Texas ReadsGlenn Dromgoole

Texas ReadsGlenn Dromgoole

>> archiveMiles Arceneaux offers another gripping tale

One of my favorite Texas authors — or should I say three of my favorite authors — is/are back with another fast-paced mystery novel.

I’m talking about Miles Arceneaux, the nom de plume of Texas writers Brent Douglass, John T. Davis, and James R. Dennis. Together they’ve now produced four Arceneaux offerings from the Texas Gulf Coast.

The latest is North Beach ($11.99 paperback), set in the Corpus Christi area in 1962 and featuring teenage brothers Johnny and Charlie Sweetwater and their fishing and boxing buddy Pete Lopez.

Readers may recall the Sweetwater brothers from the previous Arceneaux novel, Ransom Island, although they had only minor roles in that mystery. The island itself — Ransom Island — is still a factor in the new story.

I don’t want to state that this is necessarily a “guy” book, but it certainly has plenty of masculine themes. Boxing, fishing, gangsters, international espionage, and murder all figure into North Beach, as the Sweetwater brothers get themselves into some big-time jams trying to solve a mystery, help clear a friend, and bring a killer to justice. But there’s also a softer, romantic side to the story as well.

If you haven’t read any of the Arceneaux books, this is a good one to start with. This one, or Ransom Island, would be my suggestions. Either way, you’re in for a treat.

First novel: Abilene’s Lloyd Glynn Ray has penned his first book, The Man Who Loved North Wind ($14.95 paperback), a novel set in the 1930s in New Mexico.

Ray hooks the reader right off with a rousing first chapter as Alberto Luís Garcia sets out to exact revenge on the Mexican Federales involved in murdering his family as part of a systematic cleansing of the proud Yaqui Indian Nation in Mexico. By the end of the first chapter, Alberto has left headless bodies all over the canyon as he heads for safe refuge in New Mexico.

The other principal character in the story is Maria Esperanza Rodriguez, the first from her prominent New Mexico family to graduate from college.

Ray does something at the end of his novel that I wish more novelists would do: he includes an index and brief description of characters featured in the book, alphabetically by first name. It’s helpful when reading a 300-plus page novel to be able to go back and be reminded who the characters are. The four-page listing also gives readers a glimpse into the variety of occupations and lifestyles that come into play in the story — from a Chicago mobster to a Franciscan priest to an oil operator, a handyman, a nurse, a bank manager, and a lamb buyer.

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Glenn Dromgoole is co-author, with Carlton Stowers, of 101 Essential Texas Books Contact him at g.dromgoole@suddenlink.net.

>> Check out his previous Texas Reads columns in Lone Star Lit

Lone Star Literary Life to introduce new features, crowdfunding in celebration of first anniversary Feb. 2

On February 2, 2015, Lone Star Literary Life published its first issue of Texas’s only comprehensive statewide books-news coverage. We launched on Groundhog Day with a robust subscriber list of Texas booksellers, publishers, libraries, authors, and, most important of all, readers.

We pledged to deliver thoughtful reviews of new Texas books, first-person profiles and interviews of Texas authors, news and coverage of awards, festivals, and author tours, and the state’s only full calendar of book events — every week. And we’ve done so for almost 52 weeks now, bringing readers, writers, publishers, publicists, and librarians the latest in bookish Texas news and information.

We’re supported by advertising, providing a guaranteed vehicle to promote Texas-related books. And in our first year, we introduced such popular features as Lone Star Book Blog Tours, author podcasts, and Top Texas Bookish Destinations, which present editorial content around which publishers, booksellers, and authors can build paid campaigns.

We’ve got even bigger plans in store for 2016. Stay tuned over the next few weeks. And watch for details on our Indiegogo campaign — to learn how you can help Lone Star Lit grow and also earn unique perks.

Make a note of our hashtag: #LoneStarLit2016


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