Read of the Week: Prisoner of Night and Fog by Anne Blankman

In 1930s Munich, danger lurks behind dark corners, and secrets are buried deep within the city. But Gretchen Müller, who grew up in the National Socialist Party under the wing of her “uncle” Dolf, has been shielded from that side…

The Film Canon: Sabotage (1936)

In 1936 Alfred Hitchcock’s name was not yet immortalized as the Master of Suspense, but he was getting there. Having labored through the twenties and early thirties making flat, flavorless silent melodramas and romantic “comedies,” Hitchcock had reinvented himself as…

Book Review: Beach Bags and Burglaries by Dorothy Howell

“Beach Bags and Burglaries,” by Dorothy Howell, is a fun and simple summer story filled with drama, murder, romance, and a tropical getaway with four best friends: Bella, Sandy, Marcie, and Haley Randolph. Haley is the one who won the…

Book Review: “The Competition” by Marcia Clark

Manipulation and trickery are the foundations of The Competition, a mystery thriller that depicts a manic killing spree designed and executed by an uncanny number of suspects who always seem to be out of reach. Dead ends, close calls, and public…

Book Review: Guilt by Degree” by Marcia Clark

“Guilt by Degrees” is another suspenseful Rachel Knight Novel by Marcia Clark that hit it out of the park. This novel consisted of the characters I fell in love with in the previous story but nonetheless were able to stand…

Book Review: Guilt by Association by Marcia Clark

Marcia Clark offered a great read for all type of genre enthusiasts. There was enough love to keep the romance lovers interested and enough action packed mysterious adventures to keep the suspense lovers intrigued. I have not read a mystery…

Book Review: Unraveled Visions by Nina Milton

Death to a detective, a missing phone that seems to be found just to be lost again, disappearance of a young gypsy girl, a worried sister, and a girl who decides to seek the hidden connection between all of these…