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  • Events | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    HOME Press Interviews Books Events About/Media Resources Artwork What the Hell is a Toque? Blog Search Results Events April 7, 2024 Zoom panel, Chelmsford Library , Chelmsford, Massachusetts 2 pm. ​ April 21, 2o24 Making a Mystery , Chelmsford Library, Chelmsford, MA 2 pm ​ April 27-29, 2024 Malice Domestic Conference, Bethesda, Maryland June 8, 2024 Beach Read's Day, Natick Public Market, Natick, Massachusetts 9 am - 1 pm ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing! Email AuthorKim@kimhshapiro.com Follow

  • What the Hell is a Toque? | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    Other Websites What the hell is a Toque: and other questions on the great canadian roadtrip Click here Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing! Email AuthorKim@kimhshapiro.com Follow

  • About/Media Resources | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    About Kim - Media Resources About Kim Kim worked as a journalist in Canada for many years. Her book, Gelato with the Pope , highlights her time as a syndicated travel columnist in the Nineties. In addition to her syndicated travel column, she has written feature articles for various publications, edited a monthly children's publication in British Columbia, and had her poetry published in Do Whales Jump at Night? A Canadian Anthology of Children's Poetry . She won a Microsoft web design award for Footloose, one of the first digital e-zines on the internet. The Raven's Cry is the first book in her new mystery series, The Wynter Island Mysteries. It is based in the Gulf Islands of British Columbia and follows a journalist seeking a new beginning after undergoing trauma in Afghanistan. Book II, The Loon's Song, is due to be released in Spring 2024 from Level Best Books. For the past eight years she has been working on her video project, What the Hell is a Toque? This chronicles her travels with her sons from Newfoundland to Vancouver Island and up to the Canadian Arctic. Kim is also a board member of Sisters in Crime New England. She lives in New Hampshire with her husband, two sons, and three dogs. Media Enquiries Contact info : AuthorKim@kimhshapiro.com or 603-943-7090 Information regarding my books: Click here Headshots - photo credit: Ben Shapiro Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing! Email AuthorKim@kimhshapiro.com Follow

  • Artwork | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    Watercolor Paintings All rights reserved © Kim Herdman Shapiro. Painted digitally using Procreate on the iPad ​ Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing!

  • HOME | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    Kim Herdman Shapiro Award Winning Graphic Artist, Author, Journalist & Videographer HOME Press Interviews Books Events About/Media Resources Artwork What the Hell is a Toque? Blog Search Results Award Nominated for 2023! The Raven's Cry TV producer Kate Zoë Thomas, fleeing an abduction in Afghanistan and heartbreak in Boston, accepts the first job that gives her a fresh start: station manager at a tiny community channel on Wynter Island in the Canadian Gulf Islands. ​ But, try as she may, Kate cannot outrun her bad luck. On a moonlit walk to a local beach, Kate spots a body bobbing in the surf. In shock, she recognizes the lifeless face and realizes there is only one person on the island with a motive for his murder. Herself. ​ Will she manage to solve the mystery before the murderer stops her? ​ Press & Reviews "Kim is a marvelous Canadian ambassador to the world and a fantastic recorder of its places." Indigo, Canada's National Bookstore "Fans of small-town cozy mysteries will enjoy this action-packed yet character-driven story." Booklife/ Publishers Weekly "Shapiro, a former print and broadcast journalist in Canada, creates a vivid world on Wynter Island, and it’s one that’s full of quirky characters." Kirkus Reviews "The narrative style is fantastic and flowed gorgeously. The pace is perfect, and the scenes were descriptive enough to transport me right next to Kate as she solved the murder. Highly recommended!" Readers' Favorite Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing! Appearances Gelato with the Pope: and other adventures of a travel writer in Europe One woman, two bags, and a stolen package of British Airways peanuts. That is how Kim Herdman Shapiro began the biggest adventure of her life. She was going to travel around Europe, chatting with the fascinating and famous, eating wonderful meals, exploring magical places and writing about it for her syndicated travel column. The reality was a lot more complicated ….. and funny. A desperate attempt to go to the toilet becomes a minor international incident at the Trooping of the Colour. A train trip to Berlin becomes an exercise in surviving a zombie apocalypse. And then there is, of course, the time when she broke into the Vatican to see the Pope. Gelato with the Pope is a wonderfully honest and humorous portrait of the author and her adventures. ​ Amazon what the hell is a toque: and other questions on the great canadian roadtrip Follow Kim Herdman Shapiro as she criss-crosses Canada, from the Atlantic to the Pacific and north to the Arctic, with her two sons in tow. ​ Her mission: to show them what it means to be Canadian. Through a series of video essays, she chronicles their journey from the emerald cliffs of Newfoundland to the Polar Bears of Manitoba, and the majesty of the Rockies. ​ ​ Click here About Kim Herdman Shapiro She is an author, journalist, graphic artist, and vlogger. She has worked in both print and broadcast journalism, as well as creating one of the first ever digital e-zines with her Microsoft Award-winning travel site, Footloose. Although she grew up in Vancouver, she has lived and traveled to many different places around the world. Some of these places are detailed in her book, Gelato with the Pope: and other adventures of a travel writer in Europe. She has spent the last seven years filming across Canada for What the Hell is a Toque: and other questions on the great Canadian roadtrip , where she shows her two sons what it means to be Canadian. ​ For the past twenty years, she has lived with her husband and sons in New England. ​ At present, her writing life is focused on her two mystery series, one based in British Columbia and the other her home for the past 25 years: New Hampshire. She also serves on the board of Sisters in Crime New England and works as their Public Relations Director.

  • Interviews | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    Interviews ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Click here for podcast with Joanna VanderVlugt of JCV Art Studio ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Click here for my podcast with Dave Campbell of Living the Next Chapter! ​ ​ Please welcome Kim Herdman Shapiro to Miss Demeanors. Kim’s roots in journalism and poetry, in print, broadcast, and video, took a new road when she decided to write the first Kate Zoe Thomas mystery, The Raven’s Cry. She discusses becoming a debut fiction author. Marni Graff: Kim, thanks so much for sharing your story of turning to crime with Miss Demeanors. Before we talk about your new book, I’d like you to explain to our readers, and to other aspiring writers, about your journey to crime fiction. Like many of us, you did other things before writing mysteries. You have extensive experience in print and broadcast journalism, as well as poetry and your travel columns, and have published both. Can you tell us what made you turn to crime writing? Kim Herdman Shapiro: Like a lot of people, I found myself with some free time on my hands during the pandemic. I decided to use some of that free time to take a stab at writing fiction. My journalistic career and my previous book, “Gelato with the Pope” were non-fiction, so this was new territory for me. The only thing I knew for sure was that it would have to be a mystery. Since childhood, mysteries have always been my favorite genre to read. The only problem was that first, I had to figure out how to write one! MG: Were any of the contacts from your previous jobs instrumental in getting Level Best Books to publish you? KHS: No, I’m afraid not. I left the world of journalism more than twenty years ago to raise my two sons. Journalism – and everything else – has changed dramatically since then! MG: I wrote in my notes after reading The Raven’s Cry that the book shows a poet’s prose with an eye for description. How easy or difficult was it for you to make the transition to a mystery? Did you find it useful to have written non-fiction before writing fiction? KHS: I found it very useful to have a journalism career before tackling fiction, mainly because it taught me to be diligent about my writing. Sometimes you feel that you need that bolt of creativity to be able to sit down and write. But having to write to a deadline takes away the luxury of free time from your writing. You just have to put your butt in a chair and start working. I love Hemingway’s quote: “There is nothing to writing. You just sit at a typewriter and bleed.” Very true! I also liked to focus on profile pieces in my writing, either of individuals or places, which I think led quite organically to crime writing. I’ve always been fascinated by people and their stories, and few stories are more fascinating than murder! MG: The book is set in a small community on Wynter Island in the Canadian Gulf Islands. What made you choose that wild, natural setting? KHS: I grew up in that area of Southwestern British Columbia: Vancouver, the Gulf Islands, and Victoria. My mind immediately went back there when I was choosing a setting for this novel. The rugged beauty of the British Columbia coastline, along with our First Nations Peoples’ strong connection to the land, was something I wanted to highlight in The Raven’s Cry. The Gulf Islands are also an area whose isolation has led them to remain very much as they were ten or twenty years ago. Minimal development, abundant nature, a small population of somewhat eccentric characters: a real community. Except that now there are Etsy entrepreneurs along with the aging hippies and retirees! MG: Your protagonist, Kate Zoe Thomas, arrives on Wynter Island to become the TV station manager and quickly finds that despite the island’s small population, the job is more complex than she expected. I enjoyed how you used your broadcasting background and travel columns to influence that decision to some degree, a world you already know well. How did you decide on the storyline, and on making Kate a murder suspect? KHS: I’m a great believer in using what you know. Readers can tell when an author truly knows what they are writing about. So the broadcast journalist piece and Kate’s character came easily to me. For the rest of the storyline, I knew I needed to create an intricate puzzle for readers to try and solve. One where they literally didn’t know until the final pages who the murderer was. Hopefully, I did that! But it did mean a lot of labyrinthine plotting and planning to get there. MG: Writing crime fiction needs a gripping story, and yours was an Editor’s Pick from BookLife/PublishersWeekly. Did that early acknowledgment push you into the idea of a series, or was that always your intent? KHS: Although the praise from BookLife/PublishersWeekly was wonderful, I had always planned on making this a series. Can we say a Type A personality? 🙂 So I was lucky to have a roadmap of where I wanted the series to go before I got the multi-book deal from Level Best. MG: Tell us about your video project, What the Hell is a Toque? KHS: What the Hell is a Toque is a video project I undertook with my two – then young – sons to teach them about Canada. Growing up in the United States, they were familiar with their Dad’s history and homeland but needed to learn more about where their mother came from. Their generation’s perception of the world seems to come mainly via a laptop monitor or a smartphone screen. I wanted them to be able to smell the seawater of the Atlantic and feel the freezing winds on the top of the Rockies, not just experience them virtually. MG: I know you are a board member of Sisters in Crime, New England—how have you found the crime writing community versus the journalism world? KHS: I think there are more similarities than differences. The skills needed to be a journalist are quite similar to those needed to write crime: a curiosity about the world around you and the people in it, an eye for detail, and a creative desire to put all of this down in print for others to read. As far as the crime writing community, I found it to be extremely supportive and informative. I highly recommend your readers seek out their local mystery writing organization and check them out. MG: Kim, thank you sincerely for sharing your thoughts with us today. You can find The Raven’s Cry online at Amazon https://a.co/d/ceUMldV and Barnes and Noble https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-ravens-cry-kim-herdman-shapiro/1143236405?ean=9781685123031 or ordered from your favorite independent book store: ISBN-13 978-1685123031 Interview from IndieReader indiereader.com IR: What is the name of the book and when was it published? SHAPIRO: The name of the book is The Raven’s Cry . It was released by Level Best Books on March 14, 2023 IR:What’s the book’s first line? SHAPIRO: The water slapped against the side of the boat, playing a staccato counterpoint to my racing heartbeat: beat, beat, beat, slap. IR:What’s the book about? Give us the “pitch”. SHAPIRO: TV producer Kate Zoë Thomas, fleeing an abduction in Afghanistan and heartbreak in Boston, accepts the first job that gives her a fresh start: station manager at a tiny community channel on Wynter Island in the Canadian Gulf Islands. But, try as she may, Kate cannot outrun her bad luck. On a moonlit walk to a local beach, Kate spots a body bobbing in the surf. In shock, she recognizes the lifeless face and realizes there is only one person on the island with a motive for his murder. Herself. Will she manage to solve the mystery before the murderer stops her? IR:What inspired you to write the book? A particular person? An event? SHAPIRO: I have always wanted to write a mystery, mainly because this is the genre I read the most. When the pandemic arrived, I found myself with a window of time where I could try writing a mystery. I wanted to base it on my home, the places I knew and loved when I was growing up: Vancouver, the Gulf Islands, and Victoria, BC. IR:What’s the main reason someone should really read this book? SHAPIRO: I think there is a demand for what I call the modern cozy: mysteries that include the small town characterizations which add life to a story, while still exisiting in a modern world with modern problems. I hope readers come to love the citizens of Wynter Island, while also enjoying the puzzle of the mystery. IR:What’s the most distinctive thing about the main character? Who-real or fictional-would you say the character reminds you of? SHAPIRO: I think the actress to play the role of Kate would definitely be Emma Stone. She comes across as very honest and direct, but still with a good sense of humor. And still able to be a bit of a goofball. That’s very much like Kate. IR:When did you first decide to become an author? SHAPIRO: I have written stories for pretty much as long as I have been able to hold a pen and paper. I received a fair amount of attention for my writing as a child, so in many ways I never really expected to do anything else. The only question was what was going to pay the bills! 🙂 IR:Is this the first book you’ve written? SHAPIRO: No, but it is the first book I’ve written since having children. I put my writing career on hold for twenty years to look after my sons as well as our growing herd of small, furry creatures. IR:What do you do for work when you’re not writing? SHAPIRO: I used to be a journalist, first in print and then broadcast journalism. IR:How much time do you generally spend on your writing? SHAPIRO: Probably about four hours a day, including weekends. I usually either write, outline or research in the mornings and have a late lunch. IR:What’s the best and the hardest part of being an indie? SHAPIRO: The best part is having a really close, co-operative relationship with my editor and publishing house. Small presses are doing this because they love the work – not for the money. The hardest is not having a large marketing department behind your book. IR:What’s a great piece of advice that you can share with fellow indie authors? SHAPIRO: Network, network, network! Join local and national writer’s organizations and attend their in-person or zoom meetings and seminars. Writing, like most businesses, is helped by forging relationships with people who will not only help you with your manuscript, but also offer sound advice and support when you need it. IR:Would you go traditional if a publisher came calling? If so, why? SHAPIRO: By traditional I’m thinking you mean one of the Big Five publishing houses. Well, never say never, but I am happy with Level Best Books and the excellent working environment and support they provide for their authors. IR:Is there something in particular that motivates you (fame? fortune?) SHAPIRO: It is a lovely feeling to have someone come up and tell you that they enjoyed your work and that, perhaps for a short time, it gave them a bit of joy and distraction in their life. That’s really why most of us do this. IR:Which writer, living or dead, do you most admire? SHAPIRO: As far as mysteries are concerned, I am a huge fan of Louise Penny and her Inspector Gamache novels. Also Julia Spencer-Fleming, Ann Cleeves …. The list could go on and on. There are so many excellent writers out there. IR:Which book do you wish you could have written? SHAPIRO: Two books that I found transformative when I was young were To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee and Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh. ​ ​ ​ ​ I n terview from The Feathered Qu ill ​ www.featheredquill.com Today, Feathered Quill reviewer Ephantus Gold is talking with Kim Herdman Shapiro, author of The Raven's Cry: A Wynter Island Mystery. FQ: The Raven's Cry suggests a deeply thought title. Although I've read the book, I would still like to hear and understand more about the idea behind this thought-provoking title. SHAPIRO: When I was plotting this book, I wanted to make sure to include some examples of the Indigenous culture of British Columbia, in particular their rich connection with the land. There is a beautiful sculpture by Canadian artist, Bill Reid, entitled The Raven and the First Men, that I thought of. I then needed to figure out a way to include this imagery/mythology in the book. Voila! The Raven’s Cry! FQ: Is Wynter Island a real place (I searched online and couldn't find it - but there are a lot of islands included in the Canadian Gulf Islands)? If it's real, what drew you to it, and if it's not, might it be based on an island you visited? SHAPIRO: No, Wynter Island is not a real place. It is an amalgam of several of the Gulf Islands, with a particular emphasis on Pender Island, British Columbia. I have family and friends who live there. Luckily, I have been able to spend a fair amount of time there, as well as had the opportunity to eavesdrop on the small island gossip! FQ: Jupiter is an animal character that brings out the best in Kate and is bound to make the book even more enjoyable to many readers, especially animal lovers. Do you have any plans of continuing with him in the next series? Two, why did you choose the name Jupiter for him? SHAPIRO: Jupiter has been by far the most loved character in the series, and I have no intention of messing with that. So Jupiter is not going anywhere! I am a big animal lover, and have three dogs of my own. The name Jupiter just came to me several years ago, before I even started writing the book. FQ: There were a lot of twists and turns in The Raven's Cry. Were these all planned out before you began writing, or did they "write themselves" as the story came together? ​ SHAPIRO: Outline, outline, outline! I am not a pantser! In fact, I spent several months plotting all the details of this story. Certainly, there may be a natural growth and change in the story while I’m writing, but the intricacy of the plot is already worked out. I want readers to be able to enjoy a complicated puzzle with lots of surprises. That’s part of what I love about mysteries! FQ: Your first book Gelato with the Pope: and Other Adventures of a Travel Writer in Europe has a great title and sounds like a fun read. Would you tell our readers a little about it? SHAPIRO: Gelato with the Pope is based on my time as a syndicated travel columnist in the Nineties. It is a fun romp through the many adventures I had - and the many mistakes I made along the way. Like thinking I could avoid the security at the Queen’s Trooping of the Colour parade only to have it end badly. Very badly. Namely me, face down on the Mall, soldiers and police officers swarming everywhere. There is also a sweet love story, as I met someone on that journey. FQ: Speaking of your first book, you've gone from writing a travel book to embarking on a new mystery series. That's quite a jump in genres. Was mystery writing always something you wanted to tackle? SHAPIRO: I always planned on writing fiction, but got diverted into journalism and then non-fiction when I was scooped up to be a newspaper columnist while still at university. The pandemic gave me a window of time to have a crack at writing fiction and I went to the genre that I read the most: mysteries. FQ: The fascination with murder mysteries continues to grow - it's a huge market (all the true crime shows on t.v. are a good indicator). Why do you think the general public is so fascinated? SHAPIRO: I think it is a part of our nature to be curious, as well as to want to know how and why something has occurred. You throw into that mix interesting characters and human drama - sometimes all too real - and people are hooked. FQ: You've been busy working on a video project, What the Hell is a Toque? Would you tell us a little about it? SHAPIRO: What the Hell is a Toque? is a video project I started with my sons when they were eleven and fourteen. I wanted them to understand something about where their mother came from - Canada - as well as have an opportunity to see incredible things and meet a wide variety of people. It felt very much to me that the world was getting smaller then - small enough to fit on to the screen of a computer - and I wanted them to realize how vast the world and its peoples really were. So they have been from the tip of Newfoundland to the Pacific, with polar bears and beluga whales in between. And they have learned the bad as well as the good. They understand that no one, no country, is perfect, and that Canada has its own mistakes to mourn and remember. FQ: Your watercolor paintings are beautiful! How long have you been painting? What inspires you? I'd love to learn a little about your background in painting! SHAPIRO: Painting has always been a part of my life as my Great Aunt was involved in the Canadian art movement of the early twentieth century. I started actively painting watercolors about thirty years ago, but stopped when I had children and animals racing around my water jar and paint palettes! I’ve been able to return to it using the new digital painting options on my iPad. FQ: What's next for Kate (and hopefully Jupiter)? Would you give our readers a sneak peek into book 2 in the Wynter Island Mystery series? SHAPIRO: Well, Book 2 is completed and with my publishers. It is called The Loon’s Song, and my editor has agreed to allow me to give your readers an advance taste. It will be released in Spring of 2024. Beautiful actress, Rosalie Morgann, returns home to Wynter Island seventeen years after she fled because of her romantic liaisons with numerous island husbands. Not many islanders are pleased to see her return, and even fewer are interested in hearing what she has to say for herself. Rosalie manages to convince Kate Thomas - manager of the local community television station - to allow her on their inaugural broadcast from the newly redesigned studio. When Rosalie dies, live on-air, there are almost too many suspects for the RCMP to consider! With the station’s financial sponsorship now at risk, Kate must help the police find the killer or risk losing the station and her new home on Wynter Island. ​ ​ ​

  • Press | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    Press & Reviews For interviews click here Interviews Press for The Raven's Cry by Kim Herdman Shapiro from Level Best Books. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ The milieu is fascinating and established with striking detail, like paying for local eggs with twoonie coins, or the powerfully evoked sense of loss—“Loss of resources, loss of culture, loss of identity”—Kate feels visiting the land of the T’sawout First Nation. A hint of romance is welcome, too, though readers should keep on their toes when it comes to the mystery: following the plot’s many twists and turns as Kate sets off on her journey for truth and justice demands attentive reading. Still, readers who enjoy skewed, twisty plots will appreciate the threads of quirky characters and doubt Shapiro has carefully woven together. Fans of small-town cozy mysteries will enjoy this action-packed yet character-driven story. ​ - BookLife/Publishers Weekly ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ "Shapiro, a former print and broadcast journalist in Canada, creates a vivid world on Wynter Island, and it’s one that’s full of quirky characters—from bitter hotel manager Bob Corker, who’s certain that his daughter should have gotten Kate’s job, to kind Shea Porter, an animal rescuer and librarian, and elderly Vera Schmidt, whose reputation for the best eggs on the island starts events in motion that put Kate’s life in danger. Although the novel can’t accurately be called a cozy mystery—certain details are simply too graphic and frightening for that subgenre—the small-town environment is inherently comforting, with enough genuine goodwill that readers will be able to see Kate’s future as a happy one—provided she gets through the next few weeks alive. A suspenseful blend of cozy and thrilling mystery elements." ​ - Kirkus Reviews ​ ​ ​ ​ Kate, a journalist with a troubled past and a cheating ex, moves to enchanting Wynter Island seeking a fresh start. But when she becomes the prime suspect in her ex's murder, Kate must delve into the town's dark secrets in order to clear her name. Kim Herdman Shapiro’s THE RAVEN’S CRY, which kicks off her Wynter Island series of cozy mystery novels, is a quintessential example of the genre, from its enchanting setting—Wynter Island, a picturesque little spot off the coast of British Columbia—to its redoubtable protagonist, Kate Zoë Thomas, a newcomer who becomes embroiled in the island’s hidden secrets. A journalist fleeing a traumatic past (as well as an unfaithful ex) covering the war in Afghanistan, Kate comes to Wynter Island seeking a fresh start in the small town’s tight-knit community. She meets with Gwen Wynter, a descendant of the town’s founder, who has launched a television station, and before long, Kate has a new job as Wynter Island Television’s station manager. Kate finds solace in the beauty of Wynter Island and the companionship of new friends. Kate’s past comes crashing back into her new life, however, when she discovers a body on a beach, which turns out to be her ex, Daniel. As the prime suspect in his death, Kate is desperate to prove her innocence, and her search for the actual killer leads her into the treacherous waters of the island’s dark history—and a confrontation with her own past demons. As a small-town murder mystery, THE RAVEN’S CRY doesn’t stray far from the cozy formula, but the author brings Wynter Island to vivid life, tapping into the rich pleasures of the genre with a charming narrative voice and an imaginatively rendered milieu. Following Kate as she gets to know Wynter Island’s residents and history—including the T’sawout people, an indigenous community from whom she learns of a long-lost sacred artifact, the Raven’s Cry, believed to hold immense power—is as compelling as the mystery itself, which Shapiro unreels with brisk pacing and plenty of dramatic turns. And Kate’s inner conflict, as she walks a precarious line between loyalty to her new friends—the most delightful of which is Jupiter, a scruffy stray dog with whom Kate forms an intimate bond—and her desire to uncover the truth about her new home, gives her character complexity and depth that elevates her beyond the genre’s standard amateur sleuth protagonist. With THE RAVEN’S CRY, Kim Herdman Shapiro tells a deeply immersive, evocative tale against an enticing backdrop of characters and plot threads that will leave cozy mystery fans eager to explore in future installments. ​ - IndieReader ​ ​ The story was full of action, and there was never a dull moment. The chapters flowed into each other and it was a pleasure to read. The characters were excellently developed with unique attributes and personalities. Each person contributed their part to making Wynter Island flourish. It was easy to fall in love with the role players, but there were a few I did not like. The mystery surrounding Daniel's death deepened as the story progressed, and more people became suspects. This story was well-written and exceeded my expectations by far. ​ - Alma Boucher, Reader's Favorite ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Overall, The Raven’s Cry was a quick, cozy small-town mystery with a diverse cast of characters and an intriguing murder case. It’s a great read for any fans of the genre! I would give this book 4/5 stars! ​ - Book Nerdection ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ It was not the whodunit story I expected; The Raven’s Cry was far better than my expectations. Wynter Island was a mystery, and I knew something was fishy about the place before Kate realized it. Kim Herdman Shapiro does a great job of creating a small-town environment. From Fish Bingo to gossip, Shapiro nails it all perfectly. I love how smart Kate is; she quickly picks up on things. She is observant, that’s for sure, and it works perfectly for her in the end. The mystery behind Daniel’s murder is electric. All my guesses as to what happened were wrong, and I had to wait until the end, where Shapiro explains everything. I loved Jupiter, the dog, and his connection with Kate. He was her only source of comfort, and their bond was terrific. The narrative style is fantastic and flowed gorgeously. The pace is perfect, and the scenes were descriptive enough to transport me right next to Kate as she solved the murder. Highly recommended! ​ - Rabia Tanveer, Readers' Favorite. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ The Raven’s Cry will have you on your toes after encountering cleverly imagined stakes, surprises, and tidbits by the experienced journalist and author, Kim Herdman Shapiro. It is a must-read mystery that brims with exciting cliffhangers which will adeptly build anticipation for the second part of this new series. ​ - The Feathered Quill ​ ​ Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing!

  • Books | Kim Herdman Shapiro

    Books ​ Coming Spring 2024 Book 2 in the Wynter Island Mystery Series The Loon's Song The Raven's Cry Book 1 in the Wynter Island Mystery Series Available on Amazon and at bookstores Amazon Gelato with the Pope: and other adventures of a travel writer in Europe Available now on Kindle, Paperback and Hardcover Amazon Subscribe to our newsletter • Don’t miss out! Email Join Thanks for subscribing! Email AuthorKim@kimhshapiro.com Follow

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