Thrilled to share this: my short story “Kit’s Pad,” which was published last year in @eqmm , is this week’s featured story being read on @rabiasquared podcast! Enjoy! https://t.co/xxgAbFrQOI
Happy to report I have a short story, “The Cold Case Geniuses,” in the latest issue of @MysteryWeekly! Inspired by a random thought: What if you could use DNA/ancestry databases to solve murders? Magazine’s available in Paperback or Digital https://t.co/sIsMFRUD7m on Amazon
I’m thrilled and honored to have a story in the latest issue of Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (Nov./Dec.)—alongside of Joyce Carol Oates, no less! Copies available at Barnes & Noble brick stores. I also contributed a freebie to the mag’s blog: https://t.co/z6RTjsxhv0
Pleased to share the news that my story “Every Fire Wants to Kill” has just been published in the latest issue of @MysteryWeekly: https://t.co/C3tqrW9wyX. You’ll never again be careless with matches after reading it!
Delighted to have been on the panel Spies Like Us: Espionage Thrillers w/ @acfrieden, Simon Gervais, @graybasnight and Bill Rapp @Bouchercon2022! Fabulous audience, great questions.
Happy to report @mysteryweekly just published my short story "Two Sharks Walk into a Bar." Nothing is as it appears in this pool hall hustle set in 1970s Chicago. https://t.co/zcMKSFDOMW or https://t.co/7PYmzn1JZp
Excited to join @acfriedan, @graybasnight, Simon Gervais, and Bill Rapp for the Bouchercon panel “Spies Like Us: Espionage Thrillers” (Downtown Hilton, 1001 Marquette Avenue, Minneapolis) on 9/8 at 1:45pm.
Thrilled to moderate this exciting panel of authors at the @Bouchercon2022 conference (Sep. 8-11). We'll chat about the intricacies of researching and writing espionage thrillers. Join us! #bouchercon2022#crimefiction @simongervaisbooks @graybasnight@historicnoir
In class today a student asked if the mob killed JFK. Told them to read November Road by @Lou_Berney—best novel I’ve read all year, I added. Still, I better not put a question about the assassination on the final exam—I am supposed to be teaching history, not literature!
President Truman expresses a sentiment regarding Modern Art with which many of us can no doubt sympathize. Or at least chuckle at (with thanks, @historicnoir)