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Category: Cozies

02/28/13

Homicide in Hawaii

Aloha fellow readers, I'm off to sunny Hawaii and I thought I would share some of the titles I will be taking with me on vacation.

Primitive Secrets (2002)
By Deborah Turrell Atkinson

Book # 1 in the Storm Kayama series

An exciting new voice richly and suspensefully evokes modern and ancient Hawaii...

When Storm Kayama walks into her lucrative Honolulu law firm one morning, she's shocked--and grieved--to find her adopted uncle at his desk, stiff and cold. Years before, Miles Hamasaki had fulfilled a promise to Storm's father and brought her to be raised with his own family. But, as questions surround Miles' death and her adopted family begins to close ranks, Storm suspects that he has been murdered.
Heading to the Big Island for a weekend escape from escalating pressures, she narrowly escapes a terrible accident. Storm takes refuge in the home of her Aunt Maile, a traditional Hawaiian healer, and Uncle Keone, a paniolo on the huge Parker Ranch. There she encounters a legend from her youth and a family totem, or 'aumakua, which Aunt Maile promises will protect her. As Storm struggles to heal her own childhood wounds and bring justice to Hamasaki's killer, she also comes to grip with the rifts in her own life and culture. (Book Description)

The Green Room (2005)
by Deborah Turrell Atkinson


Book # 2 in the Strom Kayama series

Storm Kayama needs to build her clientele, so when surf promoter Marty Barstow's wife Stephanie walks into her new law office, Storm agrees to represent her, despite her distaste for a bitter divorce situation.
When Stephanie's son Ben, a promising surfer, invites her to O'ahu's North Shore for a contest, Storm jumps at the chance. Not only will it be a thrill to observe the meet, but Storm will also have the opportunity to watch a distant cousin compete. Nahoa Pi'ilani has grown from a mischievous kid to a surfer of international renown, and he seems to have put the trouble that once brewed between their families behind him.
Then a child delivers a package to Nahoa containing an ancient Hawaiian weapona wooden club encircled with shark's teeth. Storm recognizes the lei o mano. It's a threat, a call to battle.
Events soon suck her into a vortex of escalating peril. As if she were in the green roomthe underwater space where tons of churning water can imprison a surferStorm is buffeted and disoriented by local legend, greed, and cutthroat competition and must confront not only a vicious killer but a haunting incident from her past. (Book Description)

Hula Done It? (2005)
By Maddy Hunter

Book # 4 in the Passport to Peril series

For travel escort Emily Andrew and her fellow Iowans, aloha means "hello" to all the sun, surf, and scrumptious cuisine their Hawaiian cruise has to offer. But for Professor Dorian Smoker, a renowned expert on the legendary Captain Cook, aloha also means "good-bye" -- as in "man overboard."

Sure, it could have been an accident. But Emily wonders if some guest with a grudge might have knocked off the opinionated professor. Or maybe it had something to do with that missing journal Nana's friend lent him -- the one with the mysterious treasure map. Emily figures the map is probably a fake. But when another copy turns up, she and her friends take off, rafting down rivers and plunging through jungles to find the treasure themselves. Unfortunately, Professor Smoker's killer just might have the same idea. And this tropical heat wave could quickly turn into a crime wave... (Book Description)

The Flaming Luau of Death (2005)
By Jerrilyn Farmer

Book # 7 in the Madeline Bean Culinary Mystery series

When Holly Nichols sets her wedding date, trendy L.A. party-planner Madeline Bean decides to throw her top assistant the hippest and most lavish bridal shower on the planet. The guests embark on a “destination” party to a fabulous and exclusive spa/resort in Hawaii. The salt-rubs! The paraffin pedicures! The dead body in the mud bath! Ew. It doesn’t help matters when Holly confesses to Maddie that she can’t really go through with the upcoming wedding after all. In her effort to smooth the matrimonial path for her dear friend, Madeline must track down the mystery man Holly may have married ten years earlier and never actually got around to divorcing. How hard can that be? Well, with the elusive gentleman in question running from a gang of rare vegetable smugglers, the bridal shower guests imbibing in one “Bridesmaid Mojito” too many, the current fiancé developing an allergy to scandal, and a murderer on the loose, it looks like anything but clear sailing down the aisle for one of Mad Bean’s best employees. (Book Description)

Right from the Gecko (2007)
By Cynthia Baxter

Book # 5 in the Reigning Cats and Dogs series

Surf’s up . . . and so are the stakes when veterinarian and amateur sleuth Jessica Popper escapes to the land of hula, hibiscus, and geckos for a professional conference. The last time she and boyfriend Nick Burby touched down on the island of Hawaii, Nick caused a volcanic eruption when he unexpectedly popped The Question to commitment-phobic Jess. But this trip proves just as dangerous when Jess befriends an ambitious young reporter whose body later washes up on the sand . . . and someone thinks Jess holds the clue to the killer’s motive.

There’s no end of suspects among the exotic flora and fauna, from the victim’s journalistic rivals and a mystery boyfriend to an eccentric beachcomber and a governor’s aide with ties to a controversial biotech firm bringing progress to paradise. One of them is a killer with the chameleon-like ability to stay hidden?and if Jessica doesn’t uncover hula-dunnit in time, she’ll be saying aloha . . . permanently. (Book Description)

## Related post: Hawaii Mysteries (posted in 2010 - includes MBTB mini-reviews)

Happy Reading!!


12/24/12

Margaret Cannon's Christmas Picks

Here's the link to the December 22, 2012 Globe & Mail Crime Fiction review column by Margaret Cannon with the full reviews. These all have Christmas or winter themes.

The Dead of Winter
by Peter Kirby

Ho! Ho! Ho! Santa has brought crime fans a brand-new detective series set in Montreal, and it’s terrific.
Irish-Canadian lawyer Peter Kirby’s Inspector Luc Vanier is just what the readers ordered for a Christmas-themed murder mystery.....read more
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The Snow White Christmas Cookie
by David Handler

Funny, smart and the perfect antidote to the seasonal treacle, The Snow White Christmas Cookie – the ninth novel by David Handler in the excellent Mitch Berger and Desiree Mitry series – turns the Christmas cozy on its head....read more

The series with Mitch Berger, a New York film critic, and Desiree “Des” Mitry, a black police detective, in Dorset, Connecticut starts with The Cold Blue Blood

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A Fatal Winter
by G.M. Malliet

Those who love updated puzzle plots and solid English mysteries need look no further than this superb series featuring Anglican priest/sleuth Max Tudor. Malliet has managed to pay homage to Agatha Christie, while at the same time taking her favoured settings into the 21st century....read more

First book: Wicked Autumn

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All is Clam
by Hilary MacLeod

Mountie Jane Jamison returns in this delightful Christmas confection set in The Shores, that lovely fictional spot just off the coast of Prince Edward Island. There’s not yet snow, but there is murder...read more

Previous books in the Shores mystery series:
Revenge of the Lobster Lover
Mind Over Mussels

posted by Sharon
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12/19/12

Christmas Mysteries 2012


A new Christmas mystery that I'm looking forward to reading:
The Twelve Clues of Christmas
by Rhys Bowen

# 6 with Lady Georgiana, minor royalty in 1930s England, in the Royal Spyness series

Here's what Publisher's Weekly had to say:
Set at Christmas-time 1933, Bowen's sixth whodunit featuring the irrepressible Lady Georgiana Rannoch may be her best yet. Despite her connections (albeit attenuated) to the Crown (she's 35th in the line of succession), Georgiana finds herself at the mercy of her brother's ghastly family. Escape comes just in time for the holidays when she answers an advert and is hired to help Lady Hawse-Gorzley with a large Christmas party at Hawse-Gorzley's home in Tiddleton-under-Lovey, Devonshire. Accompanied by the anti-Jeeves, her bumbling, if endearing, maid Queenie, Georgiana arrives in Tiddleton-Under-Lovey only to find that a series of apparently accidental deaths has begun to plague the rustic community. With one villager dying each day, the amateur sleuth suspects that the accidents are anything but....

Want more Christmas mysteries?
Christmas Mystery Book Selections by MysteryNet.com

The Mystery Lover's Bookshop Christmas Mysteries selections

and the wonderful extensive lists on Mystery Fanfare website:
Christmas Mysteries Authors A-D
Christmas Mysteries Authors E-H
Christmas Mysteries I-N
Christmas Mysteries Authors O-R
Christmas Mysteries Authors S-Z

Previous MBTB posts:
Want more Christmas mysteries 2011?

Christmas Mysteries 2011

Holiday Mystery Update 2010

posted by Sharon


12/06/12

The Cozy Corner

With winter settling in, it's nice to pick up a good cozy and cuddle up by a roaring fireplace. Here are some that have caught my eye:

The Probability of Murder (2012)
By Ada Madison

Book #2 in the Sophie Knowles math series

Dr. Sophie Knowles is a professor with a way of making even the most complex math problems fun for her students. But when the school's beloved librarian is found shot to death in the stacks, Sophie learns that her friend was more complex than she ever knew. Now, Sophie must take on some rigorous deduction homework before the chances for another murder on campus increase exponentially... (Book Description)

Endangered (2012)
By Ann Littlewood

#3 in the Zoo Mystery series

Zoo keeper Iris Oakley is sent to a remote farm in Washington State to rescue exotic animals after a drug bust. Instead of pets, she finds smuggled parrots and tortoises destined for sale to unscrupulous or unsuspecting collectors. The zoo’s facilities are full, and she ends up with two macaws shrieking in her basement. The marijuana grow operation and the meth lab are the cops’ problem. The smuggling side-line is hers. Then she discovers a woman who escaped the bust—dead. Iris has stumbled onto a violent crime, something far too dangerous for a widow with a young son. But it’s too late to untangle herself. (Modified Book Description)

Cast on, Kill Off (2012)
By Maggie Sefton

Knitting Mystery Book #10

Kelly Flynn’s knitting pal, Megan, is about to get hitched, and all the planning is falling into place. Megan has found the perfect seamstress, Zoe Yeager, to create the dresses for Kelly and the other bridesmaids. And each bridesmaid is knitting her own loose-knit shawl to drape over the lovely dresses. But Zoe has more than bolts of fabric and seam-cutters stashed away in her shop—she’s harboring a secret. Bruises on her face show a troubling side of her marriage, and just after she finds the courage to leave her husband, Zoe’s found dead from a single bullet shot.

Though her husband is a key suspect, it turns out there are others who might have had designs on Zoe’s death. One is fellow seamstress Leann O’Hara, who recently discovered Zoe won a bridal gown design contest with one of Leann’s own designs. Now it’s up to Kelly and her knitting pals to use their sleuthing savvy to solve the case, while helping Megan stay cool and collected as the big day approaches. They’ll have to stitch up all the loose ends before they can don their dresses and shawls and escort Megan into the land of happily ever after… (Book Description)

Foul Play at the PTA (2011)
By Laura Alden

#2 in the Beth Kennedy PTA series

PTA meetings at Tarver Elementary School can get pretty heated. But after parent Sam Helmstetter is strangled in his car following a meeting, mom and PTA secretary Beth Kennedy and her best friend Marina fear there may be a cold-blooded killer in the group... (Book Description)

Keep warm and Happy Reading!

Posted by Shiela


10/09/12

Holy Terror in the Hebrides by Jeanne M. Dams ***½


Holy Terror in the Hebrides
By Jeanne M. Dams

Cozy
Book # 3 with Dorothy Martin, an American schoolteacher retired in England

MBTB review: This one is my favorite in the series so far.

A group of American tourists from different Christian denominations who DO NOT get along with each other visit Scotland on a retreat. Meanwhile, Dorothy is also on vacation in Scotland and is touring with the group when she witnesses a member (who is liked by exactly nobody) fall to his demise. Was it an accident or murder?

Holy Terror in the Hebrides is set up like a closed-room mystery in a sense that this group of people gets stuck on an island during a raging storm, and one of them is a potential killer. There is no ill will lost amongst the suspects and they each have very distinctive personalities. The one thing to keep in mind when reading this book is that it did come out quite a while ago (1997) so some of the sentiments are a bit dated. Other than that, it was a fantastic cozy and I must say, I am really enjoying my little jaunt with Dorothy Martin.

## Related post: MBTB review of The Body in the Transcept # 1

posted by Shiela


09/24/12

Janice Hamrick: Death Makes the Cut (2012) ***½

Death makes the Cut
By Janice Hamrick

The first bell of the new school year hasn’t even rung, and Texas high school teacher Jocelyn Shore is already at the scene of a murder. Friend and fellow teacher Fred Argus has been found dead on campus, and it isn’t long before the annoying, albeit attractive, Austin police detective Colin Gallagher uncovers evidence that Fred might have been selling drugs to students. Shocked by her loss as well as the insinuation that Fred was a dealer who got what he deserved, Jocelyn starts asking the kinds of questions guaranteed to set fellow teachers, administrators, and parents on edge.

With the school serving as the setting for a big-time director’s latest film, her investigation could hardly have come at a worse time. Jocelyn, however, finds clearing her friend’s name far more important than the needs of a pesky movie crew and doesn’t care who knows it. But it’s only when she’s attacked while on set that she realizes someone is determined to make sure the secrets hidden by Fred’s death remain hidden no matter what the cost (abridged book description).

MBTB Review: There is more meat to this mystery than her previous attempt and Jocelyn’s (and Kyla’s) sassy attitude keeps the momentum going in Hamrick’s second book Death on Tour. I loved the back to school setting which is so appropriate for this time of the year and it made me nostalgic for when I was teaching (minus the body count of course!) Suspects and suspense were aplenty, sarcasm and hunky men abound, this cozy quick read will have you wanting more of Jocelyn Shore.

Don't forget to pick up Hamrick's first mystery Death on Tour.

Click here to read a full review of Death on Tour

Posted by Shiela


08/17/12

Janice Hamrick: Death on Tour (2011) ****

Death on Tour
By Janice Hamrick

Texas high school teacher Jocelyn Shore and her cousin Kyla are on a “dream” tour of Egypt when things take a nightmarish turn: One of their fellow travelers, Millie Owens, takes a fatal fall off one of the Pyramids. And that’s only the first leg of the trip…
From the jovial doctor haggling for trinkets he doesn’t want to the mysterious imposter wearing someone else’s clothing to the attractive stranger traveling alone, this group of tourists is carrying more than one kind of baggage. Add a mistaken identity, a priceless necklace, and another unexpected death, and Jocelyn finds herself reluctantly trying to unravel an intrigue that threatens to end not only her vacation, but her life. (Book Description taken from Amazon)

MBTB Review: Apart from the actual mystery (which was so simplistic that I kept thinking my predictions couldn't possibly be right--but they were), there were so many other things going on in the novel that I thoroughly enjoyed. I loved the touring aspect of the story, the fact that one of them in the group is partaking in foul play and everybody's a suspect. The locale was also a real treat, it took me right back to our little stint in Egypt. The descriptions of the sightseeing was fleshed out enough to take me back, but no so much that I was bored. My favorite aspect of the novel was the relationship between the two cousins. Hamrick does a wonderfully accurate job at depicting typical female relationships especially when the two females are spending a little too much time with each other in close quarters--we do get a little snippy with each other but ultimately are there when it counts!!
This was a great little cozy and I'm looking forward to the next one in the series "Death Makes the Cut."

Posted by Shiela


07/08/12

Susanne Alleyn: Game of Patience (2006)****

Game of Patience
By Susanne Alleyn

MBTB review: A young woman of reputable status is found dead in her blackmailer’s apartment in post-Revolutionary France. Tortured by the events in his own past, undercover police agent Aristide Ravel is called upon to investigate these crimes and soon finds himself entangled with a friend of the victim who seems to know more than she lets on. Aristide must learn the truth before the wrong person is sent to the guillotine.

Full of rich historical detail, Game of Patience was a wonderful mystery set in between the French Revolution and the rise of Napoleon. Not only does Alleyn know her stuff, but she is a masterful storyteller as well. The novel was fast paced with many unpredictable twists and turns and the denouement was very unexpected, far from typical, but strangely satisfying.

I have the second in the series, A Treasury of Regrets, waiting for me at home as we speak. I can hardly wait…

Posted by Shiela


05/26/12

Update: Agatha Award Winners

Here are the Agatha Award Winners. They were announced at Malice Domestic on April 28, 2012 (The awards are for books published in 2011).

This organization salutes the traditional mystery — books best typified by the works of Agatha Christie. The genre is loosely defined as mysteries which contain no explicit sex or excessive gore or violence. (description from malicedomestic.org About Malice)

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Best Novel:


Three-Day Town by Margaret Maron
# 17 with Deborah Knott, district judge in North Carolina

While in New York, Judge Deborah Knott has been asked to deliver a package to Lt. Sigrid Harald of the NYPD. Sigrid offers to swing by the apartment with her husband to pick up the box, but when they reach the apartment, they discover that the box is missing and the doorman has been murdered.

## Related post: MBTB review of Rituals of the Season # 11

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Best First Novel:

Learning to Swim by Sara J. Henry
# 1 with Troy Chance, a freelance writer in Lake Placid, New York

When Troy Chance rescues a boy who falls off a ferry she discovers he can only speak French and that no one seems to be looking for him. Thus begins a dangerous journey across the eastern United States and Canada as Troy attempts to uncover the mysteries surrounding the special little boy she comes to care for deeply.

## Related post: MBTB mini-review of Learning to Swim

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Best Historical Novel:

Naughty in Nice by Rhys Bowen
# 5 with Lady Georgiana, minor royalty in 1930s England

In the French town of Nice to recover the Queen's stolen snuff box, Lady Georgiana Rannoch participates in a Coco Chanel fashion show where a necklace also belonging to the Queen goes missing, forcing her to search for both priceless items and solve a murder.

## Related posts:
MBTB review of Her Royal Spyness # 1
MBTB review of Royal Flush # 3
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Check out the MBTB post Agatha Award Nominees 2012 for the full list of nominees with series descriptions.

posted by Sharon


WHAT I'M READING NOW:
Beastly Things by Donna Leon

Book # 21 with Guido Brunetti, a police commissario in Venice, Italy

Summary: Commissario Brunetti investigates the death of an animal lover whose murdered body was found in a Venice canal.

First book: Death at La Fenice


05/03/12

Rhys Bowen: Royal Flush (2009) ****

Royal Flush
By Rhys Bowen

Book # 3 with Lady Georgiana, minor royalty in 1930s England, in the Royal Spyness series

MBTB review: With the heat of the summer forcing the upper class to dash to their summer homes in the countryside, Georgie’s secret housekeeping business fizzles to naught. As her financial situation steadily declines, she decides to start up an “escort” service not realizing her definition of the word (accompanying people to dinner parties so that they don’t have to eat alone) and her “client’s” definition of the service greatly varies. In an attempt to avoid another royal scandal, Georgie is whisked away to her family home in Scotland only to find that someone is targeting members of the royal family to pursue their own ends.

This one is my favorite by far. The situations Georgie seems to find herself in never ceases to amuse me and once again, the cast of colorful secondary characters propel the plot to its climax. In hindsight, I realize there were enough clues along the way to figure out the perpetrator had I not been enjoying the romp through the Scottish countryside. This was another fun, lighthearted mystery with a bit of romance and dollop of humor.

Here is a list of the series in order of publication date:

Her Royal Spyness (2007)
A Royal Pain (2008)
Royal Flush (2009)
Royal Blood (2010)
Naughty in Nice (2011)

# Related post: MBTB review of Her Royal Spyness # 1

Posted by Shiela


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