Showing posts with label mystery scene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery scene. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

MYSTERY SCENE: Sad News


I mentioned a few months ago that Mystery Scene was looking for a buyer. Sadly news comes to us that the Winter 2022 (#174) edition of Mystery Scene is the final issue of this fabulous publication. 

Editor-in-Chief Kate Stine has this introductory letter in the final issue which just arrived.

Fall #173 was a benchmark for Brian [Skupin] and me as publishers of Mystery Scene—our 20th Anniversary Issue. Winter #174 marks a sadder occasion—the final issue of Mystery Scene Magazine after 37 years in business.

The publishing industry has changed seismically over the last two decades with the advent of the internet, publisher consolidation, the birth of social media, and the rise of Amazon. It has become impossible for us to continue to offer you the high-quality print publication in which we’ve taken so much pride.

The website will remain functioning for now, as will our monthly e-newsletter. We will be refunding readers for their outstanding subscriptions over the next few months. This is a big job, so please be patient with us. We expect to have this task done by February 2023.

We want to thank our outstanding staff, particularly the indispensable Teri Duerr for all her excellent work editing, writing, and organizing over the years. Annika Larsson made all of us look good with her outstanding design skills. The quality of our contributors is apparent to 
Mystery Scene readers already—but let me just say how interesting, educational, and fun it was to work with them. And we want to thank all of you—we loved bringing you the magazine. Brian and I had the best job in publishing for 20 years and we want to thank you for coming along for the ride.

This is so sad. Mystery Scene has been one of the premiere publications in the field. Thank you, Kate and Brian, for your work on Mystery Scene over the years. You'll be missed.



Monday, October 3, 2022

MAP BACK MONDAY: Delano Ames's She Shall Have Murder

Today is Map Back Monday. Today's Dell Map Back is She Shall Have Murder by Delano Ames  (1948). This is the first in the Dagobert Brown and Jane Hamish series. This one is set in London, so the London map is so appropriate! I love these old Map Backs.  And, in case you're just tuning in to this Monday feature, Dell Map Backs were a series of paperbacks, published in the 1940s and 1950s with a map of the scene of the crime on the back cover.