The Shine from a Girl in the Lake Sample

The Shine from a Girl in the Lake by Richard Schwindt launches today. It is book number 6 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series. And it is a winner.

Schwindt is one of my favorite contemporary writers. And he may even be on my all time top 10 list. He is that good.

In my previous post, I talked a little bit about mysteries and his latest book. In this post, I thought I’d give you a sample of the goodness that is in store for you when you pick up your copy.

Because if you want fiction that gives you a sense of place, is filled with suspense, is poignant, and is seasoned with humor, then Schwindt’s fiction is for you.

And now, sit back and enjoy the sample.

Week 1 

Chapter 1
Sunday afternoon 

I knew what a Walker Coonhound could do, but my experience with Butch mostly involved watching him roll over, and invite me to rub his belly on the days I wandered next door to drink with Jack Rice.

This didn’t prepare me for the furious restraint of the animal now stalking beside me in the hot brush, ten miles outside of Magnolia Bluff. His hackles rose stiff as knives, and his mouth curled in a rictus of canine rage and anticipation.

I had thought the recurve bow with a seventy-pound draw would do the job, but now I was not so sure. Deciding to kill a rogue boar, was easy. Executing the plan much more of a challenge. Judging from Butch’s demeanor, we were close indeed.

A review of the topographic map suggested the existence of a hollow in the next hundred yards; adjacent to a gorge, probably ringed with the ubiquitous juniper scrub.

Melanie Fairchild had spent her twenty-fifth year alone in a house in town, self- imprisoned with agoraphobia. She met a charming man online, who lured her out, impregnated her in his trailer, married her, and then ran away for good.

She was left with mixed memories of love and loss, a nice little boy named Seth, and an incentive to get out into the world. She inherited a run-down ranch when her mother passed, and managed to make a quiet living producing soybeans and goat milk.

Melanie counted on me to help keep her anxiety at bay, and manage the stresses of single motherhood.

Now a goddam feral hog threatened to undo her gains.

Two weeks ago, it appeared on the edge of an escarpment situated by the south end of her property. One week later, it had killed her Cocker Spaniel, Lady, while she and Seth watched in horror from the doorway.

Terrified, Melanie had booked three sessions last week. She had one girlfriend driving her to my office at the college, and another, armed, watching Seth, who was no longer allowed to play outside. This hog was smart. She kept a loaded lever action 30-30 by the door, but he didn’t show his ugly face again. She knew he was around, likely in the hollow where the feral hogs clustered.

Psychotherapists are supposed to do therapy; not solve people’s problems for them. Melanie was now 32, pretty, and probably harboring erotic transference for me.

I knew this was a bad idea, but another part of me wanted the thrill of the chase, and to do Jack Rice a favor.

Jack, 72, had been in the wrong part of the Mekong delta in 1968, when his buddy, just ahead, stepped on a Bouncing Betty mine. The other guy was shredded, but Jack lost his left leg, and sent home with a Purple Heart.

It was a bad start to adulthood. Jack stayed single, but forged a good life for himself running a garage, and hunting the hill country with his dog, and prosthesis. Two years ago, diabetes took the other leg. No more hunting, and time to retire.

He took the loss with surprising equanimity, telling me he considered every day since the Tet Offensive a bonus.

He still drank a bit, made his way to the coffee shop to bullshit with the boys, and walked Butch from the seat of his VA issue electric wheelchair. He even drove an old beater truck with hand controls.

I found Jack garrulous and opinionated, but a decent drinking buddy, and a great source of intelligence on local hunting.

“Take Butch with you tomorrow,” he said Saturday night, over a glass of whisky. “You may not find the hog without him, and, hell, it might find you first. Let Butch even the odds. Nothing meaner than a cornered boar.” He wasn’t finished. “And if I thought you’d listen, I’d tell you to take a rifle instead of the recurve. You’ll need to be awful close to hit it square.”

I laughed. “I’ll be fine, Jack. No need to fuss. If I get it, I’ll gut him and bring it back for you to butcher. All I’ll want is a roast and a couple of chops.”

He grinned and raised his glass.

I was a little drunk and cocky, sparing a glance to the friendly dog in the corner. Butch wagged his tail. “What’s he going to do? He’s too nice to hunt.”

“Just take him, stalk the hog, and let him do his thing. I trained him before I lost the leg; he knows hogs better than you.”

I waved away a fly with the corner of my bow as we tramped down a pathway. With the insidious arrival of late afternoon, shadows from the October sun lengthened around me.

As Butch stiffened, I unconsciously drew a broad head arrow from my hip quiver. My sympathetic nervous system activated, I felt the increase in muscle tension, respiration and heart rate.

Without notice, Butch bolted down the path, ears glued to his head. About 15 yards along he turned sharply to the right. That had to be the hollow. I started to jog after him, but he had begun to bay. Finding him would not be a problem.

Now I was running, and turned the corner almost as fast as he had. I pulled up sharply.

Maybe another 15 yards away, Butch was nose to nose with the boar.

No one told me it would be that big; it must have topped 200 pounds, dwarfing the enraged hound. Covered in stiff bristles, it rocked on its feet, obviously ready to fight back, but temporarily intimidated.

Butch never let up the baying, even when the boar noticed my appearance on the fringe of the hollow. That had to be the right hog; he was smart and mean. And he made the smart decision. To charge.

Charge me.

I had the arrow nocked, but he was halfway to me by the time I began my draw. The dog never lost a beat; pivoting, lunging and sinking his teeth into the boars’ ear.

This provided the opportunity to pivot myself, and line up for a clean shot. I drew. Damn dog was in the way. Christ, try telling Jack I shot his dog. Butch wasn’t letting go, probably saving both of us.

I shuffled to one side just as the boar turned to the other. With one fluid motion, I drew and fired.

It screamed like a human being, one long, pained wail, culminating with spindly legs collapsing from under it. Bullseye.

Butch and I felt that crazy elation that follows a kill. He circled the dead boar, panting. And me; I felt like I wanted to show up at Melanie’s house with the carcass, and then fuck her.

I returned to earth quickly. The carcass was promised to Jack, Melanie was vegan, you don’t sleep with clients, and I had a large pig to gut and drag back to my truck. I sighed and removed my pack. Time to dig out the knife. Dark would soon find us.

Butch still panted, while bleeding from one ear and a puncture wound on his thigh. He wagged his tail. The dog was happy.

***

Hope you enjoyed the sample. The Shine from a Girl in the Lake is live today. Get your copy on Amazon!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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The Shine from a Girl in the Lake

In The Simple Art of Murder, Raymond Chandler excoriates the classic detective story as unrealistic. And he is undoubtedly correct.

All one has to do is look at Edgar Allan Poe’s seminal detective, C. Auguste Dupin, to realize that the classic detective story was never intended to portray reality. The stories may possess elements of reality, but they are not reality the school of Realism would like. Fiction, after all, is fiction. It’s make believe.

But neither is the hardboiled world of Hammett or Chandler realistic. It’s simply much more gritty, depressing, and pessimistic. But that doesn’t make it real.

The world of Spade and Marlowe is just as unrealistic as is the world of Wolfe and Poirot. They are simply different unrealities.

Chandler’s defense of the hardboiled world was undoubtedly a case of self-justification.

Poe was an accomplished storyteller. His settings weren’t always real, but the atmosphere he evoked was something we can still touch and feel and smell and taste today. He leads us into believing his world is real — and that is what actually matters.

The classic detective story in the hands of a good writer does the same: it convinces us to accept what takes place as real, even though we know it’s not.

But more than that, what Poe actually gave us was a literary game. A LitRPG, as it were. The game of Clue, before it was invented.

The classic detective story is a cerebral exercise. It is a cognitive analysis of data to determine what is relevant and what is not in order to determine who did it. Who murdered Mr. Body and why. It’s also a whole lot of fun. It is a game after all.

The Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles is a series of exciting whodunits. Each book is crafted by a different author, and each is set in the charming Texas Hill Country town of Magnolia Bluff.

Five books have been published to date. They are:

Death Wears a Crimson Hat by CW Hawes

Eulogy in Black and White by Caleb Pirtle III

The Great Peanut Butter Conspiracy by Cindy Davis

You Won’t Know How… Or When by James R. Callan

The Flower Enigma by Breakfield & Burkey

And you can find them all on Amazon!

On September 20th, The Shine from a Girl in the Lake by Richard Schwindt will join the series. The book is currently on pre-order, so pick up your copy today.

I’ve read an advanced review copy and I can tell you the book is fabulous. It possesses all the elements of the classic whodunit coupled with the tension of a serial killer thriller.

Richard Schwindt is one of my favorite authors. In fact, I think he is one of the finest storytellers spinning yarns today.

His books are highly imaginative. Poignant. Often hilariously funny. His prose is imbued with a sense of place. He makes you feel you are there.

And all those elements come together to make The Shine from a Girl in the Lake one heck of a mystery-thriller.

Dr. Michael Kurelek teaches psychology at Burnet College in Magnolia Bluff. He also has his own private practice. He’s a man with a past looking for a new start in the small Texas town. Then one of his patients is found dead. In Burnet Reservoir.

When another patient ends up in the lake, Kurelek is driven to find the real killer before the police decide they are convinced he did it. The game is afoot. And it is a suspense-filled game of hunter and hunted. The ending had me biting my nails. Seriously.

The Shine from a Girl in the Lake is the perfect blending of classic whodunit and serial killer thriller. A fabulous book from the pen of one of the most imaginative writers working today.

Don’t miss this one.

The Shine from a Girl in the Lake
on Amazon

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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The Lawyer: Meet the Characters of Magnolia Bluff

Magnolia Bluff, Texas. Situated in the heart of the Texas Hill Country, on the shore of Burnet Reservoir.

It’s a quaint little town, filled with all manner of interesting people. Of course some of those folk are deadly. You tick them off and you’re likely to find yourself six feet under and breathing dirt when you wake up.

The Flower Enigma, Book 5 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series, launched this past weekend, and Book 6, The Shine from a Girl in the Lake, is on pre-order and will be available in September.

I’ve read both books and they are well worth a buck. Heck, they’re well worth several bucks. So pick them up while they are at their launch and pre-launch special price.

Buy The Flower Enigma

Buy The Shine from a Girl in the Lake

In this post, I want to introduce you to Stanton Mirabeau Lauderbach, Esq. The lawyer we meet in Death Wears a Crimson Hat, which is the first book in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles.

If you visit Magnolia Bluff and find yourself in trouble, he’s the guy you want to call.

Attorney Stanton Lauderbach is hired to defend the reputation of a lady preacher who may or may not be accused of murder.

He’s tough.

He’s smart.

Two-bit cops don’t frighten him.

He knows how to play the game.

He’s played it before.

In Death Wears A Crimson Hat, Book 1 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles, Attorney Stanton Lauderbach is hired to defend the reputation of a lady preacher who may or may not be accused of murder.

He doesn’t try to make fools of small town cops.

He lets them make fools of themselves.

And the lawyer loves every minute of it.

May the best team win.

***

There was a knock, and a man stuck his head in. Detective Reece Sovern turned around and said, “What are you doing here, Stanton?”

“I’m here to talk to Reverend Cole. I’m her legal counsel.”

“You’re what?” Sovern demanded.

“I didn’t hire you,” Ember said.

“No, you didn’t, Ms. Cole. A friend hired me on your behalf in case you needed legal advice.” Stanton Lauderbach nodded towards Sovern, to emphasize his point, and continued, “Stanton Lauderbach, Esquire at your service, and it looks as though I got here just in time.”

“Look Stanton, the Reverend and I are just having a chat. I’m not arresting her.”

“But she is a person of interest. Is she not?”

Reece Sovern took his glasses off and ran his hand over his face. “Yes, the Reverend is a person of interest.”

“Then I arrived just in time.” Lauderbach sat in the chair next to Sovern. “Continue, Reece.”

Sovern put his glasses back on, took in a deep breath, and exhaled. “Ms. Cole, did you know that your friend, Harry Thurgood, paid Mary Lou Fight a visit yesterday, and, according to her husband, threatened her?”

Lauderbach held up his hand to stop Ember from replying. “And what does that have to do with Ms. Cole? Shouldn’t you be discussing Mr. Thurgood’s alleged threat with him?”

Ember looked from Sovern, to the lawyer, and then back to the police investigator.

Sovern stood. “You want to make this difficult, don’t you, Stanton?”

“Just doing my job.”

“Yeah, right. Well, I’ll leave you two to whatever business you have. Ms. Cole. Stanton.”

The police investigator left, and Ember took in the man sitting before her. He was immaculately dressed in a three-piece charcoal gray suit. His dark hair was combed straight back from his high forehead, but stood out from his head, giving a very full appearance. He had an aquiline nose and thin lips. But what she found most impressive were his piercing, almost feral eyes. And his smile: genuine, but rather too genuine.

“Who hired you?”

“I’m not at liberty to say.”

“Really?”

“That was the condition your benefactor put on the arrangement.”

“I see. Why are you here?”

“To meet you and find out what Detective Sovern has asked you thus far.”

“And if I say no to your services?”

“If I may be direct…”

Ember nodded.

“You’d be a fool to do so. I’m the best in the county at this sort of thing.”

“Modest, aren’t we?”

Lauderbach smiled. “No, I’m not. But I am the best, which is why Sovern left. He was fishing. Which is good for him and bad for you. He has no evidence you are involved. Let him come back when he has some. Now, what has he asked you about?”

Ember filled in the attorney on her interactions with Reece Sovern.

When she was finished, Stanton Lauderbach fished a card out of his suit coat pocket and handed it to her. He stood. “Call me, no matter the time, whenever someone official shows up.”

“Aren’t you going to ask if I’m innocent?”

Lauderbach smiled, and Ember could’ve sworn his eyes glowed. “My job is to defend you. Period. Guilt or innocence is up to judge and jury. Good day, Reverend Cole.”

Ember watched him leave, and then studied the chair in which he’d been sitting. She pursed her lips, then picked up her desk phone. “This is Harry’s doing,” she muttered, started punching in numbers, but stopped before she was finished.

Her eyes took in her Bible, and she returned the phone to the cradle. She mouthed the verse: Be welcoming to strangers; because, by doing so, some have entertained angels and didn’t realize it.

She sat back in her chair, and softly said, “Maybe Harry is an angel.”

Please click HERE to find Death Wears A Crimson Hat on Amazon.

And you can find Caleb Pirtle’s original post which I borrowed with his permission on his website: https://www.calebandlindapirtle.com/the-lawyer-meet-the-characters-of-magnolia-bluff/

Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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The High Sheriff of Magnolia Bluff

There are always people who stand out in a crowd. Or a small town for that matter.

And in Magnolia Bluff, we have quite a few who stand out. One of them is Sheriff Buck Blanton, who we first meet in Eulogy in Black and White.

Once again, I’ve borrowed Caleb Pirtle’s excellent post (with his permission, of course). You can find the original here.

Buck has one facial expression. He grins when he sees you. He grins if he is about to hit you with the hickory club that hangs from his belt.

Every small town has a law officer who’s tough, who takes no nonsense off of anybody.

But he has a good heart.

Probably not a pure soul.

But a good heart.

He’ll go out of his way to help you.

But only God can help you if you break the law.

In the Texas Hill Country town of Magnolia Bluff, that lawman is the high sheriff, Buck Blanton. Here is the scene when you meet him for the first time in Eulogy in Black and White.

*

Buck Blanton makes a sudden U-turn, its headlights splintered by the rain. I pull my denim jacket collar tighter around my throat and watch him ease slowly to the curb beside me and stop. The only sounds Magnolia Bluff can manage at four minutes past eight on a soggy morning are distant rumbles of thunder and Buck’s windshield wipers slapping back and forth in a lackadaisical effort to shove the spatter of raindrops aside.

The sheriff rolls down his window and pushes his blue-tinted Shady Rays sunglasses up above his thickening gray eyebrows. Buck fits the job description of a country sheriff perfectly. Sunglasses, rain or shine. A thick neck. Broad shoulders. Barrel chest. Sagging jowls. Broad nose, probably broken more than once. Hands big enough to grab a grown man by the throat, jerk him off the floor, and shake him into submission. A gray felt Stetson hat lies in the seat beside him. I can’t see his feet, but I know he’s wearing his full quill Justin cowboy boots as black as his skin. Wouldn’t be caught dead without them. Says he was born in them. Says he will die in them. I don’t doubt it for a minute.

“On your way up to see Freddy?” He asks, glancing at the flowers in my hand. The rain has beaten them up pretty good. His voice is deep and mellow, a full octave lower than the thunder.

I nod.

Buck has one facial expression. He grins when he sees you. He grins if he is about to hit you with the hickory club that hangs from his belt. He grins if he’s praying over your lost soul at the First Baptist Church. He’s grinning when he throws you in jail. He’s grinning if he has to shoot you first. I suspect he grins in his sleep.

“Need a lift?”

I shake my head.

“It’s a bad day for walking,” he says. “You still got a mile or so to go before you reach Freddy.”

I shrug. “It’s fine,” I say. “I’m already wet.”

Buck opens the car door. “Get in before I arrest your sorry ass,” he says.

I look closely.

His grin has reached his eyes.

I climb into the front passenger seat. “Hate to mess up your upholstery,” I tell him.

“Don’t matter.” The sheriff wheels back down an empty street. “I’ll have a couple of drunks in here before the day’s out, and they’ll be a damn sight wetter than you are.” He leans forward and studies the rolling black clouds closing in from the west end of Burnet Reservoir. “That’s the trouble with the weather,” Buck says. “It rains on the just and the unjust alike.”

“Sound like a preacher,” I say.

“Tried it once.” Buck shrugs. “Didn’t like it. Found it’s easier to drag the bad guys to jail than drag them to the altar.”

*

You can find Eulogy in Black and White on Amazon. And you’ll be glad you did.

Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

 

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Magnolia Bluff — Alive and Well

I’ve been living in the Texas Hill Country town of Magnolia Bluff for quite a few months now. And aside from the murder rate (think Cabot Cove and Midsomer), it’s a nice place to live.

Even though I’m not a coffee drinker, I like to hang out at Harry Thurgood’s Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee Shop. Harry’s an interesting conversationalist.

And even though I’m not Methodist, I often go to St. Luke’s Methodist Church on Sundays because, well, the Rev. Ember Cole is easy on the eyes. I may end up going to hell for writing that, but perhaps she’d be willing to save my soul. Wait a minute, I think that’s Harry’s line.

This past Thursday, Death Wears A Crimson Hat, Book 1 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series, dropped, as they say. Then, again, maybe they don’t say that anymore. At my age, I can hardly remember if I had toast and tea for breakfast and I have it every morning.

In any event, Death Wears A Crimson Hat is out there in the wild, available on Amazon. Make sure to get yourself a copy. I’ve been told it’s pretty doggone good. (BTW, the book even reached the Top 100 on Amazon’s Amateur Sleuth category.)

Read a review by SS Bazinet on her blog: http://ssbazinet.com/wp/reviews/death-wears-a-crimson-hat/

Here’s one of several nice reviews I found on Amazon:

Harry Thurgood and Ember Cole, independently, have come to the small Texas Hill Country town of Magnolia Bluff to get away from their past. And while they like each other, they are kept apart by the secrets from their past lives. Yet this delightful little town has its own secrets. One powerful woman is capable of imposing her will on others, and often her will is to harm someone not in her inner circle. But someone objects to this and that leads to a person being killed and another almost dying.

Ember, now the Reverend Ember Cole, is accused of murder. Forgetting their own hidden history, Harry and Ember must work together to keep Ember from being arrested for the murder. The problem is, as they begin to make headway on finding the murderer, they become the new targets for the killer.

Author CW Hawes has drawn several interesting characters with such careful work that you begin to believe they are your long-time friends. You are drawn not only into the charming town but also into the lives of these characters. If you like a good mystery and great characters, grab a copy of Death Wears a Crimson Hat. You won’t be disappointed.

I’ll take their word for it because I’m biased.

I can tell you that the next two books coming down the pike are dynamite. I’ve read them and thoroughly enjoyed them. So stayed tuned for more news.

Each of the next 2 books, and the 6 after them, gives a different slant on my favorite town. Which is good. It keeps me honest. About the town, that is. And that’s important, because we writers have a bad habit of making stuff up. Some call that lying. I called it rearranging the facts. Then again, others call it news.

Magnolia Bluff. That beautiful little town on the shore of Burnet Reservoir. Just make sure you look behind you. Often.

Death Wears A Crimson Hat. Book 1 of the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles. Get it on Amazon.

And after you’ve read Death Wears A Crimson Hat and while you’re waiting for Book 2, Eulogy in Black and White by Caleb Pirtle III, coming out around May 20th, you might want to check out my Justinia Wright Mystery series and Caleb Pirtle’s The Boomtown Saga.

Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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To Right A Wrong — Is Live!

 

The latest Justinia Wright mystery, To Right A Wrong, is live!

Get it on Amazon!

And here’s a snippet to whet your appetite.

Gavin, maintaining his innocence, said the only conclusion was that someone had shot his uncle.

The jury agreed. They also agreed with the prosecutor that the someone was Gavin Gamble.

I set the papers on my desk. It all seemed to be there: motive, means, and opportunity. I picked up the copy of the anonymous letter Molly Gamble received. The penmanship was elegant, but the hand that had written the note was not a steady one. The message was simple:

Your husband is innocent. One of the witnesses is lying.

The message was signed, A Friend.

A friend. Ha! If the person was truly a friend, why didn’t he or she say something at the trial? Why wait until now? Indeed, why now? Why send Molly Gamble this note at this particular point in time?

It seemed to me we had more people, a lot more people we needed to talk to before Tina could decide if the note sender was a liar or not.

And how did the note sender know Gavin Gamble was innocent in the first place? Now that was a question I’d like an answer to.

Tina walked into the office and sat at her desk.

“So did Chopin confess? He did it, with the revolver, in the study.”

My sister poured herself a glass of Sercial madeira, the cheap fifty dollar a bottle stuff. “What are you talking about?”

“Apparently he didn’t confess, because you’re still a crabby puss.”

“I am not.” She took a sip of wine. “Did you read the transcripts?”

“I did.”

“Thoughts?”

“In spite of his claim to innocence, the evidence is pretty damning.”

“As I recall from the news coverage, the case was more or less open and shut.”

“So how are you going to spring our jail bird out of the slammer?”

“I don’t know. Who else had a motive for killing James Bowen?”

“Beats me. Gavin Gamble admitted he felt hurt and betrayed because his uncle decided to give him the boot. It could be he also felt angry and decided to get even. That was the prosecution’s line of reasoning, and the jury bought it.”

“Yes, they did. The question is whether or not they bought a snow job. The question we must answer is simple: who else had motive to kill James Bowen, because if Mr Gamble is innocent then someone else not only had motive but acted on it — and then framed Mr Gamble.”

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To Right A Wrong

 

The newest Justinia Wright mystery, To Right A Wrong, number 8 in the series, is formatted and waiting on Amazon’s approval, and, barring any problems, will be available to the public on Cyber Monday.

This traditional whodunit murder mystery sees Tina (Justinia) and Harry trying to gather the necessary evidence to overturn a wrongful conviction, and put the right person behind bars.

To Right A Wrong is about justice. About justice having been sacrificed to get a conviction, and about justice restored so that crime does not pay.

Tina’s lawyer, Harold Feingold, wants to reopen a case even though the evidence is very slim that indicates there was a miscarriage of justice. He comes to Tina seeking her help, and Tina accepts the challenge.

A murdered uncle. Four nephews vying for the inheritance. One fingered by the others for the murder. But what about the servants? Could it be that, in this case, the butler really did do it?

This is a murder mystery that will have you scratching your head with Harry, or arranging puzzle pieces with Tina.

Along the way, there is wise-cracking humor, sibling rivalry, good food and wine, enough action to keep things interesting, and plenty of exercise for those little gray cells.

Stay tuned, so you can experience a little goodwill towards people this holiday season.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

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A New Justinia Wright

Coming out in time for Cyber Monday (Lord willing, and the creek don’t rise) will be a brand new Justinia Wright murder mystery. Number 8 in the series.

If you’re on my mailing list, you’ll get early access — and a cheaper price. You can sign up for my mailing list at this link.

So what’s the new Justinia Wright mystery all about? Murder, of course. But it’s also about righting a wrong.

Seeing justice done is a big driver for Tina. After all, it’s in her name. What’s fair is fair and she doesn’t like it when someone is not fair and somebody gets hurt or killed.

In a way, she wants to put an end to all the playground bullies she comes across.

So stay tuned. More on this new mystery is coming! And you can catch up with the series on my Amazon page.

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The Nine Deadly Dolls is live!

The Nine Deadly Dolls
A Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mystery

About the Book

Nine little dolls. Voodoo dolls. A suicide. Or was it?

When Bobby Joseph Frieden visits Justinia Wright with a mysterious demand letter and the belief his uncle was murdered, Tina takes his case.

But how are the dolls connected to Frieden’s uncle’s death? And what is with the mysterious box that is the subject of the demand letter?

What begins as a cozy little mystery, turns ugly real fast, and Tina has to work quickly to stop the killers.

The Nine Deadly Dolls is live today! Pick up a copy at Amazon!

About the Series

Set in Minneapolis, home of Minnesota Nice, the sister and brother detective team of Tina and Harry Wright catch the bad guys and make sure Minnesota stays Nice.

This series has thrills and spills aplenty — along with good food, wine, and wisecracking humor — it’s as if Nero Wolfe moved to Minnesota.

What Readers are Saying About the Series

“Some fictional universes are just places you want to be…”

“CW Hawes has created a cast of characters that stand tall next to any traditional detective, whodunit mystery you want to put them up against. … Hawes has developed characters that you can’t help but care about.”

“The story line is wonderful, creative, and kept me expectant throughout. Hawes is wonderfully descriptive, drawing the reader in and holding them until the final page.”

Pick up a copy of The Nine Deadly Dolls at Amazon. The game is afoot!

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The Nine Deadly Dolls

Next week a new Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mystery will hit the ebookstores: The Nine Deadly Dolls.

The novelette is a whodunit involving a Voodoo cult, terrorism, and, of course, murder. We even see Tina leave the comforts of home to get her hands dirty — not that she’ll admit to anything.

If you enjoy the classic whodunit, then The Nine Deadly Dolls should be right up your alley.

And if you’d like advance news of upcoming new releases, free stories, and other assorted goodies, then please sign up for my monthly email.

It’s no secret that of all my fictional children, Tina and Harry are my favorites. They’ve been with me the longest, springing from my forehead in the early 1980s. I’m glad I’ve lived long enough to enable them to come alive.

And I hope you enjoy their escapades and banter as much as I do.

Stay tuned!

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