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Saturday, 21 February 2026

‘Directions for Murder’ by Nikki Copleston

Published by Coppersmith Press,
11 December 2025.
ISBN:‎ 978-095695941-6 (PB)

The body of Christian Darbyshire is found brutally stabbed in Coronation Gardens. The case is far from clear cut and raise a great many questions for DI Jeff Lincon and his team. What was the man doing in a park notorious for gay encounters, why when it was raining heavily was he not wearing a coat and how did he get to this remote spot without transport? 

The same night a young man goes missing in similar circumstances to those of the disappearance of a teenage boy six years earlier. 

Derbyshire was investigating the death of a well-known pantomime dame, Hamilton Vaughn, who supposedly committed suicide thirty years ago. Rumours suggested that Vaughn sexually abused several of the young boys in the cast. 

Are all these events connected? DI Jeff Lincon and his team have their work cut out to uncover the truth. Every avenue Lincoln pursues turns up more questions than answers. Every suspect appears to have things they want to hide. Finding out the truth about Hamilton Vaughn and his supposed suicide thirty years previously becomes as important as that of the recent murder. Only by solving what happened in the past can the motive and thus the identity of Christian Derbyshire’s murderer be identified. 

This is the sixth in Nikki Copleston’s novels featuring Jeff Lincon series, but like all well-written series books, it can be read as a standalone. A great deal happens in the fast-paced story that will keep the reader on their toes wanting to turn the page. Although there are a great many characters, including the half dozen members of DI Jeff Lincon’s team to get to grips with, each is well-drawn in the opening chapters and even new readers will soon have no difficulty identifying who’s who.     

Nikki Copleston deserves to be much more widely read. Directions for Murder has all the ingredients of a truly enjoyable police procedural – thoroughly engaging plot, credible fully rounded characters, atmospheric locations all written in a straightforward style. What’s not to like?
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Reviewer: Judith Cranswick 

Nikki Copleston was born in Somerset and raised in the West Midlands and Wiltshire. Nikki Copleston worked in local government in London for many years. Her grandfather and great-grandfather were policemen, which may explain why she's always enjoyed watching detective series on television and reading crime novels. She is an active member of Frome Writers' Collective, which supports and promotes writers in the Frome area. When she isn't writing, she enjoys exploring the West Country with her camera. She is already working on the next DI Jeff Lincoln novel. She and her husband now live in Wells, Somerset. 

Judith Cranswick was born and brought up in Norwich. Apart from writing, Judith’s great passions are travel and history. Both have influenced her two series of mystery novels. Tour Manager, Fiona Mason takes coach parties throughout Europe, and historian Aunt Jessica is the guest lecturer accompanying tour groups visiting more exotic destinations aided by her nephew Harry. Her published novels also include several award-winning standalone psychological thrillers. She wrote her first novel (now languishing in the back of a drawer somewhere) when her two children were toddlers, but there was little time for writing when she returned to her teaching career. Now retired, she is able to indulge her love of writing and has begun a life of crime! ‘Writers are told to write what they know about, but I can assure you, I've never committed a murder. I'm an ex-convent school headmistress for goodness sake!’

Her most recent book is Journey to Casablanca  

http://judithcranswick.co.uk/ 

Wednesday, 18 February 2026

‘Never Say a Word’ by C J Carver

Published by Bloodhound Books, 
5 February 2026.
ISBN: 978-1-91770564-6

There's a theory that it takes three elements to make a good story. How about these three? A former paramedic suffering from flashbacks and hallucinations after a deeply traumatic experience in a war zone. A small boy, apparently mute and terrified, who appears naked out of nowhere in the middle of a stormy night on a remote Welsh hilltop. And hundreds of miles away, a teenage girl who went missing several years ago. 

The other thing a good story needs, of course, is someone to write it. C J Carver has picked up these three elements and run with them, all the way from the twisty lanes of rural mid-Wales to the litter-strewn seedy side of England's second city. 

Tom, the paramedic, lives in a camper van which he parks close to a place where he enjoyed family holidays as a boy. He encounters the boy he names Wren, who is clearly running away from something; they form an unlikely bond, and Tom makes it his mission to find out where the boy came from.     

It's as much a journey of self-discovery as a hunt for Wren's origins. Tom has suffered from crippling PTSD ever since he returned home; he has rejected therapy, which made things worse, in favour of self-medication with alcohol and solitude. Caring for Wren and looking for the child's family gives him a sense of purpose – and also puts him in the worst danger he has ever faced and forces him to connect with people and the real world again. 

The result is a tense rollercoaster of a psychological thriller, with a cast of bad and good guys so well realized that they jump off the page. There's Vanessa the trainee psychologist, who makes Tom face up to the deep-seated causes of his PTSD; Xantha the investigative journalist, a thorn in Tom's side at first, but later an unexpected ally; Lana the self-styled anti-ageing therapist, and Trevor her ingenuous husband; and a wide   assortment of villainous types of both genders. Forming a richly detailed background to Tom's quest are Felicity, the best kind of social worker; a Indian couple still mourning the loss of their daughter; a host of immigrant workers, some legal, others more dubious; and a policeman doing his best against the odds. 

Remote Welsh hillside villages contrast with run-down city back streets, as do a factory owner's mansion with cosy cottages and Tom's compact camper van. All have a part to play as the gripping story is played out, Wren's origins are revealed and Tom's personal journey reaches a conclusion. It kept me on the edge of my seat and could do the same to you.   
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick

Caroline Carver was brought up on a dairy farm. At 18 she headed for the bright lights of London and four years later took a holiday in Australia which turned into a ten-year stay, working for the Sydney arm of several major international publishers. Between jobs, she travelled widely and adventurously: back-packing in South-East Asia on $10 a day for nine months, walking in New Zealand, trekking in Nepal and riding a camel through the Thar Desert are just a few of her travel experiences. Her first novel Blood Junction won the CWA Debut Dagger and was selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the best mystery books of the year.

http://www.cjcarver.com

Lynne
Patrick
has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.

‘Deeds of Darkness’ by William Burton McCormick

Published by Level Short,
5 November 2024.
ISBN: 978-1-68512790-9.
 

Deed of Darkness is a superb collection of 24 short stories and novellas that will appeal to lovers of mystery, espionage, and historical fiction. William Burton McCormick’s versatility as a short story writer is unsurpassed. He has an innate ability for getting to the heart of a story through the force of his characters’ interactions with one another. The political impact of the times in which his characters live, along with the settings, are invariably exploited to full dramatic effect.    

Reading the collection is like biting into a rich fruit cake: the result is addictive and full of hidden surprises and delights. Blue Amber involves a man with a ball and chain manacled to his leg desperately trying to save himself from drowning at sea.

In Locked-In, a man unwittingly becomes trapped in his own cellar. The discovery there is an intruder in his house adds further layers of tension owing to the bizarre twists that follow. On Record is set in a claustrophobic Chicago tenement and proves a story doesn’t have to be long at less than 1,000 words to pack a first-rate wallop. The narrative hits the ground running, and the suspense doesn’t give up until the last nail-biting moments.            

Other prize specimens include Voices in the Cistern. Set in the ancient Greek city of Chersonesus in AD 50, a thief must fight off other looters to retrieve a priceless amulet at the bottom of an underground lake and survive his greedy employer’s deadly designs. The author’s flair for historical fiction makes me wish he would write a full-length novel set in the same period. Fast Forward is about a man’s whose alter ego takes over in times of boredom or stress; it has a distinct science fiction feel to it while the concept has strong potential to be developed into longer form. 

My favourite novella is Demon in the Depths. A Latvian journalist travels to a remote archipelago off the coast of Norway to search for an aircraft that crashed into the sea. She and her team of divers are forced to navigate the dangerous freezing cold waters in order to find out what really happened to the aircraft. The underwater action scenes are reminiscent of Alistair MacLean writing at his very best. 

Suffice to say, the collection is full of gems. McCormick is a writer with a social conscience who is not afraid to delve into the devastating challenges confronting his protagonists’ lives. He is a writer with a heart of gold and clearly on the side of the angels which makes reading him such a compelling and rewarding experience. Deeds of Darkness is highly recommended.
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Reviewer: Jared Cade 


William Burton McCormick
is an American novelist and short story writer specializing in historical and modern thrillers set in Eastern Europe. He is highly regarded in the crime fiction community, frequently nominated for major genre awards like the Edgar, Dagger, Thriller, and Shamus. His short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, The Saturday Evening Post, Mystery Magazine, and Black Mask. He is the author of the award-winning thriller novel A Stranger from the Storm, Lenin’s Harem, and KGB Banker, the last co-written with whistle-blower John Christmas. He has lived in seven countries for writing purposes, including Ukraine, Latvia, Estonia, and Russia. Since the Russian invasion, he has actively supported Ukrainian causes from Latvia by working with the charity Tavi draugi to run vehicle caravans filled with supplies from Rīga to the Ukraine. 

www.williamburtonmccormick.com. 

Jared Cade is the Amazon number one bestselling author of Agatha Christie and the Eleven Missing Days. His follow-up book Secrets from the Agatha Christie Archives was nominated for the ALCS Gold Dagger Award. He is a former tour guide for a bespoke luxury travel company, escorting parties around Agatha Christie’s former home Greenway, in Devon, which is open to the public courtesy of the National Trust. During an appearance on the British television quiz The 64,000 Dollar Question, he won the top prize on his specialist subject of Agatha Christie’s novels. He is also the award-winning creator of the Lyle Revel and Hermione Bradbury mysteries. The couple’s latest investigation Deadly Fortune has been hailed as ‘twisty, tense and impossible to put down.’ His latest book on the Queen of Crime Agatha Christie’s Spotlight on Murder is being released in Nov/Dec 2026.

www.jaredcade.com 

Sunday, 15 February 2026

‘The Dog Sitter Detective’s Christmas Tail’ by Antony Johnston

Published by Allison & Busby,
23 January 2025.
ISBN: 978-0-7490-3176-3 (HB)

Having read all the award -winning dog tails by Anthony Johnston, I was delighted to be offered this one to review. 

Being a massive dog lover I couldn’t help but love all of these dog mysteries. However, even if you are not a dog lover, Johnston writes so colourfully and wittily, and is great at keeping you guessing, that one couldn’t help but enjoy this cosy crime series. 

Here, in this one, Johnston’s heroine, Gwinny is an older actress, so we get a bit of entertaining theatrical information thrown in, such as how auditions happen, which adds to the fun of the book. 

In between auditioning and trying to get work, Gwinny fosters dogs or dog-sits. Each book features a different dog and in this one we meet a clever but energetic spaniel called Spiggy. 

Gwinny also has a love interest with an ex-detective, DCI Alan Birch, who has a Labrador called Ronnie. 

Gwinny is going through the last of her father’s house clearance since he had passed away. During this she finds some documents and letters which tie her father to a friendship with an ex- soviet spy, Roy Singleton. Gwinny is puzzled at discovering this friendship, as she had never heard Singleton’s name mentioned, nor knew anything about him. She decides to get in touch with Singleton and is invited to go to his house and meet him. 

After yet another audition, which didn’t go well, she drives with Spiggy, Alan and Ronnie to meet Singleton. The house he is living in, also with a few other retirees, who were all spies, and all knew her father. So now she finds out more about her father. 

Then the snow falls and herself and DCI Alan and the dogs are snowed in. Then there is a murder, and a lot of war history comes out. Gwinny and Alan discover why these people, all living together, have a connection with each other, and with her father. But who is the murderer and why?           

Of course, Gwinny and Spiggy win the day and solve the crime. 

A great puzzle to solve, a lot of fun with the dogs, and a very informative novel about the war. There are strong characters. All these pieces put together make another first class read, and a page turner from this very addictive writer. 

Keep writing them Mr Johnston, please no pawsing. You are a five-star storyteller.
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Reviewer: Linda Regan
http://www.lindareganonline.co.uk

Antony Johnston is a New York Times bestselling graphic novelist, author, and games writer with more than fifty published titles. The Charlize Theron movie Atomic Blonde is based on his graphic novel The Coldest City. His epic series Wasteland is one of only a handful of such longform achievements in comics. His first video game, Dead Space, redefined a genre.  Antony’s other books and graphic novels include The Exphoria Code, The Fuse, Daredevil, Julius, the Alex Rider graphic novels, Dead Space transmedia comics, and the adaptation of Alan Moore's 'lost screenplay' Fashion Beast.  His video games include Shadow of Mordor, Blackwood Crossing, The Assembly, Dead Space Extraction, Zombiu, and more.  He lives and works in England.  

Linda Regan is the author of nine crime novels. She is also an actor. She holds a Masters degree in critical writing and journalism, and writes a regular column, including book reviews, for three magazines. She also presents the book-club spot on BBC Radio Kent. She is an avid reader and welcomes the chance to read new writers. 

  To read a review of Linda's most recent book
 
The Burning Question
click on the title. 

www.lindareganonline.co.uk 

Saturday, 14 February 2026

Coming Soon: 'Falling Leaves' by Lea O'Harra

Published 20 February 2026

in Kindle and Paperback.

Book 4 in the Inspector Inoue Mysteries.

One cold night in 1983 in a coastal town in Japan a thirteen-year-old schoolgirl disappears on her way home from badminton practice. The local police explore all avenues, but as is often the case, when there are no clues, there are no answers.

Decades later, the repercussions of her mysterious disappearance are still being felt in Japan in unspoken secrets and lies and broken lives that are left littered behind. When a half-Japanese, half-Korean student is found hanged in her room on the campus of Fujikawa University, the local police at first suspect suicide, never dreaming that this death could possibly be connected to the fortieth anniversary of that schoolgirl's disappearance.

Chief Inspector Inoue and his trusted team of detective inspectors face their most challenging case yet in a race against time to apprehend the culprit before more lives are lost.


Lea O’Harra.  An American by birth, did her postgraduate work in Britain – an MA in Lancaster and a doctorate at Edinburgh – and worked full-time for 36 years at a Japanese university. Since retiring in March 2020, she has spent part of each year in Lancaster and part in Takamatsu on Shikoku Island, her second home, with occasional visits to the States to see family and friends. An avid reader of crime fiction since childhood, as a university professor she wrote academic articles on it as a literary genre and then decided to try her hand at composing such stories herself, publishing the so-called ‘Inspector Inoue mystery series’ comprising four murder mysteries set in rural, contemporary Japan. She has also published two standalone crime fiction novels.

Lea O'Harra – Mystery writer

Thursday, 12 February 2026

‘The House of Mystery’ by Joy Ellis

Published by Joffe Books,
27 January 2026.
ISBN: 978-1-80573498-7 (PB)
 

Following a bad car accident Ellie McEwan suffered a severe head trauma, which left her distressed and in shock as she was experiencing flashing lights of different colours. However with the help of her friend Carole Cavendish-Meyer and Dr Alice Cros, Ellie’s  partner, Ellie has come to terms with the possession of auric sight, which gives her the ability to see energy in fields of colour and therefore people’s auras which tell her that the person they are seeing is ill, or a person in a dark place. This means that she can diagnose problems within the body. 

This is the third book in this series, and we now find Ellie living in Snug Cottage which had been Carole and her partner, Vera’s home. Both have now passed over, and with the money left to her by Carole, she along with Professor Michael Seale have set up The Cavendish-Meyer Healing Centre. 

Callum Church works at the Healing Centre, and on his way to work, is experiencing shivers of apprehension, and he hopes that this is not some kind of presentment of things to come. And as he drives past the impressive frontage of the Centre, he sees Vera and Carol sitting on a stone bench, who immediately fade away. Unbeknown to him Ellie is experiencing the same feelings of apprehension. 

Beth Saunders is in despair with her 5-year-old daughter Izzie, who one moment is a lovely little girl but when alone with her mother spouts horrible malevolent words to her.  Teenager Oliver Cruise aged 14 has gone missing and young 8-year-old Christopher says he is writing an important book, using words that are far beyond is age.  Five-year-old Harry talks about flying planes over Germany and draws continually and accurately the inside of a WW11 Lancaster bomber. Daisy Hilton sent a letter to her parents 3 months after she disappeared saying she is safe and happy. 

Something bad is happening. But what? Initially these unconnected events seem to be tied up with young children.  Are they being used by an evil force? As Ellie and her team begin to uncover the truth, connections surface between the gifted children and an isolated mansion hidden deep in the Surrey woods. A place spoken about in whispers. A place no one is meant to find called The Eleventh House. A teenage boy's body is found on a lonely country road at dawn. But by the time the police arrive, it has vanished without trace. The blanket that covered him remains. The witness is adamant the boy was dead. But when Detective Bob Foreman and DI Jonathan Leatham reach the scene, there is nothing. No body. No blood. No explanation. 

I am not a believer in ghosts or the supernatural, but this book does draw you in. I had to keep reading. 

Intricately plotted, there are many strings to this story, which is a battle between good and evil. Which will prevail.? Recommended, for those who like something different.
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Reviewer: Lizzie Sirett 

Joy Ellis was born in Kent but spent most of her working life in London and Surrey. She was an apprentice florist to Constance Spry Ltd, a prestigious Mayfair shop that throughout the Sixties and Seventies teemed with both royalty and ‘real’ celebrities. She swore that one day she would have a shop of her own. It took until the early Eighties, but she did it. Sadly, the recession wiped it out, and she embarked on a series of weird and wonderful jobs; the last one being a bookshop manager. Joy now lives in a village in the Lincolnshire Fens with her partner, Jacqueline. She had been writing mysteries for years but never had the time to take it seriously. Now as her partner is a highly decorated retired police officer; her choice of genre was suddenly clear. She has set her crime thrillers in the misty fens.   

www.joyellis.info 

‘The Killing Time’ by Elly Griffiths

Published by Quercus,
12 February2026.
ISBN: 978-1-52943-338-8 (HB)

I have a sneaking suspicion that when Elly Griffiths planned her new so-cold-they're-frozen series, it was at least partly because she wanted to spend time in Victorian England along with her characters. Since, unlike them, she doesn't have access to the necessary technology, she makes use of detailed, meticulous research to bring the era to vivid life for her readers.   

The Killing Time is the second in the series, and like its predecessor, it moves between 21st century London and its equivalent nearly two hundred years ago. DI Ali Dawson and her team of cold case detectives are still mourning the loss of Jones, the scientist who discovered the secret of time travel, but was stranded in the past when things went wrong in the previous title. This time it's Ali who is stranded, when she attempts to time-travel a few days in search of her beloved cat, but somehow finds herself in 1851 along with Jones with no means of returning. 

As Elly Griffths fans have come to expect and enjoy, there's a wealth of interesting characters, including several familiar faces from the first book. In the 21st century among others are Finn, Ali's son, Dina and John, her  colleagues in the cold case team, and Bud the eccentric scientist who sends her into the past. In 1851 she encounters a couple of Victorian maids who give her an insight into the world of the lower orders. Then there's a creepy illusionist, and Cain Templeton, who makes as strong an impression on her as on their earlier acquaintance. And then there's Barry Power, a self-styled medium and showman; and Lady Serafina, about whom I'm saying no more. 

Along the way the cold case team are investigating a murder, and another one occurs later. But somehow the crimes seem almost incidental, especially in the 19th century part of the book. Far more interesting is how Ali is going to get back to where she belongs, and how she ended up in Victorian London to start with. 

Elly Griffiths has proved herself adept at weaving diverse strands into a page-turning story, peopling it with characters the reader wants to know more about, and creating richly visual backgrounds for them. With her new series, she is revealing yet another talent: bringing a period of history to life in a way that makes us believe it. It all adds up to yet another cracking good story which will garner yet more fans for this deservedly popular author.
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick 

Elly Griffiths is the author of a series of crime novels set in England’s Norfolk County and featuring forensic archaeologist Ruth Galloway. The first in the series, Crossing Places, earned a good deal of praise both in Griffiths’ native country, England, and in the U.S. The Literary Review termed it “a cleverly plotted and extremely interesting first novel, highly recommended.  Since then, Elly has written fifteen further novels in the series.  She has written a second series set in Brighton in the 1950’s featuring magician Max Mephisto and DI Stephens. There are seven books in the series. Her most recent series features Ali Dawson, a time traveller.

www.ellygriffiths.co.uk  

Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.

Monday, 9 February 2026

Valentine Day Mysteries.

 One hundred and thirteen Valentine Day Mysteries.

AAMES, Avery

2015

As Gouda as Dead   

ADAIR. Suzanne

2011

Regulated For Murder

ADAMS, Deborah

2015

Murder in the Paperback Parlour

ALBERT. Susan Wittig

1997

Love Lies Bleeding

ARNOLD, Carolyn

2015

Valentine's Day Is Murder

BASSETT, Tony

2025

Not My Valentine

BEATON. M C

2010

Death of a Valentine

BELL. Cindy

2018

Hot Chocolate and Homicide 

BELLE, Josie

2014

Marked Down For Murder

BENNING, Patti

2018

Valentines and Murder

2018

Killer Valentine Cookies 

2021

Vicious Valentine

BIRD, Nigel

2020

My Funny Valentine

BLACK. Etham

1999

The Broken Hearts Club

BLACKMOORE, Stephanie

2018

Murder Borrowed, Murder Blue 

BRITTON, Danica

2017

A Witchy Valentine 

BROWN. 'Rita Mae  &

2001

Claws & Effect

BUDEWITZ, Leslie

2015

Butter Off Dead 

BYERS, Beth

2020

Mystery on Valentine's Day 

CANNELL. Dorothy

1995

How To Murder the Man of Your Dreams

CARL, JoAnna

2009

The Chocolate Cupid Killings 

CARL, Lillian Stewart

2011

The Mortsafe

CARLISLE, Kate

2015

This Old Homicide 

CARTER, Sammi

2009

Sucker Punch

CHASE, Julie

2017

Cat Got Your Secrets 

CLELAND, Jane K

2013

Lethal Treasure.

COLLIER, Christine E

2002

A Holiday Sampler

COLLINS. Ava Ashwood

2003

Red Roses For a Dead Trucker

CRABTREE, Elisabeth

2014

The St. Valentine's Day Cookie Massacre

CRANE, Caroline

1983

Trick or Treat 

CRAWFORD, Iris

2008

A Catered Valentine's Day

CREEDON, P

2018

Murder on Valentine's Day 

DALEY, Kathi

2014

Cupid's Curse)

2018

The Valentine Mystery

2025

V in the Valentine (2025)

D'AMATO. Barbara

1998

Hard Feelings

DAVIES, Rae

2014

Lucy and the Valentine Verdict 

DAY, Marele

1994

The Disappearances of Madalena Grimaldi

DEMAREE, Steve

2018

A Valentine Murder 

DESHAW. Rose

2009

Love with the Proper Killer

DODWELL, LIz

2017

Valentine's Day 

EDWARDS. Ruth Dudley

1984

The Saint Valentine Day Murders

EMRICK, K.J.

2014

The Stolen Valentine

EVANOVICH. Janet

2007

Plum Lovin' 

FARDIG, Caroline

2016

My Funny Valentine

FITZPATRICK. Michelle

2005

Happy Valentine's Day

FLEMING. Ian

1966

The Living Daylights

FLOWERS, Jean

2017

Addressed to Kill

FLUKE. Joanne

2005

Peach Cobble Murder

GARNER, Deborah

2019

A Flair for Truffles 

GREELEY. Fr. Andrew

1989

St Valentine's Night

GREEN, George Daws

1994

The Caveman's Valentine

GREENBERG. Martin

1998

14 Vicious Valentines

with Rosalind M Greenberg

GREENWOOD, Patrice

2021

A Valentine for One 

GUNN, Alastair

2015

My Bloody Valentine

HADDAM. Jane

1994

Bleeding Hearts

HARRIS. Lee

1996

The Valentine's Day Murder

HART. Carolyn

1983

Deadly Valentine

1995

Crimes of the Heart

HARTE, Jenna

2012

Deadly Valentine

HOLLIS, Lee

2014

Death of a Chocoholic 

HOMLES, Bobbie

2016

The Ghost of Valentine Past (2016)

IRELAND, Liz

2025

Mrs. Claus and the Very Vicious Valentine

JACKSON, Melanie

2010

Cupid's Revenge

KOONTZ. Dean

2007

Your Heart Belongs to Me

LEVINE, Laura

2013

Killing Cupid

LIN, Harper

2014

Valentine's Victim 

LONDON, Meg

2014

A Fatal Slip 

LOUREY, Jess

2015

February Fever 

MACLEOD, Shea

2017

The Venom in the Valentine 

MAHER, Tegan

2018

Moonshine Valentine (2018)

MARIE, Anna S.

2017

Valentine's Cupcake & Murder 

MARKS. Jeffrey

2004

The Scent of Murder

MARPLE, Mona

2018

A Valentine's Kill

MARTIN, Faith

2011

A Fatal Fall of Snow/The Winter Mystery

MCDOUGAN, Ellie

2023

Victims and Valentine's Day Cherryville book 3

MCKINLAY, Jenn

2011

Buttercream Bump Off

MCLEISH. Doug

1991

The Valentine Victim

MCKEVETT. G A

2000

Sugar & Spite

MCLEAN, Donna

2017

A Sparrow Falls Valentine

MCLEISH, Dougal

1969

The Valentine Victim

MEIER. Leslie

1999

Valentine Murder

2012

Chocolate Covered Murder

MENUHIN, Karen Baugh

2024

Saint Valentine's Day Murder (2024)

MICHAELS. Grant

1992

Love You To Death

MOORECROFT, M'Lissa

2020

A Valentine Wedding (2020)

MURPHY. Shirley Rousseau

2009

Cat Playing Cupid

PAGE. Katherine Hall

2006

The Body in the Attic

PRESSEY, Rose

2017

Forever Valentine 

RENDELL. 'Ruth

1977

A Judgement in Stone

ROBINSON, David W

2013

My Deadly Valentine

ROCKWELL, Patricia

2012

Valentined

SAVAGE. Tom

1996

Valentine

SCHWEIZER, Mark

2012

The Treble Wore Trouble

SCOTT, Kendall

2021

The Valentine Day Murders

SHELTON. Connie

2012

Sweet Hearts

SMITH, Karen Rose

2015

Gilt by Association

SMITH, SMITH, Lotta & Kelly Hartigan

2019

My Wicked Valentine

STANLEY, J B

2015

Murder in the Paperback Parlor 

STRAUSS, Lee

2020

Mystery on Valentine's Day 

SUZETTE, Kathleen

2021

Deadly Valentine

2023

Valentine Villainy (2023)

SWANSON. Denise

2002

Murder of a Pink Elephant

TAYLOR, Brad

2011

One Rough Man

TILLER. Denise

2000

Calculated Risk (1st)

TOPE, Rebecca

2010

The Coniston Case

VIGUIE, Debbie

2015

Thou Art With Me (2015)

WEBBER, Heather

2010

Deeply, Desperately

2010

Truly Madly

2011

Absolutely Positively

2012

Perfectly Matched

2014

Undeniably Yours

WHITING, J.A.

2017

The Haunted Valentine)

WHITNEY. 'Phyllis A

1998

Daughter Of the Stars