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All Natural Murder (2013)

by Staci McLaughlin(Favorite Author)
3.39 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
0758275013 (ISBN13: 9780758275011)
languge
English
genre
publisher
Kensington
series
A Blossom Valley Mystery
review 1: In a cozy mystery I expect the characters to do "stupid" things to put themselves in danger and to get in the way of the police; that is part of the charm of the genre. But, for some reason, the antics of the characters in this book seemed incredibly juvenile. I had a really hard time relating to the sister in particular. Is anyone really that self-centered? Even the attempts to show her in a better light did not make her very appealing. I understand that is part of the burden the main character deals with when she ends up living at home again. Maybe I'm getting too old to relate. Don't know if I will try to next in the series or not.
review 2: This series is not for me. This book has sealed it. I love the premise: an organic farm and spa. Unfortunat
... moreely, that's about all that I really like and even that is done is such a way as to make it as disinteresting as possible, with organic meals that are as out-there and unappetizing as possible and a hotel manager written to be as big an ass as possible. The murder plot itself was very nicely done - the author did a very good job of misleading the reader (or at least, me) as to motives and suspects and the ultimate culprit was not one that was on my radar.Cozy mysteries are in large part character driven and I don't think there's a character in this entire book I liked or cared about. Dana's not unlikeable as the protagonist, but it seems a bit as though she's just going through the motions. There isn't much about her that feels proactive. Her sister Ashlee is just too stupid to be believed. We're supposed to buy a 20 something that acts at every single turn like a 14 year old? Ugh! The fact that both girls still live at home makes her immaturity that much more unseemly and obvious. Seriously, this character is written as though she's developmentally stunted. Jason, the love interest plays an extremely small part in this book and the part he does play certainly doesn't make me feel warm and fuzzy about the relationship, or caring about seeing it develop further. I was intrigued by the detective in the first book but he was only mentioned once or twice in this book and did not make an appearance at all.Finally this poor book suffers by committing two "sins" that drive me crazy: 1. pages and pages of internal dialogue and introspection. I freely admit to skimming or skipping a good 25% of this book and I can honestly say I didn't miss anything pertinent to the plot or characterizations. Nothing. 2. The family insists that Dana "solve this murder" so her sister isn't erroneously arrested. Cozies are about the amateur sleuth, yes. And I understand it gets extremely difficult for authors to put their characters in situations where their sleuthing is inadvertent, or innocently accomplished. But the arrogance that is implied with telling an amateur sleuth "you must solve this murder" because the police can't, that's a turn-off to me. Dana further turns me off right from the beginning of the book with the line she gives the detective investigating the murder: "I don't like to brag but..." in relation to the last mystery that took place in the first book of the series. It just felt wrong to me, turned me off, and the book just went downhill from there. less
Reviews (see all)
angelica
I figured out the killer relatively quickly. This is a good series.
Bob
I thought it was more enjoyable than the first title in the series
Michy
a fun second outing -- Love the cringe worthy meals at the spa.
Yuzzyyuz
This was not as good as the first. Too cliche for me.
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