Playing Roulette with Minotaur Books
Playing Roulette with Minotaur Books If you’ve been paying attention to the blog, you’ve
already noticed my recent devotion to the writings of David Housewright;
especially his long-running series about unlicensed Twin Cities P.I., Rushmore McKenzie. Back in February, 2024, I noticed the library had a shelf full of the
McKenzie books in hardcover, which jangled my memory of when the long gone and
fabled Leisure Books—fabled at my house, anyway—was reprinting the series in mass market during the second half of the ’00s. A title that had caught my attention back then
was the second book in the series, Tin City (2005). I bought it but
never read it, lost it in one move or another, and utterly forgot about both
the series and Housewright. But this library bookshelf
rekindled my interest in the series. So being a studious kind—and never
really caring if I start with the first or twentieth title in a series—I
studied each book, mostly looking at the blurbs from trades like Publishers
Weekly (which I agree with often) and Kirkus (which I agree with
less often) and settled on the eleventh book, The Devil May Care
(2014), because it had received a starred review from PW. And wow did
that book hit every note just right. To say I was hooked is an understatement.
After turning the last page, I rushed to the library to retrieve the first
book in the series, A Hard Ticket Home (2003), which of course wasn’t
in the collection and so I rolled to the second, Tin City. The very same
title that had caught my eye nearly two decades earlier. |
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After racing through a handful of the McKenzie’s, an
idea jittered and popped. An idea that went something like this: the library
has a bunch of mysteries published by Minotaur Books—the same house that has
brought out all twenty-one of the McKenzie books—in the late ’00s and
throughout the ’10s; so, I decided, I would concentrate much of my
non-mandatory reading to the Minotaur Books sitting on the library’s shelves.
And it went well, even though it was kind of like playing roulette with my reading since I often knew nothing about the books or authors before picking them up. Although I’ll admit I took too much advantage of the
McKenzie’s since they accounted for eleven of the nineteen Minotaur titles I
read. All eight of the authors were new to me and I have every intention of
reading more books by at least five of those writers: David Housewright,
Sasscer Hill, Brian McGilloway, John Keyse-Walker, and J. D. Rhoades. Due to sheer meanness, I
chose not to finish two of the titles: Ranchero, by Rick Gavin (2011),
and L’Assassin, by Peter Steiner (2008). As for 2025, I’m
thinking of sticking to the game plan for at least the first few months, but
after that, who knows? Maybe I’ll schedule my reading around Golden Books or maybe Harlequin’s NASCAR romance series or…. Here’s the rundown of
the Minotaur Books I checked out from the library and read in 2024
(click the titles for the review, if I wrote one): |
February The Devil May Care, by David Housewright (2014) – McKenzie #11 Tin City,
by David Housewright (2005) – McKenzie #2 |
March Pretty Girl Gone,
by David Housewright (2006) – McKenzie #3 Madman on a Drum,
by David Housewright (2008) – McKenzie #5 The Taking of Libbie, SD,
by David Housewright (2010) – McKenzie #7 |
April Flamingo Road,
by Sasscer Hill (2017) – Fia McKee #1 Bleed a River Deep, by Brian McGilloway (2010) – Ben Devlin #3 |
May Man in the Water,
by David Housewright (2024) – McKenzie #21 The Territory,
by Tricia Fields (2011) – Josie Gray #1 |
June Highway 61,
by David Housewright - 2011 – McKenzie #8 Ranchero,
by Rick Gavin (2011) – Nick Reid #1 |
July Curse of the Jade Lady,
by David Housewright (2012) – McKenzie #9 |
September The Last Kind Word, by David Housewright (2013) – McKenzie #10 |
November The Dark Side of Town,
by Sasscer Hill (2018) – Fia McKee #2 Unidentified Woman #15,
David Housewright (2015) – McKenzie #12 |
December Sun, Sand, Murder, by John Keyse-Walker (2016) – Teddy Creque #1 Breaking Cover, by J. D. Rhoades (2008) – Tony Wolf Stealing the Countess, by David Housewright (2016) – McKenzie #13 L’Assassin,
by Peter Steiner (2008) |
Trivia – My short story,
“Asia Divine,” appeared in the same anthology, Bullets and Other Hurting
Things (2021), as David Housewright’s tale, “Best Man.” A connection I
didn’t realize I had with McKenzie’s creator until a few months ago. “Asia
Divine” is available in my collection, Casinos, Motels, Gators (2024). |
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