Showing posts with label British mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British mystery. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2025

Versed in Murder

 

Versed In Murder: A McLaren MysteryVersed In Murder: A McLaren Mystery by Jo A. Hiestand
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Versed in Murder might sound as if it could be a story of sinister poetry. However, it is melodies and lyrics that compose this story. McLaren’s best mate, Jamie, needs some help this time. A good friend of Jamie's, a violinist in a band, died about a year ago and Jamie was the one who found him. He might have done a little investigating of the scene before the other officers arrived. In other words, he overstepped. Overstepped enough to be given a couple of days off. Embarrassed by his lack of protocol, he really doesn’t want to admit his mistake to McLaren but needs his help enough to ‘fess up.

Saturday, December 9, 2023

Christmas at Corbie Hall

 



Christmas at Corbie Hall: A McLaren Mystery
by Jo A Hiestand
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

If the weather wasn’t so unpredictable in Scotland McLaren and Melanie might not have arrived early at Corbie Hall. The McLaren estate belonging to his grandfather was their destination to celebrate the Christmas holidays with the family. If McLaren hadn’t been there early what would have happened to the dead body found on the steps of the estate? What if McLaren’s somewhat strong, bullheaded grandfather hadn’t wanted McLaren to investigate regardless of the holiday season? Lots of “ifs” lead up to another great McLaren mystery.

Monday, August 7, 2023

The Cottage by Jo A. Hiestand

 

The Cottage: A McLaren MysteryThe Cottage: A McLaren Mystery by Jo A. Hiestand
My rating: 5 of 5 stars



In this 18th book of the McLaren series Melanie is finally moving to McLarens’s hometown, Derbyshire. She intends to own and run a B&B as she has in Moorton. She’ll be closer to him and still be able to support herself as well as send her daughter to college.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Haunted Water

 


This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Jo A. Hiestand will be awarding a $25 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. 


Cameron Rutter drowned two months ago in a lake on a Cheshire moor. Some say a morgen—a spirit who drags men to a watery grave—was responsible. Others say it was the phantom Grey Lady. The police say Gareth Gynne was the guilty one. Whoever—or whatever—killed Cameron needs to be sorted out. And ex-police detective Michael McLaren is asked to do just that.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Haunted Water

 

another great book from the McLaren series...



My Review...

In Haunted Water, the newest book in the McLaren series, Michael McLaren has become serious enough about his friend Melanie to visit her. Whether she is more than a close friend is something I’m not even sure McLaren knows. She will most certainly have to be a patient friend because once again McLaren gets a call to investigate a murder. It’s not the same as most murders though. His best mate, Detective Jamie Kydd, wants him to try and prove the innocence of a nephew of McLaren’s most hated nemesis, Charlie Harvester.  I’ve described McLaren as a softie yet a curmudgeon in earlier books. In this book his sister describes his occasional bear-like attitude as his “growlings”. A much better description than I could have come up with. Nonetheless, he cannot pass up helping someone even if they are related to one of the meanest, most selfish men that ever lived.

Jo Hiestand starts right off making each book in this series a stand-alone. Sneaking in background and the history of her characters through dialog and description. When McLaren’s buddy Jamie calls for help, even their banter gives you a picture of what has occurred previously in the series. And yet, to a reader like me who hasn’t missed one book, it seems varied every time. It’s why I call it sneaking. Never once have I thought “oh no she’s going to tell it again”.

The setting of this book is in another small village; this one touristy only in certain seasons, and built near a mere (a lake) that is thought to be haunted. Hiestand does not miss a chance to use her skill with descriptive writing. She set me right down in the beautiful place and built a mystery around me. Once more, a well-written great mystery to curl up with.


Buy it here:  https://amzn.to/3wKO9Lq

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

An Unwilling Suspect

 WEDNESDAY WINNER






Jo Hiestand has several audiobooks available. She has one and (another coming soon) in her Linn House series. There are 7 books published in the McLaren series. But in 2020 she came across a narrator that seemed to immediately be an almost perfect fit for her series featuring Michael McLaren (the McLaren series).  In listening you’ll see he seems to fall right into that British lilt and yet his voice seems to capture that moody, strong, and yet caring excop that I fell in love with in Book 1, Cold Revenge.

Now Callum Hale has 3 of Jo’s 12 book series narrated: Unfolding Trap, No Known Address, and the newest one, An Unwilling Suspect.

Here, on Our Town Book Reviews we hope to give you just a small taste of what you are missing if you don’t jump in and read or listen to these books.

Speaking of getting a taste...here's a snippet of Callum narrating Jo's newest audiobook, https://adbl.co/3y5lDDp



Jo Hiestand is the author of the McLaren Series and a 2 time winner of N.N. Light's prestigious Book Awards....

Read about Jo and the research she does in her writing: HERE







Here's a little from Callum Hale about his background...


I trained as an actor at the East 15 School of Acting, based on the principles of Joan Littewoods Theatre Workshop. I knew from fairly early on that I wanted to be an actor, pretty much ever since I realised that playing make-believe could actually be a career. I’ve been telling stories my entire life, and when as a child I was given a Dictaphone I would record books for me and my siblings to listen to, so you could say I’ve been narrating audiobooks for a very, VERY long time.

I remember particularly recording a number of short stories from a magazine my Scottish Grandmother used to share with us. One was about a Clooty Dumpling that got into a scrape with a  spider in a cave. I read the entire thing in a Scottish accent; which you can hear me doing plenty of in another McLaren audiobook; ‘An Unfolding Trap’.


My Mother’s family are from the Yorkshire and Cheshire regions of England, not far from where McLaren and his friend Jamie call home, so I was drawn not only to those characters, and the sounds of those voices, but also to the landscapes, which Jo makes just as important a character in her books. 

 I find it a real joy to sit in my little corner, behind the microphone, and step into the world of the book I’m narrating. Just as you would when reading alone for pleasure; I can see the hills in my minds eye, I feel the emotion of McLaren; I let the words effect me and, hopefully, effect my delivery so that the listener has the same engagement as they would reading the words themselves. To my mind narrating is acting, and acting is telling stories, and I’ve been doing that all my life.


Some questions we asked Callum

How do you prepare for a new audiobook narration? 

The first step is to make sure that the author, or the rights holder, is happy with the main character voices. So, I’ll liaise with them over that and send a recording of the first chapter, to make sure the tone of the narration is right as well. You don’t want to be reading a gritty murder mystery like it’s a kids nursery rhyme book! Personally, I don’t like to mark up the manuscript ahead of recording, I prefer to feel what’s right whilst I record... this sometimes means more editing for me later, but, for me, I think I give a better performance this way.

What if it requires different character accents, like Scottish or Welsh? How do you know your accent is correct?

 Thankfully, with most British accents, I’m fairly well practiced already; certainly to differentiate between characters. If I know something needs to be very specific and I’m unsure I turn to that wonderful research tool- YouTube. There’s bound to be a video of someone talking in the accent you need to hear. I’m pretty good at picking up the music of accents quite quickly. There are times, as with ‘An Unwilling Suspect’ where a character may have a slightly more obscure accent. There aren’t too many Yorkshire born, French-speaking Swiss citizens that have returned to their home country... so I did what research I could and just took a leap of faith! I hope not to have offended any Yorkshire born, French-speaking Swiss citizens...

 What if you have a sore throat, what happens if you're interrupted during your narration, or better yet, do you have a funny story about a coughing fit, your dog barking during the recording of an emotional scene, etc…

 If I have a sore throat, the answer is very straightforward and boring... I don’t record! It can be very frustrating, especially when you start recording and realise; ‘No... I can’t do this today’. It feels like you’re giving up, but at the end of the day, you just have to stop, walk away and give the pipes a rest. After all, a painter could have all the inspiration in the world but if they don’t have any paints; they’re pretty much scuppered.

Thankfully, I’m not often interrupted in my home studio. Occasionally, though,  there’s a loud knock at the front door, and it’salways when you’re right in the middle of a deeply emotional moment... and some colourful language usually follows... which I edit out later. In fact, all the times I talk to myself, while the mic is still recording, could be edited together to make a full length audiobook of it’s own; but those conversations will never see the light of day... or reach the ear of the public, at any rate.


Here's Callum's FB page. Check it out!  https://www.facebook.com/callum.hale.14


Friday, March 19, 2021

Let Sleeping Murders Lie

 

 


Let Sleeping Murder Lie
by Carmen Radtke
Genre: Cozy Mystery


A wildly entertaining read for lovers of cosy mystery and romance alike’ 
Fiona Leitch, author of ‘The Nosey Parker mysteries’

Love can be the death of you ...

American Eve Holdsworth is living her quintessential English dream in a picturesque village in the countryside. Meeting an attractive stranger adds to the appeal.

But Ben Dryden is a pariah in Eve’s new neighbourhood, since his wife was murdered five
years ago, and he was the only suspect. Eve, who is absolutely sure someone as charming as Ben could never be a killer, is determined to solve the case and clear Ben’s name, even if it’s against his will.

Soon enough Eve finds herself in deep waters, and with her life at stake, she can only pray that her romantic notions won’t be the end of her …

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Related by Murder

 

This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Jo A. Hiestand will be awarding a $20 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
See below to sign up for the Giveaway.

about the book...

From the moment ex-police detective Michael McLaren arrives at his friend’s house, he’s plunged into a nightmare of a case. Two men, hanged a year apart, each killed on a Good Friday. A barrister. A solicitor. Related careers. Related by murder. Related motives?

 

Pottery shards, a torn newspaper article, and biscuits are found in each man’s pocket. What do they signify? And the blackmail letters Melanie receives… Are they related to the murders, or are they separate, terrifying in their own way?

 

Professions, calendar date, McLaren’s attack. Could it all be entwined? Or is the motive for murder something else, something so secret that keeping it is worth attempting a third one?

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Hide and Seek

 

This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions

Jo Hiestand will be awarding a $30 Amazon/BN GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. 

 Click on "read more" to sign up for the Giveaway. 



Playing a mystery game seems the perfect way to celebrate Jamie Kydd’s promotion to Detective Sergeant rank.  But the game turns real when a body turns up in the pretend crime scene.  Perhaps worse than spoiling the party, the corpse is someone Jamie knows.

 

Even though the police take on the case, Jamie asks his friend, former police detective Michael McLaren, to also investigate—concerned that the victim’s criminal past may dampen the Constabulary’s usual fervor to nab his killer. It seems to have been a smart decision, for the police aren’t expending a lot of energy on the inquiry.

 

Suspects float around McLaren…half truthful, hard to find.  More like wraiths than flesh and blood.  If the victim’s burglary partner, ex-wife, or childhood friend didn’t kill Dan, who did?

 

It’s a desperate game between McLaren and a killer who’s playing Hide and Seek.


My review...

This is a rather long review for me. I don’t like to read long reviews and I try not to write them. There were just too many neat aspects in this story to ignore.

Hiestand has McLaren is back but the tables have turned a little. The tough cases are in someone else’s backyard for a change. McLaren’s mate Jamie is being promoted and they’re having a party. While it might be the surprise of a lifetime it most certainly is not the one they were planning.

Another great Michael McLaren story. My favorite character is back mending stone walls and helping people solve crimes; people that really need help. And yet, someone is lying; you know how mysteries are...someone is always lying.

Although the POV hasn’t changed, the author has managed to change the spotlight to shine on a secondary character and she’s done a good job of it. She’s almost made Jamie and McLaren seem as if they were partners again; working together as they did years ago.

Hiestand is excellent at making her characters come alive. Her writing is poetic. “...grey clouds heavy with potential rain fanned eastward from the western horizon. Everything earthbound took on their dense, somber hue...”.  Between her expressive writing and skill at character description, it’s almost as if she creates a stage in your mind; as if you’re watching a “play”.

There were two other aspects I thought were great in this book. The author created a lot more tension during the action scenes. Made me want to read even faster. And secondly, she made it impossible to know who the bad guy/girl was right til the very end.

This is Book 12 of a series titled “The McLaren Mysteries”. While it can be read as a stand-alone, you’ll be missing out on a lot of McLaren cases if you don’t read the whole series.

Friday, September 4, 2020

Hide and Seek

 


Hide and Seek
The McLaren Mysteries Book 12
by Jo A. Hiestand
Genre: Mystery 

Playing a mystery game seems the perfect way to celebrate Jamie Kydd’s promotion to Detective Sergeant rank. But the game turns real when a body turns up in the pretend crime scene. Perhaps worse than spoiling the party, the corpse is someone Jamie knows.
Even though the police take on the case, Jamie asks his friend, former police detective Michael McLaren, to also investigate—concerned that the victim’s criminal past may dampen the Constabulary’s usual fervor to nab his killer. It seems to have been a smart decision, for the police aren’t expending a lot of energy on the inquiry.
Suspects float around McLaren…half truthful, hard to find. More like wraiths than flesh and blood. If the victim’s burglary partner, ex-wife, or childhood friend didn’t kill Dan, who did? It’s a desperate game between McLaren and a killer who’s playing Hide and Seek.

My Review...

McLaren is back but the tables have turned a little. The tough cases are in someone else’s backyard for a change. McLaren’s mate Jamie is being promoted and they’re having a party. While it might be the surprise of a lifetime it most certainly is not the one they were planning.

Another great Michael McLaren story. My favorite character is back mending stone walls and helping people solve crimes; people that really need help. And yet, someone is lying; you know how mysteries are...someone is always lying.

Although the POV hasn’t changed, the author has managed to change the spotlight to shine on a secondary character and she’s done a good job of it. She’s almost made Jamie and McLaren seem as if they were partners again; working together as they did years ago.

Hiestand is excellent at making her characters come alive. Her writing is poetic. “...grey clouds heavy with potential rain fanned eastward from the western horizon. Everything earthbound took on their dense, somber hue...”.  Between her expressive writing and skill at character description, it’s almost as if she creates a stage in your mind; as if you’re watching a “play”.

There were two other aspects I thought were great in this book. The author created a lot more tension during the action scenes. Made me want to read even faster. And secondly, she made it impossible to know who the bad guy/girl was right til the very end.

This is Book 12 of a series titled “The McLaren Mysteries”. While it can be read as a stand-alone, you’ll be missing out on a lot of McLaren cases if you don’t read the whole series.


** On Sale for only .99 cents!!**


Sunday, May 31, 2020

Shadow in Smoke Audio




Author: Jo A. Hiestand

Narrator: Steve Hart

Length: 8 hours 32 minutes

Series: The McLaren Mysteries, Book 3

Publisher: The Wild Rose Press

Released: Nov. 30, 2019

Genre: Mystery



Synopsis
Janet Ennis tragically died five years ago in what the police labeled an accidental fire. But Janet’s mother, Nora, believes it to be murder and arson. And she’s hoping ex-cop Michael McLaren can prove it quickly, for she’s losing her memory to dementia. 

As McLaren pokes through the case details, he becomes emotionally involved with the dead woman. Yet, Janet isn’t the only person who threatens his mental well-being. A series of arsons on his own property hint that he’s upset someone connected with this case.

Motives for Janet’s murder rise like the smoky tendrils of a fire. And motive aside, the murder scene seems a bit too pat: a drought-stricken landscape eager to lap up flames and a conveniently locked door barring Janet’s escape.

Will McLaren solve the case while Nora can still comprehend the resolution, or will Harvester’s plans see McLaren’s career go up in smoke?
CLICK HERE TO LISTEN

MY REVIEW...
No one can know what it’s like to lose a child unless they’ve experienced it. Is it better to lose your memory and have such pain fade away? Mrs. Ennis doesn’t think so. She wants to know the truth about her daughter, and she wants someone to listen. When the police don’t seem to, she calls on Michael McLaren to help her.

Michael McLaren is an ex-cop having left the force from more than a disagreement with a colleague. I sound like I am siding with McLaren and I most certainly am. This is a good man; a man who wants to help others; a man with good friends and while he’s a little moody, I’ve loved him from Book 1. Sound a little wrapped up in Jo Hiestand’ s main character, don’t I? I love good characters. This one and all of the other real players in this book have been crafted to have his or her own unique personality. When you have a twisting and turning plot, having your characters this clear makes it much easier to follow the story. 

Having such a good narrator makes it even easier and more enjoyable. Before I forget I want to say that even though this is a British mystery and this is a great narrator, never does he make any accent so thick that it is difficult to understand. He and the plot of the story will keep you tied to your earphones or whatever you choose to use.  
This book is listed as a British Mystery. While there are some settings and a few word forms that might give that impression, I think this is a mystery that would appeal to all. It has hints, puzzles, twists and turns, a dead body, and lots of personality. I’m not sure what more you could ask.

You can tell from this review that I have read and listened to many more books in this series. I’ve loved every one of them. Each can stand alone but...don’t miss out, read them all.


About Jo...


Jo A. Hiestand can usually be found at her computer, which is good, since she writes three mystery series. It seems a natural progression from her job as a graphic artist – crafting word images on a sheet of paper instead of creating graphics on the computer screen. Between the two computer stints, she lived in Britain for her semi-pro folk singing career and became friends with several English police detectives. The latter relationship was not a consequence of the former calling, however, but all these UK aspects find their way into her books. When not tapping on the keyboard, Jo enjoys reading, baking, and photography. She lives in the St Louis area with her cat, Tennyson, and way too many kilts.
WebsiteFacebookGoodreadsInstagram
about Steve Hart, narrator



After a number of years with commercial radio covering two continents, Steve Hart moved toward narration after being asked to perform his first novel in 2005. As it turned out, his story telling ability became stronger as each book and year passed. Steve considers narration an on-going study that even requires constant focus and the mindset of ‘always be willing to learn and grow.’

“Many people have an opinion on ‘how to read’ a book, but I believe there is only one way—you have to be in it! Immersed in the story and being the character(s) as they move through it. Projecting the emotion and bringing the whole story to life, while making it easy to consume for the listener.”


Jo's favorite music...

Tunes Selected by Jo A. Hiestand
  • Never Leave My Side” -- it’s an original song. I wrote the lyrics and Lola Hennicke wrote the music. It’s out on a single-song CD with her as vocalist and pianist. Also have a drummer and bassist on the song. The song is a sort of 1940s torch song about unrequited love, which fits the story because the murder victim was an up-and-coming torch song/blues singer. I needed an original song to go with the book, and this is the product.
  • Chopin Nocturnes
  • “The Very Thought of You” - I love this song. It seemed particularly appropriate for “Shadow in the Smoke” because McLaren is beginning to become enamored of the murder victim, Janet Ennis.
  • “Nut Brown Maid” - a British folksong that again links McLaren to Janet.
  • Any of Eddy Duchin’s slower songs, like ‘Lights Out’ or ‘When a Woman Loves a Man’ or ‘As Time Goes By.’ That style fits perfectly with the story.
  • “Short Grass” by the great Canadian folksingers Ian & Sylvia. McLaren’s thinking about his own folkgroup, wondering why Sylvia didn’t play autoharp on the song. I added that because in my own group in the 1970s I played autoharp on the song and I thought it went very well. I added that reference as a sort of ‘in’ joke to the story.
  • “Time Is Winding Up” by Ginny Hawker and Carol Elizabeth Jones -- the sentiment portrayed what was going in the story at that point. McLare’s getting closer to discovering the killer’s identity.
  • “Green Fields” by the 1960s folkgroup The Brothers Four. It’s a slower paced song and laments that the woman the singer loves is gone. It mirrors McLaren’s growing feelings for Janet, his lament that she’s gone. The song, though, talks about the woman returning to the singer; McLaren might realize Janet can’t return, but the sentiments are the same for him.

Saturday, March 7, 2020

Shadow in the Smoke

Audiobook Blog Tour: Shadow in the Smoke by Jo A. Hiestand



Author: Jo A. Hiestand

Narrator: Steve Hart

Length: 8 hours 32 minutes

Series: The McLaren Mysteries, Book 3

Publisher: The Wild Rose Press

Released: Nov. 30, 2019

Genre: Mystery




Janet Ennis tragically died five years ago in what the police labeled an accidental fire. But Janet’s mother, Nora, believes it to be murder and arson. And she’s hoping ex-cop Michael McLaren can prove it quickly, for she’s losing her memory to dementia.

As McLaren pokes through the case details, he becomes emotionally involved with the dead woman. Yet, Janet isn’t the only person who threatens his mental well-being. A series of arsons on his own property hint that he’s upset someone connected with this case.

Motives for Janet’s murder rise like the smoky tendrils of a fire. And motive aside, the murder scene seems a bit too pat: a drought-stricken landscape eager to lap up flames and a conveniently locked door barring Janet’s escape.

Will McLaren solve the case while Nora can still comprehend the resolution, or will Harvester’s plans see McLaren’s career go up in smoke?


Buy on Amazon

Buy on Audible

Buy on iTunes
 CLICK HERE TO LISTENCLICK HERE TO LISTEN


MY REVIEW...

No one can know what it’s like to lose a child unless they’ve experienced it. Is it better to lose your memory and have such pain fade away? Mrs. Ennis doesn’t think so. She wants to know the truth about her daughter, and she wants someone to listen. When the police don’t seem to, she calls on Michael McLaren to help her.

Michael McLaren is an ex-cop having left the force from more than a disagreement with a colleague. I sound like I am siding with McLaren and I most certainly am. This is a good man; a man who wants to help others; a man with good friends and while he’s a little moody, I’ve loved him from Book 1. Sound a little wrapped up in Jo Hiestand’ s main character, don’t I? I love good characters. This one and all of the other real players in this book have been crafted to have his or her own unique personality. When you have a twisting and turning plot, having your characters this clear makes it much easier to follow the story. 

Having such a good narrator makes it even easier and more enjoyable. Before I forget I want to say that even though this is a British mystery and this is a great narrator, never does he make any accent so thick that it is difficult to understand. He and the plot of the story will keep you tied to your earphones or whatever you choose to use.  
This book is listed as a British Mystery. While there are some settings and a few word forms that might give that impression, I think this is a mystery that would appeal to all. It has hints, puzzles, twists and turns, a dead body, and lots of personality. I’m not sure what more you could ask.

You can tell from this review that I have read and listened to many more books in this series. I’ve loved every one of them. Each can stand alone but...don’t miss out, read them all.




Jo A. Hiestand can usually be found at her computer, which is good, since she writes three mystery series. It seems a natural progression from her job as a graphic artist – crafting word images on a sheet of paper instead of creating graphics on the computer screen. Between the two computer stints, she lived in Britain for her semi-pro folk singing career and became friends with several English police detectives. The latter relationship was not a consequence of the former calling, however, but all these UK aspects find their way into her books. When not tapping on the keyboard, Jo enjoys reading, baking, and photography. She lives in the St Louis area with her cat, Tennyson, and way too many kilts.
WebsiteFacebookGoodreadsInstagram
Narrator Bio



After a number of years with commercial radio covering two continents, Steve Hart moved toward narration after being asked to perform his first novel in 2005. As it turned out, his story telling ability became stronger as each book and year passed. Steve considers narration an on-going study that even requires constant focus and the mindset of ‘always be willing to learn and grow.’

“Many people have an opinion on ‘how to read’ a book, but I believe there is only one way—you have to be in it! Immersed in the story and being the character(s) as they move through it. Projecting the emotion and bringing the whole story to life, while making it easy to consume for the listener.”

Music Playlist
Tunes Selected by Jo A. Hiestand
  • Never Leave My Side” -- it’s an original song. I wrote the lyrics and Lola Hennicke wrote the music. It’s out on a single-song CD with her as vocalist and pianist. Also have a drummer and bassist on the song. The song is a sort of 1940s torch song about unrequited love, which fits the story because the murder victim was an up-and-coming torch song/blues singer. I needed an original song to go with the book, and this is the product.
  • Chopin Nocturnes
  • “The Very Thought of You” - I love this song. It seemed particularly appropriate for “Shadow in the Smoke” because McLaren is beginning to become enamored of the murder victim, Janet Ennis.
  • “Nut Brown Maid” - a British folksong that again links McLaren to Janet.
  • Any of Eddy Duchin’s slower songs, like ‘Lights Out’ or ‘When a Woman Loves a Man’ or ‘As Time Goes By.’ That style fits perfectly with the story.
  • “Short Grass” by the great Canadian folksingers Ian & Sylvia. McLaren’s thinking about his own folkgroup, wondering why Sylvia didn’t play autoharp on the song. I added that because in my own group in the 1970s I played autoharp on the song and I thought it went very well. I added that reference as a sort of ‘in’ joke to the story.
  • “Time Is Winding Up” by Ginny Hawker and Carol Elizabeth Jones -- the sentiment portrayed what was going in the story at that point. McLare’s getting closer to discovering the killer’s identity.
  • “Green Fields” by the 1960s folkgroup The Brothers Four. It’s a slower paced song and laments that the woman the singer loves is gone. It mirrors McLaren’s growing feelings for Janet, his lament that she’s gone. The song, though, talks about the woman returning to the singer; McLaren might realize Janet can’t return, but the sentiments are the same for him.
Dream Cast
Jo A. Hiestand's Casting Picks
Since McLaren as well as the series is British, I’ll go with British actors. I’d cast Matt Ryan or Ben Mansfield as Michael McLaren. McLaren’s friend and sidekick Jamie Kydd would be Oliver Coleman. Although, when I began the series some time ago, I imagined Douglas Henshall as Jamie. But time’s marched on and Douglas Henshall—as well as all of us—has aged a bit, leaving my book-bound Jamie at Oliver Coleman’s age. Jamie’s in the other books, so Mr. Coleman could be in the series, if it came to that! McLaren’s girlfriend Dena could be played by Lena Headey. Charlie Harvester, who is McLaren’s nemesis, could be played by Patrick Malahide.




Giveaway

Prize: $30 Amazon Gift Card

Shadow in the Smoke Giveaway: $30 Amazon Gift Card






Mar. 8th:

Dab of Darkness Audiobook Reviews

Jazzy Book Reviews

A Wonderful World of Words

Mar. 9th:

Our Town Book Reviews

Hall Ways Blog

Mar. 10th:

T's Stuff

The Book Junkie Reads . . .

Mar. 11th:

B for Bookreview

4 the Love of Audiobooks

Mar. 12th:

Bookmark and Fork

Mar. 13th:

Viviana MacKade

Nesie's Place

Locks, Hooks and Books

Mar. 14th:

Teatime and Books

Just 4 My Books


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Sign up as a tour host here.

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Black Moon




Book 11 of the McLaren Mystery series
British mystery
Date Published: August 2019
Publisher: Cousins House

 photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png


Each April the members of a mystery writing group gather on Stanton Moon for camaraderie and to fuel their plots. The moody area seems the perfect setting for hatching a whodunit. Unfortunately, an unscripted mystery materializes like an unsolicited manuscript on a publisher’s slush pile—the leader of their group is found on the moor, her head bashed in and very dead.

Lesley Keeton’s murder takes on the aspects of a novel’s first draft: the suspects shadowy and the killer unnamed. Now, a year later, ex-police detective Michael McLaren is asked to tidy up the plot and expose the killer.

McLaren investigates and discovers anger and jealousy cropping up as often as editor’s red marks on a manuscript page. The group members crafted more than stories—they planned a mass exodus, fleeing Lesley’s tutelage, dictatorship and tongue lashings. Add a tinge of blackmail, an illegal business and an affair to this framework, and the deadly combination has the earmarks of a bestseller.

In the midst of this, McLaren’s lady friend arrives unannounced and disrupts the case…and unbalances his emotions. Both are tested one dark night in a churchyard when she stumbles into the arms of the killer…and McLaren must rescue her without letting evil go free.

my review...
Black Moon is the 11th book in Jo Hiestand’s “McLaren Mysteries”. I’ve loved all 11 books, but somehow this book is a little different. It has her classic talent for character description and beautiful descriptive writing, but somehow this is deeper, more fun, lighter, and yet intense. I am aware these all sound like contradictions but there are some additions and some humor as well as a little attraction and as always, McLaren has a new case to solve. 

This time the murder case is centered around a writer’s group and it makes such a fun read for those of us who have always dreamed of writing a book. The setting is as interesting as the characters. Stanton Moor is where the writer’s retreat is held each year and we see its beauty through the author. Some of the retreat writers are accomplished and published while others are only hopefuls. You surely know that success can breed contempt, right?

Hiestand has brought back a visit from Melanie, a character in a previous book. Since Melanie is interested in McLaren, it seems as if we get a deeper picture of him. By getting to know one another, we are reminded of his background, his past relationships, as well as his hardships. Of course, Jamie, McLaren’s high-profile cop buddy, is present as always making one funny crack after another but among the many people McLaren interviews is a new character. One I liked from the onset. His name is Holton Lacey and he’s a retired cop and get this…he writes cozies. Cute huh? I loved his straight-forward cop ways along with his hidden secret. A male cop cozy writer. It doesn’t get better than that.

If you have read any of my reviews of this McLaren series, you will know I am a huge fan of Hiestand’s character definition. She makes them seem so real. It isn’t just that you can picture them. She writes so well you begin to feel what they feel; almost think like they think.

The above description makes it clear this book can be read as a stand-alone. However, after you read it, you’re going to want to go right back to Book 1 and read them all.

read an excerpt...

The car park was empty, the pub having closed at midnight. A small lamp shone in the multi-paned front window, throwing numerous rectangles of yellow-tinted light onto the ground. He would avoid that area.

McLaren found an exuberant spruce wallowing in darkness near the corner of the building. A perfect spot to eavesdrop and see. He slid between the evergreen and the wall, hidden from whatever direction the delivery bloke might come.

The tree branches swayed as he settled in for his fifteen-minute wait, and he prayed the employee wasn’t staring in this direction. McLaren leaned against the building. The stone was cold on his back and pressed into his flesh. At least it’ll keep me awake, he thought. He eased a bough off his shoulder, eliminating the prickling of the needles, and hoped, not for the first time, that he’d interpreted the earlier conversation correctly.

A gust of wind slammed into the spruce, dislodging some needles. They fell onto McLaren’s head and arms, and peppered his neck where his jacket collar was open. He flinched but didn’t dare move. A rumble of thunder rolled overhead. Seconds later, the clouds burst. Rain pelted the tree and collected between rows of needles before topping the confinements and falling. It soaked his hair and trickled into his ears, ran down his neck and dampened his shirt. Rain angled through the space between the boughs and showered his face and hands. Aromas of damp wood, earth and stone saturated the air.

He angled his watch face. Five minutes to one. He held the collar of his jacket closer to his neck and wiped the rain from his eyes.

Lightning corkscrewed across the sky and ripped the clouds. A blast of wind drove the rain through the tree and against the pub. Water coursed down the walls and overflowed the gutters. McLaren tried to lean farther into the tree, away from the wall, wanting to avoid the soaking, but the density of the boughs near the trunk thwarted his movement. He gave up, silently cursing his situation, and sagged against the wall.

The pinprick of two headlights came to him before he heard the vehicle’s motor. Instinct forced him closer to the tree trunk, although he realized later that the tangle of boughs and his dark clothing made him indistinguishable from the spruce. The car slowed as it neared the pub, and McLaren slowed his breathing, afraid he’d be heard. The vehicle paused, as though the driver was checking if the establishment was open for business. Or if the one o’clock rendezvous was still on.

Another growl of thunder drowned out the sound of the idling motor. The driver made no move to drive on or exit the car. He seemed content to sit and wait. For what?

McLaren craned his head so he could see the vehicle better. It was angled just enough on the road so its shape was visible in the lightning flashes. It was an SUV.

He wiped the rain from his eyes, leaning forward as though another few inches would correct what he saw. No light lorry or van sat on the tarmac, nothing large that would denote it was about to deliver kegs of beer. He stared at the car.

He sank back against the pub’s wall as the vehicle inched forward. Puddles on the road and in the small depressions of the ground threw back the brightness of the headlights’ beams, and he diverted his gaze. The SUV was close enough now that he could hear the roughness of the motor. Still, the driver didn’t park or leave the vehicle, and McLaren wondered if he had rung up someone on his mobile and was waiting either for an answer or for the employee’s appearance.

A fresh dumping of rain assaulted the area before the car eased past the pub. It waited until it inched past the stand of trees harboring McLaren’s car before it picked up speed and faded into the night.

McLaren stepped into the open, oblivious to the spruce boughs brushing against his back. He stared at his watch. One-twenty. Surely the delivery would’ve been made by now if it was going to happen. Had the driver who stopped in his car just now phoned to find out why no one was there? Was he told the delivery time or date had been changed and he should come back another time? Surely they hadn’t seen McLaren and called it off.








About the Author


A month-long trip to England during her college years introduced Jo to the joys of Things British. Since then, she has been lured back nearly a dozen times and lived there during her professional folksinging stint.

Jo’s insistence for accuracy--from police methods and location layout to the general “feel” of the area--has driven her innumerable times to Derbyshire for research. These explorations and conferences with police friends provide the details filling both her Peak District mysteries and the McLaren mystery series.

In 1999 Jo returned to Webster University to major in English. She graduated in 2001 with a BA degree and departmental honors.

Her McLaren mystery, BLACK MOON, received the ‘N.N. Light Best Mystery Book’ award for 2019.

Jo lives with her cat, Tennyson, and way too many kilts in the St. Louis-area.


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Sunday, February 23, 2020

Ancestral Whispers

British Mystery




Each year the residents of Nether Haddon celebrate the village’s founding in the time-honored way with games, music, and performances by their sword dancers. But something new is added to the fancy footwork this year: a team member dies ... murdered. Fear, jealousy and suspicion quickly engulf the group, emotions as tightly interlocked as the five swords used in the dance: a series of turns, jumps and clogging steps intricate as Celtic knots. Was the victim the intended target, or should it have been someone else? In the course of the CID investigation, a mysterious 17th century puzzle is discovered. Does it hold a clue to the murder? Detective Brenna Taylor and her colleagues have more than enough to worry about. But unbeknownst to her, career criminal King Roper has escaped from prison where he was serving time for murder. Now free and eager to settle the score for his capture, Roper tracks down Brenna’s whereabouts, ready for revenge...


This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions

Jo Hiestand will be awarding a $30 Amazon/BN GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tourSee below to sign up for the Giveaway


My Review...
Lots going on in this mystery set in a small British village. The tradition of rapper sword dancing and a well-researched description of it seems to fill out this story, making a very clear picture and an interesting read. Hiestand has woven another British custom  into a British mystery. When I say woven, I am speaking literally. There are enough twists and turns and hints in this story that I’m sure you’ll “think” you can figure out the “who-dun-it” part before the end. But I bet not.

Hiestand’ s descriptive writing has not changed, it’s as eloquent as ever. Hornung’s knowledge and description of police procedure gives us a clear picture of the inner workings of the Constabulary and  melds well with the story.

This book, as are others in this series, is basically narrated by Brenna Taylor, a Detective Sergeant of the Derbyshire Constabulary. Taylor is now a long-standing officer and Hiestand’s nature of making Taylor the main character has made these stories evolve just as Brenna has grown. Both she and her colleagues seem to have matured a little. Hiestand’s changes to her characters make you feel it’s a world you have lived in; real, sometimes troubled, and sometimes elated.

While I have said the characters seem to mature or make some different decisions in this book of the Peak District series, I do not think there would be any problem reading it as a stand-alone. The only problem I can see would be in not reading it. 

Hiestand also has a mystery series titled "The McLaren Mysteries". I must admit I have read these books too and immediately fell in love with its main character, Michael McLaren. I love reading about his life and the mysteries he tries to solve each time.



read an excerpt...
“He mentioned Jack Darkgate is an amateur radio enthusiast.”

“Anything to throw suspicion on others, Mark.”

“Open mind, Bren, remember? Darkgate might know a lot about electricity. More so if he’s one of those blokes who’s built his own rig. You know,” he added when I looked puzzled. “Some blokes like to assemble their own transreceiver, usually from kits, rather than buy the equipment.”

“Sounds like a lot of work.”

“Probably like anything else: if you have a passion for it, it’s not work.”

We had passed the pub. Darkgate’s house was farther down the road, on the right, around the curve.  I slowed my gait. Mark had taken a half dozen steps before he realized I lagged behind. He turned, walked back to me, and asked if something was wrong.

“You’re going to tell me I’m barmy—“


“You giving me permission or just forecasting the future?”

“I can’t shake the feeling that something serious involving Scott or Graham is going on.”

“You on that again? What set you off? Graham’s dramatic pause this morning?”

“Once I could overlook, Mark, but it also happened last Saturday night and Sunday morning. And you said yourself yesterday that he and Scott didn’t look exactly like cohorts reveling in Scott’s return. Margo mentioned King Roper a few minutes ago.”

The name was like a bell to Pavlov’s dog or a not guilty judgment to a criminal. Mark’s hands gripped my upper arms and he stood facing me, the light in his eyes white-hot. “What about Roper? Why would she mention him? Did she talk to Scott or Graham? He hasn’t escaped, has he?”



about Jo Hiestand...
A month-long trip to England during her college years introduced Jo to the joys of Things British.  Since then, she has been lured back nearly a dozen times and lived there during her professional folksinging stint.

Jo’s insistence for accuracy--from police methods and location layout to the general “feel” of the area--has driven her innumerable times to Derbyshire for research.  These explorations and conferences with police friends provide the details filling both her Peak District mysteries and the McLaren mystery series.

In 1999 Jo returned to Webster University to major in English.  She graduated in 2001 with a BA degree and departmental honors.

Her McLaren mystery, BLACK MOON, received the ‘N.N. Light Best Mystery Book’ award for 2019.

Jo lives with her cat, Tennyson, and way too many kilts in the St. Louis-area.


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