Book Review: Nightswimming (The Jamie Palmieri Mystery)ย by Melanie Anagnos

Book Details:

Author: Melanie Anagnos
Release Date: 8 July 2025
Series: The Jamie Palmieri Mystery
Genre: Crime Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 320 pages
Publisher: High Frequency Press
Blurb:
Paterson, New Jersey, 1979: Jamie Palmieri is an up-and-coming patrol officer, three years out of the academy and frustrated with his slow rise to detective. That all changes one frigid night in January, when a double homicide at a local bar leaves the owner and a young woman dead. In the wake of the Rubin “Hurricane” Carter proceedings and the city’s lingering distrust for the police, Jamie is told to expect a “no one saw a thing” investigation. But as Jamie traces a series of small leads, he’s sent on a path where the tables turn suddenly – with the still-unknown killer now stalking Jamie and the people he’s closest to.
A classic police procedural charged with the social turbulence of the 1970s.

Editorial Reviews

“Anagnos smartly uses the structure of the police procedural to probe the ways in which the 1970s were both an incredibly progressive and sneakily regressive time for women – and the ways men struggled to keep up when things were changing at such a dizzying clip…and brings Paterson, at this juncture, to vivid life.”

– Sarah Weinman,ย The New York Timesย Book Review

“…debut novelist Anagnos sweats so many procedural details of Jamie’s painstaking investigation that you’ll sweat along with him. The real star of this show is Paterson, which feels as menacing, vivid, and multilayered as Walter Mosley’s Watts.”
Kirkus Review

Nightswimmingย is my favorite kind of crime novel-rich, character-driven crime that drops me right into the action. Melanie Anagnos beautifully conjures a 1970s Paterson, New Jersey that feels so lived in, I practically teleported. This is just the best kind of noir-a crime as complex and relevant today as it ever was, a world where one good man can still make a difference. I cannot wait to dive back into the world of Jamie Palmieri!”
-Halley Sutton,ย USA Todayย bestselling author ofย The Hurricane Blonde

“Contemplative, pacy, and with a setting so vivid you can taste the industrial grit on your tongue. Paterson, New Jersey in the late 1970s is not a place I’ve ever yearned to visit; by the time I reached the propulsive climax of Anagnos’s story, I never wanted to leave.”

Kat Rosenfield, author of the Edgar Award-nominated thriller,ย No One Will Miss Her

“… all the intrigue, twists, turns, and danger one would hope for in a great crime novel. Anagnos has written a compassionate, emphatic, sweet and sexy protagonist who I not only like but love…A page turner is an understatement.ย Nightswimmingย pulls you in and doesn’t let you go.”
-Patricia TM Dunn, author of the award-winning novel,ย Her Father’s Daughter

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Nightswimming by Melanie Anagnos is a debut that feels both nostalgic and freshly alive, a story rooted in the grit of the past but pulsing with emotional immediacy. It is a taut, character-driven police procedural set in Paterson, New Jersey, 1979, that manages to be both a gripping crime story and a deeply emotional portrait of a man trying to do right in a city and an era where justice rarely runs straight.

The story follows Jamie Palmieri, a young patrol officer desperate to move up the ranks when a double homicide lands on his desk. What begins as a straightforward investigation soon becomes something much darker; a labyrinth of distrust, corruption, and obsession that blurs the line between cop and prey. Author Anagnos captures the tension of the procedural perfectly with the long hours, the frustrating leads, and the constant second-guessing, but itโ€™s Jamieโ€™s emotional exploration that makes the book truly unforgettable. Heโ€™s vulnerable, principled, and haunted, the kind of protagonist readers root for not because heโ€™s flawless, but because heโ€™s real.

What impressed me most is how Anagnos balances crime and context. This isnโ€™t just a mystery about two murders; itโ€™s a story about a city in transition, still reeling from the Rubin โ€œHurricaneโ€ Carter trials, simmering with racial tension, gender shifts, and working-class despair. The authorโ€™s depiction of 1970s Paterson is vivid and sensory, you can feel the industrial grit on your skin, smell the cigarette smoke in the station house, hear the uneasy quiet between officers who no longer trust each other. The prose is clean and cinematic, the pacing steady and deliberate until it explodes into moments of real danger.

Overall, Nightswimming is astriking debut. It is atmospheric, emotionally intelligent, and perfectly paced. Nightswimming blends the precision of classic noir with the introspection of modern literary crime. Perfect for readers of Dennis Lehane, Tana French, or anyone who loves their mysteries layered with heart and history.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


Book Review: Mortal Zin by Diane Schaffer

Book Details:

Author: Diane Schafferย 
Release Date:
4 March 2025
Series: A Mortal Zin Mystery (Book #1)
Genre: Crime Fiction, Mystery, Thriller, Humour
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 408 pages
Publisher: Sibylline Press
Blurb:
A crusading attorneyโ€™s death. Sabotage at a family winery. Secrets buried in Californiaโ€™s pastโ€ฆWhen corporate attorney Noli Cooper visits her godparentsโ€™ Santa Cruz Mountain winery, sheโ€™s hoping for a few quiet days to consider her future. But the future will have to wait. The body of her childhood mentor, a crusading social justice lawyer and local hero, is discovered in a rocky ocean cove. The sheriff is quick to call it suicide. Noli knows heโ€™s wrong. Teaming up with PI Luz Alvarado, Noli dives into a world where nothing is as it seems.

As threats mount and the winery teeters on the brink of ruin, Noli and Luz must navigate a treacherous landscape of greed, revenge, and long-buried secrets. Their investigation weaves through the rich tapestry of Californiaโ€™s vineyard history, the mystery of zinfandel grapes, and the haunting legacy of the Vietnam War. With a murderer on the loose, predatory neighbors circling, and Noliโ€™s godfather framed for murder, the clock is ticking. Can two fearless women from different worlds unravel the truth before itโ€™s too late?

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Mortal Zin is a lively, character-driven novel that blends crime, suspense, and a touch of dark humor into a story that feels gritty as well as entertaining. From the opening chapters, the book throws readers into a world of ambition, temptation, and danger, where choices are rarely clean and every action carries weight. Itโ€™s the kind of story that keeps you engaged with its mix of sharp dialogue, fast pacing, and a cast of flawed, unforgettable characters.

What stands out most is how the author builds atmosphere. The settings feel vivid as bars, back alleys, and quiet corners all carry an undercurrent of tension, making the reader feel like something is always about to happen. The tone shifts seamlessly between high-stakes tension and wry humor, offering moments of relief without ever letting go of the suspense. This balance gives the book an energy that pulls you along while still allowing space to appreciate its layered characters.

At its heart, Mortal Zin is a story about choices and consequences. It digs into how people justify their actions, whether driven by greed, survival, or loyalty, and what happens when those justifications unravel. The protagonistโ€™s arc is particularly compelling, as he is constantly walking the line between control and chaos, morality and survival.

Overall, Mortal Zin is a smart, engaging read for anyone who enjoys crime fiction with depth. It isnโ€™t just about the mechanics of the plot, but about the people who inhabit it, their flaws, ambitions, and the shadows they carry. Suspenseful, atmospheric, and at times darkly funny, itโ€™s a book that will resonate with fans of noir and contemporary thrillers alike.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


Book Review: High Desert (PEOPLE MAKING DANGER) by Adam Fike

Book Details:

Author: Adam Fike
Release Date:
19 March, 2021
Series: PEOPLE MAKING DANGER
Genre: Crime Fiction, Western Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 69 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
MUSCLE CAR WESTERN – Hanner only wants to tinker in his desert junk yard, fish for wrecks on the highway and forget his family legacy. A rotten Sheriff, fate and a vault full of organized crime loot have another idea.
Free samples at adamfike.com/books.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of quick, fun, three-act, feature-length stories, full of suspense, surprises and dark humor. All told in the present tense. Like reading a movie.

“What a HOOT… recommended to me by a friend… High Desert is a clean shot at life and crime in the mid-twentieth century… I haven’t laughed so much in years. I plan to start on The Quiet Ones and work my way through them all.”

– BookBub Reviewย 

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

High Desert by Adam Fike is a gritty, cinematic slice of crime fiction that perfectly captures the raw, unpredictable energy of the American West. Adam Fike doesnโ€™t just tell a story about a botched heist and the violent, eccentric characters surrounding it, he creates a living, breathing desert landscape where danger lurks behind every gas station, junkyard, and stretch of empty highway. The atmosphere is heavy with heat, dust, and tension, giving the story a visual quality that feels ready-made for the screen.

What makes this tale so compelling is the cast of flawed but unforgettable characters. From Hanner, the hardened junkyard owner with his own rules of survival, to small-time hustlers, con men, and corrupt lawmen, every interaction is laced with suspicion, wit, and the constant threat of betrayal. The dialogue is sharp and often darkly humorous, while the pacing keeps the narrative moving with the same relentlessness as a car engine roaring across desert roads.

Overall, High Desert is a meditation on survival, morality, and the blurred lines between law, outlaw, and everything in between. Itโ€™s grim, fast-paced, and at times unexpectedly funny, making it a standout entry in the People Making Danger collection.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


Book Review: The Quiet Ones (PEOPLE MAKING DANGER #1) by Adam Fike

Book Details:

Author: Adam Fike
Release Date:
19 March, 2021
Series: PEOPLE MAKING DANGER
Genre: Literary Horror, Psychological Horror, Crime-Thriller, Noir, Horror
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 66 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
SUBURBAN THRILLER. When a young girl goes missing, families fall apart and neighbors grow together with the help of their friendly local serial killer.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of quick, fun, three-act, feature-length stories, full of suspense, surprises and dark humor. All told in the present tense. Like reading a movie.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Adam Fikeโ€™s The Quiet Ones is a sinister slice of small-town noir with a macabre twist: neighbors who โ€œgrow togetherโ€ under the shadow of a serial killer. Set in the sleepy but unsettling town of Clearfield Falls, the story layers the ordinary things like funerals, lawn services, and office gossip with the grotesque, where bodies double as fertilizer and everyday people reveal darker impulses. The writing blends dark humor with chilling violence, making the mundane (like mowing lawns or family dinners) feel like itโ€™s always one step away from horror.

What stands out most is the interplay between banality and menace. Characters like Ruth, who hides behind oversized glasses, and Junior, the deceptively gentle gardener, embody the theme that danger doesnโ€™t always roar, sometimes it whispers. Fikeโ€™s pacing is cinematic, cutting between suburban kitchens, cemetery burials, and sinister sheds with a rhythm that keeps readers uneasy yet hooked. While the sheer length of descriptive passages and overlapping storylines could overwhelm some readers, the atmosphere is thick, immersive, and undeniably memorable.

Overall, The Quiet Ones succeeds as a dark, satirical portrait of community and complicity. Itโ€™s a story that asks unsettling questions about what people are willing to ignore to maintain comfort, and whether monsters are truly outsiders or simply the neighbors we never look at too closely.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


Book Review: Gone to Ground by Morgan Hatch

Book Details:

Author: Morgan Hatch
Release Date:
July 31, 2025
Series:
Genre: Crime Fiction, Political Thriller, Suspense, Socio-Political Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 310 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
The first in a suspenseful new trilogy, a fast-paced thriller set in the streets of Los Angeles, featuring a Mexican American high school senior embroiled in a conspiracy that threatens to destroy his neighborhood.
Javier Jimenez is on a glide path to college while his brother, Alex, has done a 180 and is heading for trouble. Neither, however, have any idea what’s coming their way when George Jones sets in motion his plan for their neighborhood. “Some people flip homes. I flip zip codes.” It’s a cataclysmic vision of urban renewal replete with manmade disasters, civil unrest, and a tsunami of ambitious Zoomers.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Gone to Ground by Morgan Hatch is a bold, razor-sharp novel that dives headfirst into the urban sprawl of Los Angeles and never once comes up for air. As a writer and editor, I found myself appreciating not just the storyโ€™s complexity but the control with which author Hatch moves between perspectives, timelines, and characters. Itโ€™s dense but never bloated, gritty but with a heart that pulses beneath the asphalt.

The story follows Javier, a high school senior doing his best to keep his little brother Alex from falling into the gravitational pull of gang life in the San Fernando Valley. What begins as a familiar tale of familial loyalty quickly expands into a high-stakes political and financial thriller, complete with corporate sabotage, environmental scandal, and cold-blooded real estate warfare. The threads are numerous, but author Hatch pulls them taut with precision.

What I particularly loved was the author’s ear for dialogue and his eye for detail. Whether itโ€™s a classroom filled with half-asleep teens or a power-lunch between political sharks, the writing is immersive and confidently observant. Characters like Betzaidaโ€”the tough, queer tow truck operator and half-sister to Javierโ€”leap off the page with authenticity. And George Jones, the bookโ€™s Machiavellian fixer, is a villain you love to hate, dripping with charm and menace.

The pacing is deliberate, and thatโ€™s the one reason Iโ€™m giving this 4 stars instead of 5. Some narrative detours, while insightful, felt slightly indulgent and slowed the momentum during otherwise taut sequences. But itโ€™s a small price to pay for the scope and ambition of what author Hatch accomplishes.

Gone to Ground isnโ€™t just about a city, itโ€™s about the people hanging on to their dignity as the ground shifts beneath them. Itโ€™s a book that challenges, informs, and, most importantly, feels alive. Highly recommended for fans of Don Winslow, George Pelecanos, and Walter Mosley.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon