There are so many books coming out in September and October. It’s definitely reading season. I have a relatively short list of books here, but I’m sure you all can add some titles. I’m looking forward to seeing what books you have to add. Here are my October treasures.
Here’s a fun new series, the SCYTHE mysteries, beginning with Maxie Dara’s A Grim Reaper’s Guide to Catching a Killer. Murder is not her department. It’s not like it used to be. Modern-day grim reapers wear business casual, not black cloaks, and they don’t carry scythes, they work for S. C. Y. T. H. E. (Secure Collection, Yielding, and Transportation of Human Essences), where the Department of Natural Causes is the least exciting gig. And that’s how Kathy Valence likes it: boring and predictable. She has enough stress in her personal life; she’s mid-divorce, pregnant, and terrified she doesn’t have what it takes to be a good mom. Then, she goes to pick up a new client and finds his soul is missing. When she finally tracks down Conner Ortiz, he angrily insists he was murdered, and he refuses to move on until Kathy finds out why and by whom. (Release date is Oct. 1.)
Sydney Graves’ The Arizona Triangle wasn’t quite was I was hoping to read. I was looking for a little more Arizona. On the cusp of forty, Justine Bailen, better known as Jo, works for an all-female detective agency based in Tucson, Arizona. While staking out a cheating spouse, she learns that her long-estranged best friend from childhood, Rose, is missing, and that Rose’s mother wants to hire Jo to find her. This case is all kinds of wrong for Jo, but she has no choice but to head back to her hometown, an hour north and a world away from Tucson. Back in Delphi, she learns that her high school boyfriend, Tyler—who is probably part of the reason her friendship with Rose went south—is the cop assigned to the case. It doesn’t take long for Jo to realize that he’s all mixed up in it, too. To have any hope of learning the truth about Rose’s disappearance, Jo must finally face the demons she thought she’d escaped. (Release date is Oct. 28.)
Murder in Highbury is Vanessa Kelly’s first Emma Knightley Regency historical mystery. Less than one year into her marriage to respected magistrate George Knightley, Emma has grown unusually content in her newfound partnership and refreshed sense of independence. The height of summer sees the former Miss Woodhouse gracefully balancing the meticulous management of her elegant family estate and a flurry of social engagements, with few worries apart from her beloved father’s health . . . But cheery circumstances change in an instant when Emma and Harriet Martin, now the wife of one of Mr. Knightley’s tenant farmers, discover a hideous shock at the local church. The corpse of Mrs. Augusta Elton, the vicar’s wife, has been discarded on the altar steps—the ornate necklace she often wore stripped from her neck . . .(Release date is Oct. 22.)
Paula Munier’s Mercy Carr mysteries never disappoint. In The Night Woods, Record snow and sleet and rain are pummeling Vermont and a wild boar has escaped from an exclusive hunting club nearby—but that won’t stop a very pregnant and very bored Mercy Carr from hiking her beloved woods with her loyal dog Elvis. She’s supposed to be decorating the nursery and helping her mother plan the baby shower, but she’d much rather be playing Scrabble with Homer Grant, a word-loving, shotgun-toting hermit living deep in the forest. But when she and Elvis drop by Homer’s cabin for their weekly game, they arrive to find an unknown dead man—and no sign of Homer. She’s relieved when Elvis tracks Homer, injured but alive. But Homer’s troubles are far from over, as he’s still the number one suspect and he remembers nothing of the attack. When another corpse with a link to Homer is found, Mercy is determined to help her friend, an effort complicated by the unexpected arrival of her young cousin Tandie, sent by Mercy’s mother to keep an eye on her until the baby is born. (Release date is Oct. 8.)
Here’s the big title on the October list, Louise Penny’s latest, The Grey Wolf. Relentless phone calls interrupt the peace of a warm August morning in Three Pines. Though the tiny Québec village is impossible to find on any map, someone has managed to track down Armand Gamache, head of homicide at the Sûreté, as he sits with his wife in their back garden. Reine-Marie watches with increasing unease as her husband refuses to pick up, though he clearly knows who is on the other end. When he finally answers, his rage shatters the calm of their quiet Sunday morning. That’s only the first in a sequence of strange events that begin THE GREY WOLF, the nineteenth novel in Louise Penny’s #1 New York Times-bestselling series. A missing coat, an intruder alarm, a note for Gamache reading “this might interest you”, a puzzling scrap of paper with a mysterious list—and then a murder. All propel Chief Inspector Gamache and his team toward a terrible realization. Something much more sinister than any one murder or any one case is fast approaching. (Release date is Oct. 29.)
Andy Carpenter fans will be awaiting David Rosenfelt’s The More the Terrier. Reluctant lawyer Andy Carpenter is relieved to be headed back to Paterson, New Jersey, after a week-long family vacation in the Adirondacks. He’s ready to put the holly jolly season way behind him and settle in at home with his three dogs. But when they finally arrive, there is an extra dog eagerly awaiting them, as well as one anxious dog sitter. When the dog showed up on the doorstep a few days ago, the sitter knew Andy would know what to do. Indeed, Andy recognizes Murphy, who the Carpenters fostered before the dog went home with BJ Bremer and his mother. BJ wanted to learn all he could about caring for Murphy, which made Andy like him immediately. When Andy goes to take Murphy back to the Bremers, though, instead of the happy reunion he expects, he finds BJ’s mother in tears. It turns out Murphy ran off…after BJ was arrested for murder. Andy had hoped for a quiet Christmas vacation, but he likes Murphy’s family and his golden retriever, Tara, likes Murphy, so he can’t resist getting involved. The case isn’t as simple as Andy thought it would be, though, with BJ suspected of murdering one of his professors. With nothing to go on but Andy’s own conviction in BJ’s dog-loving character, proving his innocence would be a Christmas miracle. (Release date is Oct. 15.)
Sarah Sawyer’s The Undercurrent features an overwhelmed new mother who becomes obsessed with the unsolved disappearance of a young girl from her small Texas hometown―and unearths her own family’s dark secret. It’s 2011 and Deecie Jeffries’s missing person’s case in Austin, Texas, is still cold. New mom Bee, struggling with postpartum depression, is living in Portland, Maine, having left Austin–and those memories–far behind. Until Leo, her childhood crush and her estranged twin Gus’s best friend, suddenly resurfaces, drawing Bee back into their shared past.Bee’s predictable life is upended, pushing her to return to her childhood home and piece together a neighborhood’s shattered history. Bee becomes consumed with a need to uncover the truth about Deecie’s disappearance and what happened to the families who lived across the field from one another―Gus, Leo, and their mothers: Mary, a homemaker, whose only escape is the local community theater, and Diana, a serious academic dedicated to her studies. (Release date is Oct. 8.)
I’m looking forward to Stacy Sivinski’s The Crescent Moon Tearoom. Ever since the untimely death of their parents, Anne, Beatrix, and Violet Quigley have made a business of threading together the stories that rest in the swirls of ginger, cloves, and cardamon that lie at the bottom of their customers’ cups. Their days at the teashop are filled with talk of butterflies and good fortune intertwined with the sound of cinnamon shortbread being snapped by laced fingers. That is, until the Council of Witches comes calling with news that the city Diviner has lost her powers, and the sisters suddenly find themselves being pulled in different directions. As Anne’s magic begins to develop beyond that of her sisters’, Beatrix’s writing attracts the attention of a publisher, and Violet is enchanted by the song of the circus—and perhaps a mischievous trapeze artist threatening to sweep her off her feet—it seems a family curse that threatens to separate the sisters is taking effect. (Release date is Oct. 1.)
I hate it when I mistake in alphabetizing the books, and can’t go back. But, I was so happy to see that Terry Shames didn’t drop her Samuel Craddock series when she started another one. The Troubling Death of Maddy Benson is the eleventh in the series. Shames does an outstanding job handling current politics and issues in this mystery. Everyone knows everyone in a small town like Jarrett Creek. So Chief of Police Samuel Craddock is perplexed when he receives a call from a woman asking the police to rescue her sister. Who is Maddy Benson? Maddy said she had to get away, but she didn’t get far. When Craddock finds her just off the highway, she’s already dead, shot in the head. And as he learns more about the mysterious Maddy and the real reason behind her recent move to Jarrett Creek, his career is plunged into jeopardy. Can he unravel a terrible knot of lies, threats, dangerous politics and shocking secrets to reveal the truth behind the troubling death of Maddy Benson? (Release date is Oct. 1.)
I was excited about Munier, Penny, and Shames with the October releases. What about you? What books are you anticipating?
I have David Rosenfelt’s book on hold at the library. I have ARCs of a couple of other October releases.
Gathering Mist by Margaret Mizushima
A New Lease on Death by Olivia Blacke
Gingerbread Danger by Amanda Flower
I’ll have to look for Gathering Mist. Thank you, Sharon!
Sandy, darn. Sorry, I said Sharon. It’s only 5 am here. Maybe I should not be on the blog so early.
No problem
Two K-9s this month – Munier (yay!) and Mizushima.
Also:
1 John Banville, The Drowned (Quirke)
1 Sandy Balzo, Brew Unto Others (Maggie Thorsen)
8 J. A. Jance, Den of Iniquity (Beaumont))
8 M. C. Beaton & R. w. Green, Killing Time (Agatha Raisin)
8 Patricia Cornwell, Identity Unknown (Scarpetta)
8 Paula Hawkins, The Blue Hour
15 Michael Connelly, The Waiting (Harry Bosch & Renee Ballard – top of my list!)
15 Elly Griffiths, The Man in Black (short stories)
15 Ian Rankin, Midnight & Blue (Rebus)
22 Lee & Andrew Child, In Too Deep (Reacher)
22 Benjamin Stevenson, Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret (Ernest Cunningham – not for me; one of his was more than enough)
29 Andrew Mayne, Death Stake (Trasker)
Yay for the Munier, Jeff. And, I’m going to pick up the Mizushima. I’ll be interested to see what you think of Elly Griffiths’ collection. Her mysteries just aren’t for me.
No, I agree. I have her first book (a trade paperback I got her to sign at a Bouchercon), but I just couldn’t get into that or another one I tried. I did think I’d try the short stories.
I read a couple, Jeff. Now, I’ll wait to see what you think about the short stories.
Ooooh, i am so ready for a new Louise Penny book!!!!!!!
xxoo
K.
You need a new book, Kaye. I know nothing has jumped out lately.
Lesa, most of the books on this list have now been added to my own list. Sigh. Since discovering your blog, and with the ‘help’ of your followers, I have more piles of books in my house than ever before. My husband keeps making pointed remarks about the quantity, and yet has no problem reading and enjoying them himself.
I love the cover of ‘The Crescent Moon Tearoom’!
Other October releases I’m looking forward to:
– The House at Watch Hill by Karen Marie Moning (start of a new series, inheritance, Gothic manor, ominous secrets) Kaye first mentioned this one
– This Will be Fun by E.B. Asher (romance, fantasy, humour)
– One Big Happy Family by Susan Mallery (Christmas, family, complications, fun)
Welcome to the “problem” of this blog and its wonderful readers, Lindy. I know. I was looking for a book today that someone suggested on their own blog, and I have the feeling it’s not coming out in the U.S. yet. That’s okay. I have more than enough on my TBR pile.
The House at Watch Hill sounds like a Kaye book. And, the first in a new series is always fun!
David Rosenfelt is one of my favorite authors.
I think he has some of the best covers out there, Carol.