August 2015 (US) August 2016 (UK), Kensington, 304 pages, Ebook, Review copy from NetGalley
Content: murder, lots of humour, some tense moments,
Summary from Kensington
Halloween is coming to Tinker’s Cove, Maine, and local reporter Lucy
Stone is covering the town’s annual Giant Pumpkin Fest for the
Pennysaver. There’s the pumpkin-boat regatta, the children’s Halloween
party, the pumpkin weigh-in…even a contest where home-built catapults
hurl pumpkins at an old Dodge! But not everything goes quite as planned…
Lucy’s
getting very annoyed that her husband Bill and his friend Evan have
been working seemingly nonstop on their potentially prize-winning
pumpkin catapult. But when the day of the big contest arrives, Evan is
nowhere to be found…until a catapulted pumpkin busts open the trunk of
the Dodge. Amid the pumpkin gore is a very deceased Evan, bashed in the
head and placed in the trunk by someone long before the contest started.
Bill is on the hook for the Halloween homicide—he was the
last one to see Evan—so Lucy knows she’s got some serious sleuthing to
do. The crime’s trail seems to always circle back to Country Cousins,
the town’s once-quaint general store that’s now become a big Internet
player. Though the store’s founder, Old Sam Miller, is long gone, his
son Tom and grandson Trey now run the hugely successful company. But
whispered rumors say things aren’t going well, and Lucy finds that this
case may have something to do with an unsolved, decades-old Miller
family mystery…
With each new lead pointing her in a
different direction, Lucy sees that time is quickly running out. If she
wants to spook the real killer, she’ll have to step into an old ghost
story…
Nayu's thoughts
This is an
brilliant murder mystery with emphasis on family life. I dislike
halloween intensely, but because it's a cozy mystery I knew there
would be a lot of humour, and took the precaution of reading it in
daylight so I didn't scare myself silly.
I
got to know the characters pretty quickly, so within a few chapters
it felt like I'd known them forever, making it hard when some were
implicated in the bizarre murder which followed. The stakes get
higher as the plot thickens, but Lucy is lovable and I rooted for her
all the way. Most people in the friendly community helped her out,
and those who didn't weren't necessarily the murderer but had secrets
they'd rather keep hidden.
Lucy got into a fair amount of danger
which made her family and friends worry – it's this compassion
which helped make it such an enjoyable read. I enjoyed learning about
how Lucy interacts with her family, who love her ever so much. I so
hope there will be more stories with both Lucy and them in!
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