Showing posts with label New Finds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Finds. Show all posts

June 02, 2026

New Fiction: Books that caught my eye in 2026

Photo by Kourosh Qaffari on Unsplash
One of the joys of being a booklover, apart from buying and hoarding books, is looking up fiction titles scheduled for release in a particular year, even if it’s not possible to read them all. I frequently read about new or forthcoming books that have generated interest in the media and literary circles. I’m curious to know more about these books and sometimes buy them, depending on whether I read in those genres.

To be honest, though, I don’t buy many physical books these days because I’m running out of storage space and already have more than enough books to read. My collection of comics is another story for another day. So, most of the new books I buy are ebooks, which I read on my tablet.

(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

May 22, 2026

Book Review: Bad Medicine by Paul Bagdon

Bad Medicine by Paul Bagdon book cover
Westerns have been my favourite genre ever since an uncle introduced me to Oliver Strange’s Sudden series in my teens. I read all ten novels by Strange, as well as another five by Frederick H. Christian—one of many pen names of the late Frederick William Nolan—who did a fine j
ob of bringing the eponymous gunfighter back to life.

Since then, I have read Westerns every year, though not as many over the past couple of decades as my attention shifted to other writers and genres. Even so, I’m always looking for Western fiction. I was therefore delighted to come across a new author, Paul Bagdon, who appears to have written around fifteen series and standalone novels, though there may well be more. I also read online that Bagdon has published more than 250 stories and articles in several magazines.

(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

January 05, 2026

I got bookends for Christmas, but no books

Bookends for Christmas

I didn't get any books for Christmas. Instead, my family gifted me a lovely pair of horse-shaped bookends among other things, perhaps in the hope that I might be tempted to read the books on display if I saw them every day. Never mind all the other unread books carefully tucked away in cabinets.

(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

October 07, 2020

Book Review: Stone: M.I.A. Hunter by Stephen Mertz

Stone: M.I.A. Hunter by American thriller writer Stephen Mertz is the first novel in the adrenaline-soaked Mark Stone: MIA Hunter series, which spans seventeen books. The series was created and plotted by Mertz, who collaborated with Joe R. Lansdale, Michael Newton and Bill Crider on the novels. Mertz and Newton also wrote several instalments of Mack Bolan: The Executioner, the long-running action series created by Don Pendleton.

Stone: M.I.A. Hunter by Stephen Mertz book cover

My Kindle edition of Stone M.I.A. Hunter is a reprint of the first M.I.A. Hunter novel, retitled Leave No Man Behind and published in September 2017. 

(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.) 

As the series title suggests, the M.I.A. Hunter is Mark Stone, a tough-as-they-come former Green Beret whose mission in the years following the Vietnam War is to locate American POWs forgotten by the government and officially listed as MIA or KIA, and bring them home. He knows he cannot rescue them all, but he is determined to save as many as he can.

Stone conducts his MIA-hunting missions in the jungles of Vietnam and Laos, and in other trouble spots around the world, accompanied by two trusted and battle-hardened companions: the six-foot-four Texan Hog Wiley and former British commando Terrance Loughlin. They rarely question Stone or his decisions, even when they lead them straight into hell and force them to fight their way out. Their loyalty to one another is absolute. 

Although Stone works for the CIA in an unofficial capacity, he often operates independently through Stone Investigative Consultants, a Los Angeles-based private investigation agency that provides a convenient cover for his missions.

M.I.A. Hunter begins in the Laotian jungle. Stone and his men, aided by anti-communist Laotian guerrillas, rescue a US Navy pilot and several other POWs who have been held by the Viet Cong since the end of the war. After fighting their way through more than a hundred miles of hostile territory, they finally reach their pickup point. But the waiting helicopter brings an unwelcome surprise: CIA operative Alan Coleman, a man with an agenda of his own. Coleman despises Stone and promptly places him and his companions under arrest for violating US law—or, as Stone sees it, for making the intelligence community look bad.

Back in L.A., Stone overcomes his legal hurdle with the help of Carol Jenner, a close friend who works for the Defence Department in Washington, and a sharp lawyer. Out on bail, he helps the widow of a Vietnam comrade rescue her teenage son from a Mexican drug cartel and set him on the right path. Just when he’s hoping for some MIA action, a badly wounded stranger turns up in his garage with shocking news before dying: Rosalyn James, an army nurse and the love of his life—believed killed in a Vietnam medevac—is still alive. For nearly fourteen years, she has been held captive 
on the Laos–China border by a brutal, torture-loving drug lord known only as the General.

Stone goes back with Wiley and Loughlin, in what could well be the most important MIA rescue mission of his life.

Stone: M.I.A. Hunter delivers nonstop, edge-of-the-seat action. Mark Stone and his team use weapons and hand-to-hand combat with lethal efficiency. It’s classic vigilante fiction where the heroes are near-invincible. They are men of honour, integrity and sacrifice. For many readers, including myself, it works because it satisfies a simple sense of justice—someone has to uphold it, even if only in fiction.

Stephen Mertz does not disappoint in telling the story of the MIA hunter and the forgotten war heroes he brings home. I will be reading more books in the series.

October 03, 2017

Sniff the Detective by Richard McClure Scarry

Sniff is a detective.
He helps people find things.
He helps catch bad people.
He thinks with his head.
And he smells with his nose.


Personal commitments over the long weekend kept me away from my computer at home, and naturally, from blogging. I'm not comfortable writing or commenting on my cellphone or tablet. Something or other goes wrong, there are unsolicited pop-ups and often the page reloads itself. I find that annoying. I took the time off to read short stories, including a delightful children's detective story. Yes, you read that correctly. It was a first for me in middle age. I found the story online and read it with wide-eyed innocence. No, that's taking it too far.

Sniff the Detective (Golden Books, 1988) by the late American children's author and illustrator, Richard McClure Scarry, is an illustrated book containing two stories—Sniff Catches the Robber and Sniff's Best Case Ever—with anthropomorphic characters, animals who talk and act like humans. They're all very likeable.

In Sniff Catches the Robber, Chief Hound asks Sniff, the dog detective, to help catch a thief who has been stealing Mrs. Jewel's precious bracelets from under her nose. Mrs. Jewel, a matronly pig, likes to grow pumpkins and eat them too. Since Mrs. Jewel has neither been out nor has had any visitors, Sniff decides to spend the night at her house and catch the culprit red-handed.

In Sniff's Best Case Ever, it's raining and Sniff is lazing in bed when the police chief in another city summons him. Our sleuth is not happy because it's his birthday next day, and he wants to stay home and eat cake and ice cream. But duty calls. Sniff catches a train where he encounters shady guys wearing dark glasses and carrying violins, staring at him and scaring him out of his wits.

Sniff the Detective is a funny little book with large colourful illustrations and large typeface, the kind that you can read to your little kids or grandkids at bedtime. I liked Sniff's sleuthing philosophy. The K9 detective has got it right.

Surprised with my choice? Well, children's, YA or adult, a detective story is a detective story and you're never too young or old to read one. Reading time: 10 minutes, maybe less.



Note: Writer-blogger Patti Abbott is hosting Friday's Forgotten Books over at her eclectic blog Pattinase, where you can read some fine reviews of forgotten or overlooked books.