Old
Town Virginia’s entertaining guru and occasional sleuth Sophie Winston – a
young Martha Stewart in the making – juggles Fourth of July fireworks, a
houseful of guests, and homicide in the latest Domestic Diva culinary mystery
from New York Times bestselling author Krista Davis.
With a big crowd descending on her Northern Virginia home, it’s a good thing
event planner Sophie Winston is an expert at entertaining. Whipping up
patriotic pastries is as easy as pie for her, though meeting the man her
widowed Aunt Melly just impulsively married in Las Vegas is a little more
awkward. Especially when Melly’s longtime, now-heartbroken secret admirer is
there too, which could lead to some fireworks.
But the house party really gets explosive when Sophie’s favorite tour guide
falls victim to a killer—and evidence points to Sophie’s own father. Will DNA
really incriminate her dad? And what’s the real story with her new
uncle-by-marriage and the mysterious pal he’s brought along with him? Some of
the secrets Sophie’s discovering are raising flags—and while the police
department casts suspicion on her father, she has to declare her independence
as a detective to find the real culprit, and serve justice along with her red,
white, and blue cupcakes . . .
Krista Davis’s Domestic Diva mystery series never gets old for me. It’s more like coming home to friends and family. The Diva Hosts a Murderer is the nineteenth book in the series and was released yesterday. The story takes place over the Fourth of July in Old Town Alexandria. I was glad for the heat given off in the book since it’s been a cold spring, and it made me long for the warmer days of summer, soon to come, but not soon enough!
Second-chance romances versus the single life seem to be a topic that Krista explores for the middle and older characters in this book. It’s an interesting topic with no one answer as the characters find. And there are a lot of characters because Sophie is hosting her family: mother, father, sister, plus an aunt with her newly-wed husband and his friend, along with two men from Sophie’s hometown of Berryville, VA, where her family still lives. With that crowd, even a domestic diva can find being the perfect hostess problematic.
Please welcome Krista Davis back to WWK! E. B. Davis
When I started to read, I thought this was the first book in which you showed Sophie’s family. But over the years/books, you must have brought them into the story. Did you?
They were in the first two books and then occasionally showed up in holiday books.
Does Hannah, Sophie’s sister, still live with her parents in Berryville?
Hannah has been living in Berryville but not with her parents. She’s been in transition, spending a lot of time in Old Town, but not with Sophie!
Is Sophie being nosy by wanting Hannah to account for her whereabouts in the wee hours of the morning or is she just being an older sister?
Sophie lets her sister be an adult and do her own thing. But when someone comes home closer to the crack of dawn, and the bars closed at 2AM, it’s natural to wonder where she has been.
Sophie and Hannah don’t seem to have much in common. Is Sophie the extrovert and Hanna the introvert?
They just have different interests. Sophie loves entertaining, after all, she’s a professional event planner. But Hannah is a computer whiz.
Nina’s pathologist husband is usually off testifying somewhere. Although he doesn’t stay for long, he does make an appearance. Has he been in other books before?
He makes his sole appearance in this book! After all, it’s a holiday so he’s finally home for a few days.
Why does Officer Wong dismiss Sophie’s older neighbor Dollie’s account of seeing a dead man in her house?
Dollie has a record of calling the police to report sounds like creaking floors and footsteps in the night. But there’s never anyone there and no sign of a break-in, so the police think she has an active imagination. Her family has owned that house for generations, so there’s always the possibility of ghosts or just a creaky old house.
Are the Masonic Temple and the Apothecary Museum real and open to the public?
Yes, they are! Old Town Alexandria is often on lists of great places to visit. Good food, lovely old architecture, and loads of history. One of the popular restaurants was a hospital during the Civil War. And for history buffs, Alexandria found itself between the South and the North, so it was packed with spies!
Why did Natasha throw a 1820s costume party?
The 250th celebration of the Declaration of Independence was coming up. Natasha was all in with a huge party. She asked guests to dress in the type of clothes people would have been wearing at the time. Even the menus were based on a typical dinner in the 1820s. Natasha always has a scheme in mind and this is another one of them.
What was the story about burying politicians in unmarked graves so their enemies wouldn’t find them and then the locations of the unmarked graves were lost?
The most notable story (true or false, it’s a fun legend) was about John C. Calhoun from Charleston, who was the Vice President of the United States twice. The story goes that he died in Washington DC and was buried there. But due to the Civil War, they feared his foes would disturb his grave, so in the dark of night they dug him up and moved him to an unmarked grave. His wife then asked that he be moved to Charleston, but apparently there was some confusion about which grave he was actually occupying at that point. Eventually, they dug him up again and moved him to Charleston. But he had been born upstate, not in Charleston, so he was buried across the street from the church, in the Stranger’s Graveyard for visitors and non-locals, not in the proper cemetery. Eventually, he was dug up again and finally moved to the St. Philip’s Episcopal Church cemetery.
It's a story that a lot of tour guides enjoy embellishing.
After her father is arrested for murder due to his DNA found on the victim, Sophie researches DNA evidence and finds that it may not be conclusive evidence since DNA could be spread by mere contact and not necessarily during the time of death. Since the victim was Sophie’s family’s tour guide, they were on his bus and in his proximity for several days. Would the police arrest him on just that evidence?
They did, based on the DNA. There is a difference between DNA from skin cells and DNA from blood, which yields a higher quantity and quality.
What is a Dunlap Broadside? Why do they call them that?
Remember that we’re talking about 1776 when there were no computers or copy machines that could copy papers in a minute. So a Philadelphia printer named John Dunlap churned out 200 copies overnight. They were the very first broadly distributed copies of the United States Declaration of Independence, now referred to as Dunlap Broadsides. Today, there are only 26 known copies still in existence. But every once in a while, one turns up in a basement or box of old papers. The last auction of one brought in $8.14 million.
What’s the difference among a buckle, crisp, cobbler, crumble, and a betty?
That’s a tough question. They are all baked desserts with fruit. According to the Farmer’s Almanac and St. Louis Magazine, these are the distinctions. https://bit.ly/42Iwc0H and https://bit.ly/4ulsGFG
A buckle has a streusel topping. The berries are folded into the batter.
A crisp usually has oats in it. Often confused with a crumble. It has a crumb topping and sometimes nuts.
A cobbler has a biscuit topping, sweetened fruit, and spices.
A crumble never contains oats, unless it does. Major confusion on this issue!
A Betty is like a crisp but has no oats. There are crumbs inside as well as on top in a buttery crumb topping.
Whew! Still confused? Me, too. LOL! They’re all delicious!
What’s next for Sophie?
Hmm. I don’t want to reveal any spoilers, but a lot happens in the next book! Stay tuned!



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