Showing posts with label murder mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder mystery. Show all posts

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Cover Reveal: Death Becomes You, A Rachel Emery Novel, Book Two by Deanna Lynn Sletten

 I'm so excited to share with all of you the new cover of the second book in 

The Rachel Emery Series!


DEATH BECOMES YOU



Cover Design by Deborah @ Tugboat Design


Book Description:

Rachel Emery hadn’t planned on investigating a murder mystery again after her first and only experience solving a long-ago murder. But when her friend, romance writer Ariel Weathers, called her, frantic about her dead ex-husband stalking her, Rachel is too intrigued to refuse to investigate it.

As Rachel digs up information about Randall’s death, new twists and turns keep springing up, taking her in several directions. And when the original case investigator, Jack Meyers, joins in, they seem destined for choppy waters. Then a shocking new murder takes the two sleuths down yet another path that becomes more deadly by the minute.

What happened the day Randall went out for a cruise on his yacht? Did he die as they’d thought, or was he setting up a devious plan of murder?


If you enjoyed the first book in the series - you are sure to enjoy this one!

Death Becomes You

is now up for preorder!


Release Date: August 10, 2021

Murder Mystery/Women Sleuths

Preorder Now:

Amazon Kindle

Coming soon to Paperback and Audiobook

It will also be available on Kindle Unlimited after release.


 

Saturday, April 24, 2021

The Truth About Rachel – What Inspired This Murder Mystery Novel

 The Truth About Rachel - What Inspired This Murder Mystery Novel

by Deanna Lynn Sletten


Have you ever Googled your name? What if you did and found out that people from your hometown believed you were dead? That was the idea that inspired me to write The Truth About Rachel.

On May 11th, I will be releasing my very first novel in the murder mystery genre – The Truth About Rachel. I have had this storyline in my head for a couple of years, and finally decided to take a break from writing historical fiction (and women’s fiction and romance) and try my hand at a new genre. This novel was supposed to be a stand-alone book. After I wrote it, I fell in love with the characters and decided I had to continue it as a series.

But where did I come up with the idea? People ask me that question all the time about all my books. This time, it was personal.

As the internet has grown, the amount of information out there has increased also. Newspapers both big and small have put their old stories online for people to search. Government files are out there too—such as murder case files from decades ago. If you searched for something ten years ago, and never found it, you’d probably find it now. That was what I did one evening when I was supposed to be writing—otherwise known as procrastinating. I went online and Googled my maiden name. What I found was chilling. There on the screen was my full maiden name in newspaper headlines from the state I grew up in stating I’d been murdered years before.

To say those headlines gave me full-body chills is an understatement. A fourteen-year-old girl with the same name as mine was found murdered in the same state as I’d lived in around the same time my family moved to Minnesota. The only difference was she’d lived in a different town from the one I’d grown up in.

After reading all the newspaper articles, I couldn’t get the girl out of my head. And that’s when my writer’s brain went into action. What if people thought I was dead and didn’t know I’d moved 2,000 miles away instead? What an interesting concept for a book.

As I began writing The Truth About Rachel, I never planned on connecting so strongly with the characters. Rachel becomes an amateur sleuth in the story, trying to figure out what happened the day she was supposedly killed and more importantly, who the little girl in the grave actually is. She meets a handsome journalist who is also in town trying to solve another old murder. Together, they uncover secrets the town has been hiding for decades—and fall for each other in the process. The more I got to know these characters, the more I fell in love with them and couldn’t stop at one book. Hopefully, readers will like them too and want to read more about Rachel.

So, what is the moral of this article? Be careful what you search for online – because you just might find it!

The Truth About Rachel is available right now on Amazon. The Audiobook has released early – so you can grab it now. The paperback will be out on the release day.

 

Book Description:

Everyone believes Rachel is dead. But she’s very much alive.

Rachel Scott Emery’s life unravels when she comes upon an old news article online that states she was killed thirty-five years ago at the age of eight. Even more shocking is her murderer was her then sixteen-year-old brother.

Realizing she must untangle the mess, Rachel leaves her Tallahassee, Florida home and goes back to Casita, California to prove she is still alive. But going home again isn’t easy. Believing that her parents had relinquished custody of her years ago to her beloved aunt and uncle, she slowly learns what really happened. And unearthing the truth, when so many in town want to leave it buried, becomes a daunting and dangerous task. What really happened the day little Rachel left town? And who is the little girl buried in the grave?

This book is full of twists and turns—just when you think you know who is in the grave, you'll be surprised!


About the Author:

Deanna Lynn Sletten loves a good murder mystery. As a child, she was fascinated by her great-uncle’s job as a forensic scientist for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s office. Her first chapter books were Nancy Drew Mysteries, and she could never say no to an Agatha Christie novel. It’s also not surprising that she loves watching true-crime stories on television. So, it was only a matter of time that Deanna would try her hand at writing a murder mystery.

Deanna has been writing novels for ten years and is always up for a challenge. She writes women’s fiction, romance, historical fiction, and now murder mysteries. She lives in northern Minnesota with her husband and has two grown children. Her favorite thing to do is walk the wooded trails around her home with her new little Aussie puppy.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Book Review: Black Dahlia Avenger by Steve Hodel

Elizabeth Short AKA
The Black Dahlia
Hi all,

I read a lot of true crime/murder novels and I am especially fascinated by ones from past decades, like the Black Dahlia. I've heard of this crime for years, but never knew much about it, and hadn't gotten around to reading up on it. When a movie came on HBO one night about the Black Dahlia, I just had to watch it. Unbeknownst to me, it was a mixture of fiction with fact. So this led me to learn more about the true crime. Steve Hodel's book looked interesting. Since he was a retired LAPD Homicide Detective, and he felt he was connected by his past to this crime, I thought he might lay out an interesting view of this true crime. I was not disappointed. This book is both well-written (except for many typos) and shares as much information as you'd ever want to know about this murder as well as many similar murders from this time period. Below, you can read my five star review of Black Dahlia Avenger.

Before I get to the book description and review, I just want to explain a little about why true crime/murder stories intrigue me. I think that interest in murder is in my blood - or should I say genes! Back in the 50s & 60s, my great uncle worked as a forensic lab specialist for Los Angeles County - today he would be called a crime scene investigator (CSI). He worked at both the actual murder crime scenes and in the lab looking for clues to catch the killer. He testified in many high-profile L.A. murder cases and was well-respected among his peers. When I was about three years old, he took me and my brothers on a tour of his crime lab, fingerprinted us (I still have that sheet today), and took us through the drug room. He was an interesting and intelligent man, as well as a lovely person, and I think he passed down his interest in crime and murder to me. It's actually surprising that I don't write murder mysteries instead of romance novels, but I guess that's just how it goes. :-) Now, back to the Black Dahlia Avenger.  

Black Dahlia Avenger: A Genius for Murder
Steve Hodel


Book Description:

In 1947, California's infamous Black Dahlia murder inspired the largest manhunt in Los Angeles history. Despite an unprecedented allocation of money and manpower, police investigators failed to identify the psychopath responsible for the sadistic murder and mutilation of beautiful twenty-two-year-old Elizabeth Short. Decades later, former LAPD homicide detective-turned-private investigator Steve Hodel launched his own investigation into the grisly unsolved crime -- and it led him to a shockingly unexpected perpetrator: Hodel's own father.

A spellbinding tour de force of true-crime writing, this newly revised edition includes never-before-published forensic evidence, photos, and previously unreleased documents, definitively closing the case that has often been called "the most notorious unsolved murder of the twentieth century."


Buy Black Dahlia Avenger on Amazon in Kindle or Paperback

My Five Star Review:

After his father passes away, retired LAPD Homicide Detective Steve Hodel finds two photos among his father's possessions that look oddly similar to the murdered woman Elizabeth Short known forever in history as the Black Dahlia. These photos lead Hodel on a search to find out how his father is connected to this woman and if he is, in fact, the person who murdered the Black Dahlia.

In reading other reviews of this book, I am surprised at how many people see no connection between Hodel's father and the murder. I think Hodel makes a compelling case and has interesting evidence that shows his father could have murdered the Black Dahlia as well as many other women who were found murdered in that time period. Hodel lays out the information in an interesting way and keeps the reader interested and intrigued. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in learning more about the Black Dahlia murder whether or not you believe Hodel's father is the murderer. 


***
 
If you are a true crime buff like me, I'm sure you will enjoy this book.
 
Cheers,
Deanna