Kindle freebie at time of download
Holly Hart is eager to start her life fresh opening a cheesecake bakery in the tiny town of Fairview. Before she can hold her grand opening, her little dog Muffins leads her on a chase through town, a meeting with a handsome stranger and directly to a dead body in her bakery face down in her buttercream. Holly becomes the chief suspect in the murder in the eyes of the townspeople thanks to a malicious reporter. Holly fears the local bakery is determined to frame her in order to ice the competition. Holly is not about to let that happen. There's plenty of room for a cheesecake bakery and a regular bakery.
This mystery is exactly what I wanted to kill time while waiting for someone without a book. Thank goodness I had the tablet with cellular data and the Kindle app. A search for free cozy mysteries turned up this one I hadn't read before. If you are looking for realism, look elsewhere. This book is pure escapism. I enjoyed the fun, frothy plot and trying to guess whodunit. I only suspected right before Holly suspected that person. I wish there was more baking and some recipes included.
I like Holly. She's young, inexperienced at business but sincere. She has a good heart and wants to get along with her new neighbors, including the other bakery. It's unclear from this book why she automatically suspects Mason of being a slimeball because he appears wealthy. She has a negative attitude towards wealth and privilege and I gather that is because she comes from that world and found it stifling but her background is still a bit of a mystery. I love Muffins, the naughty little dog. How on earth does he keep escaping Holly's locked apartment and getting into mischief? His penchant for finding clues is rather implausible but charming.
The first person Holly meets in town is Mason Carlton, a handsome, well-dressed stranger. I don't like how Holly makes assumptions about him without even knowing him. I also don't like how he invites a stranger, searching for her dog in her pajamas for coffee. Doesn't she have more important things to do like find her missing dog?! That would be an automatic NO answer from me. Other than that, Mason seems OK. There's not much character depth but he seems to like Holly. The townspeople are certainly very quirky, especially Charlene, a rubber boot wearing, mystery-loving crazy cat lady. I don't really care for her myself. She talks too much and is quick to accuse Holly and talk AT her instead of to her. She delights in being eccentric so why be so rude? Her frequent comments about the policeman being hot are a little creepy too. Charlene's friends are all a bit unusual. Officer Trent Trinket seems nice enough. It's difficult for him to do his job with Holly nosing around and Charlene adding her two cents and Millicent Munroe causing trouble. Millicent is completely awful! I understand her motive but her methods are completely out of line and uncalled for. As a reporter, she shouldn't stoop to underhanded tricks. Plus her grammar is appalling. Did she actually go to journalism school? The Carltons' lawyer, Walter Huffy, looks like Santa Claus. He doesn't appear much in the story but Mason trusts him. He doesn't remember Holly's name so that's a black mark against him in her book but is he actually guilty of anything except being a lawyer to wealthy businesspeople?
The murder victim seems to have been an upstanding member of the community. Why was he killed then? What secrets did he have? There isn't much to go on and the motive seems very thin. Then Holly finds another dead body and there seems to be a connection but still not much of a motive. As a mystery novel, this story is a little weak but I like the cute, cozy factor a lot.
I signed up for the author's newsletter to read the prequel story and hopefully more about Holly.