About the Book
Book: A Riddle in the Lonesome October (Rae Riley Mysteries Book Three)
Author: JPC Allen
Genre: YA Christian cozy mystery
Release Date: October 1, 2025
How do you survive a season of fear?
October is a hard month for Rae Riley’s family. Her dad, Sheriff Walter “Mal” Malinowski lost his wife and father then. He also has to manage the trouble Halloween brings to rural Marlin County, Ohio. But this year, Rae’s uncle fights for his life after a riding accident, and a family feud over a lost inheritance erupts at a local Halloween attraction. As Rae tries to support her family, she and her cousin Amber work to unravel the 70-year-old riddle that will reveal the location of the inheritance so their great aunt Lily and her kids can gain a fortune. And Rae must deal with the secretive behavior of the deputy she’s fallen for.
When a bogus medium conducts a séance to contact Cyrus Morley, the man who devised the riddle, the results stun everyone, and the aftermath is even more shocking. There’s only one way to survive a season of so much fear–and only one way to unmask a killer.
Click here to get your copy!
About the Author
JPC Allen started her writing career in second grade with a homage to Scooby Doo, and she’s been track down mysteries ever since. A Shadow on the Snow, the first novel in the Rae Riley Mysteries series, won first place for published YA fiction in the ACFW KidLit Contest. A Storm of Doubts, her second novel, came in second for YA fiction at the Selah Awards. Online, she offers writing tips and prompts to ignite the creative spark in every kind of writer. She also leads writing workshops for adults and teens. Coming from a long line of Mountaineers, she’s a life-long Buckeye, a wife of one for twenty years, and mother of two for sixteen.
More from JPC
Writing a Historical Mystery … Sort Of
I had a great time concocting the elaborate mystery for A Riddle in the Lonesome October. What made this novel unusual for me was the importance of history in figuring out the riddle to the hidden inheritance. In my other mysteries, the suspects were living people my amateur sleuth Rae Riley knew. She could speak to them and evaluate who was telling the truth, who was lying, and who was hiding something.
But for this mystery, Rae has to dig into the past. She decides in order to crack the riddle that was left to the heirs, she has to understand what kind of man was Cyrus Morley, the man who created the riddle. Since he died over seventy years ago, she has to use historical resources.
I had a lot of fun coming up with the documents Rae uncovers. Since Cyrus Morley was wealthy and owned coal mines in Marlin County, Ohio, where Rae lives, he was a prominent citizen, often featured in stories in the local newspaper. But official sources like that only revealed part of Cyrus Morley’s complicated life.
As a former librarian, I knew that local libraries can have books or documents that you can’t find anywhere online. Those materials were printed decades or even centuries ago and only have local interest, so no one has bothered to put them online. So I created a memoir, written by a local pastor’s wife. It’s the kind of book a church and its members would have but no one else.
I loved writing in a different style from Rae’s narration. The pastor’s wife, Rebecca, had help to write her memoir in the 1980s. But I thought the style would be older since Rebecca was born in 1900. I grew up on Agatha Christie and Rex Stout, so I enjoyed writing excerpts from the memoir in a more old-fashioned style, so readers would feel like they were reading a genuine, historical document.
What was even better was figuring out a way for Rae’s eighty-one-year-old great-grandfather Walter to provide clues. Coming up with a family history that intersects with Cyrus’s life was an absolute joy to create. I loved writing the chapter in which Walter tells Rae this unknown chapter in the Malinowski family’s history.
So if you like your mysteries with a touch of history, I’m sure you’ll love Rae’s investigation into a mystery seventy years in the making.
Author Interview
- What is your favorite genre of books? Why?
I love mysteries, so I write mysteries. I think I love them because I love the research the detective has to do to uncover the truth. I also like the mental exercise of piecing together the puzzle. And the detective gets involved in the mystery to help people and seek justice, setting the world right again.
- Are you a one project at a time author or do you have multiple projects going at once?
One novel takes up so much brain power that I can only write one story at a time.
- How has your life experience helped in your writing journey?
Trying to learn how people operate in real life helps me create believable characters. I also put a lot of my faith journey into Rae’s. That gives her struggles authenticity.
- What is the funniest thing to happen in the process of writing one of your books?
My youngest sister and niece acted as my critique partners for A Riddle in the Lonesome October. When I sent them the last third of the book, I had to explain that plot point A had changed to plot point B. So in the middle of a chapter, I changed font and stated, “Ellyn and Anna, when B comes up, it’s the substitute for A.” And I explained why I made the change.
Ellyn told me she was reading along and then all of a sudden, the manuscript addressed her personally. That had never happened to her before.
- Do you remember the first book you read? What sort of impact did it make on you?
I don’t remember the first book I read, but I do know I was reading the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew in second grade, and of course, they’ve had lasting impact. I know my first exposure to mysteries was Scooby Doo. To this day, I can watch 10 to 30 seconds of an episode and tell you which one it is.
Blog Stops
Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, October 1
Stories By Gina, October 2 (Author Interview)
Holly’s Book Corner, October 2
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, October 3
Simple Harvest Reads, October 4 (Author Interview)
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, October 5
Artistic Nobody, October 6 (Author Interview)
Texas Book-aholic, October 7
Guild Master, October 8 (Author Interview)
Fiction Book Lover, October 9 (Author Interview)
Hannahbandanarama, October 9
For the Love of Literature, October 10 (Author Interview)
For Him and My Family, October 11
Tell Tale Book Reviews, October 12 (Author Interview)
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, October 13
Blossoms and Blessings, October 14 (Author Interview)
Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, JPC is giving away a signed copy of A Riddle in the Lonesome October and Christmas fiction off the beaten path, an $25 Amazon gift card, mug, tea, and chocolates!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

Such a fascinating title.
Sounds fabulous
If you could describe this book in three words, what would they be?
I liked the interview.