A Publication of Humanities Tennessee

Delightfully Dysfunctional

Lisa Lutz brings her four-novel mystery series to a close with The Spellmans Strike Again, another outing with this delightfully dysfunctional family of detectives. The family saga is narrated by Isabel “Izzy” Spellman, whose life has been a series of bad choices, poor judgment, bone-headedness, and other deep character flaws. Fortunately for Izzy, her mother, father, uncle, sister, brother, and assorted friends and lovers are equally eccentric—and equally annoying and lovable. Described by People magazine as “the love child of Dirty Harry and Harriet the Spy,” the Spellman books offer an addictive romp from the first page of the book to the last, including all the footnotes and appendices. Lutz will appear at Davis-Kidd Booksellers in Nashville on March 22 at 7 p.m.

The World According to NASCAR

At the beginning Faster Pastor, a NASCAR mystery jointly written by novelist Sharyn McCrumb and driver Adam Edwards, it’s particularly appropriate that race-car driver Camber Berkley should crash into the funeral of an avid racing fan in the small Tennessee town of Judas Grove. Even more appropriate, this deceased fan has willed the proceeds of his estate to a yet-to-be-identified local church. To determine the recipient, all the churches’ pastors must race each other; the winner will inherit the legacy. Arrested for reckless driving, Camber is put in jail and sentenced to community service: teaching the preachers to race. McCrumb and Edwards will discuss their book at the East Tennessee History Center in Knoxville on March 19 at noon.

Hellbound

Linda Fairstein worked in the Sex Crimes Unit in Manhattan for twenty-five years. In Hell Gate, she showcases her experience of both investigation and the back-room politics that probably characterize any large city but seem particularly evident in New York. As her protagonist, Alexandra Cooper, investigates a case of human smuggling, she is not so much stymied by criminals as by her own boss, the district attorney, and the mayor, who are more concerned with their own political futures than with catching the bad guys. Fairstein will sign Hell Gate at Davis-Kidd Booksellers in Memphis on March 19 at 6 p.m.

Thou Shalt Not!

When Paul Matthew Turner left his home in Virginia to attend Nashville’s Belmont University, he didn’t know what he was in for. Compared to his fundamentalist childhood, Belmont was a devil’s playground where plaid-shirted hipsters smoked clove cigarettes and listened to Amy Grant. Like a spiritual version of High Fidelity, Hear No Evil describes the way music helped Turner come to terms with this more-worldly version of the Christian faith. With a sly sense of humor and a mid-nineties soundtrack playing in his head, Turner discovers that Christianity is less a series of proscriptions than it is a way of living in a sometimes far-from-perfect world.

Chug-a-Lug

The first tax created by the young United States government, writes journalist Max Watman, was levied against whiskey, creating a subculture of illegal spirits that grew with the nation and continues to thrive. In Chasing the White Dog: An Amateur Outlaw’s Adventures in Moonshine, Watman comically explores the history and current practices of this (mainly Southern) subculture. In the spirit of submersion journalism, he not only researches this subject but also joins in the subculture, employing a succession of home-built stills. Despite a few missteps, both spirituous and literary, Watman ultimately serves up a palatable concoction, with a satisfying—and thoroughly illicit—burn.

Down and Dirty

Michael Wiley, nominated for a Shamus award for the first novel, The Last Striptease, has a style reminiscent of earlier hard-boiled detective novels. His characters are world-weary and cynical, unsurprised by any bad thing that happens—and a lot of bad things happen in his new novel, The Bad Kitty Lounge. Wiley will read from the book at Davis-Kidd Booksellers in Nashville on March 12 at 2 p.m.

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