My new favorite Christmas mystery

I think USA Today bestselling author Alexandra Benedict may have just given me the gift of my most favorite Christmas mystery novel of all time – The Christmas Jigsaw Murders.

After receiving a parcel with six jigsaw pieces on her doorstep, Edie O’Sullivan, a crotchety octogenarian and renowned crosswords setter (whom I imagined as Stephanie Cole AKA Doc Martin’s Auntie Joan) must solve the most important puzzle of her life.

A cryptic note with the package read, “Four, maybe more, people will be dead by midnight on Christmas Eve, unless you can put all the pieces together and stop me.” Signed, Rest in Pieces.

Recognizing something worrisome pictured in one of the puzzle pieces, Edie shares some of what she knows with her nephew/adopted son, DI Sean Brand-O’Sullivan. When a man is attacked and left for dead with a jigsaw piece in his hand, Sean forbids Edie from investigating any further in an effort to protect her.

Needless to say, Edie — a self-proclaimed pain in the arse, who has always gotten in her own way but has always done everything she could to protect Sean — is determined that she is the only one who can solve the mystery but she will have to face her demons to do so.

Also author of The Christmas Murder Game and Murder on the Christmas Express, Benedict gives readers everything we need in a page-turner of a modern-day Christmas mystery. A ticking clock, characters with rich layers of back-story and humor, red herrings, suspects and true to the title, you need all the pieces to really solve the puzzle.

I ho-ho heartily recommend The Christmas Jigsaw Murders to fans of British mysteries, cozy mysteries, Christmas mysteries, LGBTQ+ mysteries and fans of anagrams, which Benedict has peppered throughout the novel, with nods to Dickens, Christine McVie and Fleetwood Mac.

I received an advance readers copy from Poisoned Pen Press, an imprint of Sourcebooks, courtesy of NetGalley. Order online or buy now at your favorite independent bookstore. Mine is Sellers Books and Art in Jim Thorpe, PA.

Review by Di Prokop, More Mystery Please

*If you enjoy holiday mysteries as much as I do, be sure to check out the Second Annual More Mystery Please Santa Advent calendar, beginning December 1.

Brilliant series debut

The Brampton Witch Murders cover
I jumped at the chance to read Ellis Blackwood’s The Brampton Witch Murders, A Samuel Pepys Mystery, and I’m so glad I did.

In a brilliant series debut, we find the famed diarist’s personal inquisitors, Abigail Harcourt and Jacob Standish, tasked with proving the innocence of Samuel’s younger sister, Paulina Pepys, accused as a witch by the son of the late Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins.

My excitement never waned as the book is perfectly paced, plotted, and artfully set. Blackwood does an amazing job painting the world of 1666 England, where the flames of what would become the Great Fire of London had just ignited the bakery on Pudding Street, in the city that just the year before had been besieged by plague.

For a setting almost 400 years ago, Blackwood’s narrative flows naturally, his detailed description is subtle, never forced. With his richly drawn characters, supporting and otherwise, their back-stories and humor, it was a most enjoyable read, not to mention a satisfying mystery with clues and suspects aplenty.

I especially loved getting to know housemaid turned inquisitor Abigail, her cleverness, strength and determination in finding the truth and seeing justice done despite it not being given to her family, years earlier.

I highly recommend The Brampton Witch Murders for anyone interested in puritan-era witch trials, historical fiction readers, as well as fans of cozy mysteries. I can’t wait to see what Blackwood has in store for us in future installments of the series to be published in the coming months.

I received this advanced reader copy of The Brampton Witch Murders from Vintage Mystery Press, courtesy of the author. Order online or buy now at your favorite independent bookstore. Mine is Sellers Books and Art in Jim Thorpe, PA.

Note: Having been a bit familiar with Pepys, his diary entries from 1665 woven into the narrative of the Pulitzer Prize-nominated The Great Plague by Dorothy and Lloyd Moot (for which I was privileged to host a C-Span BookTV episode) I was quite intrigued to read mysteries inspired by the diarist and bon vivant. After finishing The Brampton Witch Murders, I found myself going down a rabbit hole of sorts, trying to learn whether characters were real or fictional. In my queries, I was delighted to find that not only The Diary of Samuel Pepys is available online but the self-appointed Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins’ The Discovery of Witches, as well.

Review by Di Prokop, More Mystery Please

Meet my new favorite crime-solving duo

A Collection of Lies, A Kate Hamilton Mystery, by Connie Berry book cover
While USA Bestselling author Connie Berry’s A Collection of Lies is the fifth of her Kate Hamilton Mystery series, the story, the characters, the case to be solved works so perfectly as a standalone but with enough tease to the back-story that you’ll want to read the entire series. So much so that I have already ordered two of the earlier four installments.

In A Collection of Lies, we find American antiques dealer Kate Hamilton and her new husband, DI Tom Mallory, on their honeymoon in Devon, in southwest England. As a favor to a colleague of Tom’s, Kate agrees to put her antique textile expertise to the test exploring whether an old, bloodstained, lace dress could possibly be linked to a long-cold-case murder.

With the discovery of long-held secrets, a shooting at a local history museum gala and a very warm murder of a Victorian You-Tuber, to which Tom assists the local constabulary to solve, and the newlyweds are soon hot on the trail of a mystery with plot turns that keep you guessing.

My new favorite crime-solving duo, I love Kate and Tom’s rapport not to mention their abilities to follow clues and their senses to solve a satisfying caper. I can’t wait to go back and read their origin story in A Dream of Death.

I highly recommend A Collection of Lies to fans of traditional cozy mysteries, British mysteries, and partners in crime-solving duos.

I received this advanced reader copy of A Collection of Lies from Crooked Lane Books, courtesy of NetGalley. Order online or buy now at your favorite independent bookstore. Mine is Sellers Books and Art in Jim Thorpe, PA.

Review by Di ProkopMore Mystery Please

Powered by WordPress.com.

Up ↑