Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading The Last Fatal Hour by Jan Matthews. 

Leona Gladney has secrets. She was a soldier in the Civil War and is currently an author trying to please a new husband and Brooklyn society. When her husband's business partner absconds with their money life gets more difficult. Dealing with her mercurial husband, Leona is also distraught when her good friend Daphne dies and she's accused of stealing her jewelry. Could Daphne's grandson be behind her death? What about those Spiritualists? Leona is determined to clear her name, but is someone just as determined to see her suffer?

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Last Fatal Hour - An Interview, Excerpt, & Giveaway

I'm pleased to welcome Jan Matthews to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Jan's most recent release is THE LAST FATAL HOUR.


Kathy: In THE LAST FATAL HOUR we meet Leona Gladney, a former woman soldier of the Union Army. What made you choose to give your protagonist this unique background?

JM: I really wanted a woman sleuth who would stand out in a popular though crowded genre. When I started reading about women soldiers during the American Civil War, I knew this would be Leona’s background. I find the aftermath of trauma rich material for story.

Kathy: Leona finds secrets, seances and murder. Spiritualism as a religion began in the mid 1800s in Western New York and was flourishing by the end of the century. It was not uncommon for fashionable members of society to host seances and seek guidance from the spirit world. Have you ever been to a seance?

JM: We held “seances” with a ouija board in college. I think that might be another story, lol. I also visited a medium shortly after my first husband died, with weirdly mixed results. But I’ve always found Spiritualism, abolition, and suffrage linked. One of the wonderful podcast series by Aaran Mahnke, Unobscured, devotes a season to Spiritualists and Mediums. Also Shelby Scott’s podcast Mediums is a fascinating look at the contrast between the way society treated male mediums versus female. 
 

Kathy: Historical mysteries require an extra special brand of research. What's your favorite method to research this time period?

JM: Books, books, books. I’ve also visited a number of Civil War battlefields and follow a few Civil War related Facebook pages, mostly because they post photographs. How many times can I watch Gods And Generals or Glory? A lot. I also listen to the music of the time via YouTube.

Kathy: What first drew you to historical mysteries?

JM: I’ve always read eclectically. I loved fantasy for a long, long time, but in the 90s I gave up on it. I thought I would be a fantasy writer, and so read a lot of European history, as one does, to help me with world building. I became more interested in the real history more than the made-up ones I was reading. Does that make sense? I’d always loved Cadfael and Dame Frevrisse and just started reading historical mysteries wherever and whenever the spirit moved me.

Kathy: Do you write in any other genres?

JM: I published Gay Romance under the pseudonym Heloise West, but I’m not interested in writing Romance anymore. Well, never say never. I wrote for a few small presses and most of them folded, so I have the rights back to four novels and one novella.

Kathy: What are you currently reading?

JM: I review on my blog for NetGalley and BookSirens, so those books are usually at the top of the TBR. So THE SMALL HOURS by Edward Averett for BookSirens and THE SEA CHILD by Linda Wilgus for myself. I’m ahead of my NetGalley list so I dipped into the TBR pile instead.


Kathy: Name 4 items you always have in your fridge or pantry.

JM: Cheese, wine, eggs, and bread.

Kathy: Do you have plans for future books?

JM: Next up is a murder mystery set in the artists’ workshops of Renaissance Florence. I’m tentatively working on a sequel to THE LAST FATAL HOUR and a mystery with a woman magician in the early 20th century as sleuth. If those could be completed and all published by 2027, I would be very happy. I have an idea for a medieval mystery series and a voice telling me her story, so that will likely be next. I work on stories usually two at a time until one dominates as far as process is concerned. It’s never the same way twice.
 

Kathy: What's your favorite thing about being an author?

JM: Process. It’s the journey not the destination. Publishing is fun, but then we’re faced with marketing and plugging the book instead of working on the next one, but oh well. This is part of the process I also enjoy, talking about the story and the characters and reading reviews (only the good ones, haha!) 

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THE LAST FATAL HOUR by Jan Matthews Banner

THE LAST FATAL HOUR

by Jan Matthews

May 4 - 29, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

The Last Fatal Hour by Jan Matthews

For Leona Gladney, former woman soldier of the Union Army, life goes on despite the echoes of the battlefield in her heart. Now a suffragist and budding socialite in Brooklyn Heights, she yearns for a literary life and family. But her husband’s business partner embezzles their money and disappears.

The society matrons of Brooklyn Heights turn a gimlet eye on Leona after the suspicious death of a wealthy friend. Leona will do anything to find justice for her friend and clear her own name, but she finds only secrets, seances and murder.

Book Details:

Genre: Historical Mystery
Published by: Coffee&ink Press
Publication Date: April 7, 2026
Number of Pages: 320
ISBN: 9798232470982
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads

Read an excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

The blot of ink stuck to her finger, tacky like drying blood. Leona scrubbed at it with her handkerchief as the clock chimed two hours after midnight. She capped the inkwell, and while the ink dried on her most recent entry, she organized the copies with ribbons. Blue for Daphne and red for Ruth. With shaking hands, she slipped the copies into stiff cardboard folios and tied them closed. Sighing, she set them on the desk in front of her.

The flames in the hearth beckoned. This wasn’t the first night she’d yearned for obliteration. It wouldn’t come if she gave in to the urge to throw her labor into the fire. Only paper and ink would vanish, leaving the memories behind.

Pen and ink or back to the laudanum.

A grim thought, the grimmest of all.

The words had clawed their way out tonight. She’d begun the memoir of her time as a Union soldier months ago with the hope her drowning spirits would revive once the words dropped to the page. Yet the foreboding crept through her and tightened around her throat as the little study filled with familiar shadows. This old terror had become a second skin, like the tattered and dirty uniform she’d once worn.

Over the monotonous chatter of the rain, the clock ticked away the seconds until her husband came home. Leona moved to the window, pushed aside the heavy velvet curtains, and looked out at night-shrouded Cranberry Street. A lamp glowed in a window across the street. Homesickness for Boston, for life before the war, for herself before the war, settled on her. The wind threw a heavy splash of rain against the window, and she jumped back, letting go of the curtain.

Pacing the study, her restless thoughts rushed on without fatigue. To keep the memories inside only fed the persistent mental return to the battlefield, and the outpouring of words somewhat tamed her tormented soul. She stopped and touched the folio. Work would save her: work, family, friendship, and love. Maybe she’d write a story about two clocks. A natural clock which kept good time and a mad clock that twisted time out of true.

The street door below opened and closed. At last Gil, home safe. She couldn’t even bring herself to scold him for being so late. Leona listened for his footsteps as she crossed the room to tuck the folios into her desk drawer and locked it. She closed the gaslight apertures in the study and turned up the flame on the wall sconces in the drafty hallway so he could find his way. In the bedroom, she shed her dressing gown, stepped out of her slippers, and kicked them under the bed. Gil made his clumsy climb up the stairs. When he stumbled into the room, she pulled the covers back. He fell into bed fully clothed beside her, mumbling and fretful, the sharp ripe scent of whiskey lacing his breath.

She laid her hand on his shoulder. Beneath the cloth of his shirt, his skin was cold and damp. “Rest now, go to sleep,” she whispered.

***

At first light, Leona had dressed in a blue and cream day gown and made her way downstairs for breakfast. The creeping dread of the night before had waned. She rubbed her gritty eyes and yawned again. Mrs. McCarthy poured coffee from the silver pot, the familiar, civilized table a welcome sight. The scent of bacon made her stomach growl.

“Are you well, m’um?”

Leona glanced into the broad face of their cook and housekeeper, a sturdy and mature woman with a comforting Irish burr. She wore her fading blonde hair in a crown around her head.

“I didn’t sleep much.” Leona yawned again behind her fingers.

Gil’s heavy tread on the stairs made them both jump, and Mrs. McCarthy squeaked.

“I’ll bring more breakfast in a jiffy.” She fled through the side door to the kitchen just as Gil ducked through the hall entrance.

Leona rose and smiled at her husband. He’d made a great effort to come down early after returning so late. She accepted his peck on the cheek, poured him coffee and set it between them, wifely mask in place. He glared with bloodshot eyes at the letter in his hand, and her stomach clenched.

“It’s not all bad news, Gil.” She’d read the contents of the letter before leaving it on his desk in his study, as Grandfather had addressed it to both.

He raised his hazel eyes to her. “You recall Henry has absconded with all our funds?” he asked in a sarcastic tone, squinting at the letter, then back at her.

She no longer knew what to say about Gil’s former business partner, Henry Caldwell-Jones. The police were still looking for him. It put the devil in Gil’s eyes to speak of it, so she tried to let it be, not wanting to distress him even more.

“Of course, I remember, Gil. I—”

“And now your grandfather won’t give me a second loan. I’ll have to go back to the bank and ask them again.”

“He only wants to speak with you face to face about our situation,” she said, in her grandfather’s defense. “He’ll help us, Gil. He did offer to speak at the lyceum on his return from Ohio, to help raise funds. It isn’t as if—” Or was it? “We won’t lose the house, will we?”

The muscles in his lean face twitched as Gil fought to hide his disappointment, and her heart broke a little more to witness it. “Your grandfather does not bring in the interest he once did.”

It was true Leona’s grandfather, poet, abolitionist, and Transcendentalist, didn’t bring in the money he used to at readings in New York and Brooklyn, but he didn’t suffer for it.

Gil raked his fingers through his thick, brown hair and opened his mouth. Mrs. McCarthy entered with his breakfast, apparently stopping what he meant to say next. He reached inside the pocket of his trousers and pulled out a small notebook and pencil. Laying them on the table, his frown deepened.

Once Mrs. McCarthy had bustled out again, Leona said, “I could write to Aunt Louisa.” Who was not truly an aunt, but a friend of her mother’s.

He opened the notebook and touched the tip of his tongue to the pencil. “We cannot afford to feed and house a man of Bronson Alcott’s caliber,” he replied with heaviness. He bent his head to the columns of numbers on the pages.

His confidence and spirits were usually high, and it hurt to see him laid so low. She did mean Louisa Alcott herself, not her father Bronson Alcott, as the speaker for the lyceum to draw a crowd. Her novel, Little Women, published two years before, had become hugely popular.

“I’ll sell the lyceum, that should help,” Gil murmured, eyes downcast.

Leona winced. It was where they’d met nearly a year before. At a loss again, she glanced down at her lapel watch—9 o’clock already. She stood and set cups and plates on the tray.

“Let Mrs. McCarthy do that.” His pencil went on calculating their precarious position.

“I don’t mind. I’m off to see Daphne this morning. I won’t be home until the late afternoon.” Taking a deep breath, she dared to ask, not expecting an answer. “How much do we owe?” She blew out her held breath, apprehension biting at her. “Why won’t you tell me how much Henry has stolen?”

“He’s made me a laughingstock.” His handsome lips formed a tight smile, but he didn’t look at her. “Don’t you worry, Leona, leave it to me. This will all be over by Christmas.”

***

On the street, she began to walk, then turned to observe the window where Gil labored, smoke curling from the chimney. The image stayed with her as she made her way to the newsstand around the corner and waited patiently for her turn to buy a paper. The sunny day, though cold, had driven people outdoors, well wrapped in fur-collared coats and wool scarves. Woodsmoke and the sharp tang of the river mingling with the scent of baking bread drifted on the breeze. She chewed on the frustration that he wouldn’t share their financial details with her. It made her more fearful not to know. Though she kept the memoir and chapter stories a secret from him, this was hardly the same.

Passing the newsstand, an article about the new bridge caught her eye so she bought the latest Brooklyn Eagle. The previous summer, the four of them, Henry, his wife Helen, herself, and Gil, had stood at the end of Noble Street to watch the construction of the giant caissons in the naval yard. Though approval of the bridge was a long-foregone conclusion, the article was typical of the Eagle’s awful anti-consolidation fear mongering. The article repeated the claim linking the boroughs would only bring the dregs of Manhattan’s Lower East Side into Brooklyn’s pure white Heights. The wrongness of such an attitude churned her stomach.

Leona folded the paper and tucked it under her arm with the folio, sighing. Who would save the poor of this world from the hatred of the rich? Her spirits drooped lower.

She breathed deep the November air on familiar, tree-lined Remsen Street, where she’d lived for two years before marrying Gil in August. The red door of the brownstone opened, welcoming her in. Timothy, the butler, took her hat and coat. Before he disappeared with them, his eyes met hers with a familiar blue twinkle.

“I’ll tell her you’re here,” he said.

“Thank you.” She inhaled the sweet smell of hothouse roses set in vases along the long hallway and waited for word of her arrival to reach Daphne and her nurse Audrey.

Audrey approached from the depths of the house. Her eyes, though hooded, were a pure delphinium blue, blonde hair pinned tight to her head. She wore a plain uniform of dark gray with long cuffed sleeves and a white apron.

“Mrs. Van Wyn is in the Lavender Room.” With a curt nod, she turned away.

When they first met, Leona and Audrey had often shared tea and conversation, but of late Leona felt nothing but a wall of smothered animosity between them. They hadn’t argued, as such, though she had an idea where the strained relations came from.

“Is she well?” Leona asked.

For a moment, she didn’t think Audrey would answer, but the woman turned toward her again. “She passed a quiet night. The laudanum helps.”

Leona frowned. Audrey flicked a dismissive hand and went on her way.

The introduction of laudanum in Daphne’s life began not long after Leona moved to Cranberry Street with Gil that summer. The spas and cures Daphne’s grandson Benedict and his wife arranged didn’t seem to help anymore. The family hired Audrey, who administered the laudanum, a common enough panacea. Laudanum’s presence always disturbed Leona, and she had protested to the family, but no one listened. Audrey had become cold after this discussion. Leona believed some of Daphne’s pain came from her daily battle with grief. Leona often feared her own grief and the overuse of laudanum, prescribed by a respected doctor in Boston, had killed the child from her previous marriage to Jack Davenport. Poor dead Jack.

***

Excerpt from The Last Fatal Hour by Jan Matthews. Copyright 2026 by Jan Matthews. Reproduced with permission from Jan Matthews. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Jan Matthews

Jan Matthews is an American expat living in the sunshine in Portugal.

She is (finally) retired from HIM and writes historical mysteries from the Middle Ages to World War I. When not writing or drinking coffee and wine in nearby cafes, she knits and crochets for charity and reviews books on her blog.

Catch Up With Jan Matthews:

coffeeandinkbooks.wordpress.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads - @coffeeink
BookBub - @coffeeandink1
Instagram - @coffeeandink197
X - @coffeeandink2
BlueSky - @coffeeandink2.bsky.social

 

Tour Participants:

Click through the other tour stops for can’t-miss reviews, insider interviews, exclusive guest posts, and more chances to win!

Click here to view the Tour Schedule

 

 

Enter Before THE LAST FATAL HOUR Strikes...

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Monday, May 18, 2026

Sore Like an Eagle - A Guest Post & Giveaway

I'm pleased to welcome Andy Shirley to Cozy Up With Kathy today. You can find Andy on the pages of the Redwoods Country Mystery series by Marc Jedel. Sore Like an Eagle is the third book in the series and was released last month.

Guest Post by Andy Shirley, from Sore Like an Eagle by Marc Jedel
As told to Marc Jedel, who insists on calling himself “my author”


Once again, Marc asked me to write a guest post—like I had nothing better to do than do his bidding. I told him I was busy, but he replied that as a fictional character, I’m not actually busy in real life. Offended, I pointed out that, technically as an author, he’s not busy in real life either.

One of us runs an inn, solves murders, and feeds a toy poodle with a superiority complex. The other sits in front of his computer for hours every day, occasionally cackling to himself. Some might even describe that behavior as crazy, but Marc insists it’s him being creative.

“What-evs” as Charlie or Sindy would put it. It wasn’t worth arguing especially when he began making threats about deleting me. Authors are not always the nicest of people.

Things around here have settled down since my last adventure that Marc exaggerated in Sore Like an Eagle—and what kind of ridiculous title is that anyway? With Thanksgiving over, Christmas is approaching. Although if you only paid attention to decorations and holiday music in the stores, you’d have thought it’s been around the corner for months now.

Whenever things seem calm, I worry something is about to go horribly wrong. Marc thinks it’s great fun to involve me in different humorous murder mysteries—as if murders could ever be funny. With the way the murder rate in the small town of Monte Rio is climbing, I might need to move away from here to stay safe.

Just don’t ask me what’s next. I have no idea. No one tells me anything—apparently, spoilers are bad for my “character arc.”

For those who don’t know me, I’m Andy Shirley, sixty-five, retired copy editor, reluctant bed-and-breakfast owner, and sometimes wannabe recluse. My late wife, Catherine, dreamed of running this inn by the Russian River. I dreamed of fishing quietly and avoiding small talk with strangers. Fate, it turns out, has a dark sense of humor.

These days, I manage the Quilt House Inn with help from my Romanian cook, Nadia—who prepares an amazing breakfast buffet. I believe she could take down a murderer with a wooden spoon. Charlie, my inadvertent and highly unofficial sidekick is the town’s hybrid plumber-electrician. She manages to keep my inn from shorting out or flooding from broken pipes. She’s thirty, loud, and possesses the reckless confidence of someone who’s never had to Google “when to replace a hip.” She insists I’m “too negative,” which is rich coming from someone who has “don’t die stupidly” written on her toolbox. She’s good at fixing things and even better at roping me into situations I should know to avoid. She calls it teamwork. I call it entrapment.

Then there’s Fifi—excuse me, Mademoiselle Fifi—my late wife’s teacup poodle. She’s comes in a petite size but is still high maintenance. Fifi insists on visiting the salon each month for a shampoo and style with a fresh pink bow. In addition she receives a pedicure to finish her look. True to her French nature, she has strong opinions. One time I chastised her and she refused to look at me for two days. Fifi accompanies me most places tucked into the front pocket of my fishing vest, supervising my life like a furry parole officer.

The townsfolk here in Monte Rio are friendly enough, though “friendly” in this case often translates to “nosy.” I’ve discovered that small-town gossip travels faster than lightning. People say the town runs on coffee and rumor, which seems entirely accurate.

When I’m not attending to my inn or being drafted into Charlie’s schemes, I go fishing, head out on hikes, or tinker in my new archery shop. Some men in their sixties buy motorcycles. Given the wet, curvy roads and my reflexes, I feel more comfortable teaching archery to young people. Unlike most people, arrows fly straight and don’t gossip.

Marc keeps telling me this series is “cozy” and “humorous.” My inn is certainly cozy. And while I enjoy a good joke, I have yet to find the humor in his stories—not with all the dead bodies. From my point of view, I’m a retired man who just wanted peace and pie. Instead, I’m chasing suspects, tripping over bodies, and finding clues where I least expect them.

Still, I can’t complain too much. The inn’s running smoothly, the guests haven’t found any corpses lately, and Fifi’s fan club continues to grow. In a flash of brilliance, Charlie added her profile to the inn’s social media page and the number of likes have doubled.

So if you find yourself near Monte Rio, stop by the Quilt House Inn. I’ll be the one in the fishing vest with too many pockets, pretending I don’t like people while secretly hoping you brought cookies. You’ll get a comfortable bed, an amazing breakfast, and—if we’re lucky—a murder-free stay. Just don’t call me “adorable” or “grumpy but lovable.”

Sore Like an Eagle, is on sale for only $2.99 during this tour. It’s available at: https://mybook.to/SoreLikeanEagle.. You can find all Marc’s cozy mysteries at: https://www.amazon.com/Marc-Jedel/e/B07H7MVKJL. They’re available in e-book, paperback, and audiobook formats. Marc’s novels are free to read by Kindle Unlimited members.

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Marc loves hearing from readers as that motivates him to keep going on the next blank page. Let him know what you liked, what you didn’t, and what you’d want to see more of in the next book.

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Website: www.marcjedel.com

Facebook: http://facebook.com/MarcJedel.Author

BookBub: http://www.bookbub.com/profile/marc-jedel

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Marc-Jedel/e/B07H7MVKJL

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18403497.Marc_Jedel

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 Sore Like an Eagle: A Redwoods Country Mystery by Marc Jedel

About Sore Like an Eagle

Sore Like an Eagle: A Redwoods Country Mystery
Cozy Mystery 3rd in Series
Setting - California’s Redwoods Country
BGM Press (April 20, 2026)
Number of Pages: 241 

The coroner is claiming natural causes. The mayor is crying murder. Can this feisty retiree spot the truth before the clues drown in the chaos?

Andy Shirley won’t admit he likes it here. But in the year since his wife’s passing, the copy-editor-turned-reluctant-hotelier has begun to appreciate small-town life amongst the towering redwoods. And his quick eye for detail has him suspecting foul play when the local busybody is found belly-up in the community pool.

With his sleuthing skills unaffected by a recent hiking injury, Andy ignores the police chief’s cautions and dives into an off-the-books investigation. But though his snarky sidekick and pocket-sized poodle help chase down leads, all his Poirot-inspired maneuvers aren’t getting him any closer to closing the case.

Can he pull off an impossible solve, or will the lack of evidence drive Andy off the deep end?

Sore Like an Eagle is the splashy third book in the Redwoods Country cozy mystery series. If you like reluctant heroes, unexpected team-ups, and puzzles that keep you guessing, then you'll love this hilarious yarn.

Try Sore Like an Eagle to swim laps around crime today!

About Marc Jedel

 

Marc Jedel writes funny, feel-good murder mysteries filled with quirky characters, twisty plots, and the kind of humor that goes down easy with a cup of tea—or glass of wine. After years of writing marketing copy in Silicon Valley, Marc finally started crafting fiction people actually wanted to read. He’s the author of multiple cozy mystery series, including the Silicon Valley Mystery, Ozarks Lake Mystery, and Redwoods Country Mystery series. His books have earned thousands of glowing reviews. Like Andy from the Redwoods Country Mysteries, Marc keeps getting older and sincerely hopes his retirement doesn’t involve running a B&B. Like Marty from the Silicon Valley series, he lives in tech-heavy California, has worked in high-tech, and proudly wields bad puns. Like Jonas and Elizabeth from the Ozarks Lake series, Marc grew up in the South and spent many a summer in and around Arkansas. He lives with his endlessly patient wife and a sweet, neurotic dog who remains deeply unimpressed by Marc’s jokes. When not writing, Marc can be found hiking, plotting murders (on the page, officer, really!), or avoiding whatever home improvement project he’s been putting off. Visit marcjedel.com for free content, updates, and more!

Author Links:

Purchase Links - AMAZON

Sunday, May 17, 2026

An Excuse for Murder - A Review

 Review

AN EXCUSE FOR MURDER by Vanessa Westermann
The First Murder by the Book Mystery 

Living in the "fairy tale house" with her great-aunt and two boarders Kate Rowan loves mysteries and her bookstore. Finding Mr. Wendell, dead outside of an apparent heart attack is not the best way to start the day. No one in the house knew much about the man and Kate's curiosity is piqued. Gary Fenris, a former bodyguard who now runs his own security business, is haunted by a mistake and a lost love. Looking for vengeance his path crosses with Kate. 

I really enjoyed this unusual mystery. It's different in that we know the killer from the start...well, one killer. But there are lots of things readers don't know. It's fascinating as things are slowly revealed and the dirty underworld starts to unfold. I like the way in which several stories come to light. We not only have the killing that starts the novel and Mr. Wendell's death, but we have Elaina and Roselyn and their pasts, as well as the storyline of the young detectives in the making. Gary is a striking anti-hero while Kate is a capable protagonist, well able to look after herself. I admire her strength and fortitude.

Haunting and haunted AN EXCUSE FOR MURDER is a compelling novel of revenge, retribution, and redemption.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Hot Wings and Homicide - A Review & Giveaway

 Review


HOT WINGS AND HOMICIDE by Carmela Dutra
The Second Food Truck Mystery 

Kluckin’ Good is doing brisk business and Beth Lloyd is delighted to have her food truck at the Flavors of the Bay Food Festival. Her twin brother, Seth, is not as pleased in his cow costume passing out samples and fliers promoting their new sliders. The first shock arrives when Beth's ex-boyfriend shows up. Brad Dawson has moved back to town, reinventing himself as a food critic. After more than one public confrontation, the second shock comes when Beth finds Brad's body on the festival grounds. Although several people had issues with the critic, police are eyeing both Beth and Seth, even as the festival promoter is saying that the death is just an accident. With a murder charge looming, Beth and her bestie, Rylie, once again start referencing their favorite true crime podcast as they are determined to find the real killer.

Let the fun begin as readers are transported to a California food fest featuring food that's to die for. I was laughing throughout this fast paced novel, almost as much as I was wishing for some wings! Twins Beth and Seth bicker and tease and each are overprotective of the other, but together they make a formidable team along with Rylie. I really enjoyed seeing Detective Kane in this off duty role and appreciate as he looks out for Beth. Other characters are not so pleasant. The more we learn about Brad the more despicable he becomes, and there are other unpleasant characters too, namely Layla and Caren. The variety of characters, even the likable ones, made good suspects. Of course, my favorite new character is Teriyaki! I think she's an even better mascot than Rylie in the chicken suit or Seth in the new cow costume. Of course, Teriyaki can't exactly hand out fliers and samples.

But it's not just laughter, or even murder, that makes everything so enjoyable. There's depth here-and not just in the quality of the sauces. Love and friendship are mainstays even as secrets come back to bite several of the characters in the second Food Truck Mystery. 

Lots of laughs, good food, and a cute chicken make HOT WINGS AND HOMICIDE a delectable read sure to satisfy your mystery loving cravings. 

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Hot Wings and Homicide (A Food Truck Mystery) by Carmela Dutra

About Hot Wings and Homicide

Hot Wings and Homicide (A Food Truck Mystery)
Cozy Mystery 2nd in Series
Setting - San Francisco, California
Publisher: ‎ Crooked Lane Books
Publication Date: ‎ May 12, 2026
Print Length: ‎ 320 pages

Twins Beth and Seth Lloyd are on the chopping block in the follow-up to A Murder Most Fowl, where a perfect recipe for murder is stirred up.

Business at Kluckin’ Good is smoking hot. To keep momentum going, Beth and her twin brother, Seth, just scored a prime spot at the Flavors of the Bay Food Festival. For three and a half days, food lovers will flock to the Bay Area’s biggest culinary event to enjoy gourmet food trucks, cook-offs, and live music, but this recipe for success is also the perfect setup for murder.

When the infamous food critic Brad Dawson—also Beth’s ex—turns up dead, the only clue at the scene of the crime is a Kluckin’ Good tumbler mug. The timing couldn’t be worse. Beth and Brad were seen in a heated altercation, and days prior, witnesses saw Seth punch Brad. Suspicion naturally falls on the twins. With the cops hot on their trail, Beth will have to avoid the flames to clear their names and save her food truck’s reputation.

But the chickens are out of the coop, and as Beth digs into Brad’s final hours, she will uncover rivalries, grudges, and a different side of Brad she never knew. If she doesn’t crack the case soon, she might be the next one to get cooked. Best of cluck!

A mouthwatering mystery for fans of Joanne Fluke that will leave you peckish for more.

About Carmela Dutra

Carmela Dutra is a writer from the San Francisco Bay Area who loves food trucks, family, and cozy mysteries. She is the author of the Food Truck Mysteries, including A Murder Most Fowl and Hot Wings and Homicide. Her series has been praised by Kirkus Reviews, which called her debut “a serious set of crimes leavened by plenty of amusing moments,” and by Library Journal, which noted that Hot Wings and Homicide “is perfect for foodies.” Criminal Element highlighted the “juicy reasoning behind the sabotage that was almost as shocking as the murder itself,” and New York Times bestselling author Ellery Adams described the books as “the perfect escapist read, brimming with banter and an extra helping of fun.” Carmela has also been featured in CrimeReads Magazine.

A lover of humor, quirky characters, and all things geeky, Carmela spends her days sketching, sipping far too much coffee, and over-cuddling her allergy-inducing cats and dog. She lives with her husband and two dinosaur-obsessed sons, drawing inspiration from rainy afternoons, bustling farmers’ markets, and the unexpected moments that make life memorable.

Author Links: 

Website: Carmeladutra.com  

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorCarmelaDutra/  

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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading Hot Wings and Homicide by Carmela Dutra. This book is the second in the Food Truck Mystery series and was released yesterday!

Kluckin’ Good is doing brisk business and Beth Lloyd is delighted to have her food truck at the Flavors of the Bay Food Festival. Her twin brother, Seth, is not as pleased in his cow costume passing out samples and fliers promoting their new sliders. The first shock arrives when Beth's ex-boyfriend shows up. Brad has moved back to town, reinventing himself as a food critic. After more than one public confrontation, the second shock comes when Beth finds Brad's body on the festival grounds. Although several people had issues with the critic, police are eyeing both Beth and Seth, even as the festival promoter is saying that the death is just an accident. With a murder charge looming, Beth and her bestie, Rylie, once again start referencing their favorite true crime podcast as they are determined to find the real killer.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Murder Most Trivial - A Review & Giveaway

 Review


MURDER, SHE WROTE: MURDER MOST TRIVIAL
By Jessica Fletcher & Barbara Early
The Sixty-Third Murder, She Wrote Mystery
 
There's a new Irish themed pub in Cabot Cove, and though Jessica Fletcher is skeptical about its authenticity, she willingly joins her friends Seth Hazlitt and Maureen and Mort Metzger for opening night. The group also decides to join in the fun and compete in the pub's first trivia night. With a victory the friends not only win a pub gift certificate, they also win entry to compete in a live televised pub quiz. Deciding they're due for a vacation the foursome head to Los Angeles, staying at Jessica's niece's home which is being converted into a B&B. Amid brushing up on their trivia and sightseeing, they also have to deal with a possibly haunted house and, when a soundman keels over on the set, murder! Teaming up with her old friend, Lieutenant Caceras, Jessica, along with Seth, Mort, and Maureen will do their best to remain in the competition so they can help solve the case.
 
There are several delightful aspects to the sixty-third Murder, She Wrote Mystery. The pub quiz theme is great fun reminding me of my days on the It's Academic team in high school and playing Trivial Pursuit in college. I love how each member of the team has their strengths and they all work together. I really love the haunted B&B that while owned by Jess's relatives, is still home to an old Hollywood movie star, giving readers more nostalgia and a touch of Old Hollywood glam...and a possible ghost! And hidden treasure too!
 
Of course, the mystery is the main thing-and it's a good one. Complex with many possible suspects and motives, I enjoy how our friends investigate; channeling former television detectives, along with using Jessica Fletcher's intuition and Mort's background as Cabot Cove Sheriff. And of course, working hand in hand with local law enforcement.
 
With a penchant for puzzles Jessica Fletcher tackles both trivia and murder in MURDER, SHE WROTE: MURDER MOST TRIVIAL, a delightfully fresh addition to this long running series.  
 
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 Murder, She Wrote: Murder Most Trivial by Jessica Fletcher and Barbara Early

About Murder, She Wrote: Murder Most Trivial

Murder, She Wrote: Murder Most Trivial
Cozy Mystery 63rd in Series
Setting - Starts in Cabot Cove, Maine, but most of it takes place in and around Los Angeles.
Publisher: ‎ Berkley
Publication Date: ‎ May 12, 2026
Print Length: ‎ 320 pages

The newest delightful entry in the USA Today bestselling Murder, She Wrote series, featuring mystery novelist Jessica Fletcher. Jessica Fletcher and friends Seth Hazlitt and Maureen and Mort Metzger team up for pub trivia and crush the competition, then are stunned to learn that the prize is a chance to appear in a five-day trivia tournament filming in LA. No one expects life-or-death stakes! But on day one of the tournament, a crew member is murdered. Who would benefit from derailing the show? Jessica has to come up with the ultimate answer. In a metafictional twist, the investigation takes Jessica and the gang to the filming locations of their favorite mystery shows, where they discuss how Columbo, Monk, or Jim Rockford might go about solving the case.

About the Authors

Jessica Fletcher is a bestselling mystery writer who has a knack for stumbling upon real-life mysteries in her various travels. Barbara Early coauthors this volume.

Barbara Early earned an engineering degree, but after four years of doing nothing but math, developed a sudden allergy to the subject and decided to choose another occupation.

Before she settled on murdering fictional people, she was a secretary, a schoolteacher, a pastor’s wife, and an amateur puppeteer. She lives in Western New York State (Go Bills!), where she enjoys cooking, crafts, classic movies and campy seventies television, board games, and spending time with her granddaughters.

Before teaming up with Jessica Fletcher, she previously wrote the Vintage Toyshop Mystery series and the Bridal Bouquet Shop Mysteries (as Beverly Allen).

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