Showing posts with label New Orleans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Orleans. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

French Quarter Fright Night by Ellen Byron

 
First Line: Muhwaa ha ha!
 
It's Halloween in New Orleans, and the staff of the Bon Vee Culinary House Museum is busy setting up a fantastic haunted house tour despite all attempts from the next-door neighbor's nasty assistant to put a stop to it all. 

Gift shop manager Ricki James-Diaz is in for a shock when, in trying to put a stop to the assistant's machinations, she learns that the new next-door neighbor is none other than popular movie star, Blaine Taggart. Yes, there's a history there between the two.

When the aforementioned nasty assistant's body is found in Bon Vee's prop tomb, everyone at the museum becomes a suspect, and that means Ricki and her friends have a killer to catch.



~

French Quarter Fright Night is another enjoyable entry in Ellen Byron's Vintage Cookbook cozy series. I really enjoy the New Orleans setting as well as all the merchandise Ricki finds for her gift shop. I also liked seeing how folks in New Orleans get ready for Halloween.

There's a good mix of characters in this third book in the series. Ricki is likable and smart, and she certainly has an interesting mix of friends. Movie star Blaine Taggart is an interesting addition, often showing how celebrities seem to be from a different planet. Ricki's friend, Cookie the "recovering children's librarian" rapidly became tiresome with all her attempts to flaunt her charms right in Taggart's face, but there are others-- like Mordant "the human Eeyore" and college intern Olivia Felice-- who took my mind right off Cookie.

The mystery is a strong one that kept me guessing, and I liked the continuing search into Ricki's family history. If you like cozy mysteries with a strong sense of place and a good cast of characters, try Ellen Byron's Vintage Cookbook series. The first book is Bayou Book Thief.

French Quarter Fright Night by Ellen Byron
eISBN: 9781448312665
Severn House © 2024
eBook, 256 pages
 
Cozy Mystery, #4 Vintage Cookbook
Rating: B
Source: Net Galley

Wednesday, June 08, 2022

Bayou Book Thief by Ellen Byron

First Line: In some cities, a middle-aged woman dancing down the street dressed as a cross between a 1970s disco queen and Wilma Flintstone would be unusual.

When her husband dies attempting a stupid internet stunt, 28-year-old widow Ricki Diaz-James returns to New Orleans, the city where she was adopted by the NICU nurse who cared for her when Ricki's teenage mother disappeared from the hospital.

Now she's got her dream job: running the gift shop in the spectacular Garden District mansion Bon Vee which is now the Bon Vee Culinary House Museum, an homage to its former owner, celebrated restauranteur Genevieve "Vee" Charbonnet. Ricki's passion is collecting vintage cookbooks, so Miss Vee's Vintage Cookbooks & Kitchenwares is just the business to make her heart sing. That isc until she opens a trunk of donated books to find instead the body of a cantankerous Bon Vee employee who'd been caught stealing books and fired.

Ricki doesn't want to see her new career crash and burn before it truly starts, so she begins using some of the skills she's honed in ferreting out vintage treasures to find a killer. But will her past prove more of a liability than she anticipated?

~

New Orleans, vintage cookbooks and kitchenwares, a book thief, a fabulous Garden District mansion... Ellen Byron's Bayou Book Thief was an irresistible siren call to my imagination, and reading it was a delight.

Ah, New Orleans, which dubs itself as the home of the original foodies. From streetcars to peacocks named Gumbo and Jambalaya to po'boy contests, the city is a character in this enjoyable mystery. I had to smile at a running thread throughout the book which concerns Ricki's air conditioner breaking down, her investigation of a repairman, and her purchase of a swamp cooler-- an item that I'm quite familiar with here in the Sonoran Desert (where it works much better than in soggy New Orleans).

The cast of characters is rich and varied, and I enjoyed learning about them all: Ricki herself, Cookie the "recovering children's librarian," Madame Noisette whose signature color is purple, nonagenarian German Guillory, Eugenia Charbonnet, and all the rest. Byron has peopled the first book of her series with just enough characters to keep the focus moving from mystery to mystery.

For someone who doesn't like to cook, you'd think I wouldn't enjoy books with strong ties to vintage cookbooks and kitchenware, but I do. Possibly because those things bring back memories of my mother and grandmother creating amazing things in their kitchens with tools and books similar to the ones Ricki has in her shop. 

Let's see... a fantastic setting, characters who will become your fictional friends, a good mystery to solve, and plenty of (often laugh-out-loud) wit, Bayou Book Thief is a great beginning to a series that I will be returning to again and again.

Bayou Book Thief by Ellen Byron
eISBN: 9780593437629
Berkley Prime Crime © 2022
eBook, 304 pages
 
Cozy Mystery, #1 Vintage Cookbook mystery
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Sunday, June 05, 2022

The Physicists' Daughter by Mary Anna Evans

 
First Line: September 1944. Justine Byrne liked taking out the trash.

After making numerous repairs on equipment that keeps failing for no good reason, Justine Byrne knows there has to be a saboteur in the factory where workers are constructing planes, ships, and top-secret parts in the Carbon Division.

Having been raised by her physicist parents to think logically, Justine also can't help thinking about the oddly shaped carbon gadgets being manufactured and shipped out as quickly as possible. It only makes sense that those items are important to the war effort and something the saboteur is willing to kill for.

Is there anyone that Justine can trust in her determination to find the spy in the factory? She could be killed if she relies on the wrong person.
 

~

The Physicists' Daughter is quite a break from author Mary Anna Evans' Faye Longchamp series about an archaeologist in Florida, and she handles the World War II setting with aplomb. Justine and her newly found best friend Georgette Broussard give readers a taste of what Rosie the Riveter had to contend with in war-time factory work, but it's not all work and no play. Justine, whose life has always centered on education and the mind, learns how to jitterbug and how to deal with the men buzzing around her like bees-- with the help of Georgette, that is.
 
Other characters, like Mavis, whose job doesn't begin to cover the loss of her husband's wages now that he's fighting in the war; Georgette, my favorite character who comes from a poverty-stricken background out in the bayous of Louisiana; and Justine's Aunt Gloria (is she or is she not paranoid?) keep the story moving as the reader tries to guess the identity of the spy in their midst.
 
An extremely dangerous scene at the end is compelling, and I was pleasantly surprised to learn that my deductions weren't entirely correct. All in all, The Physicists' Daughter is a fast-paced tale filled with plenty of interesting characters and World War II flavor. 
 
The Physicists' Daughter by Mary Anna Evans
eISBN: 9781464215568
Poisoned Pen Press © 2022
eBook, 352 pages
 
Historical Mystery, Standalone
Rating: B+
Source: Net Galley

Tuesday, October 02, 2012

Postcards from the Dead by Laura Childs


First Line: A dazzling night filled with gigantic floats, silver beads, dizzying lights, fire-twirling flambeaus, and a crowd that was fueled by too much Dixie Beer and Southern Comfort.

It is Mardi Gras season in New Orleans, one of the busiest times of year for Carmela Bertrand and her scrapbooking shop, Memory Mine. Since business still hasn't completely recovered from Hurricane Katrina, Carmela reluctantly agrees to do a puff piece on live television with her least favorite reporter, KBEZ-TV's Kimber Breeze. Instead Carmela finds Kimber's body hanging off the balcony of the Hotel Tremain.

Carmela is quite content to let the police do their job without her assistance, but when she starts finding postcards signed by the dead woman left in her shop, she and her best friend Ava decide that local law enforcement needs a helping hand.

Postcards from the Dead is a fast, enjoyable read that has two mysteries cleverly masquerading as one. (Quite fitting for Mardi Gras, isn't it?) Author Laura Childs gently led me astray on that point, so while I did deduce the identity of one killer, the second criminal was a surprise.

The strengths of this book are to be found in its two main characters, Carmela and Ava-- both strong, smart, successful and quirky women who love their work and enjoy their lives-- and in the setting itself. I loved walking the streets of the French Quarter, visiting the Garden District, and enjoying the Mardi Gras celebrations. I even learned that chicken wire plays an important part in shopkeepers' lives during this colorful, rowdy event. (Who says you can't learn anything by reading mysteries?)

Sometimes the "themes" of cozy mystery series, be they about cooking, book shops, knitting, antiques, or-- in this case-- scrapbooking, seem incidental to the books; almost as if they're just hooks to draw us in. Not so in Postcards from the Dead. As Carmela worked in her shop and taught classes to her patrons, I found the information about scrapbooking and ephemera fascinating. It's a very good thing that I'd taken care of all my errands outside the house before I plunked myself down to read, or I would have been searching out the nearest version of Memory Mine to rifle through all the goodies and bring bags of it home. Childs includes scrapbooking tips as well as recipes in the back of the book for any readers who may be interested, and I have to admit that I'm still feeling the urge to start up a new obsession.

If you're in the mood for a light, enjoyable read with thrills and laughs, Postcards from the Dead would be a perfect choice to curl up with. Worried that you've never read any of the books in this series and this is number ten? Don't be. You can read this without feeling that you're missing boatloads of information... but you may find yourself seeking out the other books in the series!

Postcards from the Dead by Laura Childs
ISBN: 9780425252758
Berkley Hardcover © 2012
Hardcover, 336 pages

Genre: Cozy Mystery, Amateur Sleuth, #10 in the Scrapbooking series
Rating: B
Source: the author

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Summer and Smoke and Murder by Nevada Barr

Title: "Summer and Smoke and Murder"
Author: Nevada Barr 
Format: eBook
Genre: Short story, humorous mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased at Barnes and Noble

First Line: I know he did it.

Somehow it's rather appropriate that the first thing I read on my new Nook was a short story by Nevada Barr-- and if my reading experience is any indication, I have a lot of pleasure ahead of me with my new gizmo.

In this short story, a woman living in New Orleans sees a serial killer claim another victim. Making the decision that the tainted and bumbling police force will be of no use, she plans to use the city's high crime rate as a resource to bring the killer to justice.

Sounds high octane good, doesn't it? You don't know the half of it. The title of the story itself evokes memories of Tennessee Williams' play Summer and Smoke as well as a line of the poem "Emblems of Conduct" by Hart Crane. Don't let the smoke of the title get in your eyes. Things aren't exactly as they appear to be in my little synopsis. I think Barr was channeling some grief and anger in this story-- one of the many benefits of the writing process. That, in the end, she could have so much fun doing it and make me laugh so much is another of the many benefits of writing and of reading. If you get a chance to read this gem of a short story, don't pass it by... especially if you're a pet lover!


Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Burn by Nevada Barr


Title: Burn
Author: Nevada Barr 
ISBN: 9780312614560
Publisher: Minotaur, 2010
Hardcover, 384 pages
Genre: #16 Anna Pigeon mystery
Rating: A+
Source: Purchased at The Poisoned Pen.

First Line: "Shit, Blackie, this one's dead, too."

In this, her sixteenth outing, National Park Service ranger Anna Pigeon is still recuperating from the events of Winter Study and Borderline. While her husband, Paul, keeps on working, Anna stays with a friend in post-Katrina New Orleans, little knowing that she's soon going to be fighting for what's right out in the concrete jungle.

While staying in one of her friend's apartments, Anna sees the creepy Jordan, a bartender by night and a "gutter punk" by day. Observing some of Jordan's behavior, Anna comes to believe he's a pedophile. But Jordan is not what he seems, and his connection to Clare Sullivan, an actress whose family was murdered in Seattle, is at the very heart of Barr's powerful plot.

If I'd known how good this book was, I would've kissed Barr when I attended her author signing at a local bookstore. For some reason, I caught on almost immediately to one of Barr's surprises, and I was able to gobble this book up at a fast clip. (In comparison, my husband was listening to the audio version and was confused. When I ascertained that he was within a very few pages of the reveal, I clued him in, and he settled down to enjoy the book, too.)

Anna isn't all that much different in the wilds of New Orleans as she is out in the middle of a national park, as you can see from her thoughts on the local "gutter punks":

These kids were not her brand of criminal. She wasn't well versed in their migration patterns, did not know their natural habitat, what they preyed upon or what preyed upon them-- but people who valued fear and enjoyed pain were scary. Healthy animals, bunnies and foxes and cougars and grizzlies, ran from what frightened them and avoided pain at all costs. When they stopped behaving this way it was because they were sick, rabid.


Anna may not be in Kansas anymore, but her observations are finely tuned.

A word of warning: this book deals honestly and in some detail with the loathsome subject of child sexual abuse and pornography. Did I enjoy the subject matter? No. Did I secretly harbor a tiny little wish that Anna was in a park keeping visitors away from the bears? Yes, for a few pages. However, one of the most important things I've loved about the character of Anna Pigeon throughout sixteen books is that she constantly evolves as a person.

At the beginning of the series, she fought for what she believed in, but if she could get away with staying away from people, that's what she would do. She's kicked her dependence on alcohol, she's learned to trust another human enough to fall in love and marry, she's knowingly coming to the end of her career, and she's still brave enough to fight-- and in fact she puts more of her heart into the battle than she ever did before.

In Burn, Anna found herself in a situation that literally made her sick, but children needed her desperately, and she refused to turn her back. You can't ask for better than that.

Imagine my surprise when I went to Amazon to check out the reviews for what I believe to be an excellent book, and found that it was rated 2.5 stars out of 5. Why? The subject matter.

"There's so much ugliness in the world today that I refuse to read about it for fun."

There's a lot of truth to that statement; however, I can't help but feel that many of these people turning up their noses at Barr's choice of subject matter in this book would also turn their heads and refuse to see when confronted face-to-face with the actual horror. (It's so nasty and uncomfortable, don't you know?)

I read most of the reviews, and it seemed to boil down to a consumer's version of Tough Love: Write about what I want you to write about, or I won't buy your books. I want blue skies and sunshine and cute animals!

Fair enough. I'm happy to let everyone read what they want, as long as I get to do the same. I'll continue to enjoy Anna's evolution as a character wherever she may roam, and I won't tell y'all that Anna will be at Lake Powell the next time she appears. I'll keep all that azure water, sky and sunshine to myself. I don't know about the cute animals, though. I've seen plenty of birds, fish and lizards at Lake Powell....

Thursday, August 12, 2010

13½ by Nevada Barr


Title: 13½
Author: Nevada Barr
ISBN: 9781593155537
Publisher: Vanguard Press, 2009
Hardcover, 320 pages
Genre: Thriller
Rating: B
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: "By the Month or by the Night" read the sign over the entrance to the trailer park.

In a radical departure from her Anna Pigeon mystery series, Nevada Barr gives us a psychological thriller that begins in the 1970s in a trailer park in Mississippi. It then moves to Minnesota with the murder spree of a child dubbed "Butcher Boy." Finally in post-Katrina New Orleans, the adults from both these broken childhoods collide.

Polly escaped from her abusive "trailer trash" childhood at the age of fifteen, running away to New Orleans. Now she's a respected college professor with good friends, her own home, and two small children she adores.

"Butcher Boy" was released on his seventeenth birthday. His surviving brother has vowed to take care of him, and they both head south to that Mecca for runaways: New Orleans.

When Polly meets and falls in love with Marshall Marchand, a restoration architect who's helping to rebuild the city, their pasts are set on a collision course.

I love Barr's books, and although this book is very good, it didn't quite meet my expectations. It has everything to do with the characters. Perhaps it's because my mind is too devious, but there were few surprises with the Marchand brothers. I knew how that part of the plot was going to work itself out. That was a bit disappointing, but the character of Polly did much in making up for the deficiencies of the Marchands.

Even after the train wreck of her childhood, Polly was such a strong, centered, caring person that I wish the book could have focused even more on her. I wanted more Polly. Perhaps you'll understand after reading these two quotes:

Two girls-- children in Polly's eyes but of the age she'd been the first time she'd come to Jackson Square-- rose from a table tucked between the benches opposite the cathedral doors. They were tricked out in the unfortunate fashion that decreed female children dress as prostitutes in a world full of predators.

The dog, his head as high as his mistress's shoulder, walked beside her. The child's face was open and trusting. The dog's was not, and Polly was relieved. Children needed bodyguards.


On the face of it, Polly's just another mother who worries too much and reads too much into innocent scenes. But she's not. She's lived in a world of predators and survived. She knows exactly what's out there that she needs to be prepared for. Her children will not have to face what she did, that is, if Polly has the least say about it.

If you haven't read too many books about the twisted minds of killers (like I have), 13½ should make you jump at each creak of a floorboard or pop of an attic beam. And Polly is one character who should not be missed.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Review-- Nine Lives


Title: Nine Lives: Death and Life in New Orleans
Author: Dan Baum
ISBN: 9780385523196/ Spiegel & Grau, 2009
Genre: Non-Fiction
Rating: A

First Line: Ronald Lewis walked past one ruined cottage after another.

Dan Baum moved to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina to write about the city's response to the disaster for The New Yorker. What he discovered was that Katrina wasn't the most interesting thing about the city. The question that he felt compelled to answer was this:
Why are New Orleanians so devoted to a place that was, even before the hurricane, the most corrupt, impoverished, and violent corner of America?

His answer is Nine Lives, a truly fascinating book that is not only informative, but is also an emotionally and artistically satisfying gourmet meal for readers.

Baum tells us about the lives of nine New Orleanians whose lives are bracketed by two hurricanes: Betsy, which transformed the city in the 1960s, and Katrina. These people cross the lines of age, race, class and gender. They are Mardi Gras Kings, jazz-playing coroners, ex-cons, transsexual barkeeps, women with dreams of white picket fences, and more. As each one spoke to me, I found myself hearing that person's voice. I was transported to the Lower Ninth, to a mansion on St. Charles, to a makeshift mortuary.

"I'm a lawyer," Billy said. "Neither my firm nor the companies I own possess the kinds of resources the city needs." He sat forward, rubbing his palms together. "But this is my idea. The collective wealth around this table must be in the billions. Why doesn't each of us, personally, pledge a million dollars cash to the recovery. We can go out of this room and announce that we have sixty million dollars cash on hand: the business community's stake in recovery. Today." He leaned on his forearms and looked around the room expectantly.

No one spoke....


Each of these nine people transcended print and became very real to me, and made New Orleans real to me in a way it had never been before. I cared about these people, I laughed and cried and became angry with these people. I was involved.

There's not much more you can say about a reading experience. Nine Lives is available today. Get yourself a copy.

[Quotes are from an advanced reader's copy and may be modified in the published work.]