Monthly Archives: August 2015

A fun whodunnit mystery involving a small town veterinarian

Unleashed: A Kate Turner, DVM Mystery (Kate Turner DVM Mysteries Book 2)

By: Eileen Brady

Rating: 5 of 5

unleashed“Unleashed” is the second in a series of mysteries about Dr. Kate Turner by Eileen Brady. Kate is a veterinarian who has moved to Oak Falls to fill in for the established vet, who is off on a prolonged vacation. She has been in her position for a number of months and is settling in quite well.

In this story, Claire, the owner of Toto, a Cairn terrier who is one of Dr. Kate’s patients, has committed suicide… or has she? While almost everyone in town is willing to accept her death, Kate has lots of questions. Further, she is fairly indiscriminate as to who she is asking the questions of. She starts getting caught up more and more in trying to figure out how Claire actually died and if murder might actually be involved.

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Lovely Regency romance

A Radical Arrangement

By: Jane Ashford

Rating: 4.5 of 5

aradicalarranement“A Radical Arrangement” is a sweet book in the tradition of the Regency romance stories I read back in the 1990’s. It is a clean romance with only a couple of romantic kisses but with lots of verbal sparring.

It has a fun heroine, Margaret Mayfield, who is rather young compared to most young women in romance novels today (she is nineteen years old.) The hero, Sir Justin Keighley, seems to be well established and quite a bit older but it is hard to say if he is in his twenties or thirties. This was very much the age range of the books of that period and may very well have reflected the age differences of couples during the Regency period. It was a tad difficult to try to relate to the Margaret but given the way the character is portrayed, it probably would have been a bit difficult to set her age at something more comfortable for the reader. Difficult but not impossible. Something the author may wish to consider for future books.

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Not as good as the first book in the series

The Red Book of Primrose House: A Potting Shed Mystery (Potting Shed Mystery series 2)

By: Marty Wingate

Rating: 3.5 of 5

theredbookofprimrose“The Red Book of Primrose House” is the second in the series of Potting Shed mysteries by Marty Wingate. I must admit I much preferred the first book. There is a bit of a sophmore slump in this second book.

Our sleuth, Pru Parke has finally gotten the job she needs in order to stay in England. She is a recent transplant from Texas and had given herself a year to settle in and find a job. The only drawback to the job is that it puts her at a distance from her new boyfriend, a detective in London that she met in the first book in this series.

Pru seems to have rather quickly adopted the lingo of her adopted country as well as their habits. To tell the truth, this is one of the things I object to in this story. I think it would be much better to have Pru speak in her Texas “voice” and have her habits contrast with that of those around her. I worked with many British individuals and was told that they generally have a lot of disdain for expats who come across too native too soon. They can tell that it is not natural and they simply don’t like it. At one point in the story, Pru hides the fact that she is making iced tea because it is too different from what her friends would do.

Pru has turned on the waterworks in this story. She has become a crier and is frankly too dependent on her boyfriend. I like a stronger woman in my mysteries and hope that the author firms up Pru’s backbone in the future. She is also acting fairly young for a woman in her fifties. One would think that time and experience would have given her a more resolute spirit.

Apart from that, it was a decent cozy mystery. The whodunnit was not too difficult to figure out and from that point on, waiting for Pru to come up with the answer was about two thirds of the book. Perhaps that is why some of the character issues became more prominent to me. All I was relying on at that point was the charm of the story and some of it lost its charm pretty quickly.

The book ends a little strangely from my point of view. Hopefully, it will make more sense in the follow on book in this series. I also hope that Pru grows up, grows a backbone, and starts acting her age and her own person.

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