Showing posts with label tradional mysteries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tradional mysteries. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Father Frank to the Rescue

 


I love the clerical sleuth genre, which is actually a sub-genre of the amateur detective genre.


There’s something about a man or woman of faith matching wits with a murderer. That combination elevates the moral nature of the story.


Philip Grosset of the Clerical Detective website has identified 376 clerical detectives. That’s an awful lot of men and women of the cloth bringing criminals to justice. A clear case of faith in action.


Father Frank first appeared in the book Cleansed by Fire, published in 2012.


You Won’t Know How… Or When, Book 4 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles, is also the latest Father Frank mystery. And it’s a good one.


Father Frank has never been to the Texas Hill Country and hasn’t had a vacation in 4 years. His friend from seminary, Father Lee, is the priest at Christ the King Catholic Church in Magnolia Bluff, that idyllic little town on the shore of Burnet Reservoir. So Father Frank decides to pay his friend a visit and do a little sight seeing.


When Father Frank arrives, Father Lee has to attend to an emergency and Father Frank volunteers to do confession for him. And that’s when the fun begins.


Confessions are sacred. Their content cannot be divulged. So what do you do when someone tells you they’re going to kill you? You won’t know how, or when. But they are going to get you.


Then it hits you — the “confession” wasn’t meant for you, but for your friend. And you can’t tell him he’s a marked man. You can’t break the seal of the confessional.


That is Father Frank’s dilemma. And it’s a very difficult one. It turns his holiday into a hunt for a man determined to kill his friend.


In the course of his investigation, he befriends Rev. Ember Cole, the pastor of the Methodist Church, and Harry Thurgood, owner of the Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee Shop, and takes a special interest in their relationship, offering Ember some “fatherly” advice. That gave the story a tender and personal touch.


The book’s storyline is fairly straight-forward. What I enjoyed most was seeing Father Frank working out his faith to achieve tangible and rewarding good works.


Callan doesn’t wield a heavy club when it comes to his faith. His approach is rather matter of fact. An approach that works well for me. An approach that makes the Christian faith accessible and desirable.


You Won’t Know How… Or When is another fabulous entry in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series, as well as a worthy addition to the Father Frank series. Two birds with one stone.


Do you like puzzles? Or Wordle? Or just figuring out the instructions on how to put together the table you just bought?


If you do, pick up a copy of this suspense-filled whodunit and see if you can figure out how it will all end. It’s on pre-order at 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

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

The People of Magnolia Bluff


The Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles, Book 3, is on pre-order right now!


The Great Peanut Butter Conspiracy by Cindy Davis goes live on June 20th. You’ll meet Bliss; Tommy, the police chief; Olivia, the pizza shop owner; and a whole lot more folks who make Magnolia Bluff, Texas home. Reserve your copy today! On Amazon!


More Good Folk


Caleb Pirtle III, author of Eulogy in Black and White, the 2nd book in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles, is running a series on the good (and bad) folk of Magnolia Bluff.


With his kind permission, I reproduce one of his posts. You can see the original on his blog.


Impossible Love: 

The Characters of Magnolia Bluff





Harry Thurgood, handsome man with a checkered past, meets Ember Cole, a lovely young Methodist Minister in Magnolia Bluff, and sparks fly.


Who is Harry Thurgood?


He is the dashing man of mystery in Death Wears A Crimson Hat, Book 1 of the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles by CW Hawes.


He owns the Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee Shop.


It’s first-class.


It’s high-class.


It has few customers.


How does it survive?


Where does Harry get his money?


Who is Ember Cole?


She’s the new minister of the Methodist Church.


She’s lovely.


She immediately catches Harry’s eye.


He’s looking for love.


She’s interested.


But she’s afraid of the gossip in town if he finds love with her.


They want each other.


They need each other.


Both are outsiders.


The candle of love flickers between them.


But will Ember ever let it burn?


A Snippet from the Book


Harry Thurgood got out of bed, showered, shaved, dressed in his custom made Tom Jones suit, and quickly descended the stairs to the Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee Shop, which he owned, operated, and lived above.


Harry paused a moment in the doorway and let his eyes roam the coffee shop. He was pleased with what he saw.


“What a contrast to the dump this place was three years ago,” he murmured.


The tables and chairs he’d brought in from T.A. Tandy in Chicago. Henri Vernier of New York had supplied the flooring and lighting. He was especially pleased with the commissioned paintings by California artists Jane Dillon and Lawrence Pruett that hung on the walls.


A smile formed on his lips. This was a coffee shop worthy of any that could be found in New York, Chicago, or San Francisco.


The smell of high-end brewed coffee filled the air…


*


Harry crossed the street to the green, took his phone out of his suit coat pocket, and told it to call “Em.”


After four rings, he heard, “Hello, Harry. I think it best if I say no.”


“Say no to what? I haven’t said anything yet.”


“Good. I don’t want you to say anything I might say yes to.”


“What’s the matter? Did I say or do something you don’t like?”


“No, you didn’t. It’s not you. It’s us.”


“We’re an us?”


“Well, no, we aren’t and I want it to stay that way.”


“I have no idea what’s going on, Em, but maybe we should talk.”


“We are talking.”


“In person.”


“I don’t think that’s a good idea, Harry. If people see us, they’ll talk, and right now I don’t need that.”


“Okay. I get it. This has something to do with the Queen of Dirt and her minions, doesn’t it?”


“That’s a good one. Did you make that up?”


“I did. Just now. Look, how about you drive out to some place and I’ll meet you there and then we’ll go to Austin. We can have supper and you can tell me all about it.”


“Not a good idea, Harry.”


“Didn’t I learn in Sunday school that Bible verse, ‘Greater is he that is within you, than he that’s within Mary Lou?’”


Ember burst out laughing.


“Glad I can make you laugh, Em.”


Her laughter subsided. “Thank you. I needed that.”


“So why don’t I meet you in the college parking lot. Will that work? Or do you have a better place?”


“I don’t know why I’m letting you talk me into this.” There was a pause, and then she said, “Yes, I have a better idea. Pick me up at the cemetery.”


“Huh. That’s novel. You don’t think Mary Lou communes with the dead?”


“Being a bloodsucking vampire, she probably does. But she definitely prefers the living.”


“Wow. I think you’re going to have to go to confession.”


“I’m Methodist. I talk directly with God.”


“Hope he’s talking back.”


“Ha, ha. Meet me at the cemetery at eight. And I still don’t know why I’m letting you talk me into this. It really isn’t a good idea.”


“If it isn’t a good idea, then why are you giving in?”


“Because, right now, you’re the only person I trust, and I’d really like to talk to someone who comprehends the definition of the word discretion.”



Hope you enjoyed the guest post. You can get the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles 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

Friday, November 26, 2021

Christmas with the Wrights

 



Even hard-nosed detective Justinia Wright can get into the Christmas spirit.

Three cases. Three chances to spread some Christmas cheer.

There’s Cordell Oscar Hellman, the conservative political pundit, who’s recreational morphine use has come to the attention of a vicious blackmailer.

Mrs. Solberg’s dope of a husband is being hoodwinked by the office minx and Mrs. S doesn’t like it.

Then there’s Emil Papenfuss, who’s homeless and a millionaire. Only he doesn’t know he’s a millionaire.

Three cases. Three chances to do a good deed. And with the inducement of three big fat fees and Harry’s help, Tina delivers the goods. But not without difficulty.

Christmas with the Wrights. Not like any Christmas you’ve ever experienced. Get in on the action and fun today!


You can get a copy on Amazon for only 99¢.


I love writing the Justinia Wright mysteries. For me, Tina and Harry’s world is a place I want to be. And I’ve written and published more stories about them than I have any of my other characters.


The 2 novelettes and 1 short story that make up Christmas with the Wrights were originally written for my mailing list. My Christmas present to my fans and followers. After several years of sitting in the desk drawer, I decided to make them available to a wider audience.


A couple years back, internationally bestselling authors Caleb and Linda Pirtle named me one of the top 25 mystery writers you should be reading. That is quite an honor, and quite a testimony for the Wrights.


The Pirtle’s are featuring Christmas with the Wrights as their Book of the Moment. Read about it on their blog.


Spending Christmas with the Wrights just might be the best Christmas you ever had. Like being a kid again.


Get it on Amazon!


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