A Lesson in Dying is book 1 in Ann Cleeves’ Inspector Ramsay series, and was my first Ann Cleeves novel but won’t be my last. I’m surprised it has taken me so long to pick up one of her books because I love most of the series’ based on her books. Note that this isContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: A Lesson in Dying by Ann Cleeves”
Tag Archives: murder
ARC Review: Death at Porthcurno Cove by Sally Rigby
Death at Porthcurno Cove is book 5 in Sally Rigby’s Cornwall Murder Mystery series, and for the most part is easily read as a standalone. Detective Inspector Lauren Pengelly finds the bodies of a young couple while walking her dogs, and she and her team are immediately drawn into the mystery of the couple’s death.ContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Death at Porthcurno Cove by Sally Rigby”
ARC Review: The Library Game by Gigi Pandian
The Library Game is book 4 in Gigi Pandian’s Secret Staircase Mystery Series, but it’s easily read as a standalone novel. Tempest Raj and her family’s company, Secret Staircase Construction, have been hired to convert historic home, Gray House, into a mystery library. Although the renovations are still in progress, the owner is hosting anContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: The Library Game by Gigi Pandian”
ARC Review: The Socialite’s Guide to Sleuthing and Secrets by S. K. Gordon
The Socialite’s Guide to Sleuthing and Secrets is book 3 in S.K. Gordon’s Pinnacle Hotel Mystery series but as someone who was not familiar with the series, I can confidently say that it’s easily read as a standalone. The story is written in first person from the point of view of Evelyn Murphy, the daughterContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: The Socialite’s Guide to Sleuthing and Secrets by S. K. Gordon”
ARC Review: The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli
The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli is an old fashioned mystery set in 1938 England, and featuring the four most successful female mystery authors of the time (Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Dorothy L. sayers, and Margery Allingham) as fictional characters. The four authors have been asked to cohost a charity gala at theContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli”