There are three reasons why I read Sourdough Wars. I grew up in Marin Co. and so the San Francisco angle intrigued me. Second, after spending two years in France I am enamoured with all things bread, and I remember the great sourdough French bread. The third reason is that it was free.
I subscribe to Bookbub and Sourdough Wars was one of the daily specials.
I am going to cut top the chase and say that if I had paid full price for this book I would feel a little cheated. It is not a bad book, but I feel that it does not live up to its potential. The first jacket blurb calls The Sourdough Wars: A Cozy and Humorous San Francisco Mystery. This is the beginning of the failure. The novel has its humorous moments, but too many of them feel forced and even more, it fails at being cozy.
Now when I think cozy in the genre of murder mystery, I think of Lord Peter Whimsey, or Albert Campion, or sometimes Hercule Poirot. I can see the author trying to put this into the same area, but to me it just fails in giving me the cozy feeling of those older works. Some of it might be that I feel more nostalgia for those older times than I do four modern San Francisco. I cannot quite put my finger on it.
Now, as a murder mystery it is pretty good. The denouement was a surprise to me. It may be lacking a little bit in the set up, because I felt that the murderer was acting a little out of character at the end, and I blame that on the author not presenting the character properly. Also, there are two murders and I do not feel like we, the readers, are given enough information to figure things as the protagonist does.
So, The Sourdough Wars is an adequate, but not spectacular murder mystery than fails to give us the cozy feeling that it seems intent on providing. It is still only $2.99 for Kindle, and at that price is still a good value.