Fai clic su di un'immagine per andare a Google Ricerca Libri.
Sto caricando le informazioni... Chapter and Curse (The Cambridge Bookshop Series, 1) (edizione 2021)di Elizabeth Penney (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaChapter and Curse di Elizabeth Penney
Series to Try Out (53) Sto caricando le informazioni...
Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Molly Kimball, a Vermont librarian, and her mother move to Cambridge, England to assist Aunt Violet in running the family bookshop. They discover the bookstore needs a big cash infusion, and Molly launches a social media marketing campaign to get the shop back on the radar. When a woman is found dead behind the shop at an author event and her aunt becomes the chief suspect because it was done with her knitting needle, Molly and others launch their own investigation to clear her aunt. The proprietor of a bicycle shop next door and Molly are attracted to one another. I found this a refreshing series. I loved the setting, and I liked all the main characters who will continue. I listened to the audio version read by Henrietta Meire. I look forward to future installments. ( ) I'm happy to see that there are already two more books in this series, with another to be released in November. I enjoyed the first very much. It combined the best characteristics of the cozy mystery with what I call "not-so-trashy trashy novels" -- romances with strong heroines who are passionate about their work. In this case, Molly Kimball is passionate about books, having worked as a librarian in her native Vermont. When her mother receives a request from British Aunt Violet to help run the old family bookshop in Cambridge, England, the two leap at the chance, even though Molly's mother has heretofore been silent about her British family. Molly's delight at being in Cambridge, surrounded by books, is tempered when, during a literary festival, a local woman who is part of the small community around Magpie Lane is found murdered in Violet's back garden. Molly's curiosity and stubborn need to find the truth lead to excitement and, finally, the true killer -- and there's romance as well. Highly recommended. When American Molly Kimball and her recently widowed British mother move to Cambridge to take over the running of a bookstore that's been in their family for generations, the last thing they expect is to get caught up in a murder investigation. But within days of their arrival, someone dies near the bookstore, and Molly's great aunt, who invited them to England, is the prime suspect. Now, amidst trying to help the bookstore get back on its feet, learning about and meeting members of her previously estranged family, and getting to know the good-looking guy who works next door, Molly is determined to clear her aunt's name. Overall, the book was decent. The plot drags in some places, and the mystery seems a little watered-down to me, which is certainly not what you want in a book from this genre. I liked most of the characters, though Molly herself is sort of "meh," in my opinion. The bookstore and the community around it were a lot of fun to read about. Aunt Violet's friends are a little on the bizarre side, and I had a difficult time pinning down what age anyone was supposed to be. I can figure it out with some math, but a lot of the characters act similarly to each other, so it was difficult to imagine age differences between some who I assume should have been in different generations. I don't go into a cozy mystery expecting to figure out whodunit by the end, though that doesn't stop me from speculating. I have a tendency to take things at face value and get too caught up in the red herrings. The resolution to this mystery wasn't a total surprise to me, though, even while I didn't expect it to go that way simply because it felt so bland. The resolution to the mystery and motivation behind it seemed weak, like much more effort went into setting up this location and cast of characters for future stories than into making the mystery interesting. That's my opinion, however, and it's not enough to keep me from being interested in the continuation of this new series, due to how much I liked the setting and characters. Thank you to Netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for providing me a copy of this book to review. Molly Kimball and her mother Nina get a chance to change their lives when they are invited by Nina's aunt to come help run the family bookshop in Cambridge, England. The recently widowed Nina and the soon-to-be unemployed Molly are both eager for the change. They arrive and find that Thomas Marlow Manuscripts and Folios is in need of a refresh. It has been in Nina's family for hundreds of years by Nina's Aunt Violet is having problems keeping the business going. Violet secured a loan from another cousin but cousin Clive is not putting pressure on Violet to repay the loan or he'll sell the bookshop to a big box bookstore. Molly has the idea of playing into the Cambridge book festival by hosting a poetry reading by one of Violet's college classmates who has become a famous poet. In fact, the whole college crew has gotten back together including Mytle who is a near neighbor of the bookstore and who was never much liked by any of the group. When Myrtle is found dead in the garden during the reading, Violet becomes a prime suspect because she was stabbed with one of Violet's pink knitting needles. But many of the other college friends and some of the various neighbors also have reasons to want Myrtle dead. Molly is determined to find the killer to clear her great-aunt's name. Along the way she uncovers a number of secrets and even solves a very old murder that had been passed off as a suicide. This was an entertaining story with an intriguing set of characters. I liked the budding romance with bike shop owner Kieran. I also like Molly's new adopted cat Puck. Fans of cozies will enjoy this story which has it all: great setting, cute pets, and a new romance along with an entertaining mystery. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Appartiene alle SeriePremi e riconoscimenti
In Elizabeth Penney's Chapter and Curse, Molly Kimball is used to cracking open books . . . but when a poetry reading ends in murder she must use her skills to crack the case. Librarian Molly Kimball and her mother, Nina, need a change. So when a letter arrives from Nina's Aunt Violet in Cambridge, England, requesting their help running the family bookshop, they jump at the chance. Thomas Marlowe-Manuscripts and Folios, is one of the oldest bookshops in Cambridge, and-unfortunately-customers can tell. When Molly and Nina arrive, spring has come to Cambridge and the famed Cambridge Literary Festival is underway. Determined to bring much-needed revenue to the bookstore, Molly invites Aunt Violet's college classmate and famed poet Persephone Brightwell to hold a poetry reading in the shop. But the event ends in disaster when a guest is found dead-with Molly's great-aunt's knitting needle used as the murder weapon. While trying to clear Violet and keep the struggling shop afloat, Molly sifts through secrets past and present, untangling a web of blackmail, deceit, and murder.
Fiction.
Mystery. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
Discussioni correntiNessunoCopertine popolari
Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
Sei tu?Diventa un autore di LibraryThing. |