Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Currently Reading...

I just finished reading Murder Most Necessary by Andrew Higgins. This book is the first in the Blaine & Meredith Mystery series and was released earlier this year.

Leaving behind a cheating boyfriend and her job as a librarian in Belfast Demelza Blaine is ready to start fresh in the cottage she inherited from her aunt. Hitting the ground running, she's accepted a job at her old friend's magazine and is already making new friends, attending a pub quiz with her new neighbor Liz. All is not quiet however, as her first night is shattered by flashing lights and the wail of police sirens. Across the street Liz has been killed. Demelza is certain that this was no robbery gone bad so, with her instincts and the help of her co-workers, she begins to investigate. She may find more than she bargained for however.

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Who Am I to Judge? - An Interview

I'm pleased to welcome Emily Hanlon to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Emily writes the Martha and Marya Mystery series. Be sure to check out my review of the first book in the series, Who Am I to Judge? coming Sunday, November 16, 2025.

Kathy: In Who Am I to Judge? We meet Mary Cook, a Bible -quoting, lavender-clad octogenarian known to locals as the Purple Pest, and Martha Collins, a much younger, efficient, ever-busy church lady. Which of these characters do you see more of yourself in?

EH: I am Martha, other than the age, (I’m older), the hairstyle (she has straight hair, and mine is curly), and tidiness quotient (she is neat as a pin, I am…not!) We both are impatient, make long, unrealistic to-do lists, and rather critical (which is less critical way of saying we are both judgmental, which is part of the reason for the title, Who Am I To Judge?


Kathy: In this first Martha and Marya mystery, a priest confesses to the murder of a parishioner. Marya, however believes he’s innocent. Have you ever believed in someone’s innocence when everyone else felt they were guilty. 

EH: Being a lawyer and arbitrator for many years, I learned that things are seldom what they appear to be at first blush. If one digs deep enough into the details of a situation, as Shakespeare says, the truth will out. 


Kathy: Religious based mysteries are a popular sub-genre and have been since the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, if not before. Father Brown immediately comes to my mind, though I have several favorite sleuthing priests, nuns, and rabbis' wives. What do you think is the appeal. 

EH: What a great question. Maybe it is because people expect religious leaders to have all the answers, to be somehow different, superior to the rest of us. But my book turns the stereotype on its head, knocks the priest off the pedestal, and replaces him with a ditzy octogenarian known around town as the Purple Pest. Unlike the respect that would be shown to a priest or a rabbi, the suspects scoff at poor dithering Marya as she unveils their murderous secrets. 


Kathy: What first drew you to cozy mysteries. 

EH: My first Agatha Christie, Murder on the Orient Express, captured me and never let me go. 


Kathy: Do you write in any other genres? 

EH: No. 


Kathy: Tell us about your series. 


EH: In the first book, my two church lady sleuths meet and form their unlikely partnership, and then try to prove the innocence of a priest who confesses to the murder of a parishioner; in the second they try to discover who is killing, one by one, the members of a cult-like group led by a fire-and-brimstone priest; and in the third they set sail on a cruise to the Greek Islands and seek the murderer of an elderly billionaire businesswoman who drops dead during her wedding to a much younger golden boy at the very moment of the “I dos”. 


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

EH: My favorite is Marya Cook. She is based on an elderly woman from my church who dressed all in purple and handed out laminated notecards inscribed with purple penned Bible quotes in her perfect script. She was the closest thing to a saint that I ever knew. 


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

EH: Quite a few years ago, I read that the two best-selling books of all time were the Bible and Shakespeare, but Agatha Christie was a close third. And so, I thought, maybe I can combine the two! 


Kathy: What made you decide to publish your work? 

EH: When I sat down to write my first book, I was in my 60’s and had never studied creative writing. I had no thoughts of publishing it. I had no idea if I would even complete it! But, after you write a book, what’s the next step? Why publishing! It took some time and a lot of effort, but I was fortunate to find a publisher. 


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

EH: Alice McCormick, David Foster Wallace, Ross Douthat, Jimmy Akin. 


Kathy: What are you currently reading: 

EH: Just finishing Charming Billy by Alice McCormick. Just starting Believe by Ross Douthat. 


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

EH: Swimming, tennis. 


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

EH: Mount Hagen instant coffee (my dirty little secret is that I prefer instant coffee to the real thing), Dave’s Killer Bread raisin cinnamon remix bagels, cream cheese for the bagels, and razz-cranberry La Croix ( I don’t like to drink plain old water). 


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

EH: Yes. But I haven’t yet decided whether I want to abandon Marya for another sleuth. 


Kathy: What is your favorite thing about being an author? 

EH: Writing! I am usually like the Martha character in my book, with a list of 25 things on my to-do list and impatient to finish one and get on with the next. But when I’m writing, I lose track of time and place and am shocked when I look down at my watch and one, two, or even three hours have passed since I sat down in front of my computer to work on one of my books. 

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Author Links:








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Blurb:

When a priest confesses to the murder of a parishioner, everyone in the wealthy waterfront town of Pequot Bays is convinced of his guilt-everyone, that is, except Marya Cook, a Bible-quoting, lavender-clad octogenarian known to locals as the Purple Pest.

Unable to prove his innocence on her own, she draws in Martha Collins, a much younger, efficient, ever-busy church lady, to assist in her investigations. Although Martha is unwilling to associate herself with the odd old woman as she accuses wealthy and influential suspects of murder, Marya's peculiar logic persuades her that this ditzy old woman may not be so ditzy after all.

A victim with plenty of enemies, a corrupt ambitious cop, a conflicting confession by a fellow priest, and the death of a prime suspect make the path to truth a crooked one. The rich and powerful suspects scoff at poor, dithering Marya. Can she, in the end, unveil their many secrets and prove there is more to a person than meets the eye?
 

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Home Fries and Alibis - A Review & Giveaway

 Review


HOME FRIES AND ALIBIS by Lena Gregory
The Eighth All-Day Breakfast Café Mystery
 
Life in Central Florida is agreeing with Gia Morelli. She owns the popular All-Day Breakfast Café and has a dynamic group of friends as well as a fiancé who loves her. She has a wonderful home in a peaceful neighborhood. She's even getting used to the bears, raccoons, snakes, and other critters that live nearby. What she can't get used to is her new neighbor.  The once idyllic community has been shattered by the arrival of Gladys Hoffmeier. Gladys is nasty, belligerent, and has called 911 on her neighbors so many times she's been banned. But she crosses the line when she descends on Gia's home accusing Thor, Gia's Bernese mountain dog, of digging in her yard. Gia manages to control her temper until Gladys threatens to shoot Thor. The following morning Gladys is found dead. Pretty much everyone who met the woman had a reason to want her dead, but who actually did the deed? 
 
Emotions run high in the eighth All-Day Breakfast Café. Gia is a better person than I. If someone threatened my animals and wound up dead I'd be satisfied and ready to dance on that person's grave. Gia and Savannah actually feel bad, wanting the woman gone, but not dead, and are ready to figure out just who killed her.
 
HOME FRIES AND ALIBIS is a well plotted mystery with no end of suspects and a wide range of motives, a list made even longer when blackmail comes to light. There are thrilling, pulse pounding moments. There are also quiet contemplative moments and moments of fun. 
 
The characters are the heart of the story. Gia and Savannah's friendship so close as to be family. Leo and Hunt, Cole and Earl, Alfie's exuberance, I could go on. The people are more than characters on a page. They're people you want to make a part of your life. 
 
With a heartwarming sense of community HOME FRIES AND ALIBIS is a cozy hug in book form.
 
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 Home Fries and Alibis (An All-Day Breakfast Cafe Mystery) by Lena Gregory

About Home Fries and Alibis

Setting - Florida 
Publisher: ‎ Beyond the Page Publishing 
Publication Date: ‎ September 23, 2025 
Print Length: ‎ 178 pages

When a belligerent woman moves in across the street, café owner Gia Morelli has to call off the welcome wagon and call in the homicide squad . . .

When a nasty new neighbor moves into their peaceful community, Gia and everyone else in the neighborhood is ready to blow a fuse. The spiteful woman has quickly made a nuisance of herself, complaining to and about everyone there. Then she makes the grave mistake of falsely claiming Gia’s dog tore up her yard, and Gia goes ballistic, telling the woman to back off . . . or else. It was an impulsive move for Gia, but someone else decides an even more extreme approach is called for, and silences the woman—permanently.

Unnerved by the thought of a murderer living in her neighborhood, Gia begins digging into the victim’s life to figure out who would have wanted her dead. She soon discovers that the woman was not only malicious but was blackmailing people in the community. Even more surprising is that nearly everyone in the neighborhood has something to hide. Dead-set on rooting out the culprit, Gia has to determine who stood to lose the most if their secret was revealed, unaware that she’s perilously close to losing her own life . . .

About Lena Gregory

Lena Gregory is the author of the Bay Island Psychic Mysteries, which take place on a small island between the north and south forks of Long Island, New York, the All-Day Breakfast Café Mysteries, which are set on the outskirts of Florida’s Ocala National Forest, the Mini-Meadows Mysteries, set in a community of tiny homes in Central Florida, and the Coffee & Cream Café Mysteries, which take place in a small town on the south shore of eastern Long Island, New York.

Lena grew up in a small town on the south shore of eastern Long Island, but she recently traded in cold, damp, gray winters for the warmth and sunshine of central Florida, where she now lives with her husband, three kids, son-in-law, and four dogs. Her hobbies include spending time with family, reading, and walking. Her love for writing developed when her youngest son was born and didn’t sleep through the night. She works full time as a writer and a freelance editor and is a member of Sisters in Crime.

Author Links

Purchase Links Amazon Barnes & Noble Kobo

 

Friday, October 3, 2025

A Gargoyle's Guide to Murder - A Review

 Review


A GARGOYLE'S GUIDE TO MURDER by Gigi Pandian
The Ninth Accidental Alchemist Mystery 
 
What should be a quick stop to check on a book before embarking on a European vacation turns out to be anything but. When Zoe Faust finds Non Degenera Alchemia missing from the British Library she's only mildly concerned. The book's ties to Notre Dame have been severed so it should no longer pose a danger. Still, when the brusque librarian declares it a poisoned book, Zoe tracks it down to Oxford. There she finds the book decaying, but it's not just a book being ravaged by time. Something else is afoot, as Dorian would say. In fact, after both Dorian, the living gargoyle, and Max Liu, her fiancé, arrive they find a man murdered, facedown in that very tome. Combined with the murder Dorian saw, although there was no evidence of a crime, stolen books, and a spooky night at a country manor house party, everything leads back to that book of backward alchemy. Will Zoe, Max, and Dorian be able to get to the heart of the matter before someone else dies?
 
Having a gargoyle best friend tagging along on a romantic trip for a newly engaged couple is not exactly what Zoe envisioned, but it certainly worked out for the best. I absolutely love Dorian and he is at his finest in this ninth Accidental Alchemist Mystery. I enjoy the alternate chapters showing the current book he's writing; in this case A Gargoyle's Guide to Murder. Dorian gives readers facts and tips about impossible crimes, gargoyles, and much more, including his thoughts to the current mystery. Dorian is witty, clever, and a darn fine cook. I wish he could make me a meal, or at least some snacks. 
 
Apart from Dorian, I really appreciate how Zoe and Max work together. I also loved Barney and enjoyed disliking Barnabas. It was a complex mystery made more complicated by backward alchemy. I found Non Degenera Alchemia absolutely fascinating. Not just the book itself and what it was becoming, but what it was doing as it died.
 
Intricate plotting, charming characters, and an incredible sense of place make A GARGOYLE'S GUIDE TO MURDER a delightful mystery that's both thrilling, funny, and ultimately heartwarming.
 

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading A Gargoyle's Guide to Murder by Gigi Pandian. This is the ninth book in the Accidental Alchemist Mystery series and will be released next week.

What should be a quick stop to check on a book before embarking on a European vacation turns out to be anything but. When Zoe Faust finds Non Degenera Alchemia missing from the British Library she's only mildly concerned. The book's ties to Notre Dame have been severed so it should no longer pose a danger. Still, when the brusque librarian declares it a poisoned book, Zoe tracks it down to Oxford. There she finds the book decaying, but it's not just a book being ravaged by time. Something else is afoot, as Dorian would say. In fact, after both Dorian, the living gargoyle, and Max Liu, her fiancé, arrive they find a man murdered, facedown in that very tome. Combined with the murder Dorian saw, although there was no evidence of a crime, stolen books, and a spooky night at a country manor house party, everything leads back to that book of backward alchemy. Will Zoe, Max, and Dorian be able to get to the heart of the matter before someone else dies?