Book Review: Death of a Tom Turkey (Hayley Powell Food and Cocktails Mystery, #18) by Lee Hollis

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Death of a Tom Turkey (Hayley Powell Food and Cocktails Mystery, #18)  by Lee Hollis  opens with Tom Farley and his neighbors in a snit because he's the last holdout to sell his house to a property developer who wants to build a resort. When Tom is shot at a pre-Thanksgiving community gathering and hospitalized, Hayley Powell puts her amateur sleuthing skills to good use. Thank you to NetGalley and Kensington Publishers for providing me with an Advanced Readers Copy (ARC) of this cozy mystery. I received a copy of this book for free in exchange of my honest opinion and review of the story. I loved the fact that this latest installment of the Hayley Powell Food and Cocktails Mystery  series had a theme around the Thanksgiving holiday and included live turkeys in the plot. It was good to visit some familiar characters. Since this is the eighteenth installment in the series, Lee Hollis didn't go into much detail of the background of those reoccurring characters; however, she...

Book Review: A Chapter On Murder (The Bookstore Mystery, #3) by Sue Minix

A Chapter On Murder (The Bookstore Mystery, #3) by Sue Minix opens with the town of Riddleton, South Carolina starting off the Christmas season with their annual Christmas parade along with the town preparing for their annual decorating contest when Jen and her employee, Charlie, find a dead man behind the bookstore. As the local detectives begin investigating the case and pinpoint it on Marcus, Jen knows she has to help prove his innocence.

The Bookstore Mystery series has become one of my favorite series. It just has a fun vibe, and I enjoy trying to figure out the who, what, when, and where. In this latest edition, I came close to figuring out who the culprit was but was wrong in the end. Sue Minix did a great job throwing suspicion on several people.

I love the characters, especially Jen Dawson. I love how quirky she is and that she's an over thinker because I can relate to her. Brittany, Charlie, and Eric are super likable too.  Even Jen's mom has grown on me.

Four out of five stars is what I give A Chapter On Murder (The Bookstore Mystery, #3) by Sue Minix. The reason for this is that there were a few times the same point was reiterated within a paragraph or two of each other. Other than that, the story was engaging, fast paced, and is wrapped up without any cliffhangers.


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