This latest cozy mystery kept me turning pages to see what would happen next and how these situations could possibly be solved. I enjoyed visiting Death by Coffee again, a café and bookstore in friendly Pine Hills, Ohio. The author describes the characters very well, primarily through realistic conversations, behaviors, and Krissy’s thoughts throughout. The scenes are defined very well, but I saw little about Pine Hills itself or what season this was set in to give it a little texture. The problems were either the result of a lot of coincidences, or somebody was wreaking havoc on the town and setting up Krissy to take the fall.
The delightful shop that she and best friends Vicki and Mason own is Death by Coffee. It is a combination bookstore and café, in which Krissy’s primary responsibility is the bookstore upstairs. She also helps in the café when needed. Normally she is motivated and friendly, a glass-half-full kind of gal. Within a couple of the longest days of her life, more stuff goes bad around her than she can keep up with and the glass is empty, empty, empty.
Cockroaches are found in the restroom and in a customer’s half-drank coffee. Someone dressed like Krissy, wearing a café apron, threw a brick through the window of a competitor and poured coffee beans everywhere inside. The new local theater where Vicki is rehearsing for a play has been extensively damaged with foodstuff everywhere and a note supposedly left by Krissy. The list continues, with a local blogger trashing her. The ultimate, however, was that a bookstore customer was murdered and a couple items easily identified as hers were in his house. Being invited to the police station got old, very quickly.
Krissy has helped the police many times with murder cases since she moved to Pine Hills. No, they didn’t usually ask for her help, and really didn’t want it. But help she did, finding whodunit before the cops did. This time they really don’t want her help. Nor do they want her boyfriend, Paul, a police officer, to spend time with her. This time it is her life, her freedom, on the line, and she refuses to leave her future in the hands of the police.
Instead of her take-charge, sometimes scattered, personality, Krissy is a basket case. Who wouldn’t be? Yet, she is still able to, with help from her friends, put together various plans to determine what she needs to do. She researches people online and considers the best people to talk with.
Plot twists added and subtracted suspects throughout. I was very surprised at whodunit, as there were no clues throughout that would help the reader find the bad guys this time. There was no way I could have guessed whodunit – everything – or why, so the end was surprising. I highly recommend this to fans of the series and author, cozy mysteries with coffee shops, bookstores, and cats.
From a thankful heart: I received a complimentary copy of this novel, and this is my honest review.