Showing posts with label Jazz Ramsey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jazz Ramsey. Show all posts

Monday, May 04, 2020

The Secrets of Bones by Kylie Logan


First Line: Wally the puppy was a nineteen-pound ball of boundless energy with more sass than a three-year-old kid, and more common sense than one, too.

When St. Catherine's has a no-show at Assembly Day, the Catholic school for girls is short one professional woman to talk about possible career choices. Employee Jazz Ramsey is persuaded to bring in a cadaver dog and talk to the students about the dog's training, which will include planting bones for Gus the dog to find.

The girls are impressed when Gus finds the first bone, but instead of finding the second, Gus heads in a completely different direction. Since he is a professional, Jazz takes a look and finds the skeleton of a  woman who used to teach at the school-- one whom everyone thought had resigned and left.

Bernadette was a controversial teacher, and as Jazz tries to find her killer, she realizes that there are plenty of people who wished her ill. The trick will be to find the killer before the killer becomes nervous and tries to stop Jazz in her tracks.

The first book in this series, The Scent of Murder, showed a lot of promise, and this second entry certainly begins fulfilling a lot of that. Jazz has learned a better way to question her suspects (in the first book she tended to infuriate everyone which is dangerous), and her relationship with a local detective aids in her investigation. There's the usual cop who poo-poos everything she says, but he's not obnoxious to the point where I wanted someone to run him down with a patrol car. (I take out any latent aggression in the fiction I read.)

Logan has a main character with a voice that captures my attention and won't let it go. In The Secrets of Bones, she's also crafted an excellent mystery that kept me guessing all the way to the reveal. I'm definitely looking forward to the next book, although this author stomps all over one of my pet peeves.

Cozy mysteries usually have some sort of "hook" to capture a reader's attention and make them pick up and read the book. When Logan once again fell hook, line, and sinker for one of my peeves, I had to look up two things. One was my reading history with this author. She's written several series, and I've read books in two of her others. One button shop series I picked up because I love buttons. Yes, there was some information about buttons at the beginning of the book, but if they showed up again it was because someone threw all the buttons on the floor and the main character had to pick them up. Buttons were the hook that was quickly dropped after the beginning of the book.

The second thing I had to look up was more information about the literary or narrative hook: "It appears at the beginning of the story and may contain several pages of a novel, several paragraphs of a short story, or it might be only an opening sentence..."  So I learned that my expectations were rather high, and Logan is following the letter of the literary hook law. But... my expectations are still high. If this series is supposed to be about a woman who trains cadaver dogs, may we please have more than a couple of pages about the process? Pretty please?

Will I read the next book in the series? I've already said yes because I do like the main character and the mystery was excellent. I just wish I could train myself not to be so annoyed when hooks don't last as long as I want them to!


The Secrets of Bones by Kylie Logan
eISBN: 9781250180605
Minotaur Books © 2020
eBook, 336 pages

Amateur Sleuth/Cozy Mystery, #2 Jazz Ramsey mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Net Galley

 

Monday, May 06, 2019

The Scent of Murder by Kylie Logan


First Line: It had rained that afternoon and the sidewalks were still wet.

For Jazz Ramsey, life is good. She's thirty-five, loves her job as an administrative assistant at an all-girls school, and owns her own home in one of Cleveland's most interesting neighborhoods. She's also got a volunteer interest she's passionate about: she's a cadaver dog handler.

One night as Jazz is putting a cadaver dog in training through his paces in an abandoned building, she's stunned when the dog signals a find in the wrong place. The dog is insistent, and when Jazz goes to check, she finds the body of a young woman dressed in Goth clothing and makeup. She's even more shocked when she realizes that she knows who the young woman is. Disturbed over the young girl's death, Jazz searches for answers for her own peace of mind.

For those of you who anticipate a lot of canine contact in this first book in a series, I need to let you down gently. There isn't. Oh, there is some, and it's choice, but author Kylie Logan is more intent on setting her stage in The Scent of Murder than she is in letting us enjoy the working dogs. By book's end, you can see that future books will be giving readers a more immersive experience,  and I'm certainly looking forward to it.

Jazz had a past love affair with the lead detective on the case that I found to be more a hindrance than a help. I liked the way it was dealt with at the end; I just hope it was with finality. Something else that Jazz will have to deal with in the future is her abrasive approach to questioning people. She seems to know the perfect way to antagonize people, and that's not just counter-productive, it's downright dangerous.

All in all, I think this is a good start to the series, and I'm looking forward to more. Let the dogs out!
  

The Scent of Murder by Kylie Logan
eISBN: 9781250180612
Minotaur Books © 2019
eBook, 315 pages

Amateur Sleuth, #1 Jazz Ramsey mystery
Rating: B+
Source: NetGalley