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topic: What Cozy Did You Just Finish Reading???


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message 1: by Kathryn (new)

446464 I thought it might be fun to share the book you just finished reading with all of us, what did you think of it, etc? (I know "Updates" from members post in some section of the site, but it's hard to sort through them and find the cozy-mystery reviews sometimes.)

I just finished "The Moonstone" by Wilkie Collins and loved it--five stars. Here's my review:

This is supposedly one of the first mystery novels ever published and is believed to introduce the prototype for the English detective hero character. My husband and I read it together and both enjoyed it; it was wonderfully absorbing and provided us with lots of grand characters and interesting plot twists to enjoy—and the mystery to ponder!

It's certainly very long and often verbose—I usually find a fast-pace to be more appealing in a mystery—but I believe this was more a character-driven story than a plot-driven one (in his preface, Collins says that means to "trace the influence of character on circumstance") and the mystery (though it was deep and fascinating) was second to the characterization since the tale is told in Narrative form from some half-dozen characters. I feel as if I have befriended Betteredge and his dog-eared and beloved "Robinson Crusoe," suffered through an acquaintance with Miss Clack and her hideous pamphlets, sniffed roses beside Sargent Cuff and felt some of the deep love and longing of Ezra Jennings. Marvelous characterization!

I'd also like to point out that this is an excellent mystery for those who prefer a more intellectual and thought-process sort of mystery, rather that one focused on murder.


message 2: by Ann (new)

446509 Good idea Kathryn! I'll have to grab some of my older reviews and post them here :)


message 3: by Ann (new)

446509 The most recent Cozy-Mystery I read was Clouds of Witness by Dorthy Sayers. I gave it 5 stars. Here's my review:

"Clouds of Witness" was a very delightful book! In both the mystery and the characters, I thought Sayers came through brilliantly!

Lord Peter Wimsey (the main character and detective) is truly a humorous, clever, thoughtful, and lovable character! He breezes through life, always seeing the amusement and humor in situations, but doesn't lack the ability to understand people and events for the gravity they may hold.
Wimsey himself was a delightful enough character to hold my interest through the book, but add to this his good friend (and partner in crime-solving) Mr. Parker (adorable friends!) and Mr. Bunter (another more "proper" counterpart to Wimsey) and you have an entire book set to amuse!

Oddly enough, Sayers doesn't use a lot of description. In a way it reminds a bit of Jane Austin (though the feel of the books is not similar!), in her ability to convey the characters in their uniqueness and completeness through dialogue.

The mystery also is most interesting. And while I could have felt "cheated" by the ending, I didn't because of the various sub-mysteries that were occurring throughout the book. It is, in a way, three or four mysteries all revolving around one.

Additionally, the mystery centers around Wimsey’s own family, which adds another element to Wimsey’s character, and the mystery itself.

A note: the book does contain a few slightly graphic descriptions of the murder, but I stress the word slightly. I have read some Agatha Christie, and think that it’s probably on par with those. I am quite the queasy reader, and I had few qualms.
The only thing I regretted – if it could be called a regret – was the prevalent use of French. I can’t blame or criticize Sayers on this front, only myself for not having a better grasp of the language. That said, while a times I was dismayed because I did not understand every detail or clue, for the most part everything was eventually (and in a timely manner) translated or explained.

I really enjoyed this read! And am very much looking forward to picking up another Lord Peter Wimsey mystery!!


message 4: by Pumpkin (new)

1415821 I just finished reading a food cozy called Candy Apple Dead by Sammi Carter. It is the first in the series. It was good but not great. I liked the main character and the town and of course the sweets descriptions but the mystery dragged on a little long. However, that being said, I will read the next one in the series because of the setting and the fact that it is the first in the series and sometimes the author needs a little longer to find the voice. Plus, the candy descriptions!!!


message 5: by Kathryn (new)

446464 Oooh, heading into the holiday season, a mystery featuring CANDY could be dangerous, haha!




message 6: by Ann (new)

446509 I just finished Strong Poison. I'm sad I didn't like it more. I mean, I did like it, but there wasn't very much of Peter Wimsey in it, so I missed reading more about him and his friends, because that's what really endeared me to Clouds of Witness. :)


message 7: by Kathryn (new)

446464 I agree, Ann.


message 8: by Lori (new)

Nophoto-f-25x33 Try Gaudy Night and Busman's Honeymoon by Dorothy Sayers. I especially loved Busman's Honeymoon but you might want to read Gaudy Night to set it up.


message 9: by Ann (new)

446509 Thanks Lori!!! I had already purchased Gaudy Night because it looked like it followed Strong Poison. But, it's pretty long and I was a bit apprehensive. But if there's more goodies out there to be found, then I'll totally read!:D Happily, the books are pretty easy to read through.


message 10: by Liz (new)

Nophoto-f-25x33 As much as I am embarrassed to admit it, the last one I read was the newest Agatha Raisin, A Spoonful of Poison by M.C. Beaton. I really can't get enough of those books.


message 11: by Cindy (new)

339857 I just finished An Incomplete Revenge by Jacqueline Winspear. It's in the Maisie Dobbs series, set between the world wars in England. I really enjoyed it. A solid series, with the first being the best - as usual!


message 12: by Kathryn (new)

446464 Cindy, I'm so excited to hear that you are enjoying the Maisie Dobbs series. I keep seeing these and am interested (she sounds like a great heroine!) but have avoided them because they seem a bit heavy/depressing with the focus on the War. What did you think? Does it lightly touch on those aspects, or is it pretty deep/dark? Would it be a cozy mystery???


message 13: by Kathryn (new)

446464 And, Liz, I have not yet read an Agatha Raisin book but I have the QUICHE OF DEATH and am eager to try it!


message 14: by Cammie (new)

Nophoto-f-25x33 I just finished reading the Man With A Load of Mischief by Martha Grimes, the first of her Richard Jury mysteries. I really liked it, there were some terms I didn't understand because I'm American (and not English) but I enjoyed it. The characters were great, it was quite funny in some parts too. I will definitely be reading some more of her Richard Jury books.


message 15: by Cindy (new)

339857 Kathryn - I'm not entirely sure I would call the Maisie Dobbs books cozy. They are not dark, exactly, but the first book talks about Maisie's experiences as a nurse during WWI. So it is a little emotional and heavy. But she is a very likeable character. The last book, Pardonable Lies, is probably the darkest book. But there is little or no bad language, no sex scenes. Only the first book deals directly with the war, but all of them deal with the ramifications of England coping with the results of the war.


message 16: by Cindy (new)

339857 And I just finished Carola Dunn's latest in the Daisy Dalrymple series, Black Ship. It was fun, but not really extraordinary.


message 17: by Kathryn (new)

446464 Thanks, Cindy! I appreciate the insight into Maisie Dobbs.


message 18: by Jean (new)

1278130 I as at a book review today and the speaker mentioned a new cozy series called The Home Crafting Series. The first book is out, Lye in Wait by Cricket McRae. Although at the beginning of the book a fellow is found dead from swallowing lye, the reviewer promises that the remainder of the book is a cozy mystery. Sounds like a good read.


message 19: by Becca (new)

820833 I'm just starting the latest Agatha Raisin today. I **love** this series.


message 20: by Kathie (new)

267531 I just started Maisie Dobbs (first in the series). Thanks to whomever recommended it. Like it so far. I love anything in the post-WWI era (especially Agatha Christie).


message 21: by Kathie (new)

267531 Here is an eBay seller with lots of cozies (tell her Kathie Hagen sent you):

http://tinyurl.com/6aa2s5




message 22: by Lindy-Lane (new)

1448668 I have recently discovered the "Aunt Dimity's" mysteries by Nancy Atherton and the "Pennsylvania-Dutch" mysteries by Tamar Myers. I am enjoying both immensely.


message 23: by Pumpkin (new)

1415821 I just finished the second Alice Kimberly Haunted BOokshop mystery. I am really enjoying these. The language and humor are great!


message 24: by Judy (new)

Nophoto-f-25x33 I really like the Aunt Dimity mysteries by Nancy Atherton, too. I


message 25: by Becca (new)

820833 Oh, the "Aunt Dimity" mysteries are great! I finished the latest "Agatha Raisin" mystery too quickly. I feel bereft. :-(


message 26: by Kathryn (new)

446464 Have any of you read Jasper Fforde's NURSERY CRIME novels? I stumbled across the second one, The Fourth Bear at the library. Looks like it could be a lot of fun. If you have read both, do you think it's important to start with the first book (THE BIG OVER EASY) or can they be read in any order? Thanks!


message 27: by Cindy (new)

339857 My main problem with the Aunt Dimity series is the way the main character flirts with other men when she is married. That really bothers me!

And I have read both of the Jasper Fforde books, and I think it would be best to start with the first one, but I'm not sure it's essential.


message 28: by Sherri (new)

365597 I just finished reading Fleece Navidad by Maggie Sefton and I really enjoyed it! It was a quick read for me!


message 29: by Diane (new)

1356326 Cammie
I read Martha Grimes first 5 books then I stopped. I can't tell you why, I just got tired of her.
Sheri,'
Is the Maggie Sefton book wine or horses. I only read wine. Have so much to read that I can't get into horses.
Diane


message 30: by Beth (new)

584609 I'm a big fan of Maggie Sefton's knitting mysteries and and can't wait to get my hands on a copy of Fleece Navidad. I'm also a fan of the lady herself. She's gracious and giving with her fans and fellow mystery authors and loves to talk. I'm forever grateful to her for the blurb she gave me for my first mystery (and my publisher liked it so much they put it on the front cover).


message 31: by Cindy (new)

339857 I lost interest in the Martha Grimes books too. I wouldn't call them cozies. They were pretty violent, as I recall. But it's been a while.


message 32: by Amy (new)

1009384 Just finished Designer Knockoff by Ellen Byerrum. I'm enjoying her Crimes of Fashion mysteries.


message 33: by Pamela (new)

45018 I like Ellen's books too and I also need to catch up on this series. I need to do the same with Laura Levine's Series too!
Pam007


message 34: by Lawriter (last edited Nov 17, 2008 02:19PM) (new)

Nophoto-u-25x33 I finished AT FIRST SIGHT, a mystery novel by Stephen J. Cannell that I really enjoyed. The story, most of it, is told from the villain's point of view. Now, I'm reading excerpts from Cannell's new Shane Scully novel ON THE GRIND http://www.onthegrindbook.com/.


message 35: by Micki (new)

923719 I had finished two of the Aunt Dimity's cozies and am reading a third one now. I agree with you Cindy on the fact the main character flirts with other men with her being married, alittle distracting. Though I do enjoy the series, its a quick relaxing read. I do have a ? about Black Coffee by Agatha Christie, is it my imagination or is that another book in her collection but with a new title?


message 36: by Cindy (new)

339857 I read Black Coffee a long time ago. As I remember, it's a novel version based on a play she wrote.

I just finished Seven Suspects by G K Chesterton. Father Brown isn't in this one. It's a collection of short stories, but it was a little dated. Still fun though.


message 37: by G.M. (new)

1042178 Just finished Louise Penny's second Three Pines book.


message 38: by Lynn (new)

1436056 I haven't just finished on , but am in the middle of Murder of a Chocolate Covered Cherry.
It is really a cute story.
Going to see if I can find the whole series at the library



message 39: by Jean (new)

1278130 I just finished a Home Crafting Mystery, Lye in Wait. It's an easy and fun read. The characters are likeable with a possible future love relationship. The plot of the story is to discover who and how a handy man was forced to drink lye, which, of course, caused his death. There are a couple of incidents that are far fetched but overall it's a nice book.


message 40: by Terri (new)

45128 I really enjoy the Nursery Crimes series. The Fourth Bear is kinda complicated though. I dont think it is necessary read in order, but the first was the best IMHO


message 41: by Nancy (new)

819103 PAST MALICE by Dana Cameron (mystery)
Archeologist Emma Fielding has her hands full at her latest dig. Not only does someone associated with historic Chandler House hope to chase her away after she finds the body of a security guard, but her husband isn’t too keen on her investigating either. Will she risk her marriage to keep snooping, or will she ignore the secrets the townspeople are so anxious to hide?
Emma isn’t a person to quit on a job, and soon danger is flying along with the dirt. A solid mystery with an insider’s look at what it means to be an archeologist in the field.

THE HADES PROJECT by Lynn Sholes and Joe Moore (thriller)
Cotten Stone once again fights the forces of evil in this clever thriller featuring the biblical Spear of Destiny and a global power melt down. If you’ve ever feared a worldwide computer worm that could cause havoc everywhere, read this book. It’ll make you praise your antivirus program and hope something like this never happens for real.



message 42: by Lynn (new)

1436056 I just finished Murder of A Chocolate Covered Cherry. Very cute book, Didn't read it as fast as I have other books because of getting things ready for Thanksgiving


message 43: by Ann (new)

446509 Love the title of that book, Lynn!
And Happy Holidays! :D


message 44: by Lynn (new)

1436056 The Title is cute and I just love the way she has each chapter named.

I am going to the Library Book store and see if they may not have some more of the series down there.

I know a lot of you all go to the library and check them out to read, but I go to the book store part and I can get them for anywhere from .25 cents up to 2.00 and hardback editions for as little as 3.00. That way if something comes up I don't have to worry about a due date that I have missed. ANd I like to try and keep all the collections together.

I got my Mary Higgins Clark collection I am trying to get finished, anad Nicholas Sparks I have all but 1. I don't do this wih every author or genre of books just those I really like.

Then if I decide I don't wnat to keep certain books they are donated to the hospital, or the therapy room at the hospital or back to the Library so the Friends of the Library can keep making money.
and what I keep will all be going to my children who are also readers.








message 45: by Pamela (new)

45018 In the past few days I finished reading The Body In The Gallery by Katherine Hall Page, Who Left The Body In The Rain by Patrica Sprinkle, and just started The Book Of Old Houses by Sarah Graves.
Pam007


message 46: by Betty (new)

1380729 My most recent was "The Dead Wives Society" by Sharon Duncan but I was a little disappointed in it. The cozy I read before that is one of my favorite authors: "Scots on the Rocks" by Mary Daheim. Review:

What happens when you give your husband a criteria for your long-awaited vacation and let him pick the location? Well, that is what happens when Judith and her irascible cousin Renie dream of a vacation by a beach where they can get some much needed rest, and their husbands can go fishing. It is February in the Pacific Northwest and they have warmth and sun in their minds. Where do they end up, but on an island with a beach, good fishing, and in a castle in Northern Scotland!

The girls are literally dumped at the island & left on their own as their husbands go off for a day of fishing that turns into a week or more. Fortunately for them, the water between the island and the mainland is very shallow and twice a day at low tide the sand can be driven or walked on. That turns out to be a blessing because Judith’s husband has kept the destination a secret from her and she has arrived with only lightweight clothing. Of course, wherever Judith McGonigle Flynn goes trouble follows and soon this B&B owner finds herself wrapped up in murder and mayhem. In this book, a large cast of well-fleshed characters are involved in greed, conspiracy, jealousy, misplaced anger and more. Family bloodlines contribute to the mix.

This is number 23 in Mary Daheim’s Hillside Manor Bed & Breakfast series . The characters remain true and age appropriately. Her series is light and fun, even with Judith’s statement to Renie “You get worse as you get older. You age, but you don’t act it.” The opposite personalities play well off each other and the series has a large following. I recommend any of her books for a light entertaining read. Daheim also has a second series based in the town of Alpine in the Pacific Northwest featuring Emma Lord - Editor/Publisher of the The Alpine Advocate.


message 47: by Katie (new)

1283225 I just finished Crime Brulee by Nancy Fairbanks today. It's the first book in her Culinary Mystery series. The main character, a food critic, has interesting excerpts throughout the mystery from the book she's supposedly writing about food in New Orleans. There are also some recipes.

I liked the book and I'd read more in the series. Not the most suspenseful mystery ever, but still a fun, light read.


message 48: by Terri (new)

45128 The Body in the Attic by Katherine Hall Page. Her writing really sucks you in.


message 49: by Pamela (new)

45018 Yeppers and I really like particular book in the series. Although it did raise some eyebrows because Katherine gave Page an unexpected twist in this book.


message 50: by Kathie (new)

267531 I just returned Maisie Dobbs to the library. I could not stick it! I tried but it just did not engage me at all. I got about 25% through it.


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Books mentioned in this topic

Clouds of Witness (other topics)
Strong Poison (other topics)
The Fourth Bear (other topics)
Dead Ex (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic

Gayle Trent (other topics)
Evelyn David (other topics)
Mary Daheim (other topics)
Maggie Sefton (other topics)
Janet Evanovich (other topics)
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