When I began the series with the fifth book, halfway through I thought...you really like this book and want to start with the first of the series. Also, I believed the series a great pair for a review I wanted to write to go along with a book about Betty White that is newly released called Pearls of Wisdom. Ironically, when I looked into getting the book I found on the writer Lee Hollis wrote for the Golden Girls. So, the whole pairing for the review of the two books, kismet!
However I am glad I went back to read the first of the series, rather than start in the middle, because this mystery series really needs to be read that way. While I will say some series can be read out of order, one at a time, stand alone, many cannot. This is one where you need to get the character stories from the beginning, to get maximum enjoyment. While I don't want to say this series couldn't be read out of order, or the fifth book as your first (as I did), for optimal understanding, you want the whole set up from the first book. But, if you read one I guarantee your going to want to read them all.
This first book of the series introduces you to Poppy Harmon and her entourage. While she is an interesting character herself, a retired actress of an eighties sitcom whose husband is newly dead in the first chapter, has been lying to her while alive, cleaned her out completely, the associates of Harmon, are just as entertaining. Two are older women like Poppy, a young man is introduced with a creative relationship to the group along with a daughter and grandchild of the women in the group...all make up this odd consortium for a detective agency. This makes for a good, entertaining read one that pulls you in and doesn't let go. Luckily I got all five books so when I finished the first I instantly went on to the second. That is how good they are!
Growing up I loved the Golden Girls. I didn't have any choice in the matter, when it came to watching them, as my grandmother put them on every Saturday (I believe that was the night they were on, when new episodes came out, anyone else who may remember better, let me know) evening and we would watch them together. I would lie in front of the television (as close as I could get without being yelled at) and my grandma in her chair. She would cut me a bowl of fruit or vegetables (sometimes mixed) and I would veg out. Those were some of my best memories, however vague. It's really the memory I get of how warm those evenings made me feel, how safe, secure, loved and happy I was to watch those funny old ladies.
Now, almost forty years later, I am closer to the age of those women I watched on television, than the age that I watched them. Funny how things change. But, the Poppy Harmon books, maybe it's because Lee Hollis did write for the Golden Girls, that I get the same feeling of warmth, comfort, all those feelings from years ago, in these books. And, it's not just the choice of characters (older women) but that Lee Hollis brings great writing skills to cozy mysteries where, while there is death, while the story revolves around it, there isn't a major dicussion revolving around the horror of the situation. And, while many people love books like that because I, myself, read them more so than cozy mysteries, I think that taking a step out of the horror and gore and being able to focus more on the story, more circumstance and situation, when it comes to mysteries, this is a cozy mystery I am glad to have stumbled over.
Recently, there has been a re-release of older mysteries, classics from mystery writers (from sixty years ago and further back) like Anthony Berkeley, for instance, (he is more well known than some others released) who wrote Jumping Jenny (more well known than others released, but just an example). When I read this mystery I noticed how many differences there were from the mysteries we read today. And there were many. But, one thing I will say that there is a comparison between the mystery writers of the past and cozy mystery writers, such as Lee Hollis, in that they take the focus away from the gore and horror and place it elsewhere, rather than the death, itself.
And, in a world full of death, gore, and horror, what we see today on the media is worse than any other generation who came before us, we need to be able to have death talked about, and be able to read about death, without having the focus be on any aspect that makes it fearful (stressful, even without recognition). Cozy mysteries are a good break, in this way, and Lee Hollis a definite writer to read, especially with his Poppy Harmon series! You need to seek and find the first of the series, the price of the paperback was the smallest I've seen lately, $7.99, so I was able to take a well needed break from Kindle reading!
**NOTE, I call them Poppy Harmon series but Lee Hollis calls the series a Desert Flowers Mystery