Publishers Weekly best sellers
June 2012
BOOKS: “Never Tell” is a winner
NYPD Detective Ellie Hatcher returns in a baffling case involving cyberstalking and a teenage suicide in Alafair Burke’s new suspense novel, “Never Tell.”
Waterville police log and arrests, June 20 and 21
Thefts, criminal mischief, criminal trespass
BOOK SIGNING: “Birkebeiner”
Local author Jeff Foltz will be at the Owl and the Turtle Bookshop in Camden on Friday, June 29, from 1 – 3 p.m. to sign copies of his novel “Birkebeiner: A Story of Motherhood and War.”
TRAVELIN’ MAINE(RS): Take an island break on PEAKS
As we plotted and planned our first travel columns, we were excited to receive an invitation from Fred Forsley — owner of Shipyard Brewery and a sponsor of our website — to be his guests at his Inn on Peaks Island. Our column about that experience — our very first column — appeared on Jan. 16, 2011, when we wrote, “We plan to return to the Inn on Peaks Island during the spring bird migration.”
BOOKS: ‘Gone Girl’ takes ordinary plot in surprise directions
I picked up “Gone Girl” because the novel is set along the Mississippi River in Missouri and the plot sounded intriguing. I put it down two days later, bleary-eyed and oh-so-satisfied after reading a story that left me surprised, disgusted, and riveted by its twists and turns.
BOOKS: ‘The Skeleton Box’ is Gruley’s best work to date
The mythical village of Starvation Lake, Mich., is an authentic realm of piney woods, deadman’s curves, working-class bars, lakefront cottages, friendly neighbors, town drunks, rampant gossip and small-town cops where almost everyone is obsessed with the fate of a junior hockey team called The River Rats.
Bath man sentenced for embezzlement
Dale Marshall stole the money while he worked as office manager for an excavating contractor from 2007 until 2011, investigators say.
Sweden on alert after explosives found near nuclear plant
Bomb sniffer dogs detected the explosives during a routine check of a truck in the power plant’s industrial area near its high security enclosure.
Plane part crashes through roof of Bangor home
The part – about 1-inch in diameter and 4 inches long – goes through the attic and a sheetrock ceiling and lands on the floor. No one is injured.