Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts

Sunday, September 20, 2020

Jokers Wild - A Review

 Review


JOKERS WILD by Barbara Barrett

The Sixth Mah Jongg Mystery

Marianne Putnam is beyond thrilled. The local community theatre has chosen to produce her one act play and she will be part of the entire production process. Unfortunately, reality comes crashing down in the person of Jason Newhall, the play's director. Arrogant, antagonistic and demanding, Jason expects perfection from the amateur volunteers and pushes them to get it. When opening night finally arrives Marianne, instead of basking in her playwright's glory, gets pulled from the theatre to search for the missing director. What she finds is a dead body and another opportunity to put her sleuthing skills to use.

There needs to be a huge willing suspension of disbelief with the sixth Mah Jongg mystery. A sheriff allowing civilians to accompany deputies while they check out possible murder suspects? Said deputies reactions? But, if you can overlook that, it is an interesting way to investigate the murder. I do like how the husbands got involved and ultimately how the murderer was caught. I especially enjoyed the entire depiction of the community theatre; how the show came together and how the director ultimately achieved his vision.

While I like the fact that the four women have their own lives and separate storylines, too much time is taken to share information that has no bearing on the mystery. There was entirely too much written about the remodel of the dinner club. It had no relevance to the mystery at hand and was like reading two different books. I enjoyed it once the book concentrated on the theatre mystery.

JOKERS WILD is an entertaining mystery about cooperation and compromise.

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Jokers Wild (Mah Jongg Mystery Series) by Barbara Barrett

About Jokers Wild


 Jokers Wild (Mah Jongg Mystery Series)  

Cozy Mystery 6th in Series  

Publisher: Bowker (July 5, 2020) 

Paperback: 232 pages 

“The show must go on.” That applies even to playwright Marianne Putnam, when the director of her one-act play, “Jokers Wild,” fails to show for curtains up on opening night at the community theater in Serendipity Springs, Florida. When the director’s wife begs Marianne to accompany her to their home to check on him, they find the man floating in his pool. Dead.

Though not known for his pleasant disposition—her relationship with him had been tense since nearly ramming into his car in a parking lot, but after all, he was the director—who would have wanted to murder him? Surely no one in the production crew, cast or the staff of the community center where the play was to be staged. Maybe it was the wife, who Marianne had overheard arguing with him. Or perhaps someone from his theater connections back in the Big Apple.

Since she was there when the body was discovered, Marianne is considered a suspect. That doesn’t mean she can’t help her three Mah Jongg friends—Syd, Micki and Kat—assist the sheriff with the investigation. But who’s there to help her when her path crosses the murderer’s.

About Barbara Barrett

 

Author Barbara Barrett. Photo by Chris Kridler, ChrisKridler.com

Barbara Barrett started reading mysteries when she was pregnant with her first child to keep her mind off things like her changing body and food cravings. When she’d devoured as many Agatha Christies as she could find, she branched out to English village cozies and Ellery Queen.

Later, to avoid a midlife crisis, she began writing fiction at night when she wasn’t at her day job in human resources for Iowa State Government. After releasing eleven full-length romance novels and two novellas, she returned to the cozy mystery genre, using one of her retirement pastimes, the game of mah jongg, as her inspiration. Not only has it been a great social outlet, it has also helped keep her mind active when not writing.

Jokers Wild, the sixth book in her “Mah Jongg Mystery” series, features four friends who play mah jongg together and share otherwise in each other’s lives. None of the four is based on an actual person. Each is an amalgamation of several mah jongg friends with a lot of Barbara’s imagination thrown in for good measure. The four will continue to appear in future books in the series.

Barbara is a member of Sisters in Crime, Sinc-Iowa, Romance Writers of America and the SpacecoasT chapter of Romance Writers of America.

She is married to the man she met her senior year of college. They have two grown children and eight grandchildren.

Now retired, she is a resident of Florida, although she spends her summers in Iowa, her home state. She earned her B.A. degree in History from the University of Iowa and her Master’s Degree in History from Drake University.

When not in front of her laptop creating her next story, she plays mah jongg, travels and enjoys lunches with friends.

Author Links  

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading Jokers Wild by Barbara Barrett. This book is the sixth in the Mah Jongg Mystery series.

Marianne Putnam is beyond thrilled. The local community theatre has chosen to produce her one act play and she will be part of the entire production process. Unfortunately, reality comes crashing down in the person of Jason Newhall, the play's director. Arrogant, antagonistic and demanding, Jason expects perfection from the amateur volunteers and pushes them to get it. When opening night finally arrives Marianne, instead of basking in her playwright's glory, gets pulled from the theatre to search for the missing director. What she finds is a dead body and another opportunity to put her sleuthing skills to use. 


Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Currently Reading...

I just finished reading Beware the East Wind by Barbara Barrett. This book is the fourth in the Mah Jongg Mystery series.
 
Attending a benefit is par for the course for Syd and her friends, even when the String Quartet is replaced by a hypnotist. Everyone is shocked when, a few days later the hypnotist is found dead. While they don’t know the woman, a classmate of Marianne does. Guy’s sister was the murdered woman’s business partner. Having heard of Marianne and her friend’s success at solving murders, Guy entreats her to help prove his sister’s innocence, or at least find some other suspects. Although their last case nearly proved too dangerous, the excitement of being involved in another investigation proves too heady for the four to dismiss.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Beware the East Wind - A Spotlight & Giveaway

Today I'd like to shine a spotlight on BEWARE THE EAST WIND. This book is the fourth in the Mah Jongg Mystery series by Barbara Barrett and was released in August. I will post my review soon.

 

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Beware the East Wind (The Mah Jongg Mysteries) by Barbara Barrett

About Beware the East Wind

 
Cozy Mystery 4th in Series  
Bowker (August 17, 2019)  
Paperback: 254 pages 
Beware the east wind! It’s hurricane season in Florida, and everyone’s attention is focused on preparing for the latest tempest. But in Serendipity Springs, mah jongg pals Marianne, Sydney, Micki and Kat are caught in a different kind of whirlwind—a mesmerizing murder case involving a slain hypnotist/chef and the woman police suspect of doing her in, her embittered catering partner, Portia.

About the Author


Barbara Barrett started reading mysteries when she was pregnant with her first child to keep her mind off things like her changing body and food cravings. When she’d devoured as many Agatha Christies as she could find, she branched out to English village cozies and Ellery Queen.
Later, to avoid a midlife crisis, she began writing fiction at night when she wasn’t at her day job as a human resources analyst for Iowa State Government. After releasing eleven full-length romance novels and one novella, she returned to the cozy mystery genre, using one of her retirement pastimes, the game of mah jongg, as her inspiration. Not only has it been a great social outlet, it has also helped keep her mind active when not writing.
Bamboozled, the second book in her “Mah Jongg Mystery” series, features four friends who play mah jongg together and share otherwise in each other’s lives. None of the four is based on an actual person. Each is an amalgamation of several mah jongg friends with a lot of Barbara’s imagination thrown in for good measure. The four will continue to appear in future books in the series.
Anticipating the day when she would write her first mystery, she has been a member of the Mystery/Romantic Suspense chapter of Romance Writers of America for over a decade. She credits them with helping her hone her craft.
Barbara is married to the man she met her senior year of college. They have two grown children and eight grandchildren.

Author Links:
Website – http://www.barbarabarrettbooks.com  
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/Barbara-Barrett-Author-1678443865812386/  
Twitter – www.twitter.com/bbarrettbooks  
Pinterest – pinterest.com/barbarabarrett7  
GoodReads – https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8181756.Barbara_Barrett  
Subscribe Cozy Newsletter https://www.subscribepage.com/BBCozies  

Purchase Links Amazon B&N 

 a Rafflecopter giveaway

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Connect the Dots - A Guest Post, Review, & Giveaway

I'm pleased to welcome Micki Demetrius to the blog today. You can find Micki on the pages of the Mah Jongg Mystery series by Barbara Barrett. CONNECT THE DOTS is the third book in the series and was released earlier this week.


My name is Micki Demetrius. I used to teach English in a private high school back East. It took a few years to learn how to survive in that rarified environment, but eventually I caught on. Generally, there were two types of students: those who were there because at their parents’ dictate or those there on scholarship. Not all of that first group acted like they were privileged, although there were enough. I learned a lot about myself during those days. How to keep my cool and not let the little monsters get the better of me. How to make English lit appeal to young minds with teaching methods related to their world—which meant learning how to text with my thumbs, keeping up with the latest rapper’s music and interpreting their private language to stay on top of their thinking. How to tell parents diplomatically their darlings were flunking.

I was married for ten years of that time. His name was Ignatius Demetrius, or “Iggy.” His best point was his charm. The man could talk me into anything, including loaning him money for his numerous business schemes, which I later discovered were usually disguised covers for his gambling debts. That was the reason I eventually called it quits. I haven’t really had another serious relationship since, not that I’m anti-men, I’m just much pickier these days.

My nest egg wasn’t what it could have been when I retired, thanks to my numerous loans to Iggy. Whatever path I took needed to be on a shoestring. I wanted a new start, new horizons to conquer. So I journeyed south to central Florida and the town of Serendipity Springs. After careful review of my finances and wise investing, I bought a one-bedroom condo and began pursuing a lifelong dream of being a journalist. Freelance, reporting to no one, writing about whatever topic appealed to me. The down side, however, was no guarantee of a steady income. Barely an income at all. But isn’t that what retirement’s supposed to be about? Following your heart in your later years.

But there was more to the down side. I have expensive tastes; I love designer clothes, gourmet dinners, theater and musical concerts. My teaching job had allowed me to indulge every so often, not much, but enough to satisfy my hunger until the next need to indulge. But now that I was living on my pension and limited savings, the chance to indulge came less frequently.

Then I met Katrina Faulkner. Kat. She had relocated to the sunshine state from the Midwest. She’d spent the better part of her life as an executive assistant to a CEO of a manufacturing concern and then caring for her ailing mother. Unlike me, though, Kat got lucky with the lottery. Unless she buys another nation, her winnings will keep her comfortable the rest of her life. We met playing Mah Jongg. Kat’s frugal where I’m not. I get my kicks helping her chip away at her bank account, especially updating her wardrobe.

I made two other great friends through Mah Jongg, Sydney Bonner and Marianne Putnam. Unlike Kat and me, both are married. Happily married for years to two pretty great guys. Even I approve of them. Besides our weekly games, we spend a lot of time together, sometimes no more than meeting at a local coffee shop or going out to lunch.

In recent months, we’ve also found ourselves drawn into murder investigations. Us. Imagine. Four retired women who know nothing about law enforcement procedures facing off with murderers. We didn’t seek this type of excitement. Those affected by the murders, usually our Mah Jongg friends, have prevailed upon us to look into other potential suspects on the down low, to gather the kind of intel the authorities either can’t obtain or dismiss.

Strangely enough, we’ve been successful. Well, not entirely on our own. We’ve had the begrudging help of the sheriff’s department as our safety cushion. Guess it doesn’t hurt that Sheriff Formero is sweet on Kat. Her involvement in these things frustrates him no end, but he tolerates us because we somehow manage to uncover vital information about the killer. He’ll never admit that, at least he hasn’t so far.

Recently, I wrote an article describing the numerous construction problems a friend had with her new condo. Before I got very far with my interviews, her son fell from her balcony and was killed. She was overtaken by her grief. The four of us did what we could to help, but she insisted he’d been murdered.

When medical evidence finally proved her right, my role should have ended. I tried to steer clear of the murder part. Really. Especially after the sheriff told me to stay out of it. But circumstances kept testing my good intentions; trouble kept following my friend. Like her son’s pregnant ex-girlfriend my friend didn’t even know existed, or a shady real estate agent who kept pushing her to sell her son’s business at a loss and further issues with her new temporary home. I couldn’t very well abandon her. How was I supposed to know the murderer considered me a threat?

I enjoyed being a teacher, but my life is so much richer now that I live in Serendipity Springs and have such wonderful friends who get me. Come, visit us and sign on for one of our adventures.

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Review


CONNECT THE DOTS by Barbara Barrett
The Third Mah Jongg Mystery

Micki Demetrius is surprised when fellow Mah Jongg player Clarissa asks to speak with her privately. After all, they don't know each other that well and aren't particularly close. When Clarissa tells her of all the structural issues with her new condo, added to the fact that neither she, nor her son have been able to get any help, Micki's journalistic nose smells a story. Clarissa can't even go on her balcony as it's deemed unsafe! Micki agrees to investigate and not only get answers for Clarissa, but get her condo repaired. When the two arrive at Herrington Estates they find it swarming with police and medical personnel. Clarissa's son had fallen to his death from her balcony. The police see it as a terrible accident, but Clarissa knows he never would have gone out on a balcony he knew could give way at any moment. Is it just a mother's grief, or could the Mah Jongg friends once again be involved in murder?

Mah Jongg friends, Micki, Kat, Syd, and Marianne, are each dealing with various issues in this third Mah Jongg Mystery. Syd is off on the sidelines taking care of her grandchildren while Marianne discovers a void in her life and is searching for something that's just for her. Micki takes the lead role here, using her journalistic skills to help their friend with Kat as her primary backup. Kat also has her own story line going as the Sheriff looks to move their romance along whilst she has second thoughts. Needless to say, there's a lot going on here.

I enjoyed being back with the Mah Jongg ladies. Although it wouldn't advance the plot, I would have liked to see more Mah Jongg being played. The snippets shared were not only fun, but pertinent to the story. I appreciate the way Barbara Barrett treats her main characters. They may be senior citizens, but they're not caricatures. They're not dotty old ladies, they're real women who have lived a bit. The book, in fact the whole series, focuses on how the lives of mature women change and evolve, learning to be self sufficient after depending on others, finding new meaning in life, deciding to trust again, and more. And how solving murders can keep the mind active.

CONNECT THE DOTS takes a hard look at construction and real estate today and how greed, dirty politics, and bad business practices can cause irreparable damage. Lesson one, never sign a document indicating everything is fine with your house until you've had it checked by your own home inspector! CONNECT THE DOTS is a well plotted mystery that highlights many important issues faced not only by women of mature years, but everyone.

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Connect the Dots (Mah Jongg Mysteries) by Barbara Barrett

About the Book

 
Cozy Mystery 3rd in Series  
Bowker (February 2, 2019)  
Paperback: 278 pages
How could a thirty-something man fall to his death from a fourth-floor balcony he knows is defective? That’s the question freelance writer Micki Demetrius is asked to answer by the man’s grieving mother, Clarissa White, who refuses to believe his death was an unfortunate accident. But when the authorities determine it was homicide, Micki is shut out of her investigative efforts.
Giving up is easier said than done for Micki. She can’t resist a mystery, and suspicious characters won’t leave Clarissa alone, from the woman claiming a stake in the victim’s life to a cagey character who wants his business. As the threat to Clarissa grows, Micki feels compelled to help her in spite of the danger.
Micki’s three mah jongg pals—Sydney Bonner, Marianne Putnam and Katrina, Kat, Faulkner—are drawn into the mystery, but the retirees have their own challenges. Syd and husband Trip do grandparent duty while their daughter deals with marital issues. Marianne “finds herself” by writing a one-act play. And Kat must decide how public to go with her growing friendship with the sheriff. Together, they must connect the dots in a nefarious web of greed, neglect, secrecy and murder.

About the Author



Barbara Barrett started reading mysteries when she was pregnant with her first child to keep her mind off things like her changing body and food cravings. When she’d devoured as many Agatha Christies as she could find, she branched out to English village cozies and Ellery Queen.

Later, to avoid a midlife crisis, she began writing fiction at night when she wasn’t at her day job as a human resources analyst for Iowa State Government. After releasing eleven full-length romance novels and one novella, she returned to the cozy mystery genre, using one of her retirement pastimes, the game of mah jongg, as her inspiration. Not only has it been a great social outlet, it has also helped keep her mind active when not writing.

Bamboozled, the second book in her “Mah Jongg Mystery” series, features four friends who play mah jongg together and share otherwise in each other’s lives. None of the four is based on an actual person. Each is an amalgamation of several mah jongg friends with a lot of Barbara’s imagination thrown in for good measure. The four will continue to appear in future books in the series.

Anticipating the day when she would write her first mystery, she has been a member of the Mystery/Romantic Suspense chapter of Romance Writers of America for over a decade. She credits them with helping her hone her craft.

Barbara is married to the man she met her senior year of college. They have two grown children and eight grandchildren.

Author Links:

Website – http://www.barbarabarrettbooks.com  
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/Barbara-Barrett-Author-1678443865812386/  
Twitter – www.twitter.com/bbarrettbooks  
Pinterest – pinterest.com/barbarabarrett7  
GoodReads – https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8181756.Barbara_Barrett  
Subscribe Cozy Newsletter https://www.subscribepage.com/BBCozies  

Purchase LinksAmazon B&N 

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The author has graciously offered an e-copy of CONNECT THE DOTS. Simply leave a comment on this post no later than 11:59pm Eastern Friday, April 26, 2019 telling us if you've ever played Mah Jongg and if so which version. The ladies here play the American version, while I've tried the Japanese version, Riichi. Please leave your e-mail address so that I can contact you should your comment be picked. Also, if you're having trouble posting, try using Firefox as your browser.

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading Connect the Dots by Barbara Barrett. This book is the third in the Mah Jongg Mystery series and was released earlier this year.

Micki Demetrius is surprised when fellow Mah Jongg player Clarissa asks to speak with her privately. After all, they don't know each other that well and aren't particularly close. When Clarissa tells her of all the structural issues with her new condo, added to the fact that neither she, nor her son have been able to get any help, Micki's journalistic nose smells a story. Clarissa can't even go on her balcony as it's deemed unsafe! Micki agrees to investigate and not only get answers for Clarissa, but get her condo repaired. When the two arrive at Herrington Estates they find it swarming with police and medical personnel. Clarissa's son had fallen to his death from her balcony. The police see it as a terrible accident, but Clarissa knows he never would have gone out on a balcony he knew could give way at any moment. Is it just a mother's grief, or could the Mah Jongg friends once again be involved in murder?

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Let's Play!

     It's all fun and games 'til someone gets murdered. Friends get together all over the world to play cards or other games. It wasn't so long ago that professional poker playing became so popular that major events were televised and big name players became household names; Johnny Chan, anyone? Take a popular game, add a murder, and you get a fun cozy series.
     If you are interested in poker, Texas Hold'em in particular, try A Poker Mystery by Jackie Chance. Another card game that has its own series is bridge. Susan Moody writes about Cassie Swan, a professional bridge player in the United Kingdom. Prefer something a little less formal? What about the Bridge Club Mysteries by Honor Hartman?
     Cards aren't the only games out there-don't forget dice games. Join Kate McCall and her friends as they play bunco and solve murders in the Bunco Babes Mysteries by Gail Oust.
     If you're more of a puzzle person, never fret, there are several cozies for you. The Kate McDonald Mysteries by Shelley Freydont feature a mathematician who returns to her home town and a puzzle museum...and murder. If you enjoy crossword puzzles, Parnell Hall writes the wickedly funny Puzzle Lady Series where things, and people, aren't exactly what they seem. Nero Blanc also writes a series featuring crossword puzzles with the duo of crossword editor Annabella Graham and private investigator Rosco Polyctrates. There's also the Mystery by the Numbers Series by Casey Mayes featuring Savannah Store a math puzzle creator, and her husband, a retired police chief.
     Whatever your puzzle or game predilection, I'm sure you'll find a cozy mystery to suit.