And Then They Were Doomed by Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli

And Then They Were Doomed (Little Library Mystery, #4)

by Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli

Zoe Zola is one of ten invitees to an Agatha Christie symposium. Tempers flare...and then there are nine. Can Jenny Weston save Zoe from murder on the Upper Peninsula?

Little Person author Zoe Zola believes that one of the unluckiest things in life is to receive an invitation—in the form of a letter edged in black—to an Agatha Christie symposium at an old Upper Peninsula hunting lodge. Her reluctance dissipates when she learns that the organizer is named Emily Brent—the name of a character poisoned by cyanide in Christie’s And Then There Were None.

As a dreary rain soaks the U.P., Zoe and nine other Christie scholars—each of whom bears a vague resemblance to one of the classic mystery novel’s characters—arrive at the lodge. At the opening night dinner, arguments flare over the experts’ discordant theories about Christie. Next morning, the guests find one particularly odious man has gone—whereabouts and reasons unknown. Such a coincidental resemblance to a work of fiction is surely impossible; therefore, it appears to be possible.

As the guests disappear, one by one, Zoe resolves to beat a hasty retreat—but her car won't start. She calls her friend, amateur sleuth/little librarian Jenny Weston, but Jenny will have to wait out a storm off Lake Superior before she can come to the rescue. If Zoe’s to stay alive to greet Jenny when she eventually arrives, she’ll have to draw on everything she knows about Agatha Christie’s devilish plots in Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli’s fourth tantalizing Little Library mystery.

Reviewed by annieb123 on

3 of 5 stars

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Originally published on my blog: Nonstop Reader.

And Then They Were Doomed is the 4th Little Library mystery by Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli. Released 13th Aug by Crooked Lane, it's 323 pages and available in hardcover and ebook formats.

This is a difficult book to categorize and review. It's too dark and realistic to be a cozy mystery, has too little dramatic tension to be a thriller, and too frivolous to be a modern gritty mystery. The disparate plot threads don't seem to belong to the same book. The characters are generally annoying and I was yanked out of my suspension of disbelief literally every page by the weird (almost surreal) dialogue. The book is written in 3rd person but there's almost no insight or explanation behind the characters' motivations.

I enjoyed the Agatha Christie pastiche. For readers who have not yet read And Then There Were None, or Murder on the Orient Express, and intend to do so sometime, this book might not be a good fit because it spoils both books. This one can presumably be read as a standalone, the weird semi-surreal randomness of this book isn't due to lack of backstory, it's just really strange and random. Zoe Zola is a little person, and apparently, despite it never being mentioned in the earlier books, she's a Christie authority and is writing a biography. She has an extremely dysfunctional family who shunned her mother for being pregnant and producing a little person and have apparently kept up with Zoe and her late mother's whereabouts carefully enough over the years to continue harassing them by randomly sending black bordered death announcements. (Yes, really).

When Zoe gets an invitation to participate in a webinar on Agatha Christie, she agrees, despite the webinar location being in a remote B-horror-film hunting lodge in the middle of nowhere, and despite the black bordered invitation being ostensibly sent by one of her dangerously crazy relatives. (Yes, really). The setup, dialogue, and story honestly become less believable from there.

I can't say it was a pleasant read. This is the second book in the series for me and as of this moment, I'm not tempted to continue. In an aside, there is a very brief random mention of the whole little library concept in chapter 5, but that's it. It has no relevance to the plot at all.

Two and a half stars, rounded up for the Christie references. Very odd book.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

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