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More Reviews of Murder in Concrete:

Jan 26, 2024 Paul’s Goodreads review by Paul Preuss. His novels incluede: The Gates of Heaven, Re-entry, Broken Symmetries, Human Error, Starfire, Core, Secret Passages. Paul also wrote six novels for an arthur C Clark series https://www.fantasticfiction.com/p/paul-preuss/arthur-c-clarkes-venus-prime/

“It was amazing.

Read 3 times. Last read January 26, 2024.

Arthur Coburn started his career as a Harvard-educated attorney but chose to become an editor of top-notch movies—favorites like "The Mask" and the premier "Spider-Man." Coburn has recently given us his debut novel, one of the most surprising and exciting thrillers I've read in quite a while. Even the title is loaded.

Concrete is a real town in northern Washington State, where the story's action begins instantly when 19-year-old Charlotte "Charlie" Perdue introduces herself. She's on the verge of graduating from high school, whose principal advises "if anyone makes fun of your hometown, you can tell them concrete from the limestone processed here built the Grand Coulee Dam…."

It takes barely a page for us readers to know that yes, we're going to root for her all the way. She can drive a car, but she prefers her bicycle, which she propels effortlessly for miles. Taught by her dad, she's a game hunter with a crack shot. But she has problems with hallucinations—

—beginning when she comes home to a silent house. Her mother lies murdered. Her father is missing. Soon he's is found dead too, his car in the river, his body eaten by animals. But do his Vietnam dog tags prove it's him? Before long, suspicion turns to Dad as the murderer.

Charlie goes to live with her grandmother, Lottie. The two of them both love classic movies but have little else in common. Lottie is religious, but given what's happened, Charlie has little faith in deities. "Strange things keep happening in my head. I see Mom and Dad’s mutilated bodies over and over. I have to find out who killed them."

Evidence mounts that the killer isn't done yet, and Charlie herself may be the next target. Mysterious phone calls: caller says nothing. A red-haired young woman repeatedly stalks Charlie, vanishing when Charlie tries to catch her. In hopes of tracking down the stalker, and with Lottie's reluctant permission, Charlie enrolls in the university in nearby Bellingham, Washington.
With the help of her college friend Nina, who is also a movie fan, Charlie stumbles on a strange clue: in a recent low-budget noir film, named "Dead Girls Don't Lie," the face of the man playing the villain is never quite visible—but his tell-tale limp seems identical to that of Charlie's father.

Against her grandmother’s hopes, Charlie heads to Los Angeles. Through a series of accidents that may not be wholly accidental, she finds herself involved with a crew of movie-makers working in the Mohave desert who knew her father. Her encounters with cantankerous actors, lecherous directors, dismissive cinematographers, editors, hairdressers, special effects experts, and others in the movie business are expertly and often hilariously depicted; given Coburn's expertise, the characters are downright authentic. As for Charlie's dad, they either refuse to talk about him, or they tell her he is dead.

What comes next is a series of thrilling and completely unexpected surprises. Not least, "Concrete" has more than one meaning.
Make your move and buy this book.

KIRKUS Our Verdict: GET IT.

MURDER IN CONCRETE

by Arthur Coburn ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 11, 2024

A compelling, action-packed thriller simmering with intrigue, suspense, and twisty mystery.

In Coburn’s mystery novel, a young woman dedicates her life to solving her mother’s murder.

In 1986, when good-natured graduating high school senior Charlotte “Charlie” Purdue comes home from school one day, her world is forever changed. First, her father, a local log cabin contractor, speeds out of town after telling his daughter that “leaving now is the only way I know to keep you safe.” Then, she discovers her mother’s murdered corpse, and things begin to spin out of control. The police of Concrete, Washington, have no leads, and when local boys find evidence that her father drowned in a local river, Charlotte accepts her fate as a grieving daughter but vows to find out what happened—despite small-town Concrete’s local gossipmongers, who’ve drawn their own conclusions. When Charlie thinks she sees her father in a low-budget movie, she immediately heads off to Hollywood to investigate. Things get murkier once she arrives and insinuates herself into the windswept desert set of a low-budget “zombie epic,” edging ever closer to finding her father while encountering a “cauldron of intrigues” blocking her path, including fake priests, seasoned actors, and a math whiz who writes in Russian Cyrillic text. The author is exacting in his depiction of Charlie, a gun-toting girl who exhibits the tenacity and diligence of a seasoned police investigator; as the story grows darker and more suspenseful, Charlie emerges as rock-solid in her determination. Gritty and immersively entertaining, Coburn’s novel draws readers into the movie-set melodrama as the book’s narrative momentum consistently picks up speed. The author has some difficulty with scene transitions, which can be jarring, but he makes up for these rocky shifts with convincing, authentic emotional nuances and dangerous situations that establish Charlie as a fierce protagonist.

A compelling, action-packed thriller simmering with intrigue, suspense, and twisty mystery.

Pub Date: March 11, 2024

ISBN: 9781509253388

Page Count: 382

Publisher: Wild Rose Press

Review Posted Online: today

Review Program: Kirkus Indie

Categories:

MYSTERY & DETECTIVE | DETECTIVES & PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS | GENERAL MYSTERY & DETECTIVE

 N. N. Light

5 stars for Murder in Concrete by Arthur Coburn mystery newrelease mustread wrpbks

Title: Murder in Concrete

Author: Arthur Coburn

Genre: Mystery

Book Blurb:

High school gossip...a death glare from a rival girl? Charlie takes them in stride.

But her mother’s murder and her dad’s disappearance send her off the rails. Therapy sessions get her to college, where she spots her missing dad in a film and races to Los Angeles to find him.

A lead takes her to a low budget zombie movie production in the desert. The crew say her dad died, but Charlie keeps investigating. Could the aging film star or the creepy man who writes in Russian Cyrillic script help lead her to her father? Or will Charlie find another truth, one she doesn’t want to hear?

My Review:

Can Charlie find the answers she’s been seeking about her dad’s disappearance, or will her search lead her somewhere she doesn’t want to go? Murder in Concrete is an intriguing mystery. The descriptive narration propels the plot. The characters are shrouded in mystery and there’s a young woman searching for answers. Murder in Concrete reads like a movie script and will keep your imagination engaged.

Let’s start with the descriptive narration. Every scene is very detailed, so the reader encapsulates the mood, emotion, tension, and action at the same time. The narration is also emotional, so it becomes the vehicle to connect with the characters.

The characters are well-written and emotive. I connected with Charlie right away. Her POV is deeply emotional, and the reader sees everything from her viewpoint. Her reactions are realistic.

The rest of the characters fill out the plot nicely. While some characters are complex and shrouded in darkness, other characters are easy to figure out.

The writing is unlike anything I’ve read before. It’s like reading a movie script, which is understandable considering the author’s background. It’s different but in a good way. The writing kept me reading late into the night. This author is one to watch.

If you like mind-bending mysteries in a unique style, you’ll enjoy Murder in Concrete as much as I did.

My Rating: 5 stars

Buy it Now:   

Author Biography:

Arthur Coburn grew up in New Jersey, went to Dartmouth College and Harvard Law School, passed the Washington bar, exam spent two years in the U.S. Infantry as a first Lieutenant, and survived a three-year law career, before bailing out and landing a job for King Screen Productions, a filmmaking Division of the KING Broadcasting Company in Seattle. His first assignment there was to make a chart of all the proposals for peace in Vietnam. He progressed to directing commercials, industrials and documentaries; later to writing educational film scripts for the same company. When the division closed, he worked as a freelance writer – doing environmental impact statements, and as a freelance still photographer.

After he left the law, Arthur wrote dramatic educational film scripts, and won a local Emmy for a documentary, then moved to Hollywood, where he edited more than two dozen films, including Spiderman, A Simple Plan and The Cooler. He is a member of Sisters in Crime and MWA; and he goes to writing conferences. He has taken a screen writing class John Truby, studied with poet and novelist Jim Krusoe at Santa Monica College. He took a class with author Kris Neri in mystery writing, and two courses with novelist and short story writer Tod Goldberg at UCLA. He has written five novels: Murder in Concrete (to be published in 2024) Murder in Madrona (currently in revision); and several awaiting care and review: MaBoys Will Be Boys, Mostly (general fiction), Rough Cut (a thriller). He won the Novel Prize at the Southern California Writer’s Conference in June 2005 for Rough Cut. His short stories, Some CreatureI Care About, and Backswing, appeared in Sisters in Crime Anthologies: LAmarked for Murder and Ladies Night.

Arthur is a member of the Motion Picture Academy and the Foreign Film Committee for which watches dozens of domestic films and upward of fifty films from all over the world in order to vote for best foreign film.

He has traveled and worked in Morocco, Poland, Italy, Greece, Egypt, Canada and France, speaks serviceable French and Italian and watches the French and Italian channels on cable. He learned enough Polish to order tomato soup without rice and enough Swahili to order hot water for a for a show in a desert encampment. Arthur skis, road bikes, and has a pilots’ license. Plays a little classical guitar and can improvise on the piano and Hammond organ. He has a B2 and a Leslie speaker at home.

He worked as a film editor in Hollywood on more than two dozen features.

His current novel, Murder in Concrete, was picked up by The Wild Rose Press largely due to the sympathetic eye and efforts of his fabulous editor, Dianne Rich of TWFP. She saw the novel’s value from the start and guided him past various hurdles to bring it home.

Social Media Links:

Website https://www.arthurcoburn.com/

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/arthur.coburn.7

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/arthurcoburnauthor

Newsletter https://www.arthurcoburn.com/about

Reviewed by: Nancy

 5 starClear filter

3 total ratings, 3 with reviews

From the United States

N. N. Light

5.0 out of 5 stars Murder in Concrete reads like a movie script and will keep your imagination engaged

Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2024

Can Charlie find the answers she’s been seeking about her dad’s disappearance, or will her search lead her somewhere she doesn’t want to go? Murder in Concrete is an intriguing mystery. The descriptive narration propels the plot. The characters are shrouded in mystery and there’s a young woman searching for answers. Murder in Concrete reads like a movie script and will keep your imagination engaged.

Let’s start with the descriptive narration. Every scene is very detailed, so the reader encapsulates the mood, emotion, tension, and action at the same time. The narration is also emotional, so it becomes the vehicle to connect with the characters.

The characters are well-written and emotive. I connected with Charlie right away. Her POV is deeply emotional, and the reader sees everything from her viewpoint. Her reactions are realistic.

The rest of the characters fill out the plot nicely. While some characters are complex and shrouded in darkness, other characters are easy to figure out.

The writing is unlike anything I’ve read before. It’s like reading a movie script, which is understandable considering the author’s background. It’s different but in a good way. The writing kept me reading late into the night. This author is one to watch.

If you like mind-bending mysteries in a unique style, you’ll enjoy Murder in Concrete as much as I did.

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Jo Anne Vincenti

5.0 out of 5 stars intriguing chain of events

Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2024

Well woven tale with some interesting characters - it certainly took me on an intriguing journey. I became emotionally immersed in this daughter’s quest to learn the truth and get answers about her parents while coping with her trauma and PTSD; feeling her emotions, stress, struggles, and journey. Full of twists, action, drama, suspense, mystery, and interesting situations/scenarios. Fast paced gripping mystery – kept me wondering what was going to happen next and I totally didn’t figure out the ending.

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Paula Rollins

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome read

Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2024

I enjoyed reading this book. Wonderful writer. I enjoy writers who can keep me interested and he has done that. I loved the fact that PTSD was involved showed Charlie can work with PTSD to get what she needed done.

Jim Krusoe led a legendary creative writing class for thirty-five years at Santa Monica College in Los Angeles: He is a American novelist, poet, and short story writer. His stories and poems have appeared in Antioch Review,DenverQuarterly, BOMB, Iowa Review, Field, North American Review, American Poetry Review, and Santa Monica Review, which he founded in 1988 Novelist; and former Writing Professosr at Santa Monica Communnity College:

“Dear Arthur,

Thanks so much. It was just what I needed: a really fast read with a teen-noir heroine. I liked your character-building skills, and for sure your film editor chops were perfect. I hope you are doing well, and maybe it will be picked up for a movie. 

Best, Jim

Review by Alma Boucher for Readers Favorite

“Murder in Concrete is a mystery murder by Arthur Coburn. Charlie's father told her to call her grandmother and ask her to fetch Charlie; he also advised Charlie not to go home. A week after Charlie discovered her mother's body on the bathroom floor with a slashed throat, her father's body was discovered in the Skagit River. Charlie's therapist diagnosed her with PTSD, but, with his assistance, she recovered sufficiently to be admitted to college. Charlie recognized her father during a film showing at college and decided to travel to Hollywood in search of answers. Charlie followed leads to a pornographic film studio and a low-budget zombie film in the desert, where she discovered her father had passed away some months prior.

Murder in Concrete by Arthur Coburn drew my interest right away. It was a captivating mystery, a challenging puzzle, and had a thrilling storyline. The plot moved at a breakneck pace, with several twists and turns that raised the stakes and revealed more mystery with each chapter. The action swiftly increased in speed and veered in a different direction just when I believed I understood what was happening, leaving me with more questions than the ones I already had. The characters were well-developed, and the intriguing characteristics of each individual gave the plot more depth. The writing is detailed and powerful, making the setting come alive with vivid and dramatic descriptions. The story ends on a high note with a satisfying and surprising finish.”

Reviewed by Keith Mbuya for Readers’ Favorite

“Charlie Purdue was just graduating from Concrete High School and looking forward to university when all hell broke loose. It began with her mother’s brutal murder in their house. It did not help that her father went missing immediately after this. Then came the rumors. According to the people of Concrete, Jefferson Purdue, Charlie’s father, had murdered Janine, Charlie’s mother, after catching her cheating on him with a Hollywood producer. Police investigations stall and Charlie can’t wait any longer to find out what happened to her mother. Launching her own investigation, she finds herself in California, where her father had apparently fled. However, Charlie might have more than one problem. Since her mother’s murder, she barely has a grip on her sanity and keeps lapsing into different realities. And there could be someone following her. Find out what happens to Charlie in Arthur Coburn’s Murder in Concrete.

Maintaining a fine line between reality and imagination, Arthur spins a tangled web of mystery in the plot. This gave the storyline a beautiful, yet quite complicated flow. Coupled with the edge-of-the-seat suspense, all this left me at the mercy of Arthur’s words. Every time I thought I had figured out where the story was headed, I would be presented with a plot twist that left me doubting my judgment. Arthur brings out the cast’s traits and emotions, allowing me to connect with them. The vivid depictions plunged me into the complicated world of a PTSD sufferer, where reality is as fickle as the control their trauma-laden brain has on it. Lovers of mystery murder novels with a touch of psychological thriller will find Arthur Coburn’s Murder in Concrete an enthralling read.”

Reviewed by Bil Howard for Readers’ Favorite

“There's been a murder in Concrete, a small town in Washington. The moment 19-year-old Charlotte Purdue, “Charlie,” finds her mother dead on the bathroom floor something snaps inside her brain. Battling PTSD, which causes her to do crazy things when it’s triggered, Charlie is almost certain that her father did not kill her mother despite what others were saying. Neither does she believe that the unidentifiable body, found in the Skagit River and wearing his dog tags, is her father. A strange redhead that continues to pop up in various places and phone calls without a voice on the other end of the line have her on edge. She is in fear for her own life and that of her grandmother. Charlie has weapons, and she knows how to use them, but unless she can find her father she will find no peace. Her only leads are a glimpse of her father in a movie, a buxom blonde movie star, and the name of a production studio. Despite the objections from her therapist, grandmother, and her roommate at the U., who wants to tag along, Charlie sets out from Washington to Hollywood alone, determined to find her father and the answers to her questions. Will she find her father working on a Hollywood set or meet the same fate as her mother in this mystery thriller by Arthur Coburn?

Murder In Concrete is a thrilling tale of determination and coming of age. Arthur Coburn is no stranger to Hollywood sets and plots that keep audiences on the edge of their seats. He won’t disappoint in this story about a bright and capable tomboy who is struggling to unravel the truth while battling a psychological disorder that distorts reality. Though her grit and determination are powerful tools, at 19, Charlie is still a novice, especially when it comes to navigating Hollywood where everything is smoke and mirrors. Through Charlie's eyes, Coburn expertly walks you around a movie set, showing how each part of the production crew works to create the illusions that we call movies. Charlie never gives up on her mission. Despite the failures and disappointments along the way, she learns from each of them, learns to battle PTSD, and becomes a confident young woman. Thanks to Coburn’s ability to create real characters and an intriguing plot, you will fall in love with Charlie and be suspicious of everyone around her from beginning to end. If you’re looking for a story that will challenge your wits and keep your blood pumping, I highly recommend this thriller.

What a good find! Great novel centred around Charlie dealing with teenage angst and high school until her life changes overnight when her Mum is murdered and her Dad disappears. After college and therapy Charlie has her life back on track until she sees a man who she believes to be her Dad in a movie and heads to LA to find out the truth for herself. Charlie finds herself on a low end film set in the desert where she is told her Dad has died but has he?”

 by Isaic on Booksprout  ****

 What a good find! Great novel centered around Charlie dealing with teenage angst and high school until her life changes overnight when her Mum is murdered and her Dad disappears. After college and therapy Charlie has her life back on track until she sees a man who she believes to be her Dad in a movie and heads to LA to find out the truth for herself. Charlie finds herself on a low end film set in the desert where she is told her Dad has died but has he?

 Post by Nzube Chizoba Okeke » Yesterday, 05:59

[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "murder in concrete" by arthur coburn.]

4 out of 5 stars

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Charlotte came home after school to find her mother's throat slit and a strange emblem drawn in blood beside her. Left only with cryptic warnings from her father and memories of the family she once had, she embarked on a quest to find her father and get some answers. As she searched, she made discoveries that would challenge everything she had known.

With the whole world telling her that her father was dead and enemies around every corner, who could she trust? Would she get the answers she sought?

Murder in Concrete by Arthur Coburn was a book with a lot of depth. I admired how the author created layered scenes and characters, giving the reader the feeling that there was more beneath the surface. Reading about Charlotte's journey and her struggles made me emotional. She was a scared girl who had endured the shock of her mother's death and her father's disappearance. She was also a brave woman who would stop at nothing to get what she wanted. The way she deftly navigated challenges and braved everything thrown at her while searching for her father made her character compelling.

The author skillfully used suspense in this book. I loved how the uncertainty built up; one could hardly guess what would happen next. I was searching for answers with the main character, looking around every corner, analyzing each character in the book, and wondering whether they could be the one Charlotte had been looking for.

The pacing of this book seemed haphazard to me. I couldn't understand the book's flow until I was halfway in. I'd attribute this to the hurried way things were revealed in the book. It felt like a truck ride on a bumpy road. The book could have been easier to follow if the opening scenes were easier to understand. Also, the transitions between scenes seemed choppy, as though one scene didn't follow the other. I had to study the book like a textbook to understand how we got from one point to another. It negatively affected my reading experience.

The editing is professional. However, I rate the book 4 out of 5 stars and recommend it to people who love crime stories, thrillers, and suspenseful novels. One star is removed due to how long it takes to grasp the narrative.

******

 Cc:Thomas Anderson,April Pulliam Editor

Thu, Feb 22 at 8:37 AM

Arthur,

Below is your review for Murder in Concrete. Your book has received 4 out of 5 stars from our reviewer. Please look over the review and let me know if it is ok to go forward with publishing to our site. Please let me know if you have any other questions. I am happy to answer them. 

In Murder in Concrete, author Arthur Coburn delivers a riveting mystery thriller centered around the determined and headstrong Charlie Purdue. The narrative begins with Charlie's world being shattered by the traumatic discovery of her mother's body and her father fleeing the scene, an event that throws her once-ordinary teenage life into disarray. Struggling with PTSD and paranoia, she takes it upon herself to unravel the truth behind her mother's murder, leading her on an unexpected journey to a Los Angeles movie set. There, she not only finds clues to the murder but also uncovers answers to questions she hadn't even considered.

Coburn crafts a compelling investigation, effectively drawing readers into Charlie's quest. Her refusal to accept the town's prevalent theory about her father's guilt drives the story forward with urgency. The depiction of Charlie's PTSD is a notable aspect of the book, adding layers to her character and introducing an element of unreliability in her narration. This narrative choice enriches the plot's complexity and adds to the overall suspense.

Coburn successfully portrays Charlie as a convincingly relentless avenger in her quest for justice, complemented by a well-rounded ensemble of villains and allies. Although there are moments where the dialogue between Charlie and the secondary characters could be more fluid, these instances are balanced by the overall strength in character development, adding depth to Charlie's interactions and journey. While occasionally facing challenges in fluidity during scene transitions, Coburn's prose successfully maintains a brisk pace that keeps the reader thoroughly engaged. The story culminates in a notably satisfying conclusion, skillfully tying up loose ends and offering a twist that is poised to delight readers.

Murder in Concrete stands out as a solid pick for those who enjoy a fast-paced thriller that combines an intricate mystery with high emotional stakes. Coburn's narrative invites readers into a world where uncovering the truth is as perilous as it is imperative, making for an engaging and suspenseful read.

Thank you,

Karen Almeida

Assistant Editor - Literary Titan

  

Murder in Concrete
by Arthur Coburn
The Wild Rose Press

 

book review by Kat Kennedy

 

"You students are like our concrete, strong enough to weather troubles that would undo most people."

In his farewell speech to graduating seniors in the small town of Concrete, the principal describes the graduates as “strong enough to weather troubles that would undo most people.” Charlie can’t fathom how she will have to put that theory to the test. But that same day, her panicked father tells her to immediately leave Concrete without going home. Charlie soon discovers her mother has been murdered. Then, her father’s body is pulled from a nearby river. After her parents’ horrible deaths, she suffers from PTSD, which causes hallucinations and disorientation. She decides to attend university, but her unnerving hallucinations cause her to shy away from others. It also seems she is being followed, and she fears whoever killed her parents is after her. By chance, she discovers her father is alive. Charlie’s search for answers lands her on a movie set, which begins a rollicking adventure with colorful characters.

This is one of those novels that has the reader invested from the first. Losing both parents in a matter of hours, the protagonist sets off on a dangerous quest for truth. Coburn’s handling of Charlie’s psychological problems brought on by her parents’ deaths is spot-on, with Charlie slipping from the present to the past in a frightening, and sometimes public, reaction to her delusions. Though struggling with the results of trauma, Charlie remains a strong character determined to find the truth regardless of the danger. This leads to some nail-biting scenes and unexpected plot twists. The author does a wonderful job of building the plot into a surprising ending. Many interesting details are included in the narrative about the movie business. This novel delivers on characterization as well as plot. Appropriate for both young adult and older readers, this one is excellent from start to finish.

RECOMMENDED by the US Review

Interview by Creative minds at work: We had the pleasure of interviewing the author. Here are a few excerpts from the interview:

Hi, Please introduce yourself and tell us about what it is that you do.

I write every day and am a member of the Motion Picture Academy, so I see up to sixty foreign films and dozens of Domestic films in order to vote in the Academy Awards competition;

I post daily on Facebook with reviews, photos, and experiences, as a young man and in my travels to Europe and Africa. I also post writing experiences and methods on Instagram.

Please tell us about your journey.

I have traveled and worked on languages and watched the French Channel and the Italian Channel to broaden my experience;

I ski and do rode biking; I play the guitar and piano; I spend as much time as I can with my grown son living in Seattle and with my grandsons, who are remarkable and sensitive boys, not afraid to hug me and tell me they love me. 

What are the strategies that helped you become successful in your journey?

I exercise and stretch every day – though one can never do enough of those things.

I have a morning meditation and memory exercise to keep all those gray cells perking and happy.

Any message for our readers

I Know readers have experienced all kinds of good and bad things, and I want to offer them respite from daily cares as well as tales that may entertain and help them with their lives. I respect their intelligence and the fact that they have many options for viewing and reading. I would be infinitely grateful if they chose to read my work.

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