Cat on a Hot Tin Woof is exactly my kind of unruly mystery title
I am not immune to a shameless title. Cat on a Hot Tin Woof is exactly the sort of pun that gets me to stop and read the flap.
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I am not immune to a shameless title. Cat on a Hot Tin Woof is exactly the sort of pun that gets me to stop and read the flap.
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A title like Murder Most Delicious has one job: make me grin and pick it up. That part is already handled.
Continue Reading →Every now and then I want a book that feels generous. Big-hearted, transporting, a little lush, and absolutely unconcerned with looking cool.
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A fantasy novel with the right kind of hush around it, the sort you hand to someone who misses getting lost in a story.
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A mystery with a title like this already has one advantage: it knows how to get your attention from across the room.
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Some business books promise certainty. Roger Spitz is more honest than that, and weirdly enough, that makes his advice more useful.
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This is the kind of mystery that works when you want tension, but not hollow tension.
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You know that business book someone gave you three years ago that's still holding up a wobbly monitor? This one's different. Roger Spitz's Disrupt wit
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