Linda Berry's Trudy Roundtree novels are set in rural south Georgia, but Linda lives in Colorado, where she's a community arts activist and an insatiable theatregoer. Other published credits include poetry, plays, preschool currriculum, and a newspaper entertainment column.
The story seemed to drag, even though the idea was good. A pastor Josh is electrocuted when he is baptizing 16 year old Crys. It wasn’t an accident and Crys runs away. Officer Trudy works on finding Crys and trying to tie 3 other deaths into the pastor’s.
I was torn between 4 or 5 stars. I really enjoyed the book but I figured out who committed the crime and even how they would prove it before the characters did. On the other hand, I loved the use of southern phrases from time to time that only true southerners would understand and laugh out loud when reading them. I definitely want to read some more of the author’s books.
The appeal of this cozy mystery hinges on implied insider knowledge of southern phrases, quirky secondary characters, humor, and small-town Georgia life a la Andy Griffith. The plot is simple and easy to follow; there are relatively few main characters; and the means of murder is clever and unique.
I finished this series and will miss Trudy. I want to know how things progress with Paul, and, as I've said about other books, I wish Delcie was more of a character.
Trudy Roundtree of the Ogeechee, GA, police department investigates when youth pastor Josh Easterling is electrocuted right before he is to baptize 16-year-old Crys Cleary at the local Baptist Church. Crys disappears believing she is a jinx because all those who have cared for her have died (her father, her mother, her boyfriend, and now her pastor), and she wants to protect her grandfather—the only one she has left. Trudy convinces her cousin police chief Henry Huckabee that these deaths may be connected, so with his permission, she delves into the past to try to find the link that will bring a murderer to justice while trying to locate and then protect Crys. The case also causes Trudy to resolve some issues in her own life. Well-drawn, likable main characters, quirky secondary characters, humor, and small-town Georgia life add to this sixth in a series that will appeal to those who enjoy the Andy Griffith television show and Joan Hess’ Maggody series.
When the youth pastor at the Baptist Church is electrocuted just before baptizing a neurotic teenager, policewoman Trudy Roundtree and her cousin, police chief Hen, begin to wonder just what links the series of deaths in her life. The experienced reader will get there before the Ogeechee police force, but then Trudy has other things on her mind, including her relationship with the local newspaper editor.