I see her becoming more of her own person and living her life based on what she truly wants. In a way, she’s now defining herself on what she’s done rather than on what was done to her.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean? 
A:  No, that’s my story and I must stick with it.
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A:  I base parts of the fictional Eden, West Virginia using some of the details about the town that I live in, borrowing some of the unique and quirky buildings and situations…like one of the fire station buildings being built near the bowling area.
Q: Do you see your books as a movie, a TV series, a video game, or..?
A:  I can see the Scrap This Series as a TV series rather than a movie. I’m having some trouble narrowing down choices on who’d play the major parts.
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A:  The worst piece of advice was the often heard and quoted, “Write what you know.” When I decided to work toward having a book published, I was a mother of two young children and at home. At the time, I truly felt like I didn’t “know” anything of interest to other people. How would a book based on what I knew be interesting? And some of the issues I conquered in my life weren’t topics I wanted to write about…or at least not as my full story. I wasn’t quite ready to open myself up that much.
The best piece of advice I received from an author was when I was starting to query agents about my book. He said I needed to stop thinking the agents were turning down my book. They hadn’t read my book, they were saying no to the query so stop going back to edit the story and instead fix the query. Once I acted on his advice and rewrote my query, I started getting positive responses from agents.
 


christina - Copy (1)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Christina has loved books since she can remember. There was nothing better than picking up a story and finding herself in another place and meeting new people. The love of reading evolved into the love of writing and she’s been writing since her teenage years. Her first novel, Parental Source, was a 2003 Library of Virginia Literary award nominee. Whether it’s a detective story or an inspirational romantic suspense, her stories usually involve some sort of crime where the characters are determined to see those wrongs righted.

 
Author Links
Webpage: www.christinafreeburn.com
Blog: www.theselfrescueprincess.wordpress.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Christina-Freeburn-Author/245592138834150
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/ChristinaFreeb1
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/ChristinaFreeburn
 
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#Giveaway and Interview: Karoline Barrett, Raisin the Dead

>>>Click here and enter to win an e-copy of Raisin the Dead<<<

The author of Bun for Your Life returns to Destiny, New York, where bakery owners and amateur sleuths Molly Tyler and Olivia Williams never crumble under pressure…

While the rest of Destiny is focused on the arrival of an upper crust perfume mogul, Molly is more concerned about what’s on the front page of the newspaper: her mother. Library director Anne Tyler was photographed at the most romantic restaurant in town having a cozy dinner with library advisory board member Philip Baldelli. But there’s more for Molly to worry about after Philip is found dead a few days later.
When Detective Sean Corsino zeroes in on Anne as a person of interest in the case, it turns down the heat on his budding romance with Molly. But after he’s injured during the course of his investigation, Molly and Olivia must step in to sift through the clues and clear Anne’s name.


Q: Thanks for stopping by, Karoline! Tell us about your protagonist, Molly (and of course I must congratulate you on your excellent name choice)
A: Molly owns Bread and Batter Bakery with her best friend, Olivia. She’s lived in Destiny her entire life. She’s divorced, and has a new man in her life, a certain detective who’s new in town. She adores dogs, drives a Prius, and doesn’t eat meat.
Q: How much of you is in your protagonist? How would you feel about Molly if you met her in real life?
A: Molly and I both have a sense of humor. We’re both from upstate New York and we’re both Nancy Drew fans. I think as friends, we’d be great. Especially, since she owns a bakery; free cupcakes, you know.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A: In the first book of my series, Molly is still harboring feelings for her ex-husband, but as she and Detective Corsino get closer, she moves on.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean?
A: What a great question, I’ve never been asked that before! I’ve actually thought of making people I’m not fond of the killer, but not the “killee.”
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A: Definitely liberties! Destiny, N.Y. is based on towns I’m familiar with in the Finger Lakes area of upstate New York, where my family is from. It’s a beautiful area and it’s the only place I considered for this series. There are apple orchards and wineries up there, so that part is true to life, but Destiny is a product of my imagination.
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A: For Molly I like Anna Paquin. I can see Christina Ricci as Olivia, and for Detective Corsino, I like Christopher Meloni from Law & Order in his much younger days!

Anna PaquinChristina RicciChristopher Meloni

Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A: The best advice I’ve heard is always be true to your voice. The worst advice was that I should first write everything in longhand, in a notebook! Yikes! I’d still be writing if I did that.


 >>>Click here and enter to win an e-copy of Raisin the Dead<<<

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 
I live in a small Connecticut town with my husband. When I’m not writing, I’m either reading, spending time by the water, taking pictures, traveling, indulging in social media, accompanying above-mentioned husband to New York Yankees games, or doing anything that does not involve math…
Author Links
Webpage      http://www.karolinebarrett.com/
Blog                http://www.karolinebarrett.com/category/blog/
Facebook      https://www.facebook.com/KarolineBarrettBooks
Twitter          https://twitter.com/KarolineBarrett
Goodreads   http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/3315555.Karoline_Barrett
Purchase Links
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Sisters In Crime/Hawaii: Special e-Book Sale for Hawaii Book and Music Festival Week-End


Special e-Book Sale for Hawaii Book and Music Festival Week-EndTO CELEBRATE HAWAII BOOK and MUSIC FESTIVAL week-endSisters In Crime/Hawaii members are offering some of their e-Books at the specially reduced price of 99 cents each April 27 – May 1, 2016Load up your e-Reader or your favorite reading device with all of these fantastic tales, novels,and short stories, many set in Hawaii. Get The Case of the Defunct Adjunct and more!
Source: Sisters In Crime/Hawaii: Special e-Book Sale for Hawaii Book and Music Festival Week-End


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#Giveaway and Character Guest Post: Without a Doubt by Nancy Cole Silverman

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KCHC radio reporter Carol Childs is investigating a jewelry heist when she realizes her FBI boyfriend is working the same case undercover and that she may have inadvertently helped the suspect to escape. The suspect is amused by the connection and has been calling the radio station. And when a Hollywood socialite Carol believes may be connected to the case is murdered, Carol risks her relationship and her job to uncover the truth.
My name is Carol Childs, I’m a single, middle-aged mom and a reporter for a local talk radio station in Los Angeles, and I’ve got a problem. I recently got myself into the middle of a jewelry store robbery as I was covering a Beverly Hills Chocolate tour for the radio station. And if that wasn’t bad enough, I witnessed Eric, my boyfriend–my FBI boyfriend–leaving the scene of the crime only moments before on the arm of Carmen Montague, an L.A. socialite.
Like I said, I’ve got a problem. But not like you might think. I can more or less put two-and-two together and it didn’t take much to figure Eric was probably working a case. But, I have to admit, seeing him with Carmen wasn’t exactly something I could un-see, and I was curious.
Thing is, I can’t afford to be curious. As a reporter, it was my job to let my boss, Tyler Hunt know I what I knew. However, I really didn’t think it was a good idea. He’s always telling me reporters and the law enforcement make for poor bedfellows – like he’d know – and I didn’t really think it was his business. After all, despite the fact Tyler calls me the World’s Oldest Cub Reporter, I’m not without some sense and I wasn’t going to risk his reassigning me. I figured, if I needed to, I could tell him later.
Only later was when people starting dying and by then…well, I was in hot water with the station owner’s wife. You see, she thinks I’ve been compromised and wants my job.
Like I said, I’ve got a problem.
WITHOUT A DOUBT front SM
Without a Doubt is #3 in the Carol Childs series.  If you’re new to this series, start with Shadow of a Doubt!
“Forget the shower scene in Psycho; Shadow of a Doubt will make you scared to take a bath!” – Diane Vallere, Author of the Material Witness, Style & Error, and Mad for Mod Mystery Series






About The Author  
Nancy Cole Silverman credits her twenty-five years in radio for developing an ear for storytelling. After writing everything from commercial copy to news Silverman retired from radio in 2001 and founded The Equestrian News, a niche publication targeting southern California’s active equestrian community. Working on a story about America’s wild mustangs inspired Silverman to write her first novel, The Centaur’s Promise.
In the last ten years, Silverman has written numerous short stories and novelettes some of which have been produced as audio books. Silverman’s new series with Henery Press, the Carol Childs Mysteries takes place inside a busy Los Angles Radio station.

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