I'm pleased to welcome Suzanne Stauffer to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Suzanne writes the Couriers Mystery series. FRIED CHICKEN CASTAÑEDA is the first book in the series.
Kathy: In FRIED CHICKEN CASTAÑEDA we meet Prudence Bates. Prudence is bored with her conventional middle-class life and heads West. Have you ever tried to liven your life up?
SS: Oh, my, yes. Many times. I think that I did all of the things that Prudence didn't do -- I went away to college, I moved to New York City after I got my master's in library science and lived there for ten years. I'd probably still be there, but my income wasn't keeping up with the cost of living, so I moved across country to got to school at UCLA and get my PhD. Los Angeles is a pretty exciting place to live -- but also expensive. In 2006, I went to Australia to meet a man I'd been corresponding with via email for 10 years. We got married at the Riviera in Las Vegas NV in December of that year. He continues to liven up my life! After I retired in 2024, we moved to Albuquerque and I started a third career.
Kathy: Prudence is befriended by Castañeda Hotel employees and she is invited to dances and the local hot springs. Which of these activities would you prefer?
SS: Oh, neither one. Prudence is the extrovert that I wish I were! I wish that I could dance, but it's not one of my skills. My husband loves hot springs and I tolerate them. Prudence and I share a love of Golden Age mysteries.
Kathy: Prudence follows in the footsteps of her favorite fictional detectives, Tommy and Tuppence. If you were to solve a mystery in real life, which sleuth's footsteps would you like to follow?
SS: Probably Miss Marple. I'd be watching quietly from the sidelines, gathering clues and making connections while I knitted away. Or possibly rare book librarian Helen Shandy in the Charlotte MacLeod Professor Peter Shandy series. I'd love to work at Balaclava College!
Kathy: What first drew you to cozy mysteries?
SS: It's more that the mysteries I have always loved got retconned into being cozy. I started with Nancy Drew and Judy Bolton, then moved on to Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, Ngaio Marsh, and Marjorie Allingham. I also love the hardboiled mysteries of Dashielle Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and Ross Macdonald. I think it's the focus on character and character development that drew me to them. Human beings and their motivations are central to the story and the mystery. I don't much care for graphic descriptions of blood and guts or sex, either.
Kathy: Do you write in any other genres?
SS: I've written several short stories in other genres and have plans for others. Strangely enough, the two that I wrote in the hardboiled genre -- "Effie's Tale" and "Detour to Murder" -- have been published. The others are available on my Substack https://smstauffer.substack.com/ along with additional Fred Harvey recipes.
Kathy: Tell us about your series.
SS: The Couriers Series follows Prudence from Cleveland to New Mexico, as she prepares to train as a Courier, and then on the Detours that she leads.
Kathy: Do you have a favorite character? If so, who and why?
SS: I think that's like asking a parent who their favorite child is! By the time I've spent 60-70,000 words with them, it's impossible to pick. And, Prudence meets new people in each book. If I absolutely had to pick one in "Fried Chicken Castaneda," I think it would be Clara, the desk clerk. She's just so grounded and confident. She knows who she is and what she wants.
Kathy: Did you have a specific inspiration for your series?
The Fred Harvey Indian Detours and the Couriers who led them. I learned about them on a visit to the Grand Canyon, and realized they would make a great basis for a cozy mystery series.
Kathy: What made you decide to publish your work?
SS: That was always the goal -- to write a book that people would read and enjoy. As you probably can guess, I've been a reader for as long as I can remember (and my mother read to me before I could even talk), so it seemed natural to someday write and publish books, as well.
Kathy: If you could have a dinner party and invite 4 authors, living or dead, in any genre, who would you invite?
SS: My immediate response is "The Four Queens of Crime, of course." Christie, Sayers, Marsh, Allingham. Then I think it might be more fun to invite Barbara Mertz (Elizabeth Peters/Barbara Michaels), Charlotte Macleod, Caroline Graham, and Sarah Caudwell. They all write/wrote such witty, clever, humorous books.
Kathy: What are you currently reading?
SS: I just finished the "Mr. and Mrs. North" series (all 25 books) by Frances and Richard Lockridge.
Kathy: Will you share any of your hobbies or interests with us?
SS: Cooking, as you might have guessed, gardening, knitting/crocheting/embroidery/sewing, Western history, travel.
Kathy: Name 4 items you always have in your fridge or pantry.
SS: Tea, flour, sugar, yeast
Kathy: Do you have plans for future books either in your current series or a new series?
SS: Yes, the second book, "French Toast ala Santa Fe" is scheduled for release on October 13. Prudence goes on a 3-day Detour with 10 other tourists. Secrets are revealed. I just finished the third, "Cold Vichysoisse Cream." Prudence investigates the murder of an acrobat in a vaudeville troupe appearing at the KiMo theater in Albuquerque. In the fourth, which I'll be starting in a month or so, Prudence leads her first Detour to Taos.
Kathy: What's your favorite thing about being an author?
SS: The freedom to create these new characters and new situations and see where they take me. I was a professor for 20 years and, although I did a lot of writing, my work always had to be documented and otherwise based on evidence. Writing fiction frees me from that! Of course, it all has to make sense in the end and play fair with the reader, but no one asks me to cite my sources! I do include an author's note, though, explaining where I took liberties with the facts and giving links to further information about real people and places -- I can't help myself!
**************************************************************************
Review
The First Couriers Mystery
Bored. There's no two ways about it, Prudence Bates is bored. Sure she enjoys her job as a librarian, helping patrons find the perfect book. But even they seem to be requesting the same boring books. But after hearing a talk about the the Southwestern Indian Detours, she's inspired. The scenery, so different from Cleveland, the different cultures...Prudence is entranced. Despite qualms from her mother and Wally, the friend, who wants to be more than just a friend, Prudence decides to do something for herself for a change and decides to head West to try to become the a courier for the touring company. Traveling alone, Prudence is quick to make friends, from the Navajo teacher she meets in the train to the staff at the Castañeda Hotel in Las Vegas, New Mexico where she decides to stay for a week. But, along with good food, she soon discovers prejudice and murder!
I found FRIED CHICKEN CASTAÑEDA to be fascinating, not just for the mystery, but for all of the history. I never knew there was a Las Vegas, New Mexico and I was unfamiliar with the Harvey Houses and Detours. I really appreciated the author note as the end which provided more details and resources! I can see me delving into more rabbit holes of research for fun! I appreciated the light shined on prejudice in the West in 1929. The conundrum Native peoples faced, from selling their wares to tourists to living the traditional way or a more modern one. And not only the Navajo and other Indigenous people, but the way you were treated if you were considered Spanish, rather than Mexican...or Indian.
As for the murder, Prudence is first shocked by the number of alcohol related deaths, surely considered murder. She's also seen enough of Tom's bad behavior so that his murder isn't much of a shock, but just who did it? I liked how she quietly inserted her way into the investigation. The resolution was unique. The romance, heart stopping.I enjoyed the various characters and the whole concept of this series. I'm fascinated to see what happens on her next stop.
Stepping back to 1929 FRIED CHICKEN CASTAÑEDA provides a delicious mystery amidst a stunning Western backdrop.
*************************************************************************
Fried Chicken Castañeda by Suzanne Stauffer
About Fried Chicken Castañeda
Fried Chicken Castañeda
Historical Culinary Cozy Mystery 1st in Series
Setting - Las Vegas, New Mexico, in June 1929
Publisher: Artemesia Publishing, LLC
Publication Date: May 6, 2025
Print Length: 228 pages
At the Castañeda Hotel you'll find romance, gourmet dining, bootleggers, and murder!
Bored with her conventional middle-class life, Prudence Bates escapes Cleveland by heading west to qualify as a Courier for the Southwestern Indian Detours. On the California Limited she meets Jerry Begay, a charming Navajo school teacher. They feel an instant rapport, but he's headed for Gallup, so it's but a brief encounter.
In Las Vegas, New Mexico Prudence is befriended by Castañeda Hotel Harvey Girls Martha and Anne and desk clerk Clara. They take Prudence under their wing and invite her along to dances and the local hot springs.
Four days later, Martha's brother, Tom, is found murdered. Was it because of his bootlegging activities? Or his amorous relationship with Liz Kearney, daughter of the richest man in the area and rumored mob boss? And was that really Jerry Begay whom Prudence saw meeting with Tom in secret the day before he was killed?
Following in the footsteps of her favorite fictional detectives, Tommy and Tuppence, Prudence is determined to solve the murder. But one wrong step and she may end up in the sights of the bootleggers.
About Suzanne Stauffer
After 20 years as a librarian and 20 as a professor of library science and library historian, Suzanne Stauffer has moved on to a third career as a mystery novelist. She currently lives in Albuquerque with her Australian husband and brown and white spotted rat terrier dogter, Treme. Her debut novel, Fried Chicken Castañeda (Artemesia Publishing, May 2025), won the CIPA EVVY Bronze Medal in Mystery/Crime/Detection and the New Mexico Book Award for Cozy Mystery.
Author Links:
Blog https://couriersseries1926.blogspot.com/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/couriers1926/
Substack Newsletter Amuse-Bouche https://smstauffer.substack.com/
Purchase Links: Publisher Amazon B&N Bookshop.org















