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Delta Blues

Page 37

by Carolyn Haines


  Pest Control

  Heart Seizure

  The Organ Grinders

  Radio Activity

  Cross Dressing

  Highway 61 Resurfaced

  Fender Benders

  The Adventures of Slim and Howdy

  James Lee Burke

  James Lee Burke is the recipient of the 2009 Mystery Writers of American Grand Master Award and he has also been honored with two Edgar Awards for Best Crime Novel of the Year. He grew up on the Louisiana-Texas coast and has worked as a pipeliner, land surveyor, social worker, newspaper reporter, U.S. Forest service employee and university professor. He wrote and published his first novel, Half of Paradise, by the age of twenty-three. He’s published twenty-eight novels and two short story collections. He also managed to go thirteen years during the middle of his career without publishing a novel in hardback. During that period, his novel The Lost Get-Back Boogie received over 100 editorial rejections. Later, after it was published with Louisiana State University Press, it was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. He is both a Breadloaf and Guggenheim fellow and has been a recipient of an NEA grant. Three of his novels have been adapted as motion pictures. He and his wife, Pearl, have four children and divide their time between Missoula, Montana, and New Iberia, Louisiana.

  Half of Paradise

  Cimarron Rose

  To the Bright and Shining Sun

  Sunset Limited

  Lay Down My Sword and Sheild

  Heartwood

  Two for Texas

  Purple Cain Road

  The Convict and Other Stories

  Bitterroot

  The Lost Get Back Boogie

  Jolie Blon’s Bounce

  The Neon Rain

  White Doves at Morning

  Heaven’s Prisoners

  Last Car to Elysian Fields

  Black Cherry Blues

  In the Moon of Red Ponies

  A Morning for Flamingos

  Crusader’s Cross

  A Stained White Radiance

  Pegasus Descending

  In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead

  Jesus Out to Sea

  Dixie City Jam

  The Tin Roof Blowdown

  Burning Angel

  Swan Peak

  Cadillac Jukebox

  Rain Gods

  Dean James

  Dean James is a seventh-generation Mississippi long transplanted to Texas. He grew up on a farm near Grenada, often visited relatives living in the Delta, and earned two degrees from Delta State University. He has published numerous mystery short stories and has co-authored a number of award-winning works of mystery non-fiction. Writing under his own name and two pseudonyms—Jimmie Ruth Evans and Honor Hartman—he has published fourteen mystery novels. He currently works as a librarian in the Texas Medical Center and likes to spend time thinking of interesting ways to kill people.

  Cruel as the Grave

  Closer than the Bones

  Posted to Death

  Faked to Death

  Decorated to Death

  Baked to Death

  Death Dines In

  Death by Dissertation

  By a Woman’s Hand: A Guide to Mystery Fiction by Women

  Killer Books: A Reader’s Guide to Exploring the Popular World of Mystery and Suspense

  The Dick Francis Companion

  The Robert B. Parker Companion

  As Jimmie Ruth Evans:

  Flamingo Fatale

  Murder Over Easy

  Best Served Cold

  Bring Your Own Poison

  Leftover Dead

  As Honor Hartman:

  On the Slam

  The Unkindest Cut

  Nathan Singer

  Nathan Singer is a novelist, playwright, musician, and experimental performing artist from Cincinnati, Ohio. He is the author of the critically acclaimed novels A Prayer for Dawn, Chasing the Wolf, and In the Light of You, as well as numerous plays including the stage adaption of Chasing the Wolf. His work has appeared in several anthologies such as 2007’s Expletive Deleted. He teaches writing at Northern Kentucky University and the University of Cincinnati and is currently at work on a multitude of new projects.

  A Prayer for Dawn

  Chasing the Wolf

  In the Light of You

  Suzann Ellingsworth

  Suzann Ellingsworth is an insatiable history buff fascinated by hoboes, tramps, the Dillinger era, and its music. Suzann memorized the lyrics to Cab Calloway’s recordings of”Minnie the Moocher” and “St. James Infirmary” by second grade, though then, as now, she can’t carry a tune in a tow sack. Suzann’s father often said he drove bootleg whiskey across Mississippi during Prohibition. Since his car’s speedometer seldom topped 35 m.p.h., Suzann was highly skeptical of that claim, and will forever wish she’d questioned him further when she had the chance. The story, “Songbyrd Dead at 23,” is dedicated to the memory of the South’s (probably) slowest bootlegger: Howard A. Rodgers.

  Redemption Trail

  Deliverance Drive

  Colorado Reverie

  Pure Justice

  Klondike Fever

  Trinity Strike

  East of Peculiar

  South of Sanity

  North of Clever

  West of Bliss

  A Lady Never Trifles With Thieves

  In Hot Pursuit

  Ahead of the Game

  Deadly Housewives

  Once a Thief

  Halfway to Half Way

  Let Sleeping Dogs Lie

  Nellie Cashman: Prospector and Trailblazer

  Shady Ladies: Nineteen Surprising and Rebellious American Women

  The Toast Always Lands Jelly-Side Down: And Other Tales of Suburban Life

  I Have Everything I Had Twenty Years Ago, Except Now It’s All Lower

  Michael Lister

  Michael Lister is a novelist, essayist, and playwright who lives in northwest Florida. A former prison chaplain, Michael is the author of the “Blood” series featuring prison chaplain/detective, John Jordan (Blood of the Lamb, Blood Money, The Body and the Blood, etc.). His second series features Jimmy “Soldier” Riley, a PI in Panama City during Word War II (www.FloridaNoir.com). In addition to fiction, Michael writes two columns, River Readings (www.RiverReadings.com), chronicling his search for wisdom and meaning, and Of Font and Film (www.OfFontandFilm.com), reviews of film and fiction. Michael’s latest novel, Double Exposure, is a literary thriller set in the North Florida pine flats and river swamps along the Apalachicola River. When Michael isn’t writing, he teaches college, operates a charity and community theater. His website is www.MichaelLister.com

  Power in the Blood

  Double Exposure

  Blood of the Lamb

  Thunder Beach

  Flesh and Blood

  Florida Heat Wave

  Lynne Barrett

  Lynne Barrett, Edgar Award winner for best mystery short story, is the author of The Secret Names of Women and The Land of Go, and co-editor of Birth: A Literary Companion and The James M. Cain Cookbook, Guide to Home Singing, Physical Fitness and Animals (Especially Cats). Her stories appear in One Year to a Writing Life, A Hell of A Woman, Miami Noir, A Dixie Christmas, and many other anthologies and magazines. For more information, see www.http://lynne.barrett.googlepages.com . She is grateful for the generous assistance of John Connaway of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, who is in no way responsible for any inaccuracies or misbehavior by her story’s fictional archaeologists.

  The Secret Names of Women

  The Land of Go

  Birth: A Literary Companion

  The James M. Cain Cookbook, Guide

  to Home Singing, Physical Fitness

  and Animals (Especially Cats)

  Charlaine Harris

  Charlaine Harris was born in Mississippi and lives in southern Arkansas with her husband and daughter and three dogs. Their sons are out of the nest. In her years as a published writer, she’s written four
series and two stand-alones, plus numerous short stories. Her Sookie Stackhouse books have appeared in twenty different languages and on many best-seller lists. They’re also the basis of the number one HBO show True Blood, produced by Alan Ball (Six Feet Under). An avid reader of genre literature, Charlaine is deeply involved in the life of the small town where she and her family live. You can visit Charlaine online at her website www.charlaineharris.com Sookie Stackhouse Series

  Dead in the Family

  Dead and Gone

  From Dead To Worse

  All Together Dead

  Living Dead in Dallas

  Dead Until

  A Touch of Dead (Sookie short story collection)

  Aurora Teagarden Series

  Poppy Done to Death

  Last Scene Alive

  A Fool and His Honey

  Dead Over Heels

  The Julius House

  Three Bedrooms, One Corpse

  A Bone to Pick

  Real Murders

  Definitely Dead

  Dead as a Doornail

  Dead to the World

  Club Dead

  Lily Bard Shakespeare Series

  Shakespeare’s Counselor

  Shakespeare’s Trollop

  Shakespeare’s Christmas

  Shakespeare’s Champion

  Shakespeare’s Landlord

  Harper Connelly Series

  Grave Secret

  An Ice Cold

  Grave Surprise

  Grave Sight

  Non-Series

  A Secret Rage

  Crimes by Moonlight

  Sweet and Deadly

  Wolfsbane and Mistletoe

  Death’s Excellent Vacation

  Must Love Hellhounds

  Toni L.P. Kelner

  Toni L.P. Kelner believes in trying new things, which explains “A Man Feeling Bad,” her first private eye story as well as her first noir story. She also believes in multi-tasking. Who Killed the Pinup Queen?, her second “Where are they Now?” mystery, was released in January, and Death’s Excellent Vacation, her third urban fantasy anthology co-edited with Charlaine Harris, is due out in August. Previous work includes nine novels, two anthologies, and numerous short stories. She’s won a Romantic Times Career Achievement Award and an Agatha Award, and has been nominated for two other Agathas, four Anthonys, and two Macavity awards. Kelner lives north of Boston with her husband, author Stephen Kelner; two daughters; and two guinea pigs.

  Laura Fleming Series

  Down Home Murder

  Dead Ringer

  Trouble Looking for a Place to Happen

  Country Comes to Town

  Tight as a Tick

  Death of a Damn Yankee

  Mad as the Dickens

  Wed and Buried

  Where are they Now? Series

  Curse of the Kissing Cousins

  Who Killed the Pinup Queen?

  Anthologies

  Many Bloody Returns

  Wolfsbane and Mistletoe

  Death’s Excellent Vacation

  Daniel Martine

  Daniel Martine is an actor, writer, musician and film producer who has worked in the film industry for over twenty years. He has been published in numerous magazines and periodicals. Daniel is a partner and co-founder of Cinema Pacifica Entertainment, Inc. and Cinepac Films, Inc., a Latino-oriented film production company based in Santa Barbara, California. He is currently writing and developing three projects for future feature release for the company. Well traveled, Daniel now resides in Memphis, Tennessee, and travels frequently to Santa Barbara, California.

  Mary Saums

  Mary Saums worked as a recording engineer in her youth in Muscle Shoals on albums by Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison, Jimmy Buffett and many other fine artists. Her first novel, Midnight Hour, was the first in a mystery series set in Nashville. Her poem “The Blues Reminds Me” was chosen by Nikki Giovanni for a Tennessee Writers Alliance award. The first book in her new series, Thistle & Twig, was a finalist for the 2008 SIBA Award for Fiction. Mary currently serves as a national officer of Sisters In Crime and as vice-president of the Southeast chapter of Mystery Writers of America.

  Midnight Hour

  The Valley of Jewels

  When the Last Magnolia Weeps

  Thistle & Twig

  Carolyn Haines

  Carolyn Haines is a 2009 recipient of the Richard Wright Award for Literary Excellence and will be awarded the 2010 Harper Lee Distinguished Writing Award in May. She is also a past recipient of an Alabama State Arts Council writing fellowship. Her Sarah Booth Delaney mysteries, set in the Mississippi Delta, as well as her darker fiction such as Penumbra, Touched, and Summer of the Redeemers reflect her great love of and passion for her home state of Mississippi. Born in Lucedale, she was a journalist for ten years before turning to fiction. She is an avid worker for animal rights and lives on a farm with 21 critters—equine, feline and canine—all of them smarter than she is. She is an assistant professor of English and Fiction Coordinator at the University of South Alabama where she teaches the graduate and undergraduate fiction classes. For more information, go to www.carolynhaines.com

  Sarah Booth Delaney Mysteries

  Bone Appetit

  Greedy Bones

  Wishbones

  Ham Bones

  Bones to Pick

  Hallowed Bones

  Crossed Bones

  Judas Burning

  Touched

  Summerof the Redeemers

  Summer of Fear

  Splintered Bones

  Buried Bones

  Them Bones

  Novels

  Revenant

  Fever Moon

  Penumbra

  Non-fiction

  My Mother’s Witness:

  The Peggy Morgan Story

  Les Standiford

  Les Standiford is the author of fifteen books, including the novels Spill and the John Deal series set in the Miami and Key West area and four critically acclaimed works of non-fiction including 2008’s The Man Who Invented Christmas: How Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits. Last Train to Paradise was one of the History Channel’s Top Ten picks and was read coast to coast by Dick Estell, NPR’s “Radio Reader.” Booklist called John Deal, Standiford’s recurring series character, “the most emotionally centered protagonist in crime fiction today,” and the New York Times has said of his suspense writing, “each scene is like a little gasp for breath.” He edited and contributed to The Putt at the End of the World and edited the anthology of crime fiction Miami Noir. He also authored one of the chapters in the national best-selling satire, Naked Came the Manatee with Dave Barry, Carl Hiaasen and others. He has received the Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Award, the Frank O’Connor Award for Short Fiction, and Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities. A native Ohioan, he is a Professor of English and Director of the Creative Writing Program at Florida International University in Miami, where he lives with his wife Kimberly, a psychotherapist, and their three children, Jeremy, Hannah, and Alexander. Visit Les’s website at www.les-standiford.com & his blog: www.grandstandifordstation.blogspot.com

  Done Deal

  Raw Deal

  Deal to Die For

  Deal on Ice

  Presidential Deal

  Black Mountain

  Deal with the Dead

  Bone Key

  Havana Run

  Spill

  Miami Noir

  The Putt at the End of the World

  Opening Day

  Miami: City of Dreams

  The Man Who Invented Christmas:

  How Charles Dickens’s A Christmas

  Carol Rescued His Career and

  Revived Our Holiday Spirits

  Last Train to Paradise:

  Henry Flagler and the Spectacular Rise

  and Fall

  of the Railroad that Crossed an

  Oce
an

  Meet You in Hell: Andrew Carnegie,

  Henry Clay Frick, and the Bitter

  Partnership that Changed America

  Washington Burning: How a Frenchman’s

  Vision for Our Nation’s

  Capital Survived Congress, the

  Founding Fathers, and the Invading

  British Army

  John Grisham

  John Grisham is the author of twenty-two bestselling novels, many of them dealing with the law. A graduate of the University of Mississippi Law School in Oxford, Mississippi, John was born in Jonesboro, Arkansas, but grew up in Southaven, Mississippi. He was admitted to the State Bar of Mississippi in 1981 and practiced in Southaven until 1990. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in 1983 and served until 1990. During that time he was vice-chairman of the Committee on Apportionment and Elections. He also served as a member of the State Democratic Executive Committee from 1988 to 1990. Many of his books have been adapted for the screen. His first novel, A Time to Kill, was published in 1989, and his latest novel, The Associate, was published in 2009.

 

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