This series began as a straight mystery but I didn't count on the developing romance between Katherine and Lars. Excerpt and book are PG13
BLURB:
Katherine is a retired nurse and a retired church organist. The small Hudson River village where she lives in her Victorian “Painted Lady” makes her the neighborhood matriarch. Along with her Maine Coon Cat Robespierre, she guards friends and families.
When amoral Rachel moves into the first floor apartment of Katherine’s house, trouble erupts. The murder weapon is one she recognizes and makes her fear for her friends and family. Finding the killer becomes her goal.
Excerpt:
Chapter 1
The pale winter sun shone through the kitchen window. I cleaned up the last of the mess from my
adventure. The caper hadn’t gone as
planned. How many do? In my many years of life, most of my plans
have taken an unexpected turn.
Merup.” Robespierre
my Maine Coon cat announced a visitor on the way. He’s almost as good as a doorbell. The firm rap on the door told me this wasn’t
one of my female friends. “Come in.”
Pete Duggan strode across the room and thrust a bouquet of
bright carnations into my hands. A red
hue, almost as vivid as his hair, stained his face. “Mrs. Miller, got to hand it to you. I’ve come to eat crow.”
To hide a smile I buried my face in the flowers and
inhaled the spicy fragrance. “How about
chocolate chip cookies and mint tea instead?”
“Sounds great.” He
straddled one of the chairs at the table and picked up the local
newspaper. “Local Woman Thwarts
Robbers.” His grin made him look like
the ten-year-old who had moved into the corner house on my block. He cleared his throat. “The guys at the station ribbed me about
this. Did you forget the plan?”
How, when the
idea to catch the real thieves had been mine?
A series of burglaries had plagued the neighborhood for months and had
troubled me. Especially when the police
had decided two teenage neighbor boys were the culprits. I knew the pair and had disagreed strongly
enough to set myself up as a victim.
Then I informed Pete.
“Did you
forget?” he repeated. “When I crept up the stairs and saw you
grappling with one of the men, I nearly had a heart attack.”
Heat singed my
cheeks. “How was I to know my date would
poop out early?”
After filling
two mugs with mint tea I opened a tin of freshly baked cookies. How could I admit to a nagging doubt, or tell
him I had wanted to be part of the action?
In July I had turned sixty-five and in September retired from the
nursing staff at Tappan Zee
Memorial Hospital . Six months of placid existence had made me
edgy. Lunch with friends, coffee with
the neighbors and weekly bridge games with old cronies bored me. These events held none of the challenge of
meeting crises at the hospital.
Editorial Review
Murder and Mint Tea is a gem in its genre, combining the voice of a classic American whodunit with that of a traditional British detective novel. Murder She Wrote meets Miss Marple in a beautifully crafted tale that makes the reader want to reach into the pages and dispense justice to the villainess themselves. ~ Writer Gail Roughton
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4 comments:
Sounds like that reviewer was spot-on. I love the types of books and detectives she mentions (and Agatha Christie in general), and from just that short excerpt, Katherine feels like an old friend.
Sounds like she's restless and ready to take on new challenges. Leaving a high pace job and slipping into retirement can be hard.
I love that she has "capers", sounds like a fun character!
Maine Coon cats are among my favorites. And Robespierre is a perfect name for one!
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