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Showing posts with label 5 Star Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5 Star Review. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Cozy Mystery Blog Tour: Author Guest Post, Review & Giveaway: One Foot in the Grape (Cypress Cove #1) by Carlene O'Neil

In California wine country, the town of Cypress Cove may seem peaceful. But someone’s about to pop their cork…

After losing her job as a photojournalist, Penny Lively is trying to get her life back in focus. Inheriting the family winery from her late aunt may be the fresh start she needs. Thankfully she’s got her niece Hayley and her handsome winery manager Connor to help. But the person in need of more urgent assistance is Antonia Martinelli, the owner of the neighboring winery, who has her own barrel full of problems. Someone’s spoiling her wine, and with the upcoming Autumn Festival, she needs Penny’s nose for clues to sniff out the culprit.

But Penny’s search for answers sours after the body of a staff member is found in a grape crusher. Since Hayley was the last to see him alive, she’s the prime suspect in the case. Now Penny must hurry to find the real killer before Hayley withers on the vine. 


Hi, I’m Penny Lively, owner of Joyeux Winery. Joyeux is a smaller winery in comparison to several of our neighbors, but enjoys a great reputation. As it happens, I’ve also managed to gain a reputation for my knack for finding bodies. I don’t know if knack is the right word…Connor would call it a gift, but the statement would be said under his breath and likely dripping with sarcasm. Connor’s my winery manager. My manager and nothing more. Yup, nothing more. He’s the best manager on the central California coast and I’m lucky to have him in that capacity, which is why I’ve stifled any urges I might have for him in any other capacity…

Where was I? Right. So after a long career as an investigative photojournalist, I came home to the winery I’d inherited. I’d been worried small town life would be too slow. Instead, I’ve been back less than a year and so far I’ve managed to find more bodies than I did in an entire career investigating situations where one might reasonably expect to find bodies. The local police can’t decide what to do with me, but it’s not like I’m asking for this. Although, I have to admit, once I’m involved I’m not about to walk away. Either the police manage to get it wrong, or someone I care about is a suspect and asks for my help. The first time it happened, my neighbor, Antonia Martinelli, thought someone was sabotaging her winery. She didn’t want to go to the police because she thought one of her children might be involved. Simple, right?  Nobody mentioned murder. They never really do.

Between running the winery and running just ahead of whatever mess I’m no doubt in, I stay pretty busy. Connor does most of the heavy lifting when it comes to the winery, so I have free time on my hands. I spend most of it with my camera, a holdover from my last profession. My focus is on the landscape now, and this is a part of the country where it’s easy to find inspiration. The winery is beautiful, vineyards stretched across rolling hills in tones of bronze and umber, and just a short drive from Monterey Bay, Pebble Beach and the fabulous town of Cypress Cove.

That’s another thing; murder just shouldn’t happen somewhere so beautiful. The mean streets of Los Angeles? Sure. The underbelly of Chicago? Who’s surprised? Nobody. Here, when you find a body set against such beauty, it seems so much more shocking, vicious, and wrong. There’s a Latin saying, “It is well to remember that there are five reasons for drinking: the arrival of a friend; one's present or future thirst; the excellence of the wine; or any other reason.” After what I’ve just been through I would include finding a body in your neighbor’s crusher. Just saying.

A winery as a setting and a protagonist that's quirky and spontaneous?  I'm one-hundred percent sold!  One Foot in the Grape is a wonderful debut book that I personally feel will be a spectacular and fun series.  

It's told in a first person point of view with Penny, our protagonist, at the helm.  It's funny, entertaining and of course, full of wine references left and right. It's a smart story with rich descriptive words that leave you feeling as if you've been transformed right in to the middle of this beautiful setting.  And the mystery is unique and leaves you scratching your head until the very end.  

I absolutely loved this book. Everything about it.  Penny, Antonia - the entire cast of characters.  The vineyards, the humor and most of all, the wine :)  Having read this story, I can honestly tell you that this series is quickly going to become a favorite of mine.  I can just feel it.  

Rating: 5 stars

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  All conclusions reached are my own.  


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Monday, May 25, 2015

Cozy Mystery Blog Tour: Author Guest Post, Review & Giveaway: Fillet of Murder (Deep Fried #1) by Linda Reilly

FIRST IN A NEW SERIES!

Talia Marby serves up delectable English deep fried fare in the heart of the Berkshires—but she soon discovers there’s something fishy going on…

Sometimes in this life, you have to fish or cut bait. After walking away from a miserable job and an even worse boyfriend, Talia Marby has no regrets. She’s returned to her hometown and is happy to help her dear friend Bea Lambert by working at Lambert’s Fish & Chips, a cornerstone of a charming shopping plaza designed to resemble an old English village.

But not all the shop owners are charming. Phil Turnbull has been pestering Bea to sign a petition against a new store opening up, and his constant badgering is enough to make her want to boil him in oil. When Talia and Bea stumble upon Turnbull murdered in his shop, the police suspect Bea. Now it’s up to Talia to fish around for clues and hook the real killer before her friend has to trade serving food for serving time…

Includes delicious recipes!




When I began writing Fillet of Murder, which features a fish and chips eatery in the Berkshires, I wanted readers to like my people . . . maybe even find a few of them quirky. Isn’t that one of the things we love about cozy characters? Since I grew up in the region where the series takes place, I scrolled my mind backward (way, way backward) to my younger days, to some of the wonderful “characters” I was lucky enough to know.

I was seventeen when I first got a summer job at an old-style restaurant called The Willows (long gone, I’m afraid). The owner, Gladys, was a generous soul and one of the best cooks I’ve ever known. Throughout that entire summer I flipped burgers, made sub sandwiches, and washed a never-ending stream of dirty dishes and pans. I even scrubbed clam shells for the soon-to-be steamed clams, never realizing they were still alive until one of them snapped shut and sent my heart into overdrive!

That summer left me with so many treasured memories. I can still recall how appreciated Gladys made me feel after working long, hot hours in a kitchen cooled only by a table fan. She overpaid me and over-praised me—she was one of the kindest people I’ve ever known.

Those are the days I thought back to when I first began writing the Deep Fried series. I wanted Talia Marby, my main character, to have those same warm recollections of her first summer job. So I created Bea Lambert.

As characters go, Bea is one of my favorites. Picture a petite, sixtyish woman with springy black curls, leaf green eyes, and a darling British accent. Originally from the UK, her speech is populated with words like “luvvy” and “bloke” and “wanker.” Bea is the co-owner, with her hubby, of Lambert’s Fish & Chips—an eatery located in a cobblestoned shopping plaza designed to resemble an old English village.

Talia was a teenager when she got her first job at Lambert’s. Troubled by a rift between her mom and dad, she bonded with the childless Bea, and Lambert’s became her refuge. Even when she wasn’t working, Talia could often be found mulling over homework at one of the tables at the back of the restaurant. Bea couldn’t have loved Talia more if she’d been her own daughter.

Talia learned the fish and chips biz that summer, never dreaming she’d return there more than fifteen years later to help out Bea in a pinch. What she also never imagined was murder, right there in that charming plaza. When Bea is accused of murdering a fellow shopkeeper, Talia dives right in to rescue her friend from a certain stint in the pokey.

Looking back, I realize that Bea and Gladys didn’t have all that much in common. Not unless you counted their many kindnesses, their overwhelming generosity, and their love for humankind.

Were you ever lucky enough to have a Bea or a Gladys in your life? Do you have a story you’d like to share about your first summer job?

Since this is the first book in the new series, I feel a little pros and cons list is in order :) 

What I Liked: 

The Characters
Talia and Bea are WONDERFUL!  They play off of each other beautifully and have formed a tremendously admirable friendship. The kind that we all wish we could have.  Their supporting cast of characters are a fantastic addition as well.  

The Setting
Naturally, who wouldn't love a shopping center that's poised to look like an Old English village?  There's a certain kind of charm to a place like that, and it's embodied perfectly in this story. 

The Food
Ahhhhhhhhhh the recipes they include! One of my favorite things about cozies - they include delicious recipes that give you the chance to feel even closer to the characters that you've grown to love and admire.  

The Mystery
I love the puns that could be inserted here to describe the mystery.  I'll refrain for the sake of anyone reading this, but I truly enjoyed following these ladies on their quest to discover the culprit of the murder.  It left me guessing until the reveal and I was actually surprised at how it unfolded.  

What I Didn't Like: 

Honestly?  There wasn't anything that I didn't like. And I truly mean that.  This book was wonderful! 

Overall: 
This is a well written, very good mystery with characters that are easily likeable.  I'm thrilled to have been able to read and review it, and am eagerly awaiting the next book in this series.  

Rating: 5 stars

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  All conclusions reached are my own. 

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Sunday, May 24, 2015

Cozy Mystery Blog Tour: Author Guest Post, Review & Giveaway: Some Like It Witchy (A Wishcraft Mystery #5) by Heather Blake

Wishcrafter Darcy Merriweather can charm desires into reality, but as the national bestselling Wishcraft mysteries continue, she won’t be able to magically avoid trouble when death holds an open house….

The Enchanted Village is abuzz when the old Tavistock house finally goes up for sale. Darcy’s friend Curecrafter Cherise Goodwin is hoping she will have the winning bid on the home, but Darcy can’t shake the feeling that something bad is about to happen—and her magical instincts are usually right.

Sure enough, while Darcy and Cherise are looking at the property, they discover real estate agent Raina Gallagher stone-cold dead on the floor. Clutched in her hand is a gemstone amulet and, on the wall above her, a large red A. While Raina had no shortage of enemies, there’s also a dark legend about the house itself. To track down the killer, Darcy must unlock the secrets of both the deceased and the estate—and she’ll need to act fast, because revenge is a deal that never closes. 



One of the taglines for my Wishcraft books, featuring loveable Wishcrafter Darcy Merriweather, is “Where there’s a witch, there’s a way.”

Which (witch?) is so true of the whole series, actually.

The phrase, however, started me thinking about witchy-type powers. Darcy can grant wishes. Others Crafters can disappear into thin air, bake a mean cupcake, grow amazing flowers, craft a spell...

But what power would I want?

There’s something to be said about invisibility. Think of the conversations you could overhear, the hilarious pranks you could pull.

Or maybe telepathy. Knowing what others are thinking. On second thought, cross that off—there are some things I probably don’t want to know.

Ooh, flying. That could be...amazing. Broomstick optional.

Oh, oh! Or maybe unlimited free shopping? Groceries, clothes, tile and drywall (can you tell we’ve been renovating our bathroom?).

All pretty good options, but ultimately I think I’d choose teleportation. Only being a blink or a twitch away from another destination holds a lot of appeal. Especially when stuck in a traffic jam.

What would you choose for your witchy power?

Heather Blake (aka Heather Webber) is the author of the Wishcraft mysteries, the Magic Potion mysteries, the Nina Quinn mysteries, and the Lucy Valentine novels, and has been twice nominated for an Agatha Award. She's a total homebody who loves to be close to her family, read, watch reality TV (especially cooking competition shows), drink too much coffee, crochet, bake (mostly cookies), and occasionally leave the house to travel to the beautiful mountains in the northeast. Heather grew up in a suburb of Boston, but currently she lives in the Cincinnati area with her family and is hard at work on her next book.



Yet another wonderful trip to the Enchanted Village with Darcy and friends! This magical addition to the series proves just how enchanting Ms. Blake's imagination must be.  She has gifted us with a brilliantly written mystery and has incorporated the paranormal beautifully into the plot.

This book made me laugh, and it certainly left me with the need for more as it wraps up with some unanswered/unresolved issues.  And of course, the main twist in the plot - the murder mystery.  It was creatively done, and had me scratching my head when the murderer was revealed.

I love these books. I love everything about them and my only suggestion - that they get written faster! :)

Rating: 5 stars

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  All conclusions reached are my own.

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Saturday, May 23, 2015

Cozy Mystery Blog Tour: Author Guest Post, Review & Giveaway: Flourless to Stop Him (A Baker's Treat #3) by Nancy J. Parra

The author of Murder Gone A-Rye and Gluten for Punishment returns to Oiltop, Kansas, where gluten-free baker Toni Holmes has to separate the wheat from the chaff to clear her brother of murder… 

It’s never a good time for a crisis. Toni’s busy whipping up gluten-free holiday treats when a murder forces her to put baking on the back burner. A dead man has been found in the bathtub of a local inn—in a room registered to her brother, Tim.

With her sibling now a prime suspect in a mysterious homicide, Toni is determined to find out who set him up. But she’s about to get some unwanted assistance from former investigative journalist Grandma Ruth, who won’t let anything slow her progress in running down a killer. 


We asked Toni Holmes from the Baker's Treat gluten-free mystery series a few questions.

1.) What new thing would you try?:  Barrel racing
What would make you say no?:  Bull riding

2.) What do you get too much of?:  Family opinions
And not enough?: Sleep

3.) What fear have you conquered?: Fitting in
Not quite yet?:  Failure

4.) What are you getting better at?: Baking Gluten-free
What are you getting worse at?: Dating

5.) What would you pay good money for?:  A new mixer
What wouldn't you take even if it were free?:  An apartment in Chicago

6.) Do you have a career highlight?:  Opening my gluten free baker, Baker's Treat
And low point?:  Struggling to catch the guy who is framing my brother Tim.

7.) What are you endlessly curious about?:  How to make food gluten free
And zero interest in?: Cow tipping

8.) What do you empathize with?: Innocent people accused of a crime they didn't commit
What do you have no sympathy for?: Killers

9.) What is worth the wait?: Love
What do you have no patience for?:  People who dismiss food allergies

10.) What's always cool?:  Birthday cake - gluten free, of course
What's never cool?:  Dismissing someone for needing a special diet

I've said it once and I'll say it again - this series makes me SO happy! To start, it's set in Kansas.  KANSAS!  Being a Kansas girl, it's rare to see a book or series set in this state.  So when you find one that is, it's incredibly exciting.  And everything portrayed in the books is exactly how the towns and people of Kansas are.  And that makes me happy :)  

The characters are another reason why I love this series so much.  Toni is a fantastic sleuth with the smarts to be a detective.  I love her personality and I especially love all of the characters this series has to offer.  It's such a wonderful group of people - the kind that you'd want to spend a lot of time with!  

The mystery in this one was an edge of your seat, thrilling ride with the stakes high for Toni and her brother, Tim.  I was enthralled with the route this story took, and when the culprit of the crime is finally revealed, it is literally jaw-dropping.  

Ms. Parra has crafted a wonderful book in Flourless to Stop Him, and I'm looking forward to seeing what she's got up her sleeve for Toni and friends in the next go-round. 

Rating: 5 stars

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  All conclusions reached are my own.  

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Thursday, May 21, 2015

Cozy Mystery Blog Tour: Author Guest Post, Review & Giveaway: Hiss and Tell (Sunny & Shadow #4) by Claire Donally

In this Sunny & Shadow Mystery from the New York Timesbestselling author of Last Licks, a fat-cat wedding is making waves in Kittery Harbor, Maine. 

Political heiress Priscilla Kingsbury is about to marry Carson de Kruk, son of business mogul Augustus de Kruk, at the Kingsburys’ waterfront compound. For reporter Sunny Coolidge, an assignment from the Harbor Courier to cover the event is like catnip.

But when Sunny photographs men pulling the body of a dead woman out of the water, the Kingsburys’ private security isn’t happy. They claim the woman’s death was an accident, but the story seems fishy. Now, with a little help from her police officer boyfriend and her cunning cat Shadow, Sunny is determined to get the scoop on a killer.
 







A Love/Hate Relationship

For Sunny and Shadow's latest outing, I decided to throw a little ailurophobia into the mix, with a billionaire, a really domineering alpha male, going to pieces whenever Shadow crosses his path. The dictionary definition of this psychological condition describes an irrational aversion to cats, a fear and even a loathing of them. And while I play the situation for laughs, it's serious for the sufferers. They can suffer panic symptoms trembling, nausea, shortness of breath, even heart palpitations.
What causes this phobia? It could be due to an unfortunate experience with a cat during the sufferer's childhood, picking up anti-cat attitudes from parents, or an intense belief in cats' bad rep in terms of evil magic. I like a semi-Buddhist friend's theory cat-haters must have spent several recent reincarnations as mice.
Let's face it, though, loving cats is just about as irrational as hating them. The ancient Egyptians worshiped cats as gods and even mummified them. The darker side of that was the temple kitten mills where cats were raised to become mummies and sold to the devout. X-rays of some of those remains show the embalmed gods had broken necks. And they certainly didn't get much love in later days. Some 38,000 pounds of mummified cats were exported to England for use as fertilizer in the late 1800s.   
A lot of websites list historical figures like Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, and Genghis Khan as ailurophobes. More recent members of the cat-haters club include Napoleon, Mussolini, Hitler, and Joe Stalin. A lot of this seems to be more myth than history, however. It's an intriguing notion: Mighty despots who could order millions around couldn't stand little furry creatures with a famous independent streak.
Of course, if you ever tried to order a cat around, a quick descent into irrationality is the least you could expect. 
And it's not just bad guys who suffer from ailurophobia. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the general who won World War II and became 34th president, apparently ordered his staff to shoot any feline trespassers wandering near his home in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. I have no reports regarding the situation around the White House during his presidency. Artists, too, have been afflicted with this cat hostility Shakespeare, the dancer Isadora Duncan, even La Toya Jackson.
But creative folks have also been cat lovers. Hemingway, Mark Twain, and Stan Laurel all were friends of furballs. When it comes to the powerful, two figures from the American Civil War, Lincoln and Lee, were kitty-lovers. One of the greatest leaders of the Twentieth Century didn't just love cats, he continued to do so from beyond the grave. During World War II, Winston Churchill not only attended dinners but Cabinet meetings with a cat named Nelson sitting beside him. During Churchill's final years, he was given a marmalade cat whom he named Jock. When the former prime minister passed away, he arranged that a similar cat should continue to live at Chartwell, his stately family manor, which is now run as a national historic site. At present, Jock V is living there, although he's not allowed in the historic rooms for fear he'll destroy the antiques.
Perhaps the sorest point of the ambivalent relationship between humans and felines lies in the field of religion. St. Gregory the Great, an early pope, was apparently very fond of cats.  Eight Gregories farther on, though, Pope Gregory IX denounced cats as limbs of Satan,  issuing a papal bull against them in the 1230s that resulted in cats being burned. A few centuries later Pope Innocent VIII wasn't so innocent when he issued a bull branding cats as co-conspirators with witches. Any woman burned at the stake would be accompanied by her supposed familiar. That was in 1484. Apparently the faithful did such a good job thinning the cat population that the bubonic plague, carried by flea-infested rats, repeatedly ravaged Europe. The city of London alone suffered outbreaks in 1563, 1593, 1603, 1625, 1636, and 1665, killing off ten to thirty percent of the population during those years. 
More recently, though, cats had a friend in the Vatican. Pope Benedict XVI was a cat-lover from when he was young and had a feline companion while he was a cardinal. Vatican rules, unfortunately, do not allow a cat in the papal apartments. However, Benedict had many furred pals on the streets of Rome, a city with many strays. Onlookers report that the cats knew the Pope when he went out for strolls and would come running to him. On one occasion, a procession of about ten cats followed him back to the Vatican, forcing the Swiss Guards to warn the pontiff about a cat invasion.
We still don't have a pill to cure cat-phobia (or cat-mania, for that matter). But science has come to the defense of cats and the way they behave around ailurophobes. The kitty that makes a beeline for the one person in the room who's uncomfortable around cats isn't using some feline sixth sense to make his victim miserable. It's simply a cattish reaction to two-leggity behavior. Among cats, a prolonged stare is a challenge. So for somebody like Shadow, strangers making kissy noises, calling puss-puss, or trying to pick him up would be seen as threatening types. The person who's sitting still and not looking his way comes across as pleasant and non-threatening, the perfect lap to hop onto. How's a cat to know that will cause cold sweats and pounding hearts?
Maybe the ailurophobe should react like my character in Hiss and Tell, having a loud meltdown whenever he catches a glimpse of Shadow. At least then the cat has a little warning. . .
What a fun story! To begin, I must say that I absolutely adore Shadow. Characters like him make me laugh and they bring an air of comforting ease to an otherwise dark situation.  I also adore Sunny. And with a name like Sunny, how could you not?!  She's the perfect protagonist and no matter what situations she finds herself in, she always manages to get her way out (with Shadow's help of course!) 
The theme for this book was a wedding. When Sunny goes to photograph and she finds men pulling a woman's body out of the water, she then finds herself caught up in the whirlwind of a homicide investigation of which she feels she has to solve.  
Superbly written, Hiss and Tell is a great addition to this series. It's clever, funny and absolutely adorable.  This is one series that I'd read again and again!  
Rating: 5 Stars
I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  All conclusions reached are my own. 
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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Cozy Mystery Blog Tour: Author Guest Post, Review & Giveaway: A Finely Knit Murder (Seaside Knitters #9) by Sally Goldenbaum

In the newest mystery from the national bestselling author of Murder in Merino, the sleuthing skills of Izzy Chambers Perry and the Seaside Knitters are tested as death mars the beginning of the school year… 

Seaside Knitter Birdie Favazza is thrilled that her granddaughter Gabby will be visiting for the fall and attending the Sea Harbor Community Day School. Gabby loves the school, with its newly-adopted progressive curriculum, and she loves that the Seaside Knitters are teaching knitting as part of the enrichment program. It’s a huge success, and on crisp autumn days, girls camp out on the terraces, knitting up hats for charity.

But not everyone is happy with the direction the school is taking. Outspoken board member Blythe Westerland has sparked tempers with her determination to unravel the current administration. Then, on the evening of an elegant school event, Blythe’s body is found near the school boathouse.

With a killer on the loose, Birdie is determined to keep Gabby safe. Working together, the Seaside Knitters carefully unravel the layers of Blythe’s complicated life, bringing faculty members and town residents under scrutiny. Before the cast-off rows are made on the students’ projects, the knitters will need to stitch together the evidence to see if a murderer has been walking beside them all along.


A FINELY KNIT MURDER is the ninth book in the seaside knitters mystery series, not a momentous event all by itself. But it made me think of the fact that that’s how long I’ve been forming friendships with the characters in the series. Nine years (and maybe even longer). And to me, that does seem momentous.

Nell, Birdie, Cass, and Izzy—These four women have become soul sisters to me. They’ve become an integral part of my life.  And with each book, we have become better friends.

As I began writing the first in the series, DEATH BY CASHMERE, I knew plenty of facts about the seaside knitters—like where they went to school, how they ended up in Sea Harbor, a little about their love lives, schooling, and their life goals, their accomplishments and likes and dislikes.

But probably—as is probably the case with your own close friends—they have continued to surprise me on this journey of friendship as we move from story to story.

Before I sit down to write a new seaside knitters mystery, I spend time talking to Nell, Cass, Izzie and Birdie, sharing a ‘seed’ of an idea with them—that tiny nugget that hopefully will grow into a book. And then I beg them to take me by the hand and lead me along to what comes next, to toughen me up as we face the blank computer screen. And in the process, I ask them to tell me more about themselves, to share secrets and feelings and things from their past.

Sometimes the characters jump right in, like Izzy did in ANGORA ALIBI, (the 7th seaside mystery). It took little time for her to share her feelings about pregnancy with me, feelings that moved her to take the actions she did—and that propelled all of her friends into a mystery, a murder, and gradually the steps needed to solve it.

In A FATAL FLEECE, Cass Halloran surprised me by showing me she had a vulnerable side in addition to being a great lobster fisherwoman. She surprised me even more in A FINELY KNIT MURDER as she tries to work through her own feelings about commitment and relationships.

And Birdie—the 80-year-old matriarch—pulled a skeleton out of her closet in A FATAL FLEECE, one that changed her life forever. And a skeleton that none of us (especially me!) was expecting.

When I began writing A FINELY KNIT MURDER, Cass surprised me yet again by showing up with a new man in her life. I knew his role in the story but honestly didn’t know at first how he was going to fit into my Cass’s; life. No one knew, not for sure. But at the end of the journey, it made sense to us. And to Cass, too.

Yes, after all these years, these women still surprise me. And that’s a good thing. Surprising means they stay fresh, but not completely comfortable. New, but still old friends.

It amazes me that I’ve known these women for all these years—maybe as long as you’ve known a close and valued friend. They truly are BFFs. To each other. To me. And I hope that their friendship with readers, with you, deepens, too, so that you’ll keep coming back to sit with them on the deck or in the yarn shop, sharing a glass of wine, a bit of gossip, and secrets of Sea Harbor.

New . . .unique . . . and familiar. Kind of like a good marriage, a good partnership. Like BFFs.

I truly enjoy this series. For so many reasons. But the main reason is the four women in the books.  They make this series worth spending the time to read.  Their personalities are all so different, and yet they manage to compliment one another's so perfectly.  They are a perfect storm of everything you'd hope for in a group of friends, and I've looked forward to getting to know them more and more with each story. 

(Insert funny story here... I wrote this review prior to receiving my guest post.  When I read through the guest post, I found it hilariously funny that the author was writing about Nell, Izzie, Birdie and Cass.  It made me laugh, literally out loud.) 

A Finely Knit Murder was a wonderful story.  It was fun, exciting, and the school setting was unique - especially this time of year!  I thoroughly enjoyed feeling all of the excitement the ladies felt about being a part of such a wonderful school's curriculum.  Where were schools like that when I was a kid?! And the murder mystery - brilliantly plotted out and solved!  

I always love visiting the Seaside Knitters. They make me happy - even when they're up to their elbows in a crazy homicide solving caper.  Every time I pick up one of these books, I feel like I'm back home with all of my just as crazy and fun loving friends.  

Rating: 5 stars

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.  All conclusions reached are my own. 

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