Sunday, July 5, 2026

A Deadly Paczek - An Interview

I'm pleased to welcome Marta Kowal to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Marta writes the Paczek Lane Mystery Series. A DEADLY PACZEK is the first book in the series and was released last week. Be sure to return to the blog Tuesday when I'll post my review of this delectable new book!

Kathy: In A DEADLY PACZEK Lena Mazur visits Miłosław in Poland to settle her late grandmother's estate. I was lucky enough to visit family in Poland staying in Sandomierz and Krakow. Have you spent time in Poland? What parts?

MK: Yes, I live n Poland currently, near Poznan in Great Poland. I know Krakow, and I completely understand why people fall in love with it. It has that mix of beauty, history, cafés, churches, old streets, and slightly mysterious corners that makes you want to keep walking.

But for this series I was more interested in smaller-town Poland than the big famous cities. I wanted a place where people notice who is walking across the square, where the bakery has a history, and where family stories don’t really disappear. Miłosław gave me that feeling. It felt like the right size for a cozy mystery: small enough that everyone has an opinion, but big enough to hide plenty of secrets.


Kathy: What is your favorite part about Poland and why set your mystery series here?

MK: My favorite thing about Poland is probably the mix of warmth and history. There is food, family, humor, strong opinions, beautiful old places, and then underneath it all there is this deep sense of memory. Even ordinary things can feel connected to the past.

That is exactly what I wanted for the series. I didn’t want the mystery to happen in a place that felt generic. I wanted the town to matter. In *A Deadly Paczek*, the bakery, the recipes, the neighbors, and the family history are all part of the mystery. Miloslaw gave me the atmosphere I wanted: cozy, but with shadows.


Kathy: Lena is a Polish-American pastry chef. Do you like to bake? Or cook?

MK: I do like to cook, yes. I’m probably more of a home cook than a precise baker. I enjoy making food that feels comforting: soups, simple dinners, things you can share. I like the process of putting something together and then sitting down with people to eat it.

Baking is a little different for me. I love baked goods, but baking itself requires more discipline than I naturally have. Lena is much better at it than I am. She understands dough, timing, texture, and all the details that separate something good from something truly beautiful. I admire that. I think that’s why I enjoyed writing her so much: she has a skill I respect.


Kathy: Do you have favorite Polish foods? When it comes to baked goods I adore kołaczki and, of course, pączki!

MK: Pączki, definitely. They are impossible not to love. I also love pierogi, especially the classic potato and cheese kind, and barszcz. There is something very comforting about Polish food. It is not shy food. It feeds you properly. 

For sweets, I like anything with plum, poppy seed, or farmer’s cheese. I also like that Polish food comes with opinions. Everyone has a family version, a correct way, a grandmother’s way, or a memory attached to it.


Kathy: What first drew you to cozy mysteries?

MK: I like that cozy mysteries give you a murder, but they also give you a world you want to return to. I enjoy the puzzle, but I think I’m just as drawn to the town, the recurring characters, the small routines, and the feeling that you are slowly getting to know a community.

There is also something satisfying about order being restored. The world can be messy and frightening, but in a cozy mystery someone pays attention. Someone asks questions. Someone cares enough to put the pieces together.


Kathy: Do you write in any other genres? 

MK: This is my first published book, so I’m still finding my feet. Right now cozy mystery feels like the right place for me because it lets me combine many things I enjoy: reading, food, small towns, family secrets, humor, and world-building.

I can imagine writing other kinds of mystery in the future, maybe something with more history or a slightly darker atmosphere, but for now I’m very happy in Miłosław with Lena and the bakery.


Kathy: Tell us about your series. 

MK: The Paczek Lane Mysteries follow Lena Mazur, a Polish-American pastry chef who inherits her grandmother’s bakery in the small Polish town of Miłosław. She arrives thinking she is only there to settle the estate, deal with paperwork, and decide what to do with the property. Instead, she finds a dead man in the cellar, missing pages from her grandmother’s recipe notebook, and a town full of people who know much more than they are willing to say.

The series is a cozy culinary mystery with a Polish setting, a bakery at its heart, and a lot of small-town secrets. Each book has its own mystery, so readers can enjoy a complete investigation, but there is also an ongoing emotional story: Lena slowly deciding whether this inherited bakery is a burden, a responsibility, or maybe the home she did not know she needed.

I wanted the books to feel warm and inviting, but not too simple. There are recipes, neighbors, humor, gossip, and plenty of food, but there are also old family stories, property disputes, buried grudges, and secrets that have lasted for years. Miłosław is not a dark place, but it is a place with memory.

Book 1, A DEADLY PACZEK, introduces Lena, the bakery, and the town. Book 2 continues her story with another mystery, more Polish food, and more complications from the past. My hope is that readers come for the murder and the pączki, but stay because they want to walk those streets with Lena again.


Kathy: Do you have a favorite character? If so, who and why? 

MK: Lena is my favorite because she is capable, but she is not completely sure of herself. I like characters who are still becoming who they are. At the beginning, she thinks she is only in Miłosław to deal with her grandmother’s estate. She does not expect to care so much.

I also really enjoy the neighbors. Small-town side characters are fun because everyone has an opinion, and not all of those opinions are useful. Some people help, some people interfere, and some people know far more than they admit.


Kathy: Did you have a specific inspiration for your series? 

MK: The first idea was a bakery with a secret. I liked the image of someone inheriting a place that should feel warm and safe, then discovering a body there. That contrast interested me. 

The recipe notebook came very early too. Family recipes are so personal. They can be messy, handwritten, stained, full of little notes. If pages are missing from a notebook like that, it immediately feels suspicious. From there, Lena and the town started to grow. 


Kathy: What made you decide to publish your work?

MK: Honestly, I think I wanted to see if the world I had built could live outside my own head. I love reading, and I love creating fictional places, but publishing is different. It means letting other people walk into that place and decide whether they want to stay.

Because this is my first book, I still feel a little strange calling myself an author. But I did finish the book, and now readers are meeting Lena, so I suppose I have to get used to it.


Kathy: If you could have a dinner party and invite 4 authors, living or dead, in any genre, who would you invite? 

MK: Agatha Christie, because I would love to ask her very direct questions about plotting and then probably get very elegant, not entirely direct answers. 
Jane Austen, because she would understand everyone at the table within five minutes. 
Louise Penny, because she writes community and kindness and darkness in such a beautiful way. 
And Olga Tokarczuk, because her imagination is so wide-ranging and rooted in place, myth, and history. I think that would be a fascinating table.


Kathy: What are you currently reading? 

MK: I usually read more than one thing at once, and not always in the same genre. For pleasure, I often return to mystery series because I love seeing how writers build a place over several books, not just one plot.

Right now, I’m reading and rereading books that help me think about three things: mystery structure, small communities, and atmosphere. I love Louise Penny’s STILL LIFE because Three Pines feels like a real village, full of warmth, beauty, secrets, and people who are kinder or more dangerous than they first appear. That sense of a community with memory is something I think about a lot while writing Miłosław.

I also admire Richard Osman’s THE THURSDAY MURDER CLUB. It has a very different tone from my series, but I love the balance of humor, friendship, and crime. It reminds me that a mystery can be clever without becoming cold, and funny without losing emotional weight.

For classic mystery, I still enjoy going back to Agatha Christie, especially THE MURDER AT THE VICARAGE. Miss Marple’s village is a wonderful reminder that small places are never simple. Everyone knows everyone, but that does not mean anyone knows the whole truth.

Outside mystery, I like reading books that give me a stronger sense of place and history. Olga Tokarczuk’s HOUSE OF DAY, HOUSE OF NIGHT is one I think about because of the way it treats place almost like a living thing, full of stories, fragments, and old memories. That kind of layered atmosphere is very inspiring to me. 

I also browse cookbooks and food writing, especially anything connected to Central and Eastern European food. For the Paczek Lane Mysteries, food is not just decoration. Recipes can be family history, comfort, pride, rivalry, and sometimes clues. So even reading about bread, jam, pierogi, or holiday baking can send my imagination in a useful direction.

So my reading is part escape and part research. Sometimes I read because I want to relax with a good mystery. Sometimes I read because one small detail, a village custom, a recipe, an old house, a line about family history, opens a door in my imagination.


Kathy: Will you share any of your hobbies or interests with us? 

MK: Reading is the big one. I love getting absorbed in a book series and feeling like I know the place. That is probably why I enjoy writing a series too.

I also like food, local history, travel, old towns, and small details that suggest a story. A handwritten recipe, an old building, a family photograph, a locked cabinet, a bakery window: those are the kinds of things that make me start asking, “What happened here?”


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

MK: Coffee, because that is non-negotiable. 
Butter, because it makes almost everything better. 
Eggs, because they are useful when you don’t know what else to make. 
And jam or preserves, ideally something plum or raspberry. It feels like the sort of thing that belongs in Lena’s kitchen too.


Kathy: Do you have plans for future books either in your current series or a new series? 

MK: Yes, I definitely want to continue the Paczek Lane Mysteries. Lena’s story is not finished, and neither is Miłosław’s. Book 2 brings another mystery, more of the bakery, more Polish food, and more trouble from the town’s past.

What interests me most is watching Lena slowly belong somewhere she did not plan to stay. She came to settle an estate. Instead, she found a bakery, a community, and a lot of unfinished business.


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

MK: Since this is my first book, I’m still getting comfortable with the word author. But my favorite part of writing is creating a world. I love the moment when a place starts to feel real: the bakery has a smell, the neighbors have opinions, the streets have routines, and the characters begin to surprise me.

And now, the best part is seeing readers respond to that world. When someone says they liked Lena, or the town felt real, or they want the next book, that means a lot. It makes the imaginary place feel shared.

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For more information check out the author's site:  https://www.martakowalbooks.com

And don't forget to come back Tuesday for my review. 

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Well-Broken Promise - A Review

 Review

THE WELL-BROKEN PROMISE by Kari Lee Townsend
The Fifth Wishville Mystery

Spring is a time of growth and renewal, but not this Spring. In Wishville, Vermont this Spring is bringing death. The old birch tree is dying and a schism is opening the earth disrupting the connection between the human world of Wishville and the Dweller world of Elarion. Guardian of the Well, Lyra Wells can feel the difference in the earth and subtle changes are becoming not so subtle as even Wishville residents are noticing a change. Though the Spring WishFest is in progress many people want to stop the wishes. When a flashy reporter from Lulu's past appears things get even worse as he adds flames to the fire with his inflammatory headlines. But the worst happens when a scientist, more eager than is good decides to use a probe to test and amplify vibrations. After a second unauthorized attempt in the middle of the night he's found dead beneath the birch. The Fearless Four, Lyra Wells, Police Chief Thorn, Enforcer Calderis, and psychic reporter Lulu will not only have to determine who killed him (Human? Dweller? Rebel?) but attempt to fix the rift before it destroys both worlds. 

As the Wishville Mystery series progresses it becomes darker with higher stakes. In this, the fifth book, we witness the possible destruction of both worlds. This aspect is even more worrisome than the murder and is even more important. We see the Fearless Four facing Rebel forces, some of whom want Lyra dead, and the Council of Elarion, who want Lyra removed from her position as Guardian of the Well going the prejudiced "she's not pure blood" route. In addition to the possible end of the world, we also have a murder and theft!

I really enjoy this series balancing light and dark, good and not so good with humor and a bit of pathos. I love how our team works together, but my favorite part was when the Wellies worked their magic, showing the way to stabilize the rift and thus save the day! A surprise at the ending made my jaw drop...Vex.

Fraught with tension THE WELL-BROKEN PROMISE delivers an anxiety laden mystery that nonetheless proves that with friendship and by working together the good guys can triumph-at least for today. 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Currently Reading...

I just finished reading The Well-Broken Promise by Kari Lee Townsend. This book is the fifth in the Wishville Mystery series and was released yesterday.

Spring is a time of growth and renewal, but not this Spring. In Wishville, Vermont this Spring is bringing death. The old birch tree is dying and a schism is opening the earth disrupting the connection between the human world of Wishville and the Dweller world of Elarion. Guardian of the Well, Lyra Wells can feel the difference in the earth and subtle changes are becoming not so subtle as even Wishville residents are noticing a change. Though the Spring WishFest is in progress many people want to stop the wishes. When a flashy reporter from Lulu's past appears things get even worse as he adds flames to the fire with his inflammatory headlines. But the worst happens when a scientist, more eager than is good decides to use a probe to test and amplify vibrations. After a second unauthorized attempt in the middle of the night he's found dead beneath the birch. The Fearless Four, Lyra Wells, Police Chief Thorn, Enforcer Calderis, and psychic reporter Lulu will not only have to determine who killed him (Human? Dweller? Rebel?) but attempt to fix the rift before it destroys both worlds. 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Deadly Ruse - A Review & Giveaway

 Review


DEADLY RUSE by Kate Parker
The Fourteenth Deadly Mystery 

In July 1943 with her husband assigned to North Africa Olivia Redmond and their son Stevie are living in the Coswolds with her good friend Esther. That is until she gets a call from British spymaster Sir Malcolm. Livvy is to report to Trent Park House just outside of London. The house has been turned into a Prisoner of War Camp for German generals, completely bugged with German speakers listening in the basement. Livvy is to teach sketching classes to the generals in the hopes of getting them relaxed and talking. The first surprise is seeing Oberst, now General, Bernhard as a prisoner. The second is the discovery of one of the POWs killed and stuffed in her art cabinet. Livvy soon finds herself dealing with stolen jewels, a plot against England, and another assault. Will she be able to convince the Germans she's merely an art teacher as she tries to solve the secrets of Trent Park House and a murder? Or will she be the next to be silenced?  

In a house that's bugged with guards all around there's plenty of room for assault and murder, but who's behind it? In my mind no one could be trusted, and I was definitely right about one person in particular. Add hidden jewels and different factions between the generals and their batmen and you get one heck of a great mystery. I love how Livvy stands up to Sir Malcolm, at least as much as she's able, yet manages to to her undercover work with ease. The mystery was complex, characters real, and wartime details fascinating.

As a fan of the Deadly series since it began I can't tell you how thrilled I was to see a book featuring my favorite secondary character-Oberst Wilhelm Bernhard. We haven't really seen him since the war began and I was honestly worried about him. Readers learn that he rose to the rank of general, but is now a prisoner of war. I was relieved to find him still alive! And still anti Nazi!

With attention to detail, fascinating characters, and an intriguing mystery DEADLY RUSE is a captivating World War II novel that will keep you engaged from start to finish. I'm already looking forward to the next installment.

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 Deadly Ruse: A World War II Mystery (Deadly Series) by Kate Parker

About Deadly Ruse


Deadly Ruse: A World War II Mystery (Deadly Series)
Historical Cozy Mystery 14th in Series
Setting - England
Publisher: ‎ JDP Press
Publication Date: ‎ June 23, 2026
Number of Pages ~300

As the war's outcome shifts, deception is an art--and survival depends on who's painting the picture. When British spy Olivia Redmond is summoned again by her elusive spymaster, she's expecting danger--not an invitation to teach drawing to captured German generals at Trent Park House. But beneath the genteel cover of sketches and civility lies a deadly ruse: the lavish POW mansion is wired for sound, every whispered secret a weapon in Britain's intelligence war. Among the prisoners is Oberst Bernhard, a conflicted German officer from Livvy's past. When murder, stolen jewels, and a suspected plot among the prisoners ignite within Trent Park, Livvy must decide whom she can trust--and how far she'll go to expose a truth wrapped in loyalty and lies. From the candlelit salons of wartime espionage to the shadows of betrayal, Deadly Ruse is a gripping historical mystery where every stroke of trust could be fatal.

About Kate Parker

Kate Parker has long wanted to build a time travel machine. However, after several false starts, she gave up and created time travel by going back in time inside her books. Since she’s fond of murder mysteries, it is probably best that all of her travel is inside books or police from various ages would be hunting her. When not recreating old time buildings and fashions, she can be found with a modern computer and modern air conditioning in North Carolina with her daughter and a 115 lb. puppy who could just crash through any time barrier.

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Monday, June 29, 2026

Driedels and Dead Ends - A Book Blast!

 

An Excerpt:

Retracing her steps, she realized she’d missed a turnoff from the kitchen. It led to a storage area for fine bone china and glassware, a dumbwaiter for delivering food to the second floor, and a wine cellar down a short flight of steps. She could smell the barrel-aged wine even from here.

Wait, what? Florida homes didn’t have basements. In her mind’s eye, she regarded the house from the outside. It had been built on a slope, presumably allowing for a lower level.

The owner must have stashed his bootlegger liquor there. In that case, the cellar might have a tunnel leading away from the house. And this inner door would have been disguised to hide its true purpose during a raid.

For that matter, where was the vault hidden? Upstairs in the master suite?

A brilliant thought hit, and she smacked her head. If she or Dalton had thought of it earlier, they could have obtained a blueprint of the place. Too late now, but that would have made things a lot easier. Now she just had her own intuition to guide her.

She peered down the stairs to the dark cellar but didn’t hear any voices coming from that direction. Quietly, she shut the door. Dread pressed upon her shoulders as she realized she’d have to go upstairs. This hadn’t been in her game plan. If she were wise, she’d wait outside until Dalton could get there. Or she could grab a defensive weapon just in case Sierra was in trouble and continue to search for her.

Dalton had once given her pepper spray for her purse, but she was afraid she’d end up breathing in the fumes herself if she used it. Nor had she wanted to learn how to use a knife or a gun like he’d suggested. Her wits would have to suffice, and so far, they’d served her well.

A solid bookend from the library might serve her purpose. She reentered that room and scanned the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves that lined the walls. As she listened to a clock ticking in the background, she heard those faint voices again.

She glanced around for a bookend and spotted a heavy flashlight on one shelf. She lifted the bulky tool and turned on the beam, scouring the shelves. If the house did have hidden passages, this would be a good location for one.

She hesitated when something struck her as peculiar about that panel in the middle. As she splayed her beam back and forth, she noticed it seemed wider than the other sections. Moving closer, she pressed her fingers around the edges, but nothing happened. Then she tilted each book on the shelves one by one.

Would the titles make a difference? She squinted at them, trying to read the faded print. They looked like stories from classic literature.

She’d read some of these titles in school, but none of them struck her as fitting the action-adventure genre. Instinct told her she was onto something, especially when she heard voices murmuring again.

Wait a minute. You have a literature professor in the family. Text Reed for a clue.

She hastily composed her query and sent it off, hoping he was near his phone. Remembering to put hers on silent mode, she paced back and forth while waiting for a response.

A few moments later, she suppressed a whoop of triumph. Reed had responded with just the info she needed.

Oh, man. She could really use a directory to the library. Shivering in the air-conditioning, she went back to studying the book titles and examined the ones nearest the panel that appeared a tad too wide. There! King Solomon’s Mines.

“Reed, you’re a genius.” She tilted the book outward. Immediately, a click sounded, followed by a rumbling noise.

 **************************************************************

Dreidels and Dead Ends (Bad Hair Day Mysteries) by Nancy J. Cohen

About Dreidels and Dead Ends

Dreidels and Dead Ends (Bad Hair Day Mysteries)
Cozy Mystery 19th in Series
Setting - Florida
Publisher: ‎ Orange Grove Press
Publication Date: ‎ June 23, 2026
Print Length: ‎ 246 pages
A daring holiday heist at the local history museum sends hairstylist Marla Vail on her most tangled case yet. When salon owner Marla Vail agrees to speak at the local history museum’s gala opening for a new exhibit, she expects applause—not a catastrophe. But shortly after she takes the stage, a thief steals the featured diamond-studded hairbrush, leaving behind an empty display case and a badly injured security guard. Marla’s friend, museum curator Becky Forest, begs for her help in recovering the prized heirloom before the mayor uses this scandal as an excuse to cut their funding. To make matters worse, the antique hairbrush comes with a curse, and suddenly bad luck is spreading through town faster than a botched dye job. As Hanukkah festivities begin, Marla would rather be lighting candles than chasing clues, but with Becky’s job at stake, she takes on the case. Her trail leads to a knot of suspects including the hairbrush’s owner, his greedy cousin, shifty museum staff, and a reclusive collector of mystical antiquities. Instead of enjoying menorah lights and latkes, Marla discovers murder, lies, and larceny. She’ll need sharp wits and a holiday miracle to save the museum and to keep the truth from being brushed aside.

About Nancy J. Cohen

 

Nancy J. Cohen writes the Bad Hair Day Mysteries featuring South Florida hairstylist Marla Vail. Titles in this series have been named Best Cozy Mystery by Suspense Magazine, won the Readers’ Favorite Book Awards and the RONE Award, placed first in the Chanticleer International Book Awards and third in the Arizona Literary Awards. Her nonfiction titles, Writing the Cozy Mystery and A Bad Hair Day Cookbook, have won the FAPA President’s Book Award, the Royal Palm Literary Award, and IAN Book of the Year. When not busy writing, Nancy enjoys reading, fine dining, cruising, and visiting Disney World.

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Sunday, June 28, 2026

A Cyclist's Guide to Poppies & Predicaments - A Spotlight

Today I'd like to shine a spotlight on an upcoming release. A Cyclist's Guide to Poppies & Predicaments by Ann Claire. This book is the third in the Cyclist's Guide Mystery series and will be released Tuesday.

Blurb: 

Sadie Greene has broken her streak—her crime streak, that is. For months, her bicycle tours through France have been blissfully uneventful, marred only by the occasional punctured tire or crushed croissant. Thus, when Sadie takes on a last-minute booking for a bridal party, she expects love, laughter, and champagne toasts. But more than pre-wedding jitters come along for the ride.

A bossy bride, rowdy party games, and a tagalong stranger threaten to turn Sadie’s carefully planned itinerary into a tour de farce. She can shift gears to keep the bride happy, but she can’t please everyone. A road-rager targets the group. So does a killer. To add to Sadie’s horror, the murder victim is found wearing the bride’s tiara.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Masher of Ceremonies - A Review

 Review


MASHER OF CEREMONIES by Victoria Hamilton
The Thirteenth Vintage Kitchen Mystery 
 
Unwilling to let Queensville's traditional Tea with the Queen die Jaymie Müller is determined to make this year's fundraiser the best ever, even if it kills her! Jaymie's already busy life gets even more chaotic when Nigel, her event partner and new owner of Stowe House, tells her he's being blackmailed and asks for her help. Does the dead body have something to do with the blackmail or is something else going on? Between making sure the Tea with the Queen is a success, dealing with volunteers old and new, including Nigel's entourage, opening her own shop, and caring for her family, Jaymie will also puzzle out just who killed Queensville's latest victim.
 
Jaymie has so much going on in the thirteenth Vintage Kitchen Mystery I don't know when she has time to breathe! I enjoyed reading about her many activities including opening her own shop and tea room with her best friend and seeing her home life, simple acts of cooking a meal and getting her daughter ready for school or watching her play with her cousins. These looks into Jaymie's life give readers a sense of who she is-someone who can organize and solve problems, whether it's where to locate  a vintage kitchenware pattern, how to deal with volunteers, or how to solve a murder!
 
MASHER OF CEREMONIES is a bit different in that the first major problem, aside from reining in was the blackmail situation. We know the identity of the blackmailer, we just don't know what he's capable of. The murder doesn't happen for quite some time and the motive, as well as the killer, is unknown. I like how Jaymie involves the police and asks for advice and help, yet still remains strong and independent. While events move at a slower pace, there are some heart pounding surprises and a few fast paced thrills.
 
With lots of moving parts MASHER OF CEREMONIES is a delightful blend of Michigan summer life and murder.