Miss Me When I'm Gone by Emily Arsenault (HarperCollins trade paperback, 31 July 2012).
Author Gretchen Waters made a name for herself with her bestseller
Tammyland—a
memoir about her divorce and her admiration for country music icons
Tammy Wynette, Loretta Lynn, and Dolly Parton that was praised as a
"honky-tonk
Eat, Pray, Love." But her writing career is cut
abruptly short when she dies from a fall down a set of stone library
steps. It is a tragic accident and no one suspects foul play, certainly
not Gretchen's best friend from college, Jamie, who's been named the
late author's literary executor.
But there's an unfinished manuscript Gretchen left behind that is much darker than
Tammyland:
a book ostensibly about male country musicians yet centered on a murder
in Gretchen's family that haunted her childhood. In its pages, Gretchen
seems to be speaking to Jamie from beyond the grave—suggesting her
death was no accident . . . and that Jamie must piece together the story
someone would kill to keep untold.
Something Strange and Deadly by Susan Dennard (HarperTeen hardcover, 24 July 2012).
Eleanor Fitt has a lot to worry about.
Her brother has gone missing, her family has fallen on hard times, and
her mother is determined to marry her off to any rich young man who
walks by. But this is nothing compared to what she's just read in the
newspaper:
The Dead are rising in Philadelphia.
And then, in a frightening attack, a zombie delivers a letter to Eleanor . . . from her brother.
Whoever is controlling the Dead army has taken her brother as well. If
Eleanor is going to find him, she'll have to venture into the lab of the
notorious Spirit-Hunters, who protect the city from supernatural
forces. But as Eleanor spends more time with the Spirit-Hunters,
including the maddeningly stubborn yet handsome Daniel, the situation
becomes dire. And now, not only is her reputation on the line, but her
very life may hang in the balance.
Slugfest (Dirty Business #4) by Rosemary Harris by Rosemary Harris (Chestnut Hill trade paperback, 22 May 2012).
Welcome to The Big Apple Flower Show where more than just the plants
are dying. Paula Holliday reluctantly agrees to staff the exhibit booth
for a reclusive garden sculptor at a legendary northeast flower show and
she expects a quiet weekend sharing garden tips. She doesn't expect to
be knee-deep in jealousy, rivalry, horticultural sabotage, beheaded
gnomes and something the loose communityof gardeners has started
referring to as the Javits Curse!
The mishaps start out small but the
uneasiness intensifies when an overeager attendee is found floating in
the river and Paula realizes she accidentally holds the clue to his
identity and the reason for his murder. And so does the killer. That's
when the garden gloves come off and this flower show turns into a real
Slugfest!
Target: Tinos (Inspector Kaldis #4) by Jeffrey Siger (Poisoned Pen Press trade paperback, 5 June 2012).
In an isolated olive grove on the idyllic Aegean island of Tinos,
revered by pilgrims around the world as the Lourdes of Greece, the
remains of two bodies charred beyond recognition are discovered chained
together amid bits and pieces of an incinerated Greek flag. An enraged
press screams out for justice for the unknown victims, until the dead
are identified as gypsies and the story simply falls off the face of the
earth.
Is it a gypsy clan war, a hate crime, or something else? With no one
seeming to care, the government has no interest in resurrecting
unwanted media attention by a search for answers to such ethnically
charged questions and orders the investigation closed.
But Andreas Kaldis, feared head of Greece’s special crimes division,
has other plans. He presses on in his inimitable, impolitic style to
unravel a mystery that yields more dead, a modern secret society rooted
in two-hundred-year-old ways, and a nagging suspicion that his answers
lay in the sudden influx of non-Greeks and gypsies to Tinos.
Shadow of Night (All Souls Trilogy #2) by Deborah Harkness (Viking hardcover, 10 July 2012).
In
A Discovery of Witches, Diana Bishop, Oxford scholar and reluctant witch, and the handsome
geneticist and vampire Matthew Clairmont; together they found themselves
at the center of a supernatural battle over an enchanted manuscript
known as Ashmole 782.
Now the two are plunged into Elizabethan London, a world of spies,
subterfuge, and a coterie of Matthew’s old friends, the mysterious
School of Night that includes Christopher Marlowe and Walter Raleigh.
Here, Diana must locate a witch to tutor her in magic, Matthew is forced
to confront a past he thought he had put to rest, and the mystery of
Ashmole 782 deepens.