Exploring the Mysteries of the Mind

Tag: 99 cent books (Page 1 of 2)

Marching into Spring with 2 Rad Reads

I’ve been pretty busy the last few months, between the holidays and getting two books out, so that’s cut into my reading time somewhat. Also, I’ve read a few stories lately that I deemed not worthy of recommendation.

So only 2 Rad Reads this time around. But they are the first in two series—working your way through the rest of the series should give you plenty of Spring reading!

Pineapple Lies, A Pineapple Port Mystery, #1 by Amy Vansant ~ Free on KU, 99¢ to buy

If one can suspend disbelief early on, this is a lighthearted but intriguing cozy mystery, the first in a 17-book series.

Orphaned Charlotte is raised by her grandmother in a retirement community, until her grandmother also dies when she’s a preteen. Then the other residents take over as surrogate parents. Now 26 years old, Charlotte still lives in her grandmother’s house in the Pineapple Port 55+ community.

Why the need to suspend disbelief? One, such communities almost always have strict rules about no children, and at least one member of each household has to be over 55. Two, why would a young person continue to live in such a place surrounded by senior citizens?

We get the answer to that last question as Charlotte’s relationship with her surrogate mothers, the amusingly nutty Mariska and Darla, is revealed.

Then Charlotte’s usually dull life becomes much more exciting when her neighbor’s dog digs up a bone in her yard, and it turns out to belong to a woman everyone thought ran away from her husband and child years ago.

That child is now a tall and handsome young man, the owner of the local pawn shop. And Charlotte finds him disturbingly attractive. The twisty romp that ensues as she and the young man try to unravel what really happened to his mother is a fun read.

I give Pineapple Lies 4 fingerprints, and Book 2 is loaded up on my kindle.

Murder in G Major, A Gethsemane Brown Mystery, #1, by Alexia Gordon, $4.99 (I think it’s worth it)

This book/series has several things I love—a spunky female protagonist, a picturesque setting in the Irish countryside, and a ghost!

Stranded in Ireland after the job she’d been promised is snatched away and her luggage is stolen, classical musician Gethsemane Brown is forced to take a teaching position at a boys’ school in a small village.

She soon discovers that the old cottage she’s rented is haunted by the ghost of its former owner, a legendary musician and composer. He is reputed to have killed his wife and then committed suicide. His relationship with Gethsemane is contentious at first, but he eventually enlists her help to clear his name.

The characters are beautifully developed, including the ghost, and the story is told with clarity and touches of humor. The setting is also described well. You feel like you are visiting the village yourself.

This first book in the series received the Lefty Award for Best Debut Novel. I have read the entire series and enjoyed each story very much.

My only disappointment is that, other than identifying Gethsemane as African-American at the beginning of Book 1, there is little mention of race nor of any struggles with prejudice. I call this a disappointment rather than a criticism, because I personally prefer realism as much as possible, even in cozy mysteries. But I can certainly understand why the author might choose to leave such ugliness out of the world she has built for the main character of her cozy series.

I enthusiastically give Murder in G Major five fingerprints and recommend the entire 5-book series. (Hope she writes more!)

That’s it for this time around. More to come in a few weeks. Happy reading!

Auld Lang Mayfair is Live!!

And we are live, Folks!! Yay! Only 99 cents for a limited time!

Also, here are two fun posts about this final installment in the MB&B series. Check them out on the misterio press blog ~ Letting Go of Beloved Characters and Confessions of a Lifelong Horse Lover

AULD LANG MAYFAIR, A Marcia Banks and Buddy Mystery, #13

Should auld acquaintance be forgot…

The last year has been eventful for Marcia and husband Will. They’ve successfully launched their private investigation agency and completed their family with an adorable but creatively energetic baby girl. Now, they’re about to ring in the New Year with friends and neighbors.

But there’s something more than champagne bubbling in Mayfair, Florida.

The octogenarian matriarch of the town is always looking for ways to boost the community’s economy. Her latest scheme is the addition of a row of shops along Main Street. But a few of her new tenants have something more nefarious in mind than simply selling their wares.

When old hostilities set off New Year’s fireworks, a shopkeeper ends up dead, and two friends of Marcia’s are prime suspects. Determined to clear them, Marcia and Will—with Buddy’s help, of course—set out to uncover the real Grim Reaper.

AVAILABLE ON:

AMAZON ~ NOOK ~ APPLE ~ KOBO  ~ GOOGLE PLAY

Enjoy!!!

Auld Lang Mayfair is Here!

Yay!! Book #13, the holiday novella that completes the Marcia Banks and Buddy Mysteries, is here!!

Available for Preorder now. Just 99 cents during Preorder; goes up after it releases on January 31, 2023.

AULD LANG MAYFAIR, A Marcia Banks and Buddy Mystery

Should auld acquaintance be forgot…

The last year has been eventful for Marcia and husband Will. They’ve successfully launched their private investigation agency and completed their family with an adorable but creatively energetic baby girl. Now, they’re about to ring in the New Year with friends and neighbors.

But there’s something more than champagne bubbling in Mayfair, Florida.

The octogenarian matriarch of the town is always looking for ways to boost the community’s economy. Her latest scheme is the addition of a row of shops along Main Street. But a few of her new tenants have something more nefarious in mind than simply selling their wares.

When old hostilities set off New Year’s fireworks, a shopkeeper ends up dead, and two friends of Marcia’s are prime suspects. Determined to clear them, Marcia and Will—with Buddy’s help, of course—set out to uncover the real Grim Reaper.

AVAILABLE ON:

AMAZON ~ NOOK ~ APPLE ~ KOBO  (Coming to GOOGLE PLAY soon)

Reserve your copy now! Only 99 cents during Preorder!

Winter Rad Reads 2023

This is the perfect time of year to pour yourself a cup of tea, coffee or hot chocolate and curl up with one or more of these Rad Reads!

(Since several books I’ve read lately I did not consider worthy of recommending, I’m going back to some earlier reads for the first of the reviews below.)

A Dash of Murder, A Pecan Bayou Mystery, #1, by Teresa Trent ~ 99¢

I read this book 9 years ago and have since read the entire series. I enjoyed them very much, especially the characters—just quirky enough to be interesting but still believable. Betsy Livingston is “The Happy Hinter,” a columnist for the local newspaper, and an amateur sleuth (much to the chagrin of her police lieutenant father).

In this short but fun first installment in the series, Betsy’s Aunt Maggie drags her along on a ghost hunting tour of a local abandoned hospital. And Betsy’s sleuthing avocation is launched when she stumbles on a “fresh spirit,” i.e. a corpse.

Aunt Maggie is a hoot and I also love the portrayal of Maggie’s son, a young man with Downs’ Syndrome. The author develops the characters and the setting, a small town in Texas, with just the right amount of detail to bring them to life, but without slowing down the story.

I give A Dash of Murder, and the whole series, 4 ½ fingerprints.

Louisiana Longshot, A Miss Fortune Mystery #1 by Jana DeLeon, FREE

First, let me say that I totally enjoyed this book, once I got past what the main character did for a living. Then a bit later on, I hit a couple of other bumps. More on that in a moment.

I was a bit taken aback when the MC of a mystery billed as a cozy is a CIA assassin…doesn’t quite fit with the normal cozy tropes. But the book has thousands of ratings and a 4.5 star average, so I forged ahead.

The story is great and the characters and town are well developed. I particularly got a kick out of the Geritol Mafia, several little old ladies who look so sweet, but they have pasts, and skills, that give even a CIA operative pause.

And of course there’s a sexy sheriff, with whom the MC locks horns over her and the little old ladies poking their noses into his investigation.

But again, I was a bit jarred when I encountered the first cuss word (there were several), and things got a bit gory toward the end.

Not that I personally object to any of that, but it breaks several rules regarding cozies. For that reason, I’m only giving Louisiana Longshot 4 fingerprints. Without those jarring moments, it would’ve gotten 4 ½ or maybe even 5. But now that I know what to expect, I probably will read more in this series.

Midnight at Malabar House, A Malabar House Mystery, #1, by Vaseem Khan ~ $4.99 (and I think it’s worth it)

I don’t read as much historical fiction as I once did, but when I do, I expect to be educated, in a pleasant way, about the location and era where and when the story is set. Vaseem Khan does not disappoint.

I loved learning about the intricacies of India’s politics and society as the infant country begins its first full decade of independence from Great Britain, in 1950.

And the author’s premise is intriguing. The main character is Persis Wadia, the country’s first female police detective. When she is handed a sensitive, and sensational, case—the murder of a British diplomat—she must not only sort out a complicated crime, but also overcome the prejudices of others, including some of her fellow officers.

The info about India’s history, culture and social structure was seamlessly woven into the storyline, as we follow Persis on the twisted trail that eventually leads to the killer. She is helped along the way by a British criminalist, Archie Blackfinch.

My complaints about this story are minor. There are a lot of characters to keep track of, and sometimes not a lot distinguishing them from one another. I had a little trouble relating to Archie. My impression was more bumbling sidekick, but then later in the story there are hints of something else…I won’t say more for fear of spoilers. But I found myself scratching my head, thinking, “Why did that go in that direction?”

I could certainly relate to Persis though, and her struggles to be accepted and respected in a male-dominated world. But I would’ve liked to know more about her motivation for becoming a police officer; that part of her back story was not nearly as well developed as her family background was.

But despite these minor drawbacks, this was a very satisfying story. I give Midnight at Malabar House 4 ½ fingerprints.

That’s it for this time around. Happy reading!!

 

 

 

 

 

Love a Bargain! Presenting the Kate Huntington Mystery Collections

COLLECTION III is Available for Preorder and COLLECTION I is On Sale ~ Both ONLY 99¢ for a limited time!~~

Collection I ~ Books 1-3, Plus a Novella ~ ONLY 99¢

A psychotherapist whose passion for helping others often lands her in trouble…

In this three-book bundle, plus a fun novella set at Christmas time, join psychotherapist Kate Huntington on the roller coaster ride her life becomes when a killer gets her in their cross hairs!

AMAZON   ~  APPLE  ~  NOOK  ~  KOBO  ~  GOOGLE PLAY

~~

~~

COLLECTION II ~ Books 4-6, Plus a Novella ~ $7.99

A $6 savings compared to individual book prices!!

Follow psychotherapist Kate Huntington and her new PI husband as they deal with the paparazzi, an international assassin, and a 9/11 first responder accused of murder, plus a locked-room mystery on a Caribbean cruise. (Note: The first two books in this collection were part of a previous 5-book bundle.)

AMAZON  ~  APPLE  ~  NOOK  ~  KOBO  ~  GOOGLE PLAY

~~

NEW!!  COLLECTION III ~ Books 7-8, Plus 2 Novellas

ONLY 99¢ during PREORDER and for a limited time after Release on 5/21/22

In this 4-story collection, follow psychotherapist Kate Huntington as she races against the clock to save her former boss from a serial killer, uncovers the murderer of her husband’s high school nemesis, searches for the truth behind a client’s supposed suicide, and faces off with a psychopath in Hawaii.

AMAZON  ~  APPLE  ~  NOOK  ~  KOBO  ~  GOOGLE PLAY

COLLECTION IV Coming Soon!!

Happy reading! Love, Kass

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

May Rad Reads

Hi,  Everyone! Sorry I didn’t get any book reviews posted in April. I’ve been up to my eyeballs in editing the next Marcia Banks and Buddy mystery.

Cover Reveal Coming Soon!!

But here are three books I’ve read recently that I think are worthwhile.

Murder on the Road, An Italian Village Mystery, Book 1, by Adriana Licio – free on KU, $2.99 to buy

The two best things about this book were the setting and the main character’s grandmother.

Travel-guide writer, Giò Brando has returned to her Italian hometown to lick her wounds after her relationship with a long-term boyfriend falls apart. Although she doesn’t do a lot of wound-licking…maybe because she gets caught up in a murder investigation right away.

Someone has been crushed in their car by a falling rock, and Giò is the first to find the body. Turns out the rock was intentionally dislodged and all the drivers who were near there that morning are on the suspect list. While the police are wading through them, Giò decides to do her own investigating. (Her relationship with the local police, for better or worse, is a bit unrealistic, but I tend to let that slide in cozies.)

The story is well-developed and I didn’t suspect the true culprit until near the end. The descriptions of the setting and the food are great, but I felt that the characters weren’t as fully developed as they could be. I had some trouble relating to them.

I think this was partly because the dialogue sometimes felt a bit stilted. The author is a native speaker of Italian, and her grasp of English (British-style) is excellent. But I’m thinking it’s harder to write natural sounding dialogue in something other than one’s first language.

I’ve now read Book 2 with the same reaction. Loved the story and the setting, but this time, I felt some of the other characters were better developed than Giò, especially her sister and the grandmother. The latter is my favorite kind of female character—an older, no-nonsense woman with a deep love for her family.

Murder On the Road gets 4 fingerprints.

Shades of Grayson: Scottish Ghost Castle Mysteries Prequel ($0.99) and Dark Night, Dead Knight, Book 1, by  Diane Lewis ~ Free on KU, $3.99 to buy

I had decided that I wouldn’t review these books; I don’t do negative reviews. I know how hard it is to write a good book, so I’m not going to dis someone else’s efforts.

Then I decided to lay it all out about this series and let you all decide for yourselves.

I read the 99-cent prequel novella, Shades of Grayson first, and enjoyed it.

Author Grayson Cleary attends a writers’ conference in Canada where he is on the short list for a prestigious award. Instead he wins the “prime suspect” award in a murder case. Helped by a blind writer and his seeing-eye poodle, his new girlfriend, and a ghost, Grayson attempts to clear his name and almost ends up a ghost himself.

I was prepared to give this story four, maybe four and a half fingerprints. It’s well written, the characters are well drawn, and the setting is realistically portrayed (I’ve been to a few of these conferences). Plus the plot has some interesting twists. A lot is packed into 160 some pages.

I liked it so much, I bought Book 1 in the series. In this story, Grayson is a supporting character, a resident at a permanent writers’ retreat at an old castle in Scotland. While this concept, a permanent writers’ retreat (I’d never heard of them and a quick internet search says they’re rare), was both intriguing and a bit of a credibility stretch, again the story is well written. The setting and characters are described in such a way that you feel like you are there with them, negotiating the labyrinth of stone hallways in the old castle and enjoying the fabulous view of the nearby loch.

The story has great twists and turns, plus a resident ghost (I love ghost stories, especially when the ghosts are friendly). I was planning on giving it at least 4 fingerprints, until I got to the ending.

Without spoiling anything, let’s just say that not all the questions of who, how and why were completely answered. The ending was semi-satisfying but left enough loose ends to make it a borderline cliffhanger.

I loathe cliffhangers, but I know some people like them, or at least don’t mind them. At first I wasn’t going to read Book 2, on principle. But the characters and especially the interesting setting lured me back and I’ve purchased Book 2.

I’ll give you an update after I’ve read it.

In the meantime, Grayson’s story gets 4 fingerprints.

And Dark Night, Dead Knight gets 3 ½. (If you don’t mind semi-cliffhangers, it’s a 4-fingerprint read.)

I’d suggest trying out the prequel to see if you like the writing, then decide from there about the other books.

Death in the Time of Ice, A People of the Wind Mystery, Book 1, by Kaye George ~ $0.99

This is a rather unusual mystery. Think Clan of the Cave Bear meets Nancy Drew.

Enga Dancing Flower is a young Neanderthal woman, wrongly accused of murdering her tribe’s leader, who was also her own foster mother.

For a while, the in-fighting in the tribe and between the remaining elders, plus their quest for food, which is getting scarcer as the Ice Age approaches, seem to take precedent over finding the Hama’s killer.

Things don’t drag, however, as the author does a good job of world-building, drawing the reader into the tribe’s story. And when Enga herself is accused of the murder and banished from the tribe, she becomes highly motivated to find out what really happened.

There are several interesting twists near the end, and a satisfying ending. My only complaints are the lack of an explanation of the motivation behind one character’s actions (part of a subplot) and some confusion about the timeline of the past (how old the various characters are in relation to Enga). But neither of these significantly impacted my enjoyment of the story.

I have downloaded the next book in the series to continue to follow Enga’s saga, and I understand that Book 3 is in the works. I recommend this story, nominated for Best Historical Mystery in the 2014 Agatha Awards, with 4 ½ fingerprints.

That’s it for this round, folks. Happy reading!

 

 

 

Rad Reads for Early Spring

You may think I’m jumping the gun here, calling it Spring, but I live in northern Florida, so our spring has actually started. We have truly beautiful weather for about 2 months; then it gets stinking hot (for 6 months)!

Okay, on to the book reviews in a moment, but first I wanted to give you all a heads up. I have Fatal Forty-Eight on Sale this week for just 99 cents, and I’ll have more bargains to tell you about this weekend.

So stay tuned!

Now for the rad reads…

Murder at the Marina, A Mollie McGhie Cozy Sailing Mystery, Book 1, by Ellen Jacobson – Free

I have somewhat mixed feelings about this book. Let me start with the positives.

Mollie McGhie is hoping for diamonds for her wedding anniversary. Instead her hubs, Scooter, buys her a fixer-upper sailboat. This premise definitely caught my attention, since I was raised in a family of boaters. I spent many a weekend, as a preteen and teenager, hanging out at marinas.

And what married woman hasn’t gotten at least one disastrous present from her husband? (Like the ugly yellow robe mine bought me for Christmas one year.) Mollie’s internal reaction to the boat and her attempts to get her hubs to sell it add humor to the story.

Also, the mystery itself is very well crafted, and the book is well-written. (Only a few typos and one small inconsistency, which is in the subplot).

I did not suspect the person who ended up being the killer, and yet my first thought was that it made perfect sense. That’s the way it should be in a good mystery!

The mystery was what kept me reading, even though I was having trouble relating to this couple. And I struggled to pin down why that was. I’m a fairly visual person (as are 65% of the American population) and I just couldn’t visualize this couple.

So I went back and re-read the first two chapters. There are physical details about these two, and they are very artfully woven into the narrative of the story. So why did I have no internal image of them?

I realized it was because I couldn’t figure out how old they were. They’ve been married ten years, and there’s no mention of previous marriages. Yet, Scooter is “retired,” but only because his business partners forced him to sell out to them, and he made enough from the sale to live independently.

Most of the folks they hang out with at the marina are middle aged or older. But I had trouble visualizing a man called Scooter as middle aged.

Another factor in the “having trouble relating” category was the subplot of Molly competing for an investigative reporter position—at an online publication about alien abductions. Molly is even convinced that one of the women at the marina was a victim of such abductions, but that remains an aside and isn’t really developed.

I think maybe the author worked a little too hard to make the main characters quirky. But there are plenty of other more realistic yet quirky folks at the marina, including a Japanese bobtail cat that adopts Mollie—although she thinks it’s the other way around.

And having said all that, I’ve downloaded Book 2 in the series and plan to read it soon. There are 7 books total, so far—a nice satisfying number for those of us who like to get to know characters and visit them periodically, like old friends.

And the other books are reasonably priced.

I give this story 4 fingerprints!

 

Here Comes the Witch, A Main Street Witches Cozy, Book 1, by Ani Gonzalez – 99 cents (Free through KU)

When I started this book, I thought that I wasn’t going to like it. First, there was the cover. While lovely, I felt it implied a cutesy type of witch cozy, which isn’t usually my cup of tea.

Then there was the premise, which seemed a little over the top. Kat Ramos, a Manhattan jewelry designer, is looking for capital to start her own store when she agrees to an odd proposal. Liam Hagen has renovated his family’s ancestral home (which happens to be cursed) and he wants to sell it, but first he needs to break the curse, by marrying a descendant of the witch who cursed it in the first place.

That descendant is Kat, who agrees to a sham marriage followed by a quick divorce.

She thinks she’s entered the Twilight Zone when she arrives in Liam’s hometown of Banshee Creek. The whole town is haunted and is proud of it. They even have their own ghost-hunting group, which does a booming business.

I like my paranormal in small doses that are at least somewhat realistic, i.e., it could happen, maybe… This story seemed to be heaping the paranormal on.

But I do like a good ghost story. So I kept reading.

I’m so glad I did! The story is well written and the mystery around the ghost and the curse is intriguing, with some very nice twists and turns.

And I kinda fell in love with Kat and Liam as they (slight spoiler alert) are falling in love with each other.

Plus this series is very reasonably priced.

The author just released Book 7, a Valentine book with a wedding! And it is only $0.99, at the moment.

Four fingerprints for Here Comes the Witch.

The First Time I Died, A Garnet McGee Mystery, Book 1, by Jo Macgregor — $4.99 (and worth it)

This is one of the best written books I’ve read in a long time (excluding misterio press authors, of course 🙂 ) And the story concept is quite original, a new twist on the protagonist going home to find closure for old unresolved issues.

Graduate student Garnett McGee goes to her hometown for Christmas, and finds herself drawn into trying to solve the ten-year-old murder of her high school sweetheart. But after a near-death experience, she finds herself thinking thoughts and feeling feelings that are not her own, and having flashbacks to experiences she never had.

When she was brought back to life by the paramedics, apparently she didn’t come back alone.

This story is poignant at times, suspenseful at other times, and engaging throughout.

And kudos to Ms. Macgregor and her publisher for a practically flawless technical presentation. No typos, no grammatical errors. Quite refreshing.

I have read Book 2, and am looking forward to Book 3, which I have on my kindle but haven’t yet read. I’m saving it for a special occasion.

Five fingerprints for The First Time I Died.

That’s it for this time, Folks. Happy reading!!

Kass Lamb

MLK Sale ~ Police Protection Just $0.99 This Week

A quick Announcement to let you all know that Police Protection is On Sale this week for Only 99 Cents!!

Police Protection, #10 in the Kate Huntington Mysteries

A story ripped from real-life headlines! A police detective is found in an alley standing over the body of an unarmed African-American boy. Gun in hand and groggy from a concussion, he has no memory of what happened.

To the police department’s I.A. division, it’s a slam-dunk. But various forces push psychotherapist Kate Huntington and her P.I. husband to investigate behind the scenes, and what they find doesn’t add up. Why did the boy’s oldest brother disappear on the same day? And did the third brother, who’s on the autism spectrum and nonverbal, witness something relevant?

For Kate, the case becomes personal as she connects with the grieving mother, whose dead son was the same age as her Billy. Then a series of seemingly unrelated events emerges as a pattern of intentional obstruction of their investigation, and Kate and Skip conclude two things.

Whatever happened in that alley, it was more than just a bad shoot by a stressed-out cop. And while the answers may come from unexpected sources, they had better find them soon… before another life is lost.

 

 

Yay! Lethal Assumptions is Live!!

Definitely doin’ my happy dance today!

Because Book 1 in my new Police Procedural series is now live.

This series is a spinoff from the Kate Huntington Mysteries. Judith Anderson was the police lieutenant in that series.

So to celebrate, I have the collection of Books 1-5 of the Kate books on sale right now, for 99 cents!

Judith Anderson’s no-nonsense attitude and confidence served her well in her climb to homicide lieutenant in the Baltimore County PD, but that confidence is shaken when she finds herself one step behind a serial killer—just eight days into her new job as Chief of Police in a small Florida city.

The first victim, a female college student, may be a case of wrong place, wrong time. But the bodies keep coming, with a mishmash of MOs, and the murders may be linked to various cases in nearby Jacksonville.

While Judith assumed the CoP job would be challenging, she’s finding it harder than she imagined to establish her authority without alienating and be more hands-on without micro-managing. Plus, evidence is staking up that there’s a leak in her department.

Who can she trust? If she makes the wrong assumption, the wrong decision, it may be her last. In a race to save lives, she’ll draw on every talent and instinct that made her a star in Baltimore. But will that be enough this time?

Fans of JA Jance’s Sheriff Joanna Brady and JD Robb’s Eve Dallas will love this new female cop on the scene!

AVAILABLE NOW on:

AMAZON ~ NOOK ~ APPLE ~ KOBO ~ GOOGLE PLAY

Hope you all love this new series as much as I do! More to come, for sure… 🙂

More Fall Rad Reads

I know I missed Halloween by a couple of days with this first one. But it’s not too late for a haunting short read, is it?

Scavenger Haunt: A Cassandra Sato Halloween Short Mystery ($0.99) ~ by Kelly Brakenhoff

Cassandra Sato, PhD, is finding babysitting two ten-year-old kids on a Halloween scavenger hunt a more difficult job than her regular gig as VP of Student Affairs at Morton College. Especially when one of them finds a lava rock that may have a curse attached to it. And ghosts are popping up in the most unlikely places!

This is well-written and has a nice story arch. All too often I find that short stories end too abruptly, but I did not feel that way with this one. There was a sense of closure.

I have read the first book in the series, which helped me to understand who the characters were, and their relationships to each other. The author tells me Book 1 will be discounted at some point after the first of the year, so I will keep you posted on that!

In the meantime, 4 fingerprints for Scavenger Haunt!

The Long Island Iced Tea Goodbye, a Career Crisis Café Mystery, Book 1 (FREE IN KU – $2.99 to buy) – by Emily Selby

The divorcée moving to a new place for a fresh start trope with a fun, exotic twist. Heather Hampton, a burned-out fashion journalist from New York, buys a café in New Zealand, where she plans to (1) try her hand at mixing exotic cocktails and (2) relax and have fun on the beach.

Just a couple of hitches. The cantankerous chef, Josephine, is part of the package deal and she doesn’t like the changes Heather wants to make. And on the first night after Heather arrives, someone poisons Josephine, making Heather the prime suspect for attempted murder.

Life would be pretty depressing if it weren’t for the feral cat who adopts Heather and the intriguing inspector assigned to the case.

I enjoyed the characters and loved learning a bit about “Kiwi” culture. I suspected the culprit was up to no good about midway, but I had the motives all wrong. I hope there will be more tidbits about New Zealand culture in the next book, and also I’m dying to find out if said intriguing inspector actually… no, I’ll stop there, so as not to spoil things.

Th writing is good but a word of warning about the formatting. It’s block paragraphs, not indented, which I found a bit distracting at first, but I got used to it.

I give The Long Island Iced Tea Goodbye 4 fingerprints!

The Accidental Alchemist, Book 1 – ($4.99, but well worth it) by Gigi Pandian

I scored a copy of this first-in-series when it was on sale for 99 cents. Had I known how good it was, I’d have totally been willing to pay full price.

We start with a likeable main character and a familiar trope, moving to a new city for a fresh start. But very little is familiar after that. It’s a “quirky” (as the author calls it) and sometimes downright fantastic story, and yet so well written that the reader suspends disbelief and goes along for the ride.

The past Zoe Faust is leaving behind is a centuries-long practice of alchemy. And her vow to lead a normal life is short-lived when she discovers a stowaway in her moving boxes, a sentient gargoyle who is slowly turning back into stone. He desperately needs Zoe to decipher the contents of an antique alchemy book that may hold the key to saving his life.

Zoe can’t resist his pleas, but a series of crimes and a threesome of teenagers soon complicate the situation. I’ll leave it at that so as not to spoil things, and only say that the story is complex yet quite readable.

I already have Book 2 on my Kindle, and I plan to devour the rest of the series in short order.

Five enthusiastic fingerprints for The Accidental Alchemist.

That’s it for this round, folks. More to come in December!

 

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