There are
never enough Wednesdays in the month to interview all the authors whose books
I’ve loved. Advanced copies are provided about a month in advance of
publication, which doesn’t allow enough time to read books, write interview
questions, and then allow time for the authors to respond. Grace Topping and I
need at least two months for this process. (For those authors who wish to be
interviewed—take this hint.) I wish publishers understood this and got on our
schedule! That month gap means we can’t interview many authors who have written
wonderful books. But that doesn’t mean we don’t read them.
The following
books I can recommend and have been released this month or will be next month.
I’ve provided the jacket copy and have also provided my comments on why I liked
the book. Happy reading, everyone. E. B. Davis
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Is Val's breakfast pie the
quiche of death?
Owning her own business seemed like pie in the sky to Valentine Harris when she
moved to the coastal California town of San Nicholas, expecting to start a new
life with her fiancé. Five months—and a broken engagement—later, at least her
dream of opening a pie shop has become a reality. But when one of her regulars
keels over at the counter while eating a quiche, Val feels like she's living a
nightmare.After the police determine the customer was poisoned, business at Pie Town drops faster than a fallen crust. Convinced they’re both suspects, Val's flaky, seventy-something pie crust maker Charlene drags her boss into some amateur sleuthing. At first Val dismisses Charlene’s half-baked hypotheses, but before long the ladies uncover some shady dealings hidden in fog-bound San Nicholas. Now Val must expose the truth—before a crummy killer tries to shut her pie hole.
As a beach
gal, the setting of The Quiche And The
Dead, a northern CA small coastal town, appeals to me. The main characters,
Val, the pie shop owner, and Charlene, her piecrust maker and modern-style
surrogate grandma, are strong female characters anyone would like. Readers
sympathize with Val’s precarious finances and emotional upheaval. Charlene, a
town native, knows everyone’s history, heads a reluctant Val into investigating
and, in the process, transposes the roles of their employer/employee relationship.
Avenging an old man’s death, finding the town’s skeletons, forming an
investigative partnership, and making and eating pies—what could be cozier? Kirsten
Weiss’s paranormal books are wonderful, but this book proves she’s also
mastered traditional cozies.
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As friends, the boisterous
and brash American Beryl couldn’t be less alike than the prim and proper
British Edwina. But as sleuths in an England recovering from the Great War,
they’re the perfect match . . .
1920: Flying in the face of convention, legendary American adventuress Beryl
Helliwell never fails to surprise and shock. The last thing her adoring public
would expect is that she craves some peace and quiet. The humdrum hamlet of
Walmsley Parva in the English countryside seems just the ticket. And, honestly,
until America comes to its senses and repeals Prohibition, Beryl has no
intention of returning stateside and subjecting herself to bathtub gin.For over three decades, Edwina Davenport has lived comfortably in Walmsley Parva, but the post–World War I bust has left her in dire financial straits and forced her to advertise for a lodger. When her long-lost school chum Beryl arrives on her doorstep—actually crashes into it in her red motorcar—Edwina welcomes her old friend as her new roommate.
But her idyllic hometown has a hidden
sinister side, and when the two friends are drawn in, they decide to set up
shop as private inquiry agents, helping Edwina to make ends meet and satisfying
Beryl’s thirst for adventure. Now this odd couple will need to put their heads
together to catch a killer—before this sleepy English village becomes their
final resting place . . .
The cover attracted me
to this book. Before reading it, I had no idea that Jessica Ellicott was none
other than Jessie Crockett from the Wicked Cozy Authors blog, a delightful
surprise. The two main characters propel this book. They are opposites but
complement each other. Recognizing that fact, they plan their investigation
choosing who will have the best advantage given the suspect. Old friends know
each other well despite years gone by. The secondary characters are well drawn
too, but what will necessitate my picking up the next in the series are
questions about Beryl and Edwina. Readers see a great deal of Edwina since the
book is set in her town and house, but the old maid is an unexpected feminist,
begging the question why. It may be obvious, but there could be much more
there. Beryl seems in-your-face apparent, but perhaps not. The plot these
ladies unravel reveals more than the murderer. It reveals how prejudice has its
nefarious uses. Pull up an overstuffed chair, pour a cuppa, provide the cat a
lap, and read this book on a wintry day.
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Elementary school teacher Jacqueline “Jacks”
Morales’s marriage was far from perfect, but even in its ups and downs it was
predictable, familiar. Or at least she thought it was…until two police officers
showed up at her door with devastating news. Her husband of eight years, the
one who should have been on a business trip to Kansas, had suffered a fatal car
accident in Hawaii. And he wasn’t alone.
For
Jacks, laying her husband to rest was hard. But it was even harder to think
that his final moments belonged to another woman—one who had left behind her
own grieving and bewildered fiancé. Nick, just as blindsided by the affair,
wants answers. So he suggests that he and Jacks search for the truth together,
retracing the doomed lovers’ last days in paradise.
Now,
following the twisting path of that fateful road, Jacks is learning that
nothing is ever as it seems. Not her marriage. Not her husband. And most
certainly not his death…
I wish I
could explain this book—but that would be a spoiler. Reading through about
seventy percent of the book, I thought I was reading “Women’s Literature” because
the main character, Jacks, sifts through her relationship with her late husband.
Some of it is magical thinking—expected in her grief. And then…. If this first
collaboration of Liz Fenton and Lisa Steinke is any indication, we’ll be in for
more treats. I wish I could say more—but I just can’t—read it.
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An insidious evil has taken root in the small town of Hope’s Peak, North Carolina…
In the midst of an internal investigation, the police department is thrown into chaos when Captain Frank Morelli is gunned down on his own front lawn. Detective Jane Harper suspects that someone is tying up loose ends—a conviction that only grows stronger when she witnesses the execution of another officer in broad daylight. With no one else to turn to, Jane seeks the help of psychic Ida Lane.
Ida thought she’d finally find peace after
the death of the man who murdered her mother. But as the town emerges from the
shadow cast by that serial killer, they discover that there is more than one
monster hiding in the darkness. Desperate to lay her ghosts to rest, Ida puts
her extraordinary skills to the test. Together, she and Jane must uncover the
truth…or be permanently silenced like the rest.
A serial
killer plagued Hope’s Peak for decades. This third book provides the conclusion
and heads toward a new beginning for Jane and Ida. The brave women main
characters shine in this series. Healey brings unlike characters together, but
they find common ground. He puts Jane and Ida in uncomfortable roles, but they
mold the roles to suit themselves. To find peace, they must change and possess
the courage to face the unknown, a great beginning for the next book in this
exciting series.
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Oh no! A bunch of new books to add to my TBR list! Will I ever catch up?
ReplyDeleteThe answer, of course, is "No."
Thanks for introducing us to some new books--I think! The stack of books I have on hand to read is threatening to topple over and crush me. So many wonderful books to read and not enough time to read the all. It reminds me of the episode of "Twilight Zone" where a lone survivor of a nuclear blast stumbles upon a library, where he can read without being harangued by his wife, only to have his glasses break.
ReplyDeleteMore books. So many good books and so little time.
ReplyDeleteI wrote the titles and authors down because they sound good, but I'm not sure I'll be able to read all of them because of the two book clubs I belong to. Like the others who commented, I already have stacks of books waiting to be read.
ReplyDeleteWhoa, I don't know how you do it, EB! You must be swamped! How many books would you say you read in a month? I used to read one a week, back in the good old days....
ReplyDeleteSome interesting reads here. I'm hoping for a cold winter--curled up in front of the fireplace with a book.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the reviews. The Good Widow sounds like a great read!
ReplyDelete