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At the cutting edge of crime fiction, Mystery Magazine presents original short stories by the world's best-known and emerging mystery writers. The stories we feature in our monthly issues span every imaginable subgenre, including cozy, police procedural, noir, whodunit, supernatural, hardboiled, humor, and historical mysteries. Evocative writing and a compelling story are the only certainty.Get ready to be surprised, challenged, and entertained--whether you enjoy the style of the Golden Age of mystery (e.g., Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle), the glorious pulp digests of the early twentieth century (e.g., Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler), or contemporary masters of mystery.★ In this issue★"Last Island" by M. H. Callway: A mysterious death in an ice fishing hut leads Danny Bluestone, a young Northern Ranger, on a high-stakes race across the frozen lands. "Absolutely" by Jim Courter: PI Barry Pool passes on a job from a would-be client he finds smug and arrogant. When the guy dies in a hit-and-run, Pool is curious, and learns that his opinion was widely shared. "His Last Duchess" by Merrilee Robson: This is not a gothic novel. The house is sunny and beautiful. The newlyweds are in love. Everything is perfect. "Barnie Brewster's Body Begone Bureau" by Ricky Sprague: When the fellow members of the Strawberries Club ask Barnie Brewster for help covering their crimes, a new potentially profitable sideline is born. "On Ice" by Allison Baxter: During an annual ice fishing trip, an elderly ice fisher finds out who her friends are ... and aren't. "Tricoteuse At The Knitting Boutique" by Jon M. Gluckman: This is a story inspired by the subversive power of women. It ends violently (so that is a trigger warning) but speaks of the injustices women have been suffering in a world, a history, largely created and controlled by men. "The Affair Of The Bewildering Bell" by Martin Hill Ortiz: Ace detective and next-door neighbor to Sherlock Holmes, Jules Pfennig, is recruited to investigate his most baffling case yet-the mystery behind a miraculous church bell.The adventure continues next month ... Cover Art by Robin Grenville Evans.
As a former investigative journalist, Milwaukee private eye Barry Pool is more adept at crafting sentences than at handling a gun. So when he's asked to find the missing son of a prominent U.S. Senate candidate, he isn't sure he wants to face the serious danger the job might entail, even though it would pay him more money than he has made since switching careers. He takes the job, accepting the risk for the sake of the money. But after uncovering a murderous neo-Nazi conspiracy and being drawn into a volatile mix of urban racial tension and high-stakes politics, he wonders if he'll live to spend it.
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