Celebrate Mystery/Thriller week with a FREE copy of The Camelot Shadow (is there a catch…?)

I made some crazy promises about giving out free copies of The Camelot Shadow to celebrate Mystery & Thriller week on Goodreads and, since I’m a man of my word—at least 17% of the time, anyway—I intend to follow through.

Even better? Not only am I going to make it so that EVERYONE IS A WINNER, I’m not even going to make you read through all of my rambling, turgid prose below before telling you how to get your copy (though you’re more than welcome to continue reading my rambling, turgid prose, which is essentially what you’re committing to doing if you’re reading The Camelot Shadow anyway).

So, what do you need to do? Two simple things: 1) Add The Camelot Shadow to your “to read” list on GR so all your friends can see what good taste you have in handsomely-nosed independent authors; and 2) in the comments section below, list your favorite mystery or thriller (if you’re feeling effusive, please feel free to tell us why). (Also, I wouldn’t be upset if you shared this link with your GR friends.)

The only catch: you’ve got to do it by midnight (Eastern) on Friday, May 5 (what better way to celebrate Cinco de Mayo than with a bunch of sexagenarian mystery solvers, right?). (Or, heck, by the end of the day on May 6...I'm a benevolent soul.)

Once you’ve commented, I’ll send you a private message asking which format you’d like the book in (Mobi/ePub/PDF) and what email to send it to. It’s that easy, folks!

Now, if you’re only here for my goodies, you can stop reading (and, let’s face it, who DOESN’T want my goodies?).

Now then…you there—in the back. I see you waving your hand frantically. What is it?

“But, Mr. Handsomely-Nosed Independent Author—is The Camelot Shadow REALLY a mystery/thriller? I mean, come on—it’s set in Victorian times, when they didn’t even have cell phones or Snapchat or Dippin’ Dots ice cream, and there’s magical stuff going on, and it’s got King Arthur references that don’t have anything to do with the Guy Ritchie movie (I mean, what’s that all about?), and the pacing is kind of slow out of the gate. Also, your nose isn’t all that handsome.”

Well, I’m glad you asked that, Mr. Bludgeoned Repeatedly and Enthusiastically With the Ugly Stick. The Camelot Shadow is something of a cross-genre hodgepodge, mainly because that’s exactly the kind of thing that I like to read. While I dig fast-paced, straight up thrillers on occasion (more on that below), I’m an even bigger fan of a slow burn mystery that builds up as characters are simultaneously built up and clues revealed, where an unexpected twist throws you off track and, before you can recover, you get twisted right back around, and where the characters can’t rely on high-tech gizmos to help save the day (not that there’s anything wrong with stories where that happens; I just love the dramatic tension of characters not instantly being able to communicate with each other across distances or find an answer to an unsolvable mystery in less than two seconds by Googling it). Throw in elements of history, fantasy, bromance/buddy movies, and a Victorian setting and you’ll literally see me drool. (Not that seeing me drool is a particularly unusual occurrence, incidentally, as all of my stained shirts will attest.)

So, sure—The Camelot Shadow isn’t a mystery/thriller in the same way that a Janet Evanovich or Nelson DeMille book is a mystery/thriller, but it’s got enough of such elements for me to use this week as an excuse to give you free books, so be quiet. If you dig mixing all of those genre elements together, you might like the book (and, if you don’t, I promise I won’t be mad if you have to publicly trash it in your review—reading is subjective, and we can still be friends). And, I have no idea what that Guy Ritchie/King Arthur nonsense is all about.

As for MY favorite mystery or thriller? First off, I think those are two different things—a book can certainly have elements of both, but a story can also just be a straight mystery (that’s not so thrilling, and I don’t mean that pejoratively), or a straight thriller (where the reader knows what’s going on but the characters don’t, and it’s a pulse-poundingly, rip-roaringly paced yarn). Putting that aside, though, and with nods to more contemporary writers like Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child (the Pendergast books never fail to entertain), Dan Brown (The Camelot Shadow borrows from the formula that Brown popularized so adeptly in his Robert Langdon books), and John Saul (that man writes some creepy thrillers), as well as masters of the genre like Agatha Christie and Edgar Allen Poe (arguably the inventor of the genre), I have to go with a tale featuring a certain deerstalker-wearing detective: The Hound of the Baskervilles. The combination of Holmes and Watson (the best detective duo ever, for my money), a haunting setting, the intimation of supernatural chicanery afoot, and some of Doyle’s most effective pacing makes for an unforgettable reading experience.

Now then—let’s hear from you…
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Published on May 02, 2017 07:41 Tags: free-books, goodreads, mystery, stories, the-camelot-shadow, thriller, writing
Comments Showing 51-69 of 69 (69 new)    post a comment »
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message 51: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Alexandra wrote: "Oh, I hate "favorite book" questions, it's so hard to narrow down the list!

Currently I'd say my favorite mystery is J. D. Robb's In Death series, first book Naked in Death."


It really is an impossible task, Alexandra!


message 52: by Sadie (new)

Sadie Forsythe I won't say it's my favorite mystery/thriller, but my favorite that I've read recently. Therefore it comes to mind. Déjà Dead.


message 53: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Sadie wrote: "I won't say it's my favorite mystery/thriller, but my favorite that I've read recently. Therefore it comes to mind. Déjà Dead."

I love the variety of picks here...mystery/thriller really is a very inclusive genre. There's a metaphor in there somewhere... :)


message 54: by Siobhan (new)

Siobhan Quinlan This book is amazing. The author is okay but his book is well worth a read :) fine okay the author is also pretty awesome :)


message 55: by Emelia (new)

Emelia siobhan wrote: "This book is amazing. The author is okay but his book is well worth a read :) fine okay the author is also pretty awesome :)"

I just started reading it and am loving it ! I find it rather amazing myself ;)


message 56: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson siobhan wrote: "This book is amazing. The author is okay but his book is well worth a read :) fine okay the author is also pretty awesome :)"

Oh, I don't know, I think the author's kind of a douche, but the book is all right. :)

(Thanks, Siobhan! I hope you're enjoying The Chronicle of Heloise & Grimple!)


message 57: by Shaun (last edited May 05, 2017 07:31PM) (new)

Shaun It's tough to pick just one. I guess The Stand is my favorite thriller but 11/22/63 is right up there. I honestly can't choose between the two. I assume that anyone who mentions Gone Girl is given the ol' drunk toss so I'll keep my third candidate a secret. A seriously honorable mention is You by Caroline Kepnes.


Jean ~ Kindle Queen Gaa! I missed the deadline by a few hours. This convinces me that I need to spend more time on Goodreads...

Just in case though, my favorite mystery series is actually about a ghost hunter. She has to solve past crimes in order to put the current ghosts to rest. The first book is Ellie Jordan, Ghost Trapper. The series starts to get really good in the third and fourth books. The ghosts are creepy, and I love the banter between the characters.


message 59: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Great selections, Shaun and Jean!


message 60: by Kim (new)

Kim already had added it to my want to read list. as for my favorite mystery/thriller I don't really know which one is my favorite


message 61: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson It's tough to pick a favorite, though I promise I won't be offended if it becomes The Camelot Shadow. :)


message 62: by Kim (new)

Kim Sean wrote: "It's tough to pick a favorite, though I promise I won't be offended if it becomes The Camelot Shadow. :)"

would love to read THE CAMELOT SHADOW


message 63: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Kim wrote: "Sean wrote: "It's tough to pick a favorite, though I promise I won't be offended if it becomes The Camelot Shadow. :)"

would love to read THE CAMELOT SHADOW"


Who wouldn't? ;)


message 64: by Kuroi (new)

Kuroi Hmm, I love pretty much any Agatha Christie book that features Poirot, so there's no picking one for mystery.

For thrillers though, I'd pick Alistair Maclean's When Eight Bells Toll.
It's got his trademark sardonic style and savvy hero without the overly cumbersome plots of the other books. Also the opening page is just scene-setting while rambling about a Colt, it's amazing.


message 65: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Krishna *is a savvy evil overlord* wrote: "Hmm, I love pretty much any Agatha Christie book that features Poirot, so there's no picking one for mystery.

For thrillers though, I'd pick Alistair Maclean's When Eight Bells Toll...."


I'm in the midst of my first Christie/Poirot adventure right now!


message 66: by Jaclyn (new)

Jaclyn When will we be receiving our copy of the book?


message 67: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Jaclyn wrote: "When will we be receiving our copy of the book?"

Hi Jacyln--there should be a message in your inbox about format/where to send.

If anyone else hasn't heard from me on those questions, please let me know!


message 68: by Mir (new)

Mir Wow, this thread really shows how broad the "thriller" genre is.


message 69: by Sean (new)

Sean Gibson Miriam wrote: "Wow, this thread really shows how broad the "thriller" genre is."

Pretty cool, right?


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