Happy Holidays - The Missing Clue - December 2021

When the calendar aligns as this year has, we are often a little bit behind in our planning at Whodunit? Chanukkah arriving in November sometimes even means that this edition of the newsletter arrives in your hands after that holiday has happened.

Not so this year. While menorah candles will not be lit for very practical shop full of paper reasons, we are ready to help you celebrate whichever midwinter celebration you and yours celebrate (or for more than one if that is your tradition) between now and years end.

Of course, the other difference is that this year, you are also allowed to come inside! We will still be offering the same delivery and curbside services as we did last year for those who wish them, and we have already heard from some customers waxing nostalgic for tapping their debit card through the glass to then be handed a brown paper package through a barely opened door, but we do have to say that we are happy to be able to have you all inside to look at all that we have in store. We were so thankful for all the patience and support that you showed us last year, and we look forward to actually being able to show you what you are buying rather than only describing it by phone, or placing its dust jacket against the window for you to read, or not having to have you fake a phone call to add another book to your order when you arrive outside.

This holiday season is also seeing the return of our ARC giveaway. Many have already seen the multi-coloured packages ready for distribution, and while supplies last, we are going to be happy to be giving away nearly two years’ worth of advance reader's copies to those who spend $30 with us.

We will also be open for you longer to better allow you to stop by on your way home (or your way to your next holiday event) first until 1800h, then from the 13th onward until 2000h. And, as always, if you find yourself running late, please just get in touch, we can often stay until you arrive. We want everyone to get the books they need and to both here, and home, safely.

Not all is back to as it was, however. December 6 is going to be the deadline for Christmas orders. Even with that earlier deadline, we are not going to be able to be certain about some things arriving on time. We hope that both you and your giftees will be understanding of this, as it is something that we have very little control over, and less and less as climate emergencies in the West create non-pandemic delays.

Year-end also brings us a chance to reflect on the things that have occurred, and here at Whodunit? we have much to be overwhelmingly thankful for. Aviva joined us in the spring and has brought amazing positive energy to our mornings, and some much-needed expertise to our social media. Laura has continued to remain a stable force both in the middle and at the end/start of our weeks (never buy a Monday to Sunday calendar), a greeter of dogs and arranger of displays par excellence. They both got married (congratulations to Laura and Alex and mazel to Avi and Shane), Laura successfully defended her Masters (applause), and have both become such wonderful editions to the store and our lives.

While Sian does outsized work in the background from her home in Toronto, those of you who miss her in-store help will have a chance to get it between the 17th and 31st of December. She makes this newsletter, and most of the rest of our communications, work and while she may edit this out for space, she deserves much more credit for what she does than she gets as a result of not being present in the store as often as really anyone would like.

The one who truly does not get the credit she deserves, however, is Wendy. For some of you, because of COVID, or because she is almost always behind a pile of books on her desk, or because she does not speak to the press, she may be a mythical figure, but the boss is truly the engine that makes the store move. Without her, your books would not arrive, or be priced, or be put in accessible places. If you have seen something beautiful at Whodunit? before anywhere else, it is because Wendy has found it and brought it in. If you have discovered a new favourite author, Wendy is who figured out how to get them on our shelves, and figures out how to keep them in stock. It is amazing how our window-lined office sometimes serves as an invisibility cloak, but if you visit us in person this season, she is probably in there getting us positioned for the next one, and deserves a quick "Wassail" or two.

Finally, we need to thank all of you. Whodunit? has changed in the last three years, not just as a result of COVID. For those who miss used mysteries stacked to the ceiling, thank you for understanding that we needed to grow (and come see those piles creep higher and higher in the back). For those who have only started visiting us in our new incarnation, thank you for the opportunity to become your place for books (and the occasional puzzle). We will continue to aim to have all the mysteries anyone might want, and lots of other books besides, and if we do not have it, please just continue to ask. We want to keep making sure that you have the books you need, in this or any other season!

MCB, November 28th, 2021

(Editor’s Note: Michael should know me better than to think I would ever edit out praise, but also that I wouldn’t take the opportunity here to send some back his way. I don’t necessarily need to tell you about all the things Michael does because it should be apparent to anyone who has set foot in the store. No one could replace our dad but as the above essay ably shows, Michael is doing an amazing job of carving out his own legacy at Whodunit. Mum and I are deeply appreciative for his steady presence these last 22 months while we navigate a world without Jack. SEB)

Bestsellers, September 2021 - The Missing Clue - October 2021

Mass Market

1.      M.C. Beaton,  Hot to Trot

2.      Carolyn Haines, A Garland of Bones

3.      Jeffrey Archer, Turn A Blind Eye

4.      Alex Erickson, Dial m for Maine Coon

5.      Bree Baker   Partners in Lime

6.      Marty Wingate,  Murder is a Must

7.      Faye Kellerman, The Lost Boys

8.      Laura Child, Egg Shooters

9.       Cleo Coyle, Brewed  Awakening

10.  Mike Lupica, Robert B. Parker’s Fool’s Paradise

Trade Paper

1.      Derva McTierney,  The Good Turn

2.      Felix Francis,  Iced

3.      Arnaldur, Indridason, The Darkness Knows

4.      Gary Filmon, Yes We Did

5.      Katherena Vermette    The Strangers

6.      Mick Herron, Slough House

7.      Richard Osman,  The Thursday Murder Club

8.      Anne Perry, A Question of Betrayal

9.      Alexander McCall Smith, How to Raise an Elephant

10.  John Banfield, Snow

Hardcover

1.      Ann Cleeves, Heron’s Cry

2.      Louise Penny, The Madness of Crowds

3.      Sally Rooney, Beautiful World, Where Are You?

4.      William McIlvanney, The Dark Remains

5.      Miriam Toews, Fight Night

6.      Richard Osman, The Man Who Died Twice

7.      Charles Todd, An Irish Hostage

8.      Colson Whitehead, Harlem Shuffle

9.      Ruth Ozeki, The Book of Form and Enterprise

10.  Harlan Coben,  Win

The Apollo Murders by Chris Hadfield - Mini Review by Laura - The Missing Clue - October 2021

The Apollo Murders is Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield’s first foray into the mystery genre. The plot is set in 1973, outlining a fictionalized Apollo 18 mission during the late days of the Cold War, following multiple perspectives of the NASA crew and operations, Russian scientists and politicians, and a cast of tangential characters. Hadfield’s unique tone and personal experience shine in his writing. I had worried that the jargon used by an actual astronaut describing a lunar mission would be difficult to follow, but it never felt out of reach. While there is a murder in the first few chapters, investigation takes a backseat as drama unfolds aboard the space craft. As a thriller, the plot does deliver as the stakes escalate to the very end. The Apollo Murders will be released October 12, 2021.

Reading (and TV) Notes by Wendy - The Missing Clue - October 2021

Back in 2007 when I first wrote about mystery series on television that was just what it was. Today people watch mystery programs in a variety of ways, on phones, tablets and computers as well as televisions. Then the content came through television providers like Prairie Public Television, the CBC and HBO. Today there are a multitude of other ways of finding content, streaming services like Acorn, Netflix, Britbox, Filmon, Apple tv, iTunes, Amazon and newer specialty channels.

The growth in ways to watch mysteries has also led to a substantial increase in the number and kinds of mysteries available. From series based on the books of cosy writers, e.g. Joanne Fluke and Kate Collins to the latest nordic noir series. This fall four long running series will be returning to television: the 22nd series of Midsomer Murders, the 6th series of Grantchester which will be alternating with Baptiste on Masterpiece Theatre, the 8th season of Endeavour and on CBC the 15th series of Murdoch Mysteries. Endeavour was a spin off series from Colin Dexter’s Morse series. The other three series were initially based on books by Caroline Graham, James Runcie and Maureen Jennings respectively but have come a long way from the originals.

Louise Penny is probably one of the bestselling mystery writers in the world now. In 2013 a made for tv film was made by CTV of her first Gamache novel Still Life. It received mixed reviews and despite rumors that there were other films to come none ever appeared. Earlier this fall Amazon Prime announced a new eight-episode series called Three Pines which is based on Louise Penny’s novels. The part of Gamache will be played by British actor Alfred Molina. The series will be produced by Left Bank who have had great success with The Crown.

Louise Penny’s latest Gamache novel, The Madness of Crowds was released in August 2021 and later this month State of Terror written with Hilary Clinton will be released. Hilary Clinton is an avid mystery reader and one of her favourite authors is Jacqueline Winspear and her Maisie Dobbs series. There have been a number of reports that Hilary & Chelsea Clinton’s production company, Hidden Light, is going to make a series based on the sixteen Maisie Dobbs titles. But as Jacqueline Winspear is quoted as saying there is a long way from an option to a finished programme.

If you were a fan of either the Luther novels or the tv series of the same name you will be pleased to hear that there will be a new Luther movie on Netflix. Peter James’ Superintendent Roy Grace is finally coming to television in a series called Grace. After years of false starts and rumours, ITV in Britain has made two feature length films based on the first two novels Dead Simple and Looking Good Dead.

In November, P.D. James’ Inspector Dalgliesh will be returning to the television screen. The series called Dalgliesh will follow the hero from the 1970s to the present. This first series is based on, Shroud For a Nightingale, The Black Tower and A Taste for Death. If you were a fan of Ben Miller in the first series of Death in Paradise, he is now starring in Professor T, as an eccentric genius criminologist. Martin Clunes (everyone’s favourite doctor in Doc Martin) is appearing in Manhunt, which documents the true-life search for a serial killer and the detective D.C.I. Colin Sutton who solved it.

Ian Rankin is a firm favourite of our customers and mystery readers around the world. Later this Fall, Channel 4 in the UK will be showing a series, Murder Island, that was filmed this Summer on the Scottish Island of Gigha. Rankin has created a narrative for a murder mystery. Murder Island is in fact a reality show and it will be up to the contestants to find whodunit. There will policemen and other professionals to provide some advice and guidance, but the eight contestants can follow their own ideas about how to investigate the crime. The prize for solving the crime and providing a compelling case that could be used by the Prosecutors Office will be 50,000 pounds sterling.

Autumn Update - The Missing Clue - October 2021

Although the thermometer disagrees, Winnipeg is firmly in autumn and still firmly in the pan-demania. With that comes a continuation of the limitations that allow us to run our business safely. There are some truly exceptional books that we are excited to arrive and are looking forward to share with you, but we are ordering them from a supply chain that is itself uncertain. As we try to prepare for the holiday season, we also live with the shadow of last year's lockdown, and a fear that we will not be able to share those things with all of you in person, or insufficient numbers.

At the same time that we are being offered opportunities to do events with local authors, we see the struggles of some in our communities with taking COVID seriously, even now, and we worry that hosting in-person gatherings at this time is something better kept for places better equipped. We love the cosy closeness that allows our shop to reverberate with the energy of a good crowd, but are too well aware that such closeness is best left to a future where both our community, and our shop, are better able to manage any risks.

Thankfully, all of this uncertainty has also come with a tremendous amount of support from authors, publishers, other independent retailers, and you, our customers. Authors have gone above and beyond to make sure we get signed copies of their books or share that we are a place to get them. Drop-in signings by local authors like Katherena Vermette are balanced by personalized video messages by Ann Cleeves, and both give us a jolt of excitement. We will once again be hosting some digital events ourselves, while also being linked to a much larger digital event calendar run by Penguin Random House and others, aimed specifically at supporting independent retailers.

Our books are also going to be available in more places this year, as we are thrilled to be partnering with "The Petite Greenhouse" in Sanford to supply them with some great Canadian and local authors, as well as have them serve as a collection point for special orders starting in November. We are also just weeks away from an upgrade to the webstore which we hope will make it even easier for you to find and order what you want. We also hope to be able to share even more of these events and partnerships with you all, and possibly even some new ways to do it. Watch out for news as soon as we can announce it, we will.

There are frightening and exciting and unplanned things upcoming for all of us as we reach the end of 2021. It is our great hope that we will continue to be able to provide you with the reading that you need to get through these moments.
MCB, October 4th, 2021

What I'm Reading by Sian - The Missing Clue - August 2021

I know this was not the summer that anyone planned on having, but it certainly wasn’t mine. At the tail end of a much-awaited visit home to Winnipeg with Penny, she was admitted to hospital with a diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes. So not only was the newsletter delayed (mea culpa!), but I got desperately behind on work, and that has pushed me further behind on my reading.

Of course, it was the summer I didn’t want on top of the winter and spring I didn’t want either. I have not done much reading and what little I have done has been comfort re-reads. A round of Deborah Harkness’ ‘All Souls Series’, now counting four titles (none in stock, but all can be ordered). Love in a Cold Climate and The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford (also not in stock, also available for order).

More relevant to the store’s interests, I enjoyed a reread of Vivian Shaw’s ‘Dr Greta Helsing’ series (Strange Practice, Dreadful Company, Grave Importance). It’s such a lovely combination of high-end urban fantasy, romance, and old school horror tropes and each book is wonderful. It’s also nice to read a short series sometimes, with a defined story arc for each character.

My new ‘to read’ pile turns toppling. I’m two behind on Anna Lee Huber’s ‘Lady Darby’ series and Dianne Freeman’s ‘Countess of Harleigh’ series. I started The Dark Heart of Florence by Tasha Alexander and Castle Shade by Laurie R. King but haven’t got beyond the first few chapters. But the beauty of books, of course, is that they don’t go anywhere and you will find them when you are meant to find them. So while my brain tries to reboot quietly in the background, I’m going to focus on rereads and light romances.

As it happens, not a lot of the authors I read publish books in the fall, so it will be a good time for me to get caught up. In that vein, I may undertake a reread of Sherry Thomas’ ‘Lady Sherlock’ series to get ready for book #6, Miss Moriarty, I Presume. It is the book I most look forward to every year, so the opportunity to read the first five before November will be a task I will look forward to undertaking.

Reading Notes by Wendy - The Missing Clue - August 2021

Breaking News

For the many fans of Dervla McTiernman's Cormac Reilly series we have good news. The third book in the series, The Good Turn, is finally available in North America. We are expecting it at the end of August. Please let us know if you would like a copy set aside for you.

Mo Hayder

The British mystery author died on July 27th, 2021 at the age of 59. She had been diagnosed with motor neurone disease in December 2020. I must admit I have never read any of her books as they are way too dark and violent for me. According to Mark Billingham's obituary in the Guardian these dark novels reflected events in her life. While working in Tokyo, in her twenties, she witnessed the sudden deaths of three strangers in quick succession, a heart attack in a coffee shop, a workman falling off scaffolding and a snake bite. These events followed on the heels of the murder of one friend and the rape of another. She published ten novels during her lifetime, beginning with Birdman in 2000 and there are two more to be published posthumously. The Book of Sand, will be published in January 2022 under the nom de plume Theo Clare.

While researching Mo Hayder's life I discovered that she played Miss Belfridge, who was Mr. Rumbold's secretary, in the last two seasons of the British sit-com Are You Being Served?

New Webstore Layout and Digital Updates - The Missing Clue - August 2021

In the coming weeks, our webstore will be getting an updated look!  For those of you who like the way it is presently (or simply fear change) fear not.  The current store will still be available for use for the foreseeable future, even after the new site launches.  The new version, however, should not only be much more user friendly for tablet and mobile users, but also provide us some great tools to help customers who use the online shop to find what the seek more easily.  We expect there to be no issues with the changeover, but we will certainly let you know if anything changes.

We should, at this point, both thank and acknowledge the lovely people at Bookmanager.  For those who are not aware, Bookmanager is the program that runs all our sales and inventory information.  Any time that you have visited us and wondered if we have a book only for us to type a few letters and make it appear, or been surprised minutes after an online order has been placed that we already have it ready to go, that’s Bookmanager.  It is also Bookmanager that allows you to easily buy audiobook versions by connecting us with Libro.fm , or shows us that the last independent bookshop available version of the book you seek is in British Columbia, or Kansas, or elsewhere. 

As well as being a Canadian company, they are, like us a multigenerational family business.  They do not get enough recognition outside of our industry, and they have really done more than just about any single entity to make Canadian bookselling work over the last 20 months. While also helping us manage our webstore, to which we were thrilled to be able to have available for your use they put in countless hours helping other shops get online (in some cases, by first getting their inventory into a computer at all) during lockdown, and have allowed so many of us to keep the lights on while the doors were closed. 

A huge thank you to Michael Neill, Trevor, the myriad support staff we speak to weekly who help us fix what we have broken, and all the others who make Bookmanager run.  We certainly could not run without them.

Recent Reads by Laura - The Missing Clue - June 2021

Two years ago, I started planning a trip to Europe for the spring of 2020 to visit friends and family. Obviously, that did not happen and I've been itching to visit those places ever since. Luckily, we have plenty of books that are set in those areas and allow for some escapism. Allons-y!

1) The first stop in the trip is the Netherlands. The Lotte Meerman series by Anja de Jager follows a female detective in the Amsterdam police cold case department - inspired by de Jager's father's cases. The most recent arrival in the store is A Death at the Hotel Mondrian (#5, TP, $19.99).

2) Over the border and back several decades, I am revisiting the Gereon Rath series by Volker Kutscher. I thoroughly enjoyed the first in the series, Babylon Berlin, for its immersive look at the political, social, and criminal spheres in Berlin during the Weimar Republic. Those more interested in a modern setting might enjoy Andreas Pfluger's Jenny Aaron series, centring on a female special operative who loses her vision in an accident.

3) To the Alps - Ruth Ware's One by One, (TP, $24.99) is a standalone, where a work retreat becomes trapped in a snowed-in ski chalet in the French Alps. Ruth Ware's writing is almost addictive, I've now read two of her books in one sitting. Also worth mentioning is the sequel to one of my previous Book of the Year selections (Flowers Over the Inferno). The Sleeping Nymph by Ilaria Tuti is due to be released in TP August 2021 ($20.95). We return to Superintendent Teresa Battaglia, a detective with early-onset dementia. Tuti's writing is comparable to the intensity and creepiness of my favourite Scandinavian authors, in the isolated setting of the Italian Alps. 

Summer Reads by Wendy - The Missing Clue - June 2021

This is the time of year when almost any newspaper or magazine that you pick up, or any website that you visit has a list of books to read this Summer. Personally, I think that there are two kinds of Summer reads. The first is the weightier tomes that require longer uninterrupted periods of time at the cottage or beach to get into the story so that you can follow all the twists and turns of the plot.  The other kind is the book that you can just pick up and put down as you need to, in the moments between innings, or while keeping half an eye on the barbecue.

Summer can also be the time when you delve into that pile of books that has been growing for a few months, the first title in a new series, which is actually not that new anymore as you have seen that the second title is about to be published and you need to know whether you want to continue the series; titles you do have meant to read that have somehow slipped down the pile or that you just found under the seat in the car or that have fallen down behind the couch or under the bed. Anyway, if none of the above apply to you, especially as many of us have read down those piles over the last year, I do have a few suggestions. In keeping with what I myself am going to be doing for much of my summer, I thought I would focus on books that are about books.

There are many mysteries set in bookstores. Bookstores are a popular setting in the cosy mystery genre, Carolyn Hart’s series set in a South Carolina mystery bookstore run by Annie Darling, is probably one of the longest, as well as one of the first. But there are many others including Lorna Barrett’s Booktown series, Paige Shelton’s Scottish Bookshop series, Lauren Elliott’s Beyond the Page series, and Vicki Delany’s Sherlock Holmes Bookstore series. This is by no means an exhaustive list and I’m sorry if I have not included one of your favourites.

The cosy genre is not the only one to have a bookstore setting. The first title in Mark Pryor’s Hugo Marston series is called The Bookseller. This series is set in Paris, and Marston is Head of Security at the U.S. Embassy when several booksellers are kidnapped and murdered. Among the many recent titles published with WWII as a background in the past year or so is The Last Bookstore in London, set in London during the Blitz.

If you are a fantasy fan, The Left-Handed Booksellers of London by Garth Nix might be just up your street. The book is classified as Young Adult but despite its designation, I must admit I am enjoying it. The left-handed booksellers are the fighting booksellers and the right-handed booksellers are the intellectual booksellers. Their task is to prevent Olde World England which lies just below the surface from intruding into the modern world. Still in hardcover now, the trade paper will be out in September, 2021.

I cannot leave bookshops without mentioning Gabrielle Zevin’s The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry. The book was originally published at the end of 2014 but has only just appeared in mass market. It is not precisely a mystery but it is a lovely book. I read it originally in the summer of 2015 when our daughter Hannah brought back a copy from New England, where the owner of a small bookshop, who knew we owned a shop ourselves, had pressed it on her saying ”Give this to your parents. They will love it”. And I did.

You cannot have bookstores without publishers, but there are fewer books set in publishing houses. One of my favourites is Judith Flanders’ Sam Clair series. Sam is an editor in a London publishing house. I have enjoyed the series since the publication of the first title A Murder of Magpies in 2014. This book fits exactly into my second category of summer read, one that you can pick up and put down and continue to enjoy. An excellent summer read choice. As this is a book that has been mentioned in these pages several times, it is likely that many of you probably have copies on your shelves. If you do it is worth taking it down and giving it and the other books in the series another read.

Judith Flanders was a book editor as was Zakiya Dalila Harris author of the new book The Other Black Girl, who was herself an editor at Knopf Doubleday. The prologue is a little unsettling, and the tone does not really fit with the opening pages but as the book proceeds all is explained. It is both social commentary and an enthralling thriller. I had not intended to read it in one go but I did as I became engrossed in the story and wanted to know where this very twisty plot would end up. While on one level the novel deals with the recognisable frictions and annoyances of any large office complex, this is overlaid with the issue of race and racial disparity. The questions and issues it raises stayed with me and I kept testing and rethinking my own positions. However, you should not be put off by this, as it is a really good read.

Introducing...Avi - The Missing Clue - June 2021

You don’t know me yet, but you will. And I hope, in turn, I get to know you too. I’ve been at Whodunit? for just over a month, and in that short time I’ve had the great privilege of seeing what’s so special about this place. It feels too simple to call it a store, I think “community” is more apt. It’s a place of familiarity, through and through. I’m still amazed at how Michael and Wendy seem to just know what each person who walks through the door is looking for -- sometimes before they even know themselves. I have to imagine that comes from years of experience, and most importantly, years of paying close attention to what each person likes to read. As the new addition to this community I hope you all forgive me for not yet knowing how to predict your reading habits and desires. I promise one day I’ll be ready and waiting for you to walk through that door; armed with new recommendations and reviews to share. For now, I’ll spare you a poor first attempt at those recommendations, and instead share just a bit about myself in the hopes that you all feel you know me a little better.

I’m originally from Kingston, Ontario. I moved to Winnipeg just over three years ago, after attending university in Halifax. I came here for work and for family (believe me when I say I have deep roots in this city, even though I wasn’t born here). I am, by training, a journalist and a writer. I still occasionally freelance and try to spend most of my free time working on personal writing projects.

Working at a place like Whodunit? is truly a dream come true. I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that I adore books! It’s hard to zero in on one specific reason or writer that drives my infatuation with the written word, but as of today some of my favourites are: Karl Ove Knausgård, Elena Ferrante, Ottessa Moshfegh, Raymond Carver, Heather O’Neill, Sally Rooney, Carl Hiaasen and Zadie Smith (to name just a few). Oh, and I’m always up for a good Jodi Picoult!

I know times are strange, and it may be a while still before we can get to know each other face to face. But in the meantime I have just one request for those of you who frequent this wonderful place: next time you stop by or call, say hi, tell me your name, and let me know who some of your favourite writers are. There are a lot of people that make this community so special, and I’m sure each of you have your own unique taste in books, but I’m up for the challenge. Thank you all for being so welcoming so far. Stay safe!

On Reading and Parenting in a Pandemic by Sian - The Missing Clue - April 2021

It is hard to imagine that more than 12 months into this pandemic, things are in many ways worse than they were this time last year. I am sitting in my basement office in Toronto, waiting on tenterhooks to hear if the province will decide to close daycares too. I haven’t seen my family, or the bookstore, or any of you since my last visit in February of 2020. And worst of all, I don’t know when I will.

Needless to say, reading for me has been impossible. I have read 7 books this year and I can’t honestly remember any of them. I keep a document of all the upcoming books I want and dutifully order them once a month from our online bookstore. Michael calls me to ask for my credit card number (for security reasons he won’t write mine down either, it’s not just you). Mum and Michael send me a big box with books for me and Penny and treats and surprises.

But at the end of the day, the books stack up because I am exhausted from working 12-hour days in my basement, parenting a curious and spirted almost 4 year old (what?), and the constant barrage of scary news. I don’t have any recommendations this month, I just want to tell you all how much I miss seeing your faces and hearing about your lives and what you’re reading. And for anyone who’s feeling weary even of reading, a reminder that although we are all in the same storm, we all have different boats (some more seaworthy than others). I believe lighthouses are ahead. And with any luck, sometime this summer, you can all tell me what to read to get out of this reading slump in person.

Recent Reads by Laura - The Missing Clue - April 2021

I've been able to dig into my reading list, including finally getting to read the first in several series that have caught my eye in the past.

After the Armistice Ball by Catriona McPherson (Dandy Gilver #1, many in the series in USED) This title takes place in Interwar Scotland and features a lovely character in Dandy Gilver, who plays up an image of a clueless upper-class woman to interrogate witnesses and suspects. McPherson creates a really twisty but fun plot, which begins with Dandy investigating possible insurance fraud and devolving into a murder investigation. For fans of the series, we do have #13 in the series, A Step So Grave (TP, 20.49).

I've hopped on the bandwagon with Riviera Express by T.P. Fielden. I'm only halfway through, but it's been a really nice, fun read.

Midwinter Sacrifice by Mons Kallentoft (Malin Fors #1, many in the series in USED) This series takes place in Sweden, specifically set in the author's hometown which provides a strong sense of place. As it centres around a presumed ritualistic murder (if you couldn't tell from the title), there are some pretty grotesque descriptions. One aspect I appreciated was the narration from the victim while the investigation was taking place. A pretty fast-paced read.

Night Boat to Tangier by Kevin Barry (standalone, TP, 19.95) The plot revolves around two aging mobsters, waiting for a missing daughter in a port in Spain. There are many tangents in the narration about their shared past, flowing in a sort of stream of consciousness. While I was reading it, I kept imagining it as if James Joyce had written ‘In Bruges’.

Started Early, Took My Dog by Kate Atkinson (Jackson Brodie #4, TP, 21). This was actually loaned to me by a friend, though Kate Atkinson has been on my to-read list based on good reviews I heard for Transcription. I'm under the impression you do not need to read this series in order, as I got enough exposition throughout, and a wide cast of characters/narrators made this book really, really interesting. Jackson Brodie is a PI, investigating an adopted woman's origins. There's a lot going on - a decades-old cold case, an abducted child, a rescued dog, a faltering actress, and some other shady characters. I sometimes dislike books with too much going on, but this one was fantastic, and I loved the conclusion when all the loose strings were tied up.

New Reading by Wendy - The Missing Clue - April 2021

Sometimes, you just need a new series, this month and for the next little while it might be a good time to try to find one. There have been a number of new authors whose books have just been released or re-released in Canada.

A.J. Cross’ new title is Dark Truths (in stock, TP, $18.50). The novel is set in Birmingham, England and the plot revolves around the murder of a female jogger. It is a police procedural with the addition of criminologist Will Traynor. Detective Inspector Bernard Watts and his team are not very happy when the well-known and high profile, Traynor is brought in to help them. I enjoyed it and am looking forward to the second title in the series, Devil in the Detail (HC, $38) in May.

Alison Bruce started her Detective Gary Goodhew series in 2008, but it has only been intermittently available in North America. At the moment, it is in the process of being re-issued. The series is set in Cambridge, and the first title is Cambridge Blue (in stock, TP, $17.99). The later titles will be reissued in the next couple of months. Goodhew is the youngest detective in the Cambridge police force. So many mystery series are set in Oxford so it's nice to have another university town as the background.

Colin Falconer’s latest series featuring DI Charlie George is new to Whodunit? and North America. Another police procedural, this series is set in North London. The first title in the series is Lucifer Falls and starts with the murder of a Catholic priest (in stock, TP, $18.99). The second title Innocence Dies is due to be released on May 18th. Falconer has written several other series.

Angela Marsons’ has a long, very popular series featuring Detective Kim Stone which again has only just become available in North America. We have just received Evil Games (TP, $16.95). I must admit that I did not get very far into the book as it was too graphic for me.

To get away from England, Max Seeck has a second title in his Detective Jessica Niemi series, which is set in Finland, coming in September. Like the first book in the series, The Witch Hunter (in stock, TP, $23), The Ice Coven is a police procedural with supernatural overtones.

Getting away from the police but staying within the legal system Jane Casey has a new book, The Killing Kind, set in London with a new main character barrister Ingrid Lewis. Starting with the seeming accidental death of another female barrister, Ingrid becomes convinced that the death was neither accidental nor that the right person died. She believes that it was a case of mistaken identity and that she herself was the intended victim. A plot with many twists and turns it is hard to know at times who is the hunter and who is the hunted.

Another legal series set in London is Abi Silver’s Burton and Lamb series. Judith Burton and Constance Lamb are solicitors and each of the books has a different theme which is reflected in the titles. The first book, The Pinnochio Brief (TP, $18.95) deals with assumptions about truth as well as issues around Artificial Intelligence. We also have The Aladdin Trial (TP, $18.95) and The Cinderella Plan (TP, $20.95) in stock. I am not a huge fan of books with multiple voices and short chapters but wanting to know the truth of the case kept me going until the end.

Housekeeping and Admin - The Missing Clue - April 2021

April 24th - Canadian Independent Bookstore Day!

Although it will not look like it has in the past, we are pleased to at least be able to be open to celebrate this annual event! Watch out for some updates on our social media in the week leading up to get some previews of what we will be doing to safely celebrate!

We can share that each book purchased (in-store and online) will be eligible as an entry in a national contest administered by the Canadian Independent Booksellers Association! You can find out more at their website, cibabooks.ca.


“So Many Windings” Virtual Launch & Signing
We are thrilled to be launching the new book by Catherine MacDonald "So Many Windings".  The virtual event will take place on Thursday May 27th, with a weather and COVID permitting signing taking place outside on the afternoon of Sunday May 30th.  The sign up link is on the store’s webpage.  Also, thanks to the generosity of the publisher At Bay Press, we have early copies! That means you can get them (unsigned), now before the actual launch!

Welcome, Avi!

As you already have probably noticed (and the lateness of this newsletter reflects), April has been a little hectic around Whodunit?. One of the reasons why has been our quest to add another person to our staff. After many great candidates, and a rigorous multi-stage process, we are pleased to be welcoming Aviva (Avi) Jacob to the bookshop. As always, we hope that you will be patient with her as she gets settled in. We are excited to see some of the new kinds of services and opportunities that Avi's presence will allow!

Eco-Thrillers by Wendy - The Missing Clue February 2021

The term eco-thriller or eco-mystery seems to be very much in vogue at the moment. This has partly been driven by the recent publication of two titles; Olga Tokarczuk’s, Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead (tp$23) and Shaena Lambert’s Petra (tp$22.95 ).

Olga Tokarczuk won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2018. This novel was published in Poland in 2009 but not translated into English until 2018 and not available in Canada until 2019. Set in Poland, the female narrator, Janina Duszejko, lives in a remote forest near the Czech border. The area is sparsely populated in winter because most of the houses are second homes used only in the summer. The narrator makes enough money to support herself and her two dogs by caretaking these houses in the winter months. Although there are deaths, of members of a local hunting club, this book is in the words of one reviewer “not your classic murder mystery”. It is not clear whether Janina is more concerned about the human murder or the shooting of a stag.

Canadian Sheana Lambert’s novel, Petra, is based on the life of Petra Kelly, who was one of the founders of Die Grunen (the German Green Party) in 1979 and served a number of terms in the West German Bundestag between 1983 and 1990. She had been a prime mover in the 1980 campaign to ban nuclear weapons and to stop NATO from stationing nuclear weapons in West Germany. It was during this campaign that Petra came into contact with a NATO general, who was converted to her cause and eventually the ‘General and the Peace Maiden’ became a major force in the campaign to ban nuclear weapons and save the planet.

However, mysteries with environmental themes are not really a new phenomenon. A quick survey of some of the most popular mystery writers shows that many of them have novels where environmental issues play a part. It is the solving of the murders of two Supreme Court Justices in Washington D.C that is the premise for John Grishams’s second novel, The Pelican Brief, (mm used $5) although much of the action in this book takes place in New Orleans. It is in Louisiana, that the motive for the deaths, a cover up of an environmental disaster, occurs. Grisham has other titles which could fall into the eco-thriller category, including The Appeal, (mm$12.99), published in 2007, which deals with the dumping of toxic waste. A toxic waste cover up is also at the heart of Donna Leon’s Death in a Strange Country, (tp $23) published in 1993. The second book in Leon’s series set in Venice has Commissario Guido Brunetti called to the discovery of a body floating in the canal outside the hospital on Santi Giovanni e Paolo. A parallel theme that runs through many of the eco-thrillers is government corruption. While David R. Boyd’s Thirst For Justice (tp$22.95) deals more with the humanitarian issues faced by his protagonist Dr. Michael MacDougall, while serving with MSF in the Congo. It is hard to avoid the impact of the degradation of the environment on his characters. David R. Boyd is a Canadian lawyer who is the U.N.’s Special Rapporteur on human rights and the environment.

Anna Pigeon, the main character in Nevada Barr’s mystery series, is a park ranger. Obviously, an occupation that is going to provide more opportunity for running into environmental issues. Two of the novels in particular deal with these issues; Superior Death, (used $5) published in 1994 and set in the Isle Royale National Park which deals with eco-justice and Ill Wind (mm $11.99), published in 1995 and set in the Mesa Verde National Park. Barr herself worked for a time as a seasonal park ranger after her husband gave up his career as a theatre director in New York, when he became interested in environmental issues. Another author who knows a lot about wildlife issues is Keith McCafferty, who is the Survival and Outdoor Skills editor of Field & Stream magazine. In Buffalo Jump Blues (tp$22) the fifth title in his Sean Stranahan series, a herd of bison is found dying at the bottom of the cliffs facing the Madison River. Stampeding animals over the cliffs had been a way the indigenous peoples were able to catch the animals on whom they depended for both food and clothing, before guns had come into the American West. In searching for an answer to this modern stampeding Sean comes face to face with adversaries who neither respect the land nor the animals who inhabit it. It also raises questions about the U.S. wildlife management policy.

Global warming and rising sea levels are other environmental issues that recur. Michael Crichton’s, State of Fear, (used $5) published in 2004 is one and Matthew Glass’ Ultimatum, (mm $13.99) published in 2009, is another. Ultimatum set in 2032 charts the political battles and secret negotiations, between the United States and China to deal with the issue that is threatening the existence of Miami and other coastal cities around the world. Water, although this time fresh water, is also at the heart of Marcia Muller’s Cape Perdido. This title is not part of her long running Sharon McCone series. The issue in this novel is water harvesting and its impact on local communities. An issue not unknown in present day Canada.

I am ending this survey of eco/enviro mysteries back in New Orleans with James Lee Burke’s Creole Belle, (tp $23) published in 2012. An oil well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico is threatening both the bayous and the population both human and animal. Detective Dave Robicheaux is no stranger to environmental disasters as in a previous novel, Tin Roof Blow Down, (used mm$5) published in 2007 he was in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. Many who were actually in New Orleans during the immediate aftermath of Katrina in 2005 believe that this novel gives the most complete and honest account of the event.

I suspect that there are many authors and titles that I may have overlooked in this piece. If there is an omission that you feel strongly about, please let me know.

Remembering Jack Through Books by Sian - The Missing Clue - February 2021

As our long-time customers will remember, my dad always used to write the anchor essay for this newsletter. It’s been a few of years since he was able to do that with any regularity and it makes me sad that our new customers won’t have had the benefit of the breadth of his opinion and analysis. He had strong opinions, occasionally that strong opinion was to have no opinion, but love him or leave him, he could always find you a book you would love. I really felt like a grown-up for the first time when I came home from university at Thanksgiving of my first year and he produced a book within minutes of my arrival, something he had done with my siblings for years.

We just passed the first anniversary of his death and I wanted to try to find a way to memorialize him to all of you without getting maudlin or just listing his amazing achievements. He was of course a brilliant academic, an upstanding member of the communities he chose to participate in, and a generous friend and neighbour. He was also an amazing dad who alongside my Mom promoted a love of reading my whole life.

(To be clear, I have many special memories of books shared with my Mom too, but fortunately we continue to be able to build those memories. She’ll forgive me for not writing about them here.)

My first memory with regards to books was when I was in Kindergarten and we had a year long project to track the books we read with comments. As a parent, I now recognize this is more homework for the parent than the child, and the effort Mum and Dad put in is apparent. I still have the log. But the first book I actually remember sharing with him is The Saturdays by Elizbeth Enright, the first in her ‘Melendy’ series. It’s about a family of four kids with a single Dad, housekeeper, and a sprawling brownstone in New York City. I remember Dad reading it to me. I don’t remember if we read all four books.  But I remember loving it, not least because he read it to me. In order to relive not just the book but sort of the experience, I downloaded the audiobook from Libro.fm. And it was charming. I don’t want to suggest that 21st century kids would find it slow, but maybe they would? But absolutely recommended as a re-read for anyone who remembers it from their childhood, and given it was published in 1941, that will erect a big tent of possible readers.

Dad, as you know, liked all kinds of books. He obviously loved mysteries and thrillers and was an early booster of the dark Scandinavian authors, particularly Stieg Larsson. He liked complicated literary stories as much as he liked Michael Connelly. He liked historical thrillers like those by Philip Kerr and never wanted to know he was reading an author’s last book. He also loved Science Fiction and Fantasy. The eclectic nature of what you find in the store, particularly on the used shelves, is a representation of his reading tastes that he shared with all of us. If you made a Venn diagram of Bumsted reading tastes, there would be lots of overlap, but in the centre would sit Terry Pratchett.

Truckers was Terry Pratchett’s first children’s book, the first in his Bromeliad series. I’ll be honest, I don’t recall liking it that much and I don’t know that we finished it. Terry Pratchett finally clicked for me in the summer of 1995, just before I turned 13, when we spent the summer in Berlin. Michael had spent the spring there with Dad and had gone properly down the Pratchett rabbit hole and I joined in when we arrived in late June. I’m not sure if I started with The Colour of Magic. Certainly my most vivid memory involves reading Wyrd Sisters in an opera house. The stories with the Witches were always my favorite. If I had to pick a favorite Pratchett though, it is hands down Monstrous Regiment. I can’t tell you much about it without giving it away, but I will say that every time I reread it, it surprises and delights me. It is set in the Discworld but requires no previous Discworld knowledge, bar the acceptance that the Discworld is a weird place. An excellent way in for a teenage girl.

One of my unpopular opinions is that I don’t much care for traditional Can Lit. So serious. So tedious. But the advantage of being the child of a Canadian Studies scholar is that your basement is filled with it and you can keep trying until you find something you like. And so, I always loved Timothy Findley. Famous Last Words is a masterpiece and if you have any interest in WWII, you should read it.

I think that The Doomsday Book and To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis were the first books pressed upon me when I arrived home from university. I say this because although they were published in the 90s, I recall reading them on a plane. I recall them being around the house and not being interested until Dad insisted I read them. It is hard to think of a more prescient title for these pandemic times that The Doomsday Book and To Say Nothing of the Dog, that followed. Willis is one of those enraging writers that publishes sporadically and then never quite what you expect. Dad loved Science Fiction in a way I never could, but her Bellwether was a good crossover moment.

I feel like I’ve barely scratched the surface here, but if I talk about every book we both loved this newsletter would be only this essay. What I would love is if you would reach out and tell us what books he brought into your life, especially if it was something you didn’t think you would like and just had to trust him. Find me at mysterysian@gmail.com or email the store at mystery@whodunitbooks.ca.

Curious Beginning to open up in 2021 - The Missing Clue - February 2021

2021 began the way that 2020 ended, with customers unable to  come inside the shop, and our province unable to battle off its worse angels as we continued to pass the novel coronavirus amongst ourselves.  As infection rates have finally begun to fall to in Winnipeg to manageable, if still unideal numbers, we have, as of the 23rd of January, been able to welcome some of you back into the shop.
 

We ended 2020 overwhelmed by the support that we were privileged to receive from this community and the city of Winnipeg at large.  We were especially thankful for those of you who had never even been able to be in our shop and have chosen to use us to get you the books that you desired, especially those that would be considered lesser known.  We hope that you will be able to come inside in the present (or the future), as we reset and we can continue to help you get the books you need.  For those who are not ready, or able to visit until we are post-corona, please remember that pickup and delivery are services that we have always offered, and remain available, as is shopping online at whodunitbooks.ca.

While in person events are also still verboten, we did begin 2021 able to share with many of you another great Canadian author.  Ian Hamilton brought us great fortune by launching the new Uncle Chow book with us, and we are thrilled to hear about further titles to come, including his first stand alone novel Bonnie Jack.  We are in the midst of figuring out how to share both this event, and some of our earlier events with folk after the fact, and we will certainly let you know when such recordings are made available.  There will be more digital events made available to those who follow us on social media.

February will bring us through winter's heart.  Between now and the next newsletter, we will have more snow, and despite how much we all might try, more struggle.  Please remember that we all have agency in our day to day lives.  We are capable of enacting small changes in our own lives that can create positive impacts, both against the pandemic and the other perils we face.  We all have a critical role in creating positive change, but that it is also alright to give yourself a break.  We hope that we will be able to alleviate that, at least in part, by continuing to share books with you that illuminate, that educate, or entertain.

Deanna Raybourn - Curious Beginning

Laird Barron - Worse Angels

Darren Bernhardt - Lesser Known

Ronald Deibert - Reset

Ian Hamilton - Fortune, Bonnie Jack

Robert Jordan - Winter's Heart

Jon Banville - Snow

William Gibson - Agency

Matt Mercer – Critical Role

Katerina Vermette - The Break

Educated - Tara Westover

MCB, February 2021

2020 Bestsellers - The Missing Clue - December 2020

2020 Bestsellers

Although 2020 is not technically over yet and we could certainly have a runaway December bestseller, here are the bestselling books sold at Whodunit from January to November 2020.

1.      The Boy, The Mole, The Fox and the Horse, Charlie Mackesy        

2.      All the Devils Are Here, Louise Penny           

3.      Unpleasantness at the Battle of Thornford, C.C. Benison   

4.      The Mirror & the Light, Hilary Mantel

5.      The Darkest Evening, Ann Cleeves

6.      Masters and Servants, Scott Stephens

7.      Riviera Express, T.P. Fielden

8.      The German Heiress, Anika Scott

9.      Troubled Blood, Robert Galbraith

10.  Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer 

If you’re looking for a new author to dip your toe into this holiday season, consider the following top ten bestselling authors, based on new and used sales.

1. Agatha Christie                                                                         

2. Louise Penny                                                 

3. Ann Cleeves

4. Anne Perry

5. Ian Rankin                                         

6. Donna Leon                                               

7. Michael Connelly                                                

8. John Sandford

9. Lee Child                                              

10.       David Baldacci

Bram's Pick - Bumsted Picks of 2020 - The Missing Clue - December 2020

Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Deep End by Jeff Kinney, HC $17.99

I always look forward to a new book in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series. The books are so funny, sometimes I laugh out loud while I’m reading them. But some of them I read over and over again and some of them I only read once. The Deep End is one of the best Wimpy Kid books I’ve ever read and I will definitely read it over and over again. The story was so good and so funny.

(Bram is 9 years old.)