Friday, February 27, 2026
A Whiff of Murder - A Review
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Currently Reading...
I'm currently reading A Poetic Pox by Samantha Larsen. This book is the third in the Lady Librarian Mystery series and was released last month.
Loathe to leave her family, especially during the holidays, Tiffany Lathrop nonetheless agrees to accompany her friend and employer, Catherine, the Duchess of Beaufort on an overnight trip to visit an old friend. The Marquess of Harwood requested Catherine visit with her young son as he had just returned after years abroad and was dying. Upon their arrival staff tried to barr their entry, but they were no match for a determined duchess! Tiffany is stunned to find the manor in disrepair, the valet dead, and the Marquess near death himself, both men seemingly poisoned. Though loving her role as a new mother, Tiffany is excited leave dirty nappies for a bit and solve another murder. Who wants to kill the Marquess? Does it have something to do with the smallpox epidemic that ravaged the town twenty years prior? Does a baseborn son believe he's entitled to an inheritance? With untrustworthy servants and a town filled with secrets Tiffany will have to rely on her wits and the support of her friends and their own staff to outsmart a villain!
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
The Case of the Christie Curse - A Guest Post, Review, & Giveaway
I'm pleased to welcome Theo Sharp to Cozy Up With Kathy today. You can find Theo on the pages of the Detection Club Mystery series by Kelly Oliver. THE CASE OF THE CHRISTIE CURSE is the third book in the Detection Club Mystery series and was released February 21, 2026!
My name is Theo Sharp and I’m a character in Kelly Oliver’s Detection Club Mysteries. Of course, Eliza Baker is the main character. But I’d like to think she couldn’t solve crimes without me. Like Kelly, I’m an aspiring mystery writer. But I’m lucky enough to spend time with the great crime writers who are members of London’s Detection Club, including Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers.
In case you want to know more about me, I’ve agreed to answer a few questions from Kelly.
Where do you live? At present, I live wherever my valise lands. Hotels, trains, borrowed rooms with windows that rattle when the wind changes its mind. Officially, I’m heir to a family estate in Sussex with its lawns clipped into obedience and portraits of men who look perpetually disappointed in me. For the most part, I manage to avoid it. Too much inheritance in the air. Too many expectations pressing in from the walls.
My own address, however, is a one-room flat above a bookstore in London, which feels less like an address and more like a state of mind. The floors creak, the radiators knock like impatient readers waiting for the next installment of their favorite series, and the smell of paper and dust seeps into everything I own. I work off part of the rent by minding the shop, shelving, recommending, occasionally rescuing a first edition from the hands of someone who means it harm. It suits me. Living among books makes the world feel legible, even when it stubbornly refuses to be read.
What is a typical day like for you? Let’s say, before Eliza Baker reappeared in my life, my mornings would begin with coffee and the shop’s front door, which sticks unless persuaded gently. If it’s a good day, I would read or write before the customers arrive, usually failing to improve my reputation as a novelist. I’ve written one mystery. It was… not a success. Still, I persist. Afternoons are for observation: customers, conversations, the small tells people don’t realize they’re giving away. Evenings tend to involve the Detection Club, which is still a marvel to say aloud, as I’m newly minted and not entirely convinced someone won’t revoke the invitation.
After Eliza Baker reappeared and drew me into her orbit, there is no longer any such thing as typical, which suits me perfectly. Some mornings begin with coffee strong enough to resurrect the dead and a chess problem that refuses to be solved. Others begin with a body, a lie, or a train departing earlier than expected. I read when I can, observe always, and think perhaps too much. By evening, I am usually trying—and often failing—to articulate something important, whether in a notebook, a conversation, or a glance exchanged across a room, always involving her.
What is your favorite food? Bread with good butter, eaten late at night when no one is watching. It’s unpretentious, grounding, and deeply unfashionable, all qualities I admire. Also, it reminds me that simplicity, when done well, can be revelatory. Kelly says her favorite is something called a taco. I don’t think I’ve ever eaten a taco.
What is your favorite drink? Coffee when I need courage. Whisky when I need perspective. (I almost feel back answering this since I know Kelly can’t drink coffee or whiskey anymore.) Tea when Agatha Christie is present, which is often. She drinks it with a kind of quiet authority that suggests she knows more than she’s saying, which of course she does. Dorothy Sayers prefers something stronger, and conversations with her tend to improve once you follow her lead.
What makes you happy?
Moments of clarity. A chess position that suddenly opens like a locked door. A
mystery that yields. Not all at once, but just enough to keep going. And,
occasionally, the quiet knowledge that someone else sees the world as sharply
as I do and chooses to stand beside me anyway.
Being taken seriously. Especially by the Detection Club and writers I admire.
And of course, the attentions of Eliza Baker. Watching her think, move,
dismantle a room with her eyes. Loving her, quietly, imperfectly, and, if I’m
honest, hoping that what feels unrequited is merely… unfinished. But, I guess whether
I have a happy ending is up to Kelly… hint, hint.
***************************************************************************
Review
The Third Detection Club Mystery
The Case of the Christie Curse: (A Detection Club Mystery) by Kelly Oliver
About The Case of the Christie Curse
Historical Cozy Mystery 3rd in Series
Setting – Mesopotamia
Publication Date: February 21, 2026
Publisher: Boldwood Books
Digital Print Length: 288 pages
Mesopotamia, 1930: When Agatha Christie invites fellow members of the Detection Club to witness the famous excavations at the ruins of Ur, Dorothy L. Sayers, her quick-witted assistant Eliza Baker, and Theo Sharp expect ancient wonders – not fresh corpses.
But when an archaeologist is found dead in the sand, whispers of a deadly curse sweep through the camp. Eliza suspects something far more dangerous than superstition. Amid glittering artifacts and fragile alliances, every guest harbors secrets: the Woolleys, whose marriage is shadowed by tragedy; a journalist hungry for scandal; even academic Max Mallowan, whose loyalties are not what they seem.
As theft, forgery, and coded messages surface, the line between archaeology and espionage blurs. And when Eliza and Theo find themselves in danger, they must face not only the truth about the murder – but also the truths they’ve long denied about each other. Can they uncover the killer before the desert claims another victim? Or will this dig unearth secrets too dangerous to survive?
About Kelly Oliver
Kelly Oliver is the award-winning and bestselling author of four mystery series: The Jessica James Mysteries, The Pet Detective Mysteries, The Fiona Figg Mysteries, and The Detection Club Mysteries.
Kelly is the Past President of Sisters in Crime National, current Education Coordinator for SinC Guppies, and a Distinguished Emerita Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University.
To learn more about Kelly and her books, go to kellyoliverbooks.com.
Author Links:
BookBub https://www.bookbub.com/authors/kelly-oliver
Amazon Author Page https://www.amazon.com/Kelly-Oliver/e/B001HN3HCM/
INSTAGRAM @kellyoliverbooks
Pinterest Kelly Oliver Books https://www.pinterest.com.au/oliver743
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/kellyoliverauthor/
Pinterest Kelly Oliver Books https://www.pinterest.com.au/oliver7431/
Purchase Links: Amazon Amazon CA Amazon UK Amazon AU Amazon IN
Monday, February 23, 2026
Side Hustle - A Spotlight
Today I'd like to shine a spotlight on a book being released tomorrow. Side Hustle by Wendy Gee is the second book in the Carolina Crossfire Mystery series.
Blurb:
Action 7’s viewers count on Sydney Quinn to expose corruption in Charleston. When a former firefighter takes two paramedics hostage, Sydney persuades her detective pal to let her interview the guy in return for gathering intel. Inside, Sydney finds the body of her friend, a local insurance executive, who the hostage taker blames for terminating his worker’s comp benefits. Despite the obvious motive, he says he’s being framed for the woman’s murder. Sydney’s investigation uncovers massive identity theft and cyber-embezzlement. Derailing a network of hackers should be routine, except she’s haunted by memories of a Taliban firefight from her time embedded with Marines in Iraq. And when those dark memories bubble up, the only thing holding them at bay is driving fast cars, eating fast food, and swatting fast balls at the batting cage. Eventually, Sydney must rely on her instincts and intellect to prevent further damage.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Teddy Bears and Ghostly Lairs - An Interview & Giveaway
I'm pleased to welcome Heather Weidner back to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Heather writes the Jules Keene Glamping Mystery series. Teddy Bears and Ghostly Lairs is the fifth book in the series.
Kathy: In Teddy Bears and Ghostly Lairs Fern Valley is having its first teddy bear and toy festival. I love teddy bears, stuffed animals and toys, I don't care that I'm an adult of mature years. What about you? Is this an event you'd like to attend?
HW: I would definitely attend. I have collected teddy bears for years. I have bears in all the main rooms of my house.
Kathy: Do you still have stuffed animals and toys? Do you buy new ones for yourself?
HW: I do have a lot of stuffed animals and toys. I kept some of my favorites from my childhood, and I’m glad I saved them. My nieces had a blast playing with the “classic” toys. I still collect teddy bears, and I add to the collection every so often (usually when I find something cute or a souvenir from one of our trips).
Kathy: Paranormal investigators are also on hand to investigate local haunts. Do you believe in ghosts?
HW: I don’t think I’ve ever encountered one, but there are a lot of people who have. I live in Central Virginia, and there are lots of battlefields and cemeteries around, and all have lots of good ghost stories to go with them. (I once worked at a company in downtown Richmond that was built near the old state penitentiary. When they were building the office next door, they had to stop construction because they found paupers’ graves from the old state prison. It was also very close to the location of a civil war prisoner of war camp and a civil war munitions factory.) I have coworkers who swear that they’ve seen evidence of ghosts nearby, such as lights and faucets going on and off when no one was around.
Kathy: Have you ever had a paranormal experience?
HW: Not that I know of. I’ve had a couple of times when I had a really funny feeling about a relative or friend being in trouble, and when I called them, they were experiencing an emergency situation. I’m not sure if that counts as paranormal or not.
Kathy: Was there a specific inspiration for this story?
HW: I’m in a mystery writers’ group that brings in experts in a variety of areas. One had a presentation on paranormal explorers. They explained what they did (and didn’t do) and showed us some of the tools they used. It was really interesting.
Kathy: Are you able to share any future plans for Jules?
HW: As of today, there will be nine books in the series. I’m currently working on book 8. (Here’s a secret about book 6. The Idiot, Jules’s ex-husband, shows up, and he gets himself mixed up in a murder investigation.)
Kathy: When it comes to writing I understand there are 2 general camps-plotters, who diligently plot their stories, and pansters, who fly by the seat of their pants. Are you a plotter, a panster, or do you fall somewhere in between?
HW: I am a plotter. I work in IT, and I love my project plans and spreadsheets. I still have a day gig, so my writing time is limited. It helps me to do a detailed outline before I start writing. I am able to finish a manuscript faster if I have plotted out all of the details, plots, and subplots.
Kathy: Authors are required to do a lot of their own marketing, especially for a new release. What's your favorite part of marketing your work? What do you dislike about marketing?
HW: This is so true. I really like social media. I love connecting with readers and other writers. I have to manage my time though to make sure that I’m not spending all my writing time marketing. Being a writer is a lot of work (not all writing-related). It is worth it, but it does take time to make sure all bases are covered.
Kathy: Will you share any other upcoming books?
HW: This year, book two in the Pearly Girls came out. Book four in the Mermaid Bay Christmas Shoppe Mysteries launches next month, and book six in the Jules Keene Glamping Mysteries comes out this fall. All three are cozy mystery series with very different sleuths.
***************************************************************************
Teddy Bears and Ghostly Lairs: A Jules Keene Glamping Mystery
About Teddy Bears and Ghostly Lairs
Cozy Mystery 5th in Series
Setting - Virginia
Publisher: Level Best Books
Publication Date: December 9, 2025
Print Length: 244 pages
The town of Fern Valley, in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains, has overdosed on cuteness for its first teddy bear and toy festival. Adorable bears have taken over every inch of the town, and Jules Keene can barely keep up with all the guest check-ins at her glamping resort. To add to the fun, a team of paranormal investigators set their sights on her vintage trailers and the new treehouse as they investigate the local haunts. It quickly becomes evident that things aren’t all sweet and cuddly when someone absconds with collectible toys. Then, to make matters worse, Jules and her friends trip over something not so other-worldly at an abandoned motel during a paranormal investigation. The very real corpse is the prickly vendor who raised a ruckus about his stolen merchandise and the weird things that were afoot in the cozy, one-stop light town. Jules has to calm frayed nerves and solve the mystery before there are any other thefts or grisly murders.
About Heather Weidner
Through the years, Heather Weidner has been a cop’s kid, technical writer, editor, college professor, software tester, and IT manager. She writes the Pearly Girls Mysteries, the Delanie Fitzgerald Mysteries, The Jules Keene Glamping Mysteries, and The Mermaid Bay Christmas Shoppe Mysteries. Her short stories appear in the Virginia is for Mysteries series, 50 Shades of Cabernet, Deadly Southern Charm, Murder by the Glass, First Comes Love, Then Comes Murder, and Crime in the Old Dominion, and she has non-fiction pieces in Promophobia and The Secret Ingredient: A Mystery Writers’ Cookbook. She is a member of Sisters in Crime: National, Central Virginia, Chessie, Guppies, and Grand Canyon Writers, International Thriller Writers, and James River Writers, and she blogs regularly with the Writers Who Kill. Originally from Virginia Beach, Heather has been a mystery fan since Scooby-Doo and Nancy Drew. She lives in Central Virginia with her husband and a crazy Mini Aussie Shepherd named Cooper.
Author Links:
- Website and Blog: http://www.heatherweidner.com
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HeatherWeidnerAuthor
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/heather_mystery_writer/
- Threads: https://www.threads.net/@heather_mystery_writer
- BlueSky: Heather Weidner (@heatherweidner.bsky.social) — Bluesky
- TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@heather_weidner_author
- Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8121854.Heather_Weidner
- Amazon Authors: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B00HOYR0MQ
- Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/HeatherBWeidner/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/heather-weidner-0064b233?trk=hp-identity-name
- BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/heather-weidner-d6430278-c5c9-4b10-b911-340828fc7003
- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyBjyB0zz-M1DaM-rU1bXGA?view_as=subscriber
- Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/HeatherWeidner1
- Purchase Links - Amazon - B&N - Bookshop.org
Friday, February 20, 2026
A Murder of Furies - A Review, Excerpt, & Giveaway
The Third Ancient Crete Mystery
A MURDER OF FURIES
by Eleanor Kuhns
February 16 - March 13, 2026 Virtual Book Tour
Synopsis:

AN ANCIENT CRETE MYSTERY
Bronze Age Crete, 1450 B.C.E.
When Tinos, the High Priestess's consort, asks Martis to search for his missing daughter, Martis becomes involved in the dangerous politics between Crete and Egypt. A minor Egyptian prince is courting Hele, the High Priestess's daughter, despite her persistent refusals. And despite the lobbying by Hele's brother, Khoranos, who seeks the Cretan throne for himself.
Then the High Priestess is found murdered, savagely stabbed multiple times. Martis discovers plans to kidnap Hele and she has to be spirited away to safety. Egyptian soldiers occupy Knossos and Khoranos installs his ally as the High Priestess.
Can Martis rescue the High Priestess's daughters and identify the murderer before Khoranos, with Egypt's help, takes the throne? Martis must embark on several dangerous quests to succeed.
Book Details:
Genre: Historical Murder Mystery
Published by: Indie
Publication Date: January 31, 2026
Number of Pages: 274
Series: An Ancient Crete Mystery, Book 3
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Goodreads | BookBub
The Ancient Crete Mystery Series
In the Shadow of the BullAmazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub |
|
On the Horns of DeathAmazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub |
Read an excerpt:
Chapter 1
Although it was just late March, Crete was already growing hot. Sweating and panting after the bird dance, I pushed my mask to the top of my head. I sucked in deep breaths and flapped the long white sleeves, pinned to resemble wings. Air rushed over my damp arms and legs,
At least my dance was finished. Other dances would also be performed, and, in fact, the next one was already beginning. The younger girls, all maidens and too young to wear the red spotted scarf, were clad in bearskins. They danced to honor the Lady of Animals and Childbirth. I remembered that hot smelly costume from previous years. Now, at almost seventeen, I danced as a bird in a graceful circle of white-clad girls twisting around one another. I thought we really did look like flying birds; not imprisoned by the earth. We each wore the mask of a different species. Although I’d hoped to dance as a gull or an owl, I was only a sparrow.
The other bird dancers removed their masks and scattered into the audience to join friends and family. Except the vulture. Funny, I thought, I didn’t recognize the vulture. Now that I’d begun my agoge and visited the dorms regularly, I thought I knew all the young women – at least by sight. I certainly should know everyone who I danced with.
Despite the identical white gowns and the masks covering the faces, the bodies were difficult to disguise. This girl was heavier, that other one was as slim as a papyrus reed. Although every girl danced the same steps, some jumped higher and some twisted with an extra roll of the hips. Easy to know them even though we weren’t supposed to – for this short space of time we were the creatures represented by our masks. But I did not recognize the vulture. I squinted against the bright sun. I didn’t remember the vulture from the rehearsals either. And surely at least one girl was missing –
“If you’re Martis, the High Priestess’s consort wishes to speak to you,” said a treble voice behind me. I turned and looked first at the grubby little boy and then around at the crowd. I saw no sign of Tinos.
“Where is he?” I asked, my heart leaping.
At one time, I’d thought – hoped – Tinos and I had developed a special connection. But last fall, during the investigation into the murder of the bull dancer, we’d fallen out. I’d seen very little of him since then and only at a distance, as he conducted his duties. Sometimes I imagined we were still close friends. Other times I despaired we’d ever be friends again.
“I’ll take you to him,” the boy said, extending a grimy paw. I took hold and followed the boy through the crowd.
We went a distance from the theater, finally pausing at a copse of trees. Tinos waited within, almost unrecognizable without his headdress or jewelry. His long black hair had been pulled back and tied with a string. “Martis,” he said. As his eyes drifted from my hair to my white dress, his eyebrows rose in surprise. I touched my long hair self-consciously. I now wore it in the fashionable style - with most of it tumbling down my back except for the locks pulled in front of my ears.
“You’ve grown up? I always think of you in a boy’s kilt . . .”
“I wear that only when I am bull dancing,” I said shortly, affronted. Did Tinos believe I would be a child forever? I was old enough to marry - although I’d vowed before the Goddess that I never would.
Tinos nodded and stared over my head as though regretting this meeting. I could see he felt awkward, without the easy camaraderie we’d once enjoyed, and I was both sorry and angry with him. I’d looked forward to talking with him once again and now he seemed, well, disappointed. “You wanted to see me?” I asked, my tone taking on some sharpness.
He turned to look at me.
“That’s the Martis I remember,” he said, grinning for the first time. “Still as quick to anger as ever.” I went hot.
Unable to think of a smart response, I tossed my head.
“Have you seen Atana lately. I know you and my daughter are friends.”
I knew Atana of course and I’d made an effort to befriend her. At one point, I’d hoped to see more of Tinos, which hadn’t happened. Atana was only nine so I didn’t spend a lot of time with her.
I turned and looked over my shoulder as though I could see through the trees and the crowds beyond. Atana should have joined the younger girls in the bear dance but, because she was the High Priestess’s daughter, she’d been allowed to dance with the birds. Now I knew who’d been missing.
“Did you see her this morning?” Tinos continued, his words rushing out.
“No,” I said. “Didn’t you?”
“No. We – um - quarreled,” he admitted, his eyes seeking the ground beneath his booted feet. “I haven’t seen or spoken to her for several days.”
“Ah.” I said in understanding. Before I moved to the girls’ dorm, I’d been arguing frequently with my mother Now that I stayed occasionally in the dorm, I saw her less often and so we quarreled less. “I saw Atana at most of the rehearsals,” I said now. “How many days has it been since you’ve spoken to her?”
“Almost three. She’s been avoiding me. It was a very bad quarrel,” Tinos’s eyes slid away from mine. He took a deep breath and looked at me. “I’m worried about her.”
“Surely the High Priestess –“ I began. But Tinos was shaking his head.
“She’s too busy now,” he said. I narrowed my eyes at him. Too busy to wonder where her daughter went? After so many days without seeing me, my mother took pains to seek me out. “Atana talks about you,” Tinos continued. “She says you are her friend.”
I stared at him. Friends? Sure, we were friendly, but she was more like my younger sister. We were the two outsiders. I’d just moved into the dorms, years after most girls my age, and I stayed there infrequently, so I didn’t know any of them well. I didn’t care to. They were all looking forward to marriage’ I wasn’t.
“Where would Atana go?” I asked. Atana, Tinos’s oldest child, was much shyer than her older half-siblings and did not make friends easily. Perhaps because of her position – Atana’s mother was the High Priestess after all, the other girls alternately teased or flattered her.
“That’s it, I don’t know,” Tinos said. A pleat formed between his brows and he suddenly looked tired. “But I am very worried. Will you ask the other girls if they’ve seen her?”
“Why can’t you ask them?” I asked. “They would have to answer you.” As the High Priestess’s consort, I meant. Tinos was the most important man in Knossos.
The fingers on Tinos’s right hand began to twitch nervously. “I can’t,” he said at last. “It wouldn’t be wise. The High Priestess . . .” His voice faded and disappeared.
“What do you mean?” I asked, puzzled.
“Speaking to them would be easier for you.” Tinos tried again. “You see them regularly and no one will find it surprising if you talk to them. My appearance would cause too much comment.” He looked at me and I nodded. I was not so much around the younger girls but I did see them as they ran races and wrestled. “Well then,” he said as though it was all settled. “I just want to know she’s safe.”
“And if I find her?” I asked.
“Tell her I’m worried,” he said. “Would you ask her to come home and visit me. And tell her – .” He paused. “Tell her I’m sorry. Will you do that for me?”
“Yes, all right,” I said. I did not believe this would be so difficult.
“And Martis,” Tinos continued, “if she objects or becomes angry with you, don’t argue.” He shot me a stern look from under his heavy brows. “Understand? Just come and tell me.” I nodded although I didn’t understand. Why would I quarrel with Atana? Why would Atana argue with me? More to the point: what exactly had happened between Tinos and his daughter? That was the real puzzle.
“I have to go now,” Tinos said, glancing at the sky. “It is almost time for the Showing. I’ll see you later.” He turned and started down the slope. I watched until he disappeared behind a thicket of trees.
I slowly made my way back to the throng of people gathered around the theater. I did not think I could force my way through the crowd to rejoin my fellow birds and besides I would not watch the Showing. Every spring the High Priestess and her consort copulated in full view of the people of Knossos. It was important for the fertility of this land. But now that I knew Tinos and knew him well, I couldn’t bear to see that ritual.
I pushed my way through the crowd at the bottom of the paved area. As I squeezed by a woman in the fashionable ruffled skirt and tight jacket, the lady wrinkled her nose and tried to move away. I guessed I stank of perspiration.
And then, with a collective sigh, everyone turned to look at the walkway below. The High Priestess, riding sidesaddle on a white bull, was approaching. Her unbound hair tumbled down her back and, instead of skirt and jacket she wore a loose white robe that left her neck and arms bare. Bronze bells hung from the bracelets on her wrists and ankles and they tinkled with every movement. The bull was also decorated; garlands of bright spring flowers festooned his horns and encircled his neck.
Usually, the High Priestess smiled and waved at the people of Knossos but her expression today was uncharacteristically grim.
I turned to look at the top of the stadium. The bull-masked consort waited, glistening with water, as if he had just arisen from the sea. The huge white bull’s head covered Tinos’s head and part of his shoulders, the horns tipped with gold and glittering in the sun. Even though I was not supposed to recognize Tinos, even though who else could it be but the High Priestess’s consort, I’d have recognized him anywhere. His broad shoulders tapered to the narrow waist where the thick twisted scar was just visible as it reached his back. Once a bull leaper, the scar served as a reminder of the bull’s horn that had caught him and ripped open his side.
The white bull came to a halt and the High Priestess’s attendants helped her down. She walked the last few yards to the bed at Tinos’s feet. When she reached him she slid the robe from her shoulders and stepped out of it. But she did not unfasten Tinos’s loincloth, as she had done every one of the nine years previously. Instead, after an awkward few seconds, Tinos slid off the garment himself.
I turned and fought my way through the audience, arriving on the other side of the crowd gasping and trembling. I’d seen this ritual enacted almost every year of my life but a year or two ago I had found I couldn’t watch it anymore. I knew that the bodies coming together on the stage were not the Goddess and Her consort but the High Priestess and Tinos acting their parts. And knowing Tinos and wishing he had his arms around me made everything different.
I set off running, fleeing the central court, to hide in the room in which the dancers changed.
***
Excerpt from Murder of Furies by Eleanor Kuhns. Copyright 2025 by Eleanor Kuhns. Reproduced with permission from Eleanor Kuhns. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:

Eleanor Kuhns is the 2011 Minotaur/Mystery Writers of America winner for first crime novel. She won for A Simple Murder and now has twelve books in the series.
A Murder of Furies is the third in the Bronze Age Crete Series which began with In the Shadow of the Bull.
A lifelong librarian, she transitioned to full time writing during the pandemic. She lives in upstate New York with her husband and her dog.
Catch Up With Eleanor Kuhns:
www.Eleanor-Kuhns.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub - @eleanorkuhns
Instagram - @edl0829
Facebook - @writerkuhns
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Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Currently Reading...
I'm currently reading The Case of the Christie Curse by Kelly Oliver. This book is the third in the Detection Club Mystery series and will be released later this week.
During a meeting of the Detection Club a letter arrives for Eliza Baker. Agatha Christie feels that something is not quite right on the archaeological dig she's on and requests the presence of members from the club. Soon Eliza, Theo Sharp, and Dorothy Parker are sweltering under the sun in 1930 Mesopotamia. Eliza quickly feels that Agatha is right, something is off. Some of the workers are calling it the Queen's curse, but Eliza is pretty sure the problems are man made-including the murder of one of the archaeologists...even though the leaders of the group are quick to call it an accident. With shifty characters, an unwelcome journalist, and feelings she'd rather keep buried Eliza will have to uncover secrets some would kill to keep.








