Reviewed by funstm on
The things I like most about this series were absent in this volume. I don't mind the faster pace (although the slower pace was what made the other books stand out) but I would prefer there to be some needlepointing (I mean it's called Mainely Needlepoint, it's kind of essential to include some sort of project more than Angie running around to the post office.) and for the mystery to be a cold case. I think the author does the mix of an old mystery affecting the present really well and it's one of the things I love most about the series.
The mystery in this one isn't bad. It's a decent cosy mystery - meaning you'll probably guess the killer off the bat. It's not as complex as some of the previous mysteries have been but it's enjoyable enough. It's just not what I really expect from this series.
The characters were a little off in this one too. I couldn't quite put my finger on it but something was bothering me with the interactions between them. On the other hand the romance in this series is majorly juvenile to the point it actually feels awkward reading it. Angie seems mostly confident but she turns into a basketcase when it concerns Patrick. But that's not exclusive to this book so whatevs.
This book felt very repetitive too. Angie was constantly relaying all of the information between three or four different people and many exchanges were just slightly rephrased. It made it feel a lot longer than it was and it made it somewhat exhausting to read her back and forth between everyone.
2.5 stars, rounded up to 3 stars.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 14 September, 2020: Finished reading
- 14 September, 2020: Reviewed