Paula Berinstein's Blog - Posts Tagged "mystery"

Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis is here!

The second Amanda Lester, Detective book is here!

Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis (Amanda Lester, Detective, #2) by Paula Berinstein is now available in paperback and as a Kindle ebook!!!

If only Sherlock Holmes’s great-great-grandson weren’t such a dork . . .

Scapulus Holmes is a descendant of the great Sherlock. Unfortunately he’s a dork and Amanda doesn’t want to have anything to do with him. But when she finds a dead body encrusted with strange orange crystals under the secret detective school, she must turn to Holmes for help. Only if they work together can they keep the bad guys from learning the crystals’ secrets, and it isn’t looking good.
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Published on September 15, 2015 08:28 Tags: amanda-lester, detectives, mystery, sherlock-holmes

New Mystery Novel Introduces Dorky Sherlock Holmes Descendant

Author Paula Berinstein’s middle-grade series set at secret English detective school shakes it up

Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis (Amanda Lester, Detective, #2) by Paula Berinstein

No one knows for sure what master sleuth Sherlock Holmes’s great-great-grandson would be like, but author Paula Berinstein has taken a stab at him. She thinks he’d be a real dork. That’s why, in Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis, she torments him so much.

“I do sort of pick on him,” says Berinstein. “I have to, though, don’t I? Otherwise he might be boring, and we couldn’t have that.”

The book is the second title in Berinstein’s Amanda Lester, Detective line. Set in England’s Lake District, the series revolves around a twelve-year-old girl, Amanda Lester (she turns thirteen in the second book), who is forced to attend a super-secret school for the descendants of famous detectives, despite her desire to pursue filmmaking. Adding to her angst is the fact that she is ashamed of her famous ancestor, bumbling Scotland Yard Inspector G. Lestrade.

Synopsis of Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis

Amanda Lester’s first term at the secret English detective school has turned out to be a surprising success. But trouble lies ahead. There’s a new student at Legatum and Amanda is supposed to work with him. She’s the envy of the school. Scapulus Holmes is a descendant of the great Sherlock and he’s crazy about her. Unfortunately she thinks he’s a dork and ducks him every chance she gets.

She can’t avoid him forever though. When the kids discover a dead body encrusted with mysterious living crystals, Amanda realizes she must find out what’s going on, even if it means putting up with Holmes. The only problem is that Blixus Moriarty has just escaped from prison, and he wants those crystals.

Can the detectives save the crystals from certain death before the bad guys learn their secrets? Only if Amanda and Holmes can find a way to work together, and it isn’t looking good.

About the series

The Amanda Lester, Detective series offers fans an updated heroine: an independent, smart, and sassy young protagonist who finds herself embracing her destiny as a detective despite herself. In addition to Holmes, the supporting characters include a blind girl, a geek, and a priggish boy who is a thorn in Amanda’s side, not to mention a descendant of Holmes’s nemesis, Professor Moriarty. Their interactions reflect many struggles and realities young readers will relate to.

Book details

Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis is available in paperback and as a Kindle download.

Berinstein’s third novel in the Amanda Lester, Detective series, Amanda Lester and the Purple Rainbow Puzzle, will be available in November, 2015.

About Paula Berinstein

Berinstein is the former producer and host of the popular podcast The Writing Show. She lives in Southern California. Unlike her protagonist, she is crazy about Sherlock Holmes.
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Published on September 15, 2015 11:10 Tags: amanda-lester, detectives, mystery, sherlock-holmes

Amanda Lester Jigsaw Puzzles Available for Messing Around With

I am developing a series of digital jigsaw puzzles to go with the Amanda Lester, Detective series. You can play around with them here. Windows users right-click to rotate the pieces. Mac users CTRL left-click.

We will be expanding on the designs. We're also going to give them a bigger workspace, but other than that, what do you think?

Please give them a try!!!
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Published on September 17, 2015 09:29 Tags: amanda-lester, jigsaw-puzzles, mystery

Meet Scapulus Holmes

Scapulus Holmes

Scapulus Holmes is Sherlock Holmes's great-great-grandson. His father is Olimus Holmes, a private detective, and his mother is Pastiche Holmes, a botanist.

Scapulus specializes in cyberforensics and is the foremost expert on the subject at Legatum Continuatum, where he is a student in Amanda Lester's class. He is a pleasant, easy-going guy except when it comes to Amanda, who can really push his buttons.

Scapulus first appears in the second Amanda Lester, Detective book, Amanda Lester and the Orange Crystal Crisis.
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Published on September 18, 2015 13:21 Tags: amanda-lester, detectives, mystery, sherlock-holmes

Cover Reveal: Amanda Lester and the Blue Peacocks' Secret

Today is the cover reveal for the fourth title in the Amanda Lester, Detective series. There is also a $50 gift card giveaway.

The Kindle version comes out on March 23rd, paperback on March 31st.

This book is intended for a slightly older audience than the first three. Because there is some romance in it, it should appeal more to those 13 and over.

Here is the blurb:

What does a dusty old secret have to do with peacocks?

Everything, as it turns out. When Amanda is knocked off her skateboard by a rare all-blue peacock, she learns that the species harbors a vital secret she must race to uncover. But before she can unravel the mystery, a startling archaeological discovery turns all of Britain against the detectives and threatens their very existence.

As old enemies gather strength and new adversaries emerge, Amanda finds herself dealing with hysterical teachers, a disappearing mentor, a mysterious poisoner, and a would-be magician. With so much at stake and so little time, the last thing she needs is to fall in love.
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Published on March 14, 2016 10:17 Tags: amanda-lester, cover, detectives, fantasy, mystery

Sample the Amanda Lester, Detective audiobook

The new Amanda Lester, Detective audiobook is read by the great English actor Allan Corduner. Click on the image to listen on SoundCloud!
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Published on October 05, 2016 09:18 Tags: allan-corduner, amanda-lester, audiobook, detectives, middle-grade, mystery

Sneak Peek at the New Coloring Book!

The first Amanda Lester, Detective coloring book will be out next year, but you can play with it now. Click on the image of Legatum Continuatum to download a PDF you can print and color.
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Published on October 05, 2016 09:47 Tags: amanda-lester, coloring-book, detectives, mystery

New and Free: Amanda Lester and the Gold Spectalces Surprise

Amanda Lester and the Gold Spectacles Surprise by Paula Berinstein Book 6 in the Amanda Lester, Detective series is here and free in the Kindle store for two days!

Free March 27th and 28th!

What is Professor Scribbish hiding?

Amanda and her friends have known about the mysterious Detective’s Bible for some time. But what they never dreamed was that old Lovelace Earful, Legatum’s founder and the author of the precious book, had much more up his sleeve than that.

Now a strange pair of gold-rimmed spectacles he designed has fallen into the hands of the Moriarty brothers. But the glasses have been stolen, and it falls to Amanda to figure out where they are and get them back before . . . what? All she knows is that they’re powerful and the bad guys want them. But in order to acquire them she’ll have to penetrate a fortress where a new enemy is waiting—one who has already targeted Scapulus Holmes and is coming for her next.

What she doesn’t know is that sometimes you should leave well enough alone.
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Published on March 27, 2017 08:54 Tags: detectives, england, female-sleuths, mystery, series

Historical Novels Project: England

Mistress of the Art of Death (Mistress of the Art of Death, #1) by Ariana Franklin
Mistress of the Art of Death by Ariana Franklin

This is a seriously creepy book. It is also a marvel, a very clever murder mystery that showcases the science of pathology; the place of the church, women, Jews, and foreigners in English life (specifically Cambridge); and the superstitions, misconceptions, prejudices, and fears of the populace. But as I say, it is creepy, and if you can't handle reading about horrific sexual crimes do not open this book.

I read tons of novels set in England, both in the present and the past, but I don't read a lot about the twelfth century. However despite the fact that I know a fair amount about the period from nonfiction sources, I learned a lot. For example, until the realm of Henry II, the only Jewish cemeteries in England were in London. If a Jew died, they had to be transported to London to be buried.

I also didn't know that until the reign of Henry II, there was no such thing as a jury trial. He instituted that. In addition, if a crime was deemed to be within the jurisdiction of the church, the civil authorities had absolutely no power to adjudicate or punish; their criteria for judging guilt and innocence were their own, and definitely not what we're used to: a nun or priest who committed a crime was unlikely to be punished, no matter how serious the offense, and if the book is to be believed, there was absolutely nothing even a king could do about it. The Pope was supreme.

I also did not know that there was a medical school in Salerno, the Schola Medica Salernitana, which was renowned for training doctors (who weren't called doctors), including women!

There is a love story in this book, which although not central, is still a lot of fun. The object of the heroine's affections is no Jamie Fraser. He's a deeply flawed, maddening man whom she comes to love in spite of his imperfections. That made him so appealing to me that I wished I could meet him (and slap his face when I did). He finds her equally annoying and loves her all the same. I just love that.

I found the style a little artsy fartsy for the first few pages but then it settled down and became much more readable. Even so, you need a certain amount of patience, I think, to get through the book because it is rather intellectually challenging. It is worth it, though.
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Published on September 26, 2017 11:56 Tags: autopsies, henry-ii, jews, mystery, pathology, salerno

Interview with Bestselling Mystery Author Tess Gerritsen

Tess_Gerritsen_headshotTess Gerritsen is best known as the author of the Rizzoli and Isles crime novels. I recently had the privilege of interviewing her about her latest book, I Know a Secret.


I_Know_a_Secret_coverTwo separate homicides, at different locations, with unrelated victims, have more in common than just being investigated by Boston PD detective Jane Rizzoli and medical examiner Maura Isles. In both cases, the bodies bear startling wounds—yet the actual cause of death is unknown. It’s a doubly challenging case for the cop and the coroner to be taking on, at an inconvenient time for both of them. As Jane struggles to save her mother from the crumbling marriage that threatens to bury her, Maura grapples with the imminent death of her own mother—infamous serial killer Amalthea Lank.

While Jane tends to her mother, there’s nothing Maura can do for Amalthea, except endure one final battle of wills with the woman whose shadow has haunted her all her life. Though succumbing to cancer, Amalthea hasn’t lost her taste for manipulating her estranged daughter—by dangling a cryptic clue about the two bizarre murders Maura and Jane are desperately trying to solve.

But whatever the dying convict knows is only a piece of the puzzle. Soon the investigation leads to a secretive young woman who survived a shocking abuse scandal; an independent horror film that may be rooted in reality; and a slew of martyred saints who died cruel and unusual deaths. And just when Rizzoli and Isles think they’ve cornered a devilish predator, the long-buried past rears its head—and threatens to engulf more innocent lives, including their own.


The Interview

PB. I love Jane and Maura! Can you tell us a little about them: who they are, their strengths and weaknesses, how you feel about them? If you knew them in real life, would they be your friends? How would you get along? What irritates you about them? What do you admire? Can you tell us something about them that we don't know?

TG. Jane is based on a number of women cops I’ve met – tough and feisty gals who are very aware that they have to work harder than the men do to be fully accepted. Jane’s also a very determined woman who’s not afraid to speak her mind, even if it makes her seem unlikeable, and this sometimes gets her into trouble with her male colleagues. Maura is much more reserved, a woman who relies on logic and science. (I once heard them described as Kirk and Spock, and I do see the resemblance, even though they weren’t created with those men in mind!) I think Maura could be my friend because we understand each other – especially since Maura is very much modeled after my own personality. Jane might scare me a little! I certainly admire them both because they’re intelligent and resourceful and very, very loyal people. After twelve books, I can’t think of anything about them that my readers don’t already know.

PB. How do you make your protagonists compelling? How have they changed over time? Why did they change in those ways? Do you struggle to keep them interesting as the series progresses? How are they different from the way you first envisioned them? Is the difference (if there is one) due to something that didn't work out or simply that you've learned more about them over time?

TG. Any character can be compelling if they face tough hurdles in their lives, and that’s certainly true of both Jane and Maura. For Jane, at the beginning, it’s the struggle to be accepted as the brilliant cop she is. For Maura, it’s a struggle for identity in a world where she never feels quite comfortable with human emotions. As the series progressed, their challenges shifted. Jane gained respect, but then had to deal with being a wife and mother as well as a cop. Maura struggled with the dark history of her birth family, as well as her attraction for an unattainable man. I never planned these developments in their lives; they evolved naturally as the stories progressed. In fact, I never imagined these women would star in a continuing series. THE SURGEON (where Jane was introduced) was supposed to be a stand-alone novel. THE APPRENTICE (the sequel) introduced the mysterious Maura Isles, which led to a third book. Every novel has been inspired by my need to know what happens next in their lives. And as the books progressed, both women evolved. Jane grew happier and more fulfilled. Maura became more deeply trapped in her feelings for Father Daniel Brophy. And the lives of everyone around them became more complicated as well.

PB. Maura is the daughter of a serial killer. Did you do research to find out how people in that situation cope and what their lives are like or did you just imagine it for yourself?

TG. Maura’s family history was inspired by a true-crime case in Oregon, about a young man who discovered that both his father and his grandfather were serial killers. I remember thinking how shocking that must have been – and how that sort of revelation would make me question who I am, and whether I inherited some of that evil. In a previous book, I had mentioned that Maura was adopted, but I never thought it was an important detail – until the idea of a murderous birth mother came to me.

PB. How far ahead do you plan your series and character arcs? I've read that you don't outline. Have you ever written yourself into a corner, and if so, did you have to rewrite large portions of the book to get yourself out of it?

TG. I only plan one book at a time, so there’s no over-arching blueprint for me to follow over a series. One story leads to the next, and each character’s personal revelation leads to the next. Yes, I quite often write myself into a corner, which leads to writer’s block. I just have to step away, re-think my story, and do a lot of re-writing to make the different little gears fit together.

PB. How do you make sure you're consistent from one book to the next? Have you committed any continuity gaffes? How do you handle the passage of time in the series? Do you try to keep each book in the time frame in which it was written or do you purposely avoid mentioning things that could end up being anachronisms and mess up your chronology? (For example, you mention Tinder in this book, but when you started the series Tinder didn't exist. That places I Know a Secret after 2012, when the app was first released.)

TG. The passage of time is my biggest challenge, especially since I need to keep track of how old Jane’s daughter is. I often have to go back into previous books to follow the seasons. Did the last book take place in summer? How many months have passed since then, and what’s happened in their lives in the meantime? Poor Jane Rizzoli had the longest pregnancy in history – it lasted through three books! (THE SINNER, BODY DOUBLE, and VANISH.)

Technology is the other thing that always trips up an author of a long-running series because of rapid technological advances. When I wrote VANISH, YouTube wasn’t yet in existence, so my characters had to physically deliver a videotape to a reporter. If you read that book now, you’d wonder: “Why didn’t they just put it on YouTube?” I wrote a book HARVEST, years ago, where my character runs around looking for a pay phone! Within a decade, many novels will seem out of date.

PB. How do you distinguish your stories from the other police procedurals out there? Do you worry about that issue at all? How do you see yourself in relation to other mystery writers, if you even think about that? (In other words, do you think about/worry about your place in the genre?)

TG. I don’t worry about those issues at all. All I can do is write the story I want to write. Yes, there may be a hundred other serial killer novels out there, but how many of them include a young woman fighting for her life in the African bush? (DIE AGAIN) Or a victim mistaken for an ancient Egyptian mummy? (THE KEEPSAKE). How many have a protagonist trapped in a snowbound village where the inhabitants have vanished? (ICE COLD). You just have to find your own unique twist on the genre.

PB. How did you learn to write mysteries? What about writing a mystery is different from writing other types of fiction?

TG. I learned by reading a lot of them, both good and bad. Writing a mystery has its own unique challenges, the primary one being: how do you challenge and surprise your audience? Mystery readers tend to be very clever readers, and it’s hard to stump them.

PB. Some mysteries take us into the viewpoint of the murderer and some don't. Why select one method or the other? What does each do for the reader and the story?

TG. It all depends on the story you’re telling, and which voice you hear as a writer. In THE SURGEON, the first voice I heard speaking to me was the killer’s, and it was so chilling and distinct, I had to write it. Using the killer’s voice means the audience learns a lot of details before the detective does, so the mystery in that novel wasn’t “whodunit”; the mystery was how he selects his victims. Sometimes it’s a secondary character’s voice that comes to me most vividly, such as Millie’s in DIE AGAIN. She’s a young woman who starts off the story stranded in the African bush. Her story of victimhood and survival is so harrowing that I simply had to use her voice.

PB. Many mysteries these days deal with the subject of crimes against children. What issues have you faced in writing and publishing this kind of story?

TG. I try to avoid that subject as much as possible. Even though I KNOW A SECRET deals with what seem to be crimes against children, that theme is actually tangential to the true mystery. I avoid killing children in my novels, but when it does happen, those crimes almost always happen off the page.

PB. What has been the response to Maura's relationship with a priest? Did you worry that that would make her unlikable?

TG. That romance generates more reader comments than anything else does! Her love affair with Daniel Brophy started off as a wistful attraction in THE SINNER, and I never thought it would go any further. They’re both such likable, moral people, and of course they would try their hardest not to fall in love. But human nature being what it is, of course they succumb a few books later. I see it as a human failing, a moment of weakness like so many other people experience, and the trap they fall into makes them both miserable. Even women as intelligent as Maura sometimes fall in love with the wrong men, and in that way she is very, very human.

PB. How do you come up with your beginnings. For example, the hook in I Know a Secret is "When I was seven years old, I learned how important it is to cry at funerals." Why did you start the book by talking about funerals? Was it hard to come up with the perfect opening sentence and starting scene? Is that something you struggle with in general? Have you ever started a story at the wrong point in the arc and had to adjust it?

TG. The opening sentence is the hardest one to write, and utterly vital to get right, because it sets the tone for the entire rest of the novel. In I KNOW A SECRET, I started off in Holly’s voice because I wanted readers to gain deep insight into her character. I wanted to show that she’s not like you and me; she has her own unique view of the world, and it’s her behavior and her attitude at funerals that truly sets her apart from normal people. A woman who must will herself to cry at funerals – and only for her own selfish reasons – is a disturbing individual.

I’ve often started off stories at the wrong point in the arc. In fact, sometimes I write the very first chapter only after I’ve completed the first draft, and realize the story should start earlier.

PB. Why is part of the book in the present tense and part in the past tense? Why is part in the first person and part in the third person?

TG. Holly is in first person because only through her inner thoughts do we know what kind of creature she is. First person narrative is a very intimate look into a person’s character, and her voice was so unique I wanted to share it. Jane and Maura are in third person simply because I’ve always written them in third person.

PB. Is there anything in your books you wish you could go back and do over?

TG. No. I did the best I could with each book I’ve written, and I prefer to focus on the next story.

PB. How long does it take you to write a book?

TG. I’ve taken as little as six months (with my romantic suspense novels) to as long as two years (GRAVITY).

PB. Who are your favorite mystery writers and why? Is there one existing book you wish you'd written? How about one you're dying to write?

TG. I like to push my “three Lisas”: Lisa Gardner, Lisa Scottoline, and Lisa Unger. All three of them have terrific characters, deep emotional insights, and baffling mysteries. One book I wish I’d written? GONE GIRL. I loved reading about those vastly unlikeable characters. A book I’m dying to write? I would like to write another historical novel about medicine. BONE GARDEN remains one of my favorites, and I’d like to go back in history to once again write about doctors in a different era.

PB. What do you wish people would ask you that they never do? Whatever it is, I'm asking it.

TG. I think I’ve been asked about everything!

PB. Is there anything I haven't mentioned that you'd like to add?

TG. I’m at a stage in my life where I’m ready to focus on projects without any concern about their marketability. You only have so many creative years during a lifetime, and now’s the time to take risks, whether it’s in novels or in other media, and explore the topics I’m passionate about. Which is why my son and I are now in production on a feature documentary about the centuries-long relationship between humans and pigs. We’ve already traveled quite a bit, interviewing experts around the world about genetics, archaeology, and animal behavior. It’s been a fascinating topic to cover, and at the end, we hope to have some answers as to why pork is the most forbidden food on the planet.

About Tess Gerritsen

Internationally bestselling author Tess Gerritsen took an unusual route to a writing career. A graduate of Stanford University, Tess went on to medical school at the University of California, San Francisco, where she was awarded her M.D.

While on maternity leave from her work as a physician, she began to write fiction. In 1987, her first novel was published. Call After Midnight, a romantic thriller, was followed by eight more romantic suspense novels. She also wrote a screenplay, "Adrift," which aired as a 1993 CBS Movie of the Week starring Kate Jackson.

Tess’s first medical thriller, Harvest, was released in hardcover in 1996, and it marked her debut on the New York Times bestseller list. Her suspense novels since then have been: Life Support (1997), Bloodstream (1998), Gravity (1999), The Surgeon (2001), The Apprentice (2002), The Sinner (2003), Body Double (2004), Vanish (2005), The Mephisto Club (2006), The Bone Garden (2007), The Keepsake (2008; UK title: Keeping the Dead), Ice Cold (2010; UK title: The Killing Place), The Silent Girl, and now LAST TO DIE. Her books have been translated into 37 languages, and more than 20 million copies have been sold around the world.

In July of 2010, TNT premiered its new series “Rizzoli & Isles,” based on the bestselling series by Gerritsen. Angie Harmon (Law & Order) and Sasha Alexander (Mission: Impossible III) star as Boston detective Jane Rizzoli and medical examiner Maura Isles, good friends and sometimes partners, who together solve crimes and bust some of Boston’s most notorious criminals. The series also stars Lorraine Bracco (The Sopranos) as Jane’s demanding and intrusive mother and Lee Thompson Young (FlashForward) as Det. Barry Frost, Jane’s somewhat green partner. The series went on to be a hit, and is just wrapping its third season. As a novelist/M.D., Gerritsen’s specialty is in translating complicated medical science for lay readers. She often lectures at science education events and teaches a writing course on Cape Cod for physicians who want to become novelists. She is also the only Asian thriller writer who has achieved bestseller status.

Her books have been top-5 bestsellers in the United States and abroad. She has won both the Nero Wolfe Award (for Vanish) and the Rita Award (for The Surgeon). Critics around the world have praised her novels as “Pulse-pounding fun” (Philadelphia Inquirer), “Scary and brilliant” (Toronto Globe and Mail), and “Polished, riveting prose” (Chicago Tribune). Publisher Weekly has dubbed her the “medical suspense queen.” Now retired from medicine, she writes full time. She lives in Maine.

Her Web site is TessGerritsen.com.
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Published on October 24, 2017 09:46 Tags: boston, interview, mystery, police-procedural, tess-gerritsen