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HALLOWEEN PARTY MURDER

Readers may never look at Halloween parties the same way.

There are parties and then there are parties, as this trio of treats by Maine authors proves.

There’s nothing small towns love more than Halloween. In “Halloween Party Murder,” Tinker’s Cove hosts a haunted house. It’s Meier’s way of giving her series heroine, Lucy Stone, a chance to apologize to her neighbors Ty and Heather Moon for suspecting them of kidnapping her grandson. Lucy recruits the members of her Hat and Mitten Fund to populate the terrifying tableaux Ty creates in each room of his home. It’s all scary fun until the person playing drowned Ophelia fails to emerge from her bath. Hollis’ Bar Harbor offers locals a chance to go upscale, dressing up as their favorite spooks in “Death of a Halloween Party Monster.” The partygoers at the restaurant bash laugh uproariously at police chief Sergio Alvares’ fear of Pennywise until music teacher Boris Candy, who came dressed as Stephen King’s terrifying clown, turns up dead in the restaurant’s freezer, leaving chef Hayley Powell to discover his killer. Ross’ party in “Scared Off” is nothing like the other two official municipal events. Julia, whose family runs the Snowden Family Clambake in tiny Busman’s Harbor, gets a frantic call from her 13-year-old niece, Page. Page’s parents have allowed her to sleep over at Talia Davies’ house with fellow middle schooler Vanessa. The three girls invite three other friends, and the six quickly turn into 60. When high school boys with beer kegs start showing up, Page knows she has to bail but worries because no one can find the Davies’ upstairs tenant, who agreed to watch the three girls for the night. When Mrs. Zelisko finally does turn up, it’s not good.

Readers may never look at Halloween parties the same way.

Pub Date: Aug. 31, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-4967-3382-5

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Kensington

Review Posted Online: June 1, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2021

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THE MAID

A compelling take on the classic whodunit.

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The shocking murder of a public figure at a high-end hotel has everyone guessing who the culprit might be.

Twenty-five-year-old Molly Gray, an eccentric young woman who's obsessed with cleaning but doesn't quite have the same ability to navigate social cues as those around her, loves working as a maid at the Regency Grand Hotel. Raised by her old-fashioned grandmother, who loved nothing more than cleaning and watching Columbo reruns, Molly has an overly polite and straightforward manner that can make her seem odd and off-putting to her colleagues despite her being the hardest worker at the hotel. After her grandmother's death, Molly's rigid life begins to lose some of its long-held balance, and when the infamous Mr. Charles Black, a rich and powerful businessman suspected of various criminal enterprises, is found murdered in one of the rooms she cleans, her whole world gets turned upside down. Before Molly knows what's happening, her odd demeanor has the police convinced she's guilty of the crime, and certain people at the hotel are a little too pleased about it. With the help of a few new friends (and while fending off new foes), she must begin to untangle the mystery of who really killed Mr. Black to get herself off the hook once and for all. Though the unusual ending might frustrate some readers, this unique debut will keep them reading.

A compelling take on the classic whodunit.

Pub Date: Jan. 4, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-593-35615-9

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Ballantine

Review Posted Online: Feb. 7, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2022

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BURIED IN A GOOD BOOK

Whimsy meets woodsy.

A mystery writer finds solace and murder in rural Oregon.

Mystery writer Tess Harrow is worried about her daughter, Gertrude. The usually resilient 14-year-old is stung by her father’s utter silence since his divorce from Tess. Fortunately, Tess has just the answer: She’ll take the feisty teen to an isolated cabin in the woods, far from Seattle coffee shops, the internet, or running water. Gertie’s reaction is predictable, but nothing else is. Shortly after their arrival, they hear a sudden boom, and water, fish, and body parts rain down from the sky. When he finally answers their distress call, Sheriff Victor Boyd tells them it’s probably “the Peabody boys.” Sure enough, Adam and Zach have been blast fishing with dynamite again, only this time, somebody stashed a corpse in the lake before their first kaboom. Boyd’s deputy Carl, who’s detailed to keep watch on Tess’ cabin, disappears, but Ivy, his female counterpart, is unfazed. What she wants most of all is for Tess to read the 1,000-page science-fiction adventure she’s written and shop it to her agent. In the meantime, Tess is fascinated with Boyd, a dead ringer for her own franchise hero, Detective Gonzales. If she can only tag along after Boyd while he’s trying to crack the case, she figures that her next novel, Fury in the Forest, will practically write itself. Boyd wants Tess dogging him about as much as he wants eczema, but eventually the two make their peace with the help of hipster librarian Nicki Nickerson, the third Peabody triplet, a man in a Bigfoot costume, and a roving flock of toucans.

Whimsy meets woodsy.

Pub Date: May 24, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-72824-860-8

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Poisoned Pen

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2022

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