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Sam Smith Mystery Series

Sam Smith Mystery Series Characters #5

Sam Smith Mystery Series Characters #5 

Marlowe

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One day, Sam walked into her office to find a cat sitting on her desk. He had jumped in through a partially open side window and made himself at home. Feeling sorry for the cat, a battered and ear-torn feline from the alley, she gave him a saucer of milk. The following day the cat returned and Sam fed him. And from there a friendship developed. Sam named the cat Marlowe and he has become a firm favourite in the Sam Smith mystery books.

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Sam Smith Mystery Series

The Hermit of Hisarya Pre-order

The eBook version of The Hermit of Hisarya is now available for pre-order from Amazon at the special price of $0.99/£0.99. The eBook will be published in December with print and audio book versions to follow in the New Year. Please follow this link for details.

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Some people will stop at nothing in their pursuit of wealth and power. Indeed, the greedy will often resort to murder.

“You’ve been through a stressful time recently,” my fiance, Dr Alan Storey said. “I’m off to Bulgaria to attend a psychology conference so why don’t you accompany me and we’ll throw in a holiday as well.”

Great idea, I thought. However, when I arrived in Bulgaria my inquisitive nature compelled me towards a mystery dating back to the Second World War. That mystery involved Emil Angelov, the Hermit of Hisarya. As I delved into the past I stirred up some ghosts, which led to murder and the prospect of spending the rest of my days in a Bulgarian gaol.

The Hermit of Hisarya – a story of corruption, of murder, of a woman and her seventy-year-old dream, offering proof that the past, the present and the future are all intrinsically entwined.

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Sam Smith Mystery Series

Another Five Star Review for Ripper

Another five star review for Ripper!


Sam Smith sets out to find a modern-day Jack the Ripper, who’s murdering prostitutes, then leaving them floating in a river with rose petals strewn around. When a murder victim is a friend, she digs deeper, uncovering truths about herself and the murderer that she might have preferred to never know.

This story is written in first person, which makes you feel as if you are investigating the murders right along with Sam. It’s well written, thought-provoking with its psychological insights, and keeps you wanting to read through the night.

The story includes tidbits from previous books, but it’s a stand-alone novel. You’ll want to curl up in a comfy chair and read cover to cover, then go back and read the earlier books if you haven’t already done so.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Hannah-Howe/e/B00OK7E24E/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1

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Sam Smith Mystery Series

Five Star Review

A Five Star Review for Ripper on Amazon

Ripper: A Sam Smith Mystery (The Sam Smith Mystery Series Book 4) by Hannah Howe is a well-paced engrossing, smartly-written read that is set in Wales with 33-year-old protagonist Sam Smith operating an inquiry agency. The story opens with a friend/client of Sam’s Julie, who works the streets, asking for her help in locating another call girl, Faye, who’s gone missing. Faye’s mother is rich which immediately introduces the question of why would the daughter of a wealthy woman who lives in a millionaire mansion be working the streets. Sam sets out to find Faye and the answer to that question. After visiting with Faye’s mother she obtains an address for Faye and the search begins. Referenced in the beginning pages is a murderer Cardiff Jack who is making it unsafe on the street. The intrigue is there, the plot is set, and the story is off to a great start. I particularly liked how we learned that Sam was a woman with a comment about a skirt she was wearing. We know for sure when we get to the chapter where she’s having a birthday dinner with her finance Dr. Alan Storey. Clever writing. And I love her cat, Marlowe who lives in her office.

RIPPER PRINT COVER

Sam follows the clues, which take her to Faye’s apartment in a ghetto neighborhood. There she runs into Faye’s pimp Blade, a threatening obnoxious man. While there she notices a name & address written on a pad of paper. It takes her to Mark Richmonds, a successful businessman and client of Faye’s. No leads have turned up anything of value as to Faye’s whereabouts and the plot thickens with the tension of a missing woman.

The story moves into a dinner scene with Alan, Sam’s fiancé (a psychologist) and the dialogue deepens with talk of psychological reasoning for why a women, especially from wealthy means, would become a call girl. Alan’s profession adds to the storyline later when Sam asks him to profile a serial killer. I particularly liked the dialogue about the difference between a psycho and sociopath, which served to deepen the characterization of the plot’s villain.

The story moves on and Sam goes out in the night looking for Faye. She senses she is being followed and there’s a creepy air flying off the page, wondering if it could be Cardiff Jack. It turns out to be a man named Mac, hired by Alan to protect her. She had been involved in a shooting altercation in her office at an earlier time and Alan wanted her protected. Mac’s character is well written and brings balance to the fear factor in the story, at times adding humor with how he tries to “reason” with Blade to get lost. He effectively makes his point.

As the tension is building Sam finds Faye and they go out in the night to look for Julie. It is here when a horrible traumatic shocking event occurs (no spoilers here) and the tone of the story, the intensity picks up to a pressure cooker tension. New clues and characters are cleverly introduced keeping the reader guessing as to who is Cardiff Jack and how does this all end.

Without retelling the rest of the story suffice it to say it continued to be mysterious, tense, riveting, and well written with unexpected turns right up to the end. I’m glad I happened upon this book. It did not disappoint.

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Sam Smith Mystery Series

Sam Smith Mystery Series Characters #3

Detective Inspector ‘Sweets’ MacArthur

When the Sam Smith Mystery Series opens with Sam’s Song, Sam has no idea who her father might be because he walked out on her when she was a baby. Understandably, his absence and neglect left a big hole in her life. That hole was partially filled when, in her late twenties, she founded her enquiry agency and met Detective Inspector ‘Sweets’ MacArthur. Sweets and Sam struck up an immediate friendship and from that point on he kept a parental eye on her.

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Sweets assists Sam with the mystery strand of the stories and, occasionally, clashes with her as well. They have a prickly friendship at times, though it is a friendship founded on mutual respect.

Sweets’ nickname is explained in Sam’s Song along with his habit of constantly wearing a trilby. One of Sweets’ main characteristics is his penchant for jokes, and here is an example of his humour, from Sam’s Song…

A burglar is burgling a house when he hears someone say, ‘Jesus is watching you.’ To his relief, he discovers that it’s just a parrot. The burglar says to the parrot, ‘What’s your name?’ The parrot says, ‘Moses.’ The burglar says, ‘What sort of person calls their parrot Moses?’ The parrot replies, ‘The sort of person who calls his Rottweiler ‘Jesus’…