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THE SHADOW OF THE EMPIRE

An elaborate and satisfying souffle of mystery, history, and poetry.

A bureaucrat and man of letters probes the death of a notorious poet and courtesan in seventh-century China.

Dee Renjie, newly appointed Imperial Circuit Supervisor of the Tang Empire, has no objection to being called Judge Dee, though this moniker is more reflective of his position within the complicated imperial court than of his erudition and achievements. Indeed, the contemplative Dee bears a strong resemblance to Qiu's Inspector Chen, the law enforcement officer with an artistic soul who has maneuvered through the minefield of the Chinese Communist Party while solving crimes over a dozen novels. Judge Dee becomes obsessed with the case of Xuanji, a beautiful, promiscuous courtesan and poet arrested for the beating death of Ning, a maidservant whom she’s buried in the backyard. Though she hasn’t been convicted of manslaughter, Xuanji remains incarcerated and is considered a murderer. Dee’s probe begins at a monastery, aided by the appropriately named monk Nameless. Xuanji’s poems provide breadcrumbs on the investigative trail. Mysticism hangs over the case in the oft-mentioned spirit of the black fox. More murders convince Dee of Xuanji’s innocence and fuel his hunt for a solution. His prison meeting with the enigmatic Xuanji is both frustrating and exhilarating. A lengthy appendix provides many more poems by the real-life Xuanji, and a postscript lays out the tangled genesis of this series debut, inspired by both history and the Judge Dee novels of Dutch author Robert Van Gulik. Qiu's ultimate homage is presenting this novel as the work of Inspector Chen.

An elaborate and satisfying souffle of mystery, history, and poetry.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-7278-5081-2

Page Count: 192

Publisher: Severn House

Review Posted Online: Nov. 16, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2021

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STANDING DEAD

Intrepid, compassionate sleuths unravel a tangle of cold-blooded crimes.

Brutal acts and baffling mysteries threaten the peace of an idyllic mountain community.

Colorado deputy sheriff Mattie Wray and her sister, Julia, have ventured south to the Mexican village of Pueblo del Sol to visit their mother, Ramona. Given Mattie’s pending wedding to veterinarian Cole Walker, this should be a celebratory occasion, but it turns tense when Ramona’s friends greet her suspiciously and explain that their mother is missing along with her husband, Juan Martinez. Could the unsolved murder of Mattie’s felonious father decades ago be connected to Ramona’s disappearance? When Mattie gets back on the job, a missing person report sends her, with K-9 sidekick Robo and her friend Stella LoSasso, a detective in the local sheriff’s office, into the Colorado pine forest, where they make a horrifying discovery: Juan’s corpse, roped to a tree. Someone has apparently followed Mattie north from Mexico with vengeance on their mind. On the heels of this bizarre crime, Cole discovers another: the apparent poisoning of several horses. The eighth entry in Mizushima’s series is distinctive as ever in its authentic Western flavor and its affection for animals. Robo is an integral part of an investigative team, ferreting out valuable evidence, and the poignant equine mystery is a major plot thread. After Mattie receives a creepy letter from someone identifying themselves as “a friend of your father’s” that confirms a connection to Ramona’s disappearance, more twists and dangers await. Though Mizushima front-loads her tale with multiple backstories, an abundance of supporting characters, and a handful of mysteries, her lucid prose and caring cast should again captivate readers, new and old, and keep them engaged in the complex mystery.

Intrepid, compassionate sleuths unravel a tangle of cold-blooded crimes.

Pub Date: March 7, 2023

ISBN: 9781639102440

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Crooked Lane

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2023

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THE WITCH'S ORCHARD

A tough heroine who refuses to quit uses her own troubled background to crack the case.

A private investigator from Louisville, Kentucky, reluctantly takes a job that may be the death of her.

Annie Gore has hocked her watch again to pay her bills, so when a young man wants help finding his long-vanished sister, she’s glad to take on the job. Max Andrews has long been saving up for Annie’s retainer, and although her resume mentions Air Force service, college degrees, and private security, when he meets her, she’s not what he imagined. Max comes from a small North Carolina mountain town; Annie’s own experiences with a battered mother in a similar town make her well aware of small-town secrets and grudges. Max’s sister, Molly, was one of three girls abducted years ago. In each case, an applehead doll was left at the scene. When Jessica Hoyle, the child of a poor family, vanished, her case aroused little interest. A second girl, Olivia Jacobs, was returned two weeks after being kidnapped, perhaps because she’s autistic. Once Molly was taken, an all-out hunt was launched, and the FBI got involved, but neither she nor Jessica was ever found. Annie doesn’t get a warm greeting in Quartz Creek, and poking around doesn’t increase her popularity. The sheriff, who’s Olivia’s uncle, is hostile, but his deputy is willing to help. One of the first people Annie meets is Susan McKinney, who makes potions and reads cards. Some of the townsfolk think she took the girls because she was moved by the tale of a witch who traded apples to the starving mother of two girls and then turned them into birds. Eventually, Annie turns up so many suspects that she’s almost killed in a meth lab fire and narrowly escapes serious injury from a shooter.

A tough heroine who refuses to quit uses her own troubled background to crack the case.

Pub Date: Aug. 12, 2025

ISBN: 9781250338686

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: June 7, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2025

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