This was fun to read, mainly because it made me laugh out loud so often! The first-person narrator, Tressa Jayne Turner, is on a seemingly hopeless mission to get rid of her nickname Calamity Jayne, which has dogged her since middle childhood, but she just keeps living up to that public image. She'd be an ideal role for a young Lucille Ball.
And her worst nemesis from that childhood, Ranger Rick Townsend, now a fish-and-fowl officer for the Iowa Division of Natural Resources, does his best to keep that nickname alive all over Knox County, where Tressa is managing to hold down two jobs at a discount chain store and at her uncle's ice cream place. But then a nicely puzzling murder mystery starts, and Rick shows a kinder face, one that goes well with Tressa's heartwarming relationships with her two faithful dogs and her horse.
What happened? Driving home late one evening from her Bargain City job, Tressa gets a flat tire way out in the countryside. She pops the trunk lid, and there's the body of Peyton Palmer, lawyer, with a bullet hole in his head. In the glove box is an envelope with $10,000 in cash. She runs down the road for help, and Ranger Rick shows up. (Hmm.) They go back to the car, and the body and the money are gone. But instead of making her the butt of another joke, Rick holds her tenderly and tells her she'll be okay, shock and fear do funny things to your mind, etc.
This sets Rick up, of course, as the Romantic Lead for the series, in the variant of enemy-to-lover that we might call ridiculer-to-protector, but if you were hoping for romance in addition to humor and suspense, all you'll get in this first book are a couple of kisses.
Tressa's desperate to be taken seriously, so she sets out to solve the crimes that nobody believes happened. All sorts of shenanigans ensue, and the editor in me would have shortened the book by maybe 40 pages to tighten it up. The puzzle pieces do start to come together after a while (a second murder helps with that), corruption is brought into the open, Tressa gets real threats, and she brings off the final surprise.
There is one trigger warning, though. As warnings to Tressa, cruel things are done to her family's cat and her own horse. For that, and because the story dragged a little and the comedy wore a bit thin in places, I'll give this 3.5 stars. Rounded up happily for Rick's grandfather Joe who teams up with Tressa saying, "I'm the Green Hornet and you're my Kato." He was a hoot.