Showing posts with label Pantley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pantley. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2026

Critters and Crimes - A Review

 Review

 

CRITTERS AND CRIMES by Elizabeth Pantley
Book 11 of the Magical Cozy Mystery Book Club Series

It's a very special day for the book club and Frank is especially excited to enter a book world where animals appear to play a major role in the story. Upon their arrival in Rivershade the gang is delighted by the picturesque town.They soon discover they're part of a book club in the story and are surprised that they are already known to the characters. Lillian is the wonderful hostess, but Frank soon discovers he's just a "regular" cat. The book characters can't understand him! Not only that, though Lillian shares her house with lots of animals, she doesn't care for them, they are her husband's, and they aren't speaking either! This has Frank giving the book they're in Zero stars!!! On their second day they go to visit Lillian and discover her standing over her husband's dead body. This must be the murder the gang is here to solve, but it's being treated a natural death. Will the gang discover it's truly murder? If so, who among the characters they just met could have done the dead? Paige, Atticus, Frank, and the rest of the crew will look for clues, enjoy the charming setting, eat lots of snacks, and hopefully solve a murder so that they can return home.

I always enjoy going with the Magical Cozy Mystery Book Club into a new book. The mystery in CRITTERS AND CRIMES is more slow paced than usual. They aren't even sure the body at the start is a murder they're supposed to solve. Most of the characters act guilty and make good suspects, even if they can't figure out a motive at first. Lillian's behavior is decidedly suspicious and as they learn more about Harold, multiple motives start piling up.

Frank had me in stitches when he gave the book zero stars! From the highest expectations to reality. The good news is that Harold's animals grew to trust the book club and...but no spoilers from me. I loved how they finally got involved and helped solve the crime. I think my favorite character in Rivershade was the smallest. It's interesting how the relationship between Paige and Atticus is evolving. Will they become more than friends?

With a slower pace and characters who really care about each other CRITTERS AND CRIMES is a wonderful escape that will make you laugh, then smile, as you enjoy a good puzzle.

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Puzzles and Premieres - A Guest Post, Review, & Giveaway

I'm pleased to welcome Dr. Atticus Papadopoulos to Cozy Up With Kathy today. You can find Atticus on the pages of the Magical Mystery Book Club Series by Elizabeth Pantley. PUZZLES AND PREMIERES is the tenth book in the series and was released


Atticus Talks about Jigsaw Puzzles 

By Elizabeth Pantley, author of PUZZLES AND PREMIERES 
Book 10 of the Magical Mystery Book Club Series

Good afternoon and thank you for hosting me today. I am Dr. Atticus Papadopoulos. I’m a professor and doctor of astrobiology; my major area of interest is extraterrestrial technology. I’m a member of a fascinating book club that journeys into cozy mystery books that are part of a massive collection held in an enchanted library. I am often sharing a bit of knowledge with our book club group about the various places to which we travel.

In this particular book journey, PUZZLES AND PREMIERES, jigsaw puzzles take center stage as they provide the clues to solving the murder mystery.

Assembling jigsaw puzzles is a very popular pastime. One study found that over 70% of adults in the United States enjoy puzzles. There are very few hobbies that have such a high percentage of interest.

In addition to providing relaxing entertainment, assembling a puzzle is an outstanding way to develop connections between the dendrites in your brain cells. It challenges your mind to recognize subtle differences in colors, patterns, and shapes. Its effects are so powerful that incorporating a puzzle routine into your life can even increase your IQ by a few points and stave off memory loss in your senior years.

Puzzles are also known to increase the production of dopamine, a chemical that regulates mood, memory, and concentration, giving you a jolt of that powerful chemical with every successful piece placed on the board.

Puzzles are far more than a game, they are an excellent addition to a healthy lifestyle, and they were an outstanding supplement to this murder mystery story.
 
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Review

 PUZZLES AND PREMIERES by Elizabeth Pantley
The Tenth Magical Mystery Book Club Mystery
 
After a fun time making a snowman with snow swirling around them and members of the Magical Mystery Book Club are ready to choose a book to dive into for their next adventure. After everyone picked a few possibilities they're surprised to see Bob, the olm and Snapdragon Inn librarian, waiting for them. Following his suggestion they choose a cozy mystery set in a ski town that's hosting a film festival and are soon snuggled up in stylish snow gear with the Snapdragon Inn transformed into a chalet. Bob has provided them with treats, movie tickets, and most importantly jigsaw puzzles which provide clues. Soon the gang are meeting up with movie starts, publicists, and even a ghost from the Golden Age of Hollywood. Between enjoying the excitement of film premieres and eating plenty of snacks the crew will have to figure out what exactly the mystery is and how to solve it in order to get to The End!

It's always fun getting together with the Magical Mystery Club gang. From down to earth Paige to the outlandish Zell, talking cat, Frank, Mollie the ghost, and everyone else, the group has an exuberant dynamic and work together well. While they meet and interact with a lot of characters, PUZZLES AND PREMIERES also has them meet another ghost, Gloria. Were they there to solve her "accidental" death? Or will their mystery have something to do with the surprise announcement at the big premiere? As they complete jigsaw puzzles, the solutions send them to various locations around Jigsaw Valley where they work their magic to solve the mystery.
 
There wasn't as much emphasis on food in this tenth Magical Mystery Book Club Mystery and I found I sort of missed it. Some of the characters seemed more subdued and Moonglow was even a bit prickly! It's interesting to see a possible romance bloom and I loved how Mollie was able to share her ghostly knowledge with Gloria. All of the insider information about film festivals was fascinating and I enjoyed seeing everyone join in the fun of the festival as well as the investigation. After the mystery came to its conclusion there was a major surprise. While similar things have happened in the past the characters had extraordinarily good reasons for their choice, this one seemed much more arbitrary. Still, I enjoyed the book.
 
Grab your popcorn and dim the lights. Jigsaw puzzles, ghosts, and the excitement of a film festival make PUZZLES AND PREMIERES a fun mystery no matter the season!  
 
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Puzzles and Premieres: Magical Mystery Book Club ) by Elizabeth Pantley

About Puzzles and Premieres

Puzzles and Premieres: Magical Mystery Book Club
Paranormal Cozy Mystery 10th in Series
Setting - In a ski town at a film festival
Better Beginnings, Inc. (July 15, 2025)
Number of Pages: 290

When this club selects a book, magic happens!

This book club does more than read their books – they are absorbed right into the story to become the amateur sleuths! To exit the book and get back home, they need to solve the mystery and reach The End.

In this journey, they travel to a mountaintop ski town to experience the enchanting setting of a famous film festival. They’ll meet movie stars, producers, and directors. They’ll watch a film premiere, go skiing, and eat at fancy restaurants. It’s all very glamorous and exciting – until a famous actress disappears.

The book club is on the case! They discover clues in the most unusual way - by putting together enchanted jigsaw puzzles.

As usual, the club finds plenty of time to enjoy the unique setting of their journey, as they put together the mystery – one puzzle piece at a time.

About Elizabeth Pantley

 

Elizabeth writes well-loved cozy mysteries in two series: The Destiny Falls Mystery & Magic book series and the Magical Mystery Book Club series. Elizabeth lives in the Pacific Northwest and Arizona, two very different places. Both are rich, gorgeous, natural places, and inspire the settings in many of her books. 

Author Links: 

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

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/destinyfallsmystery/  

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/series/345907-magical-mystery-book-club  

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/elizabeth-pantley  

Website:  https://elizabethpantleyauthor.com/ 

Purchase Link: Amazon  

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Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Some New Year Advice

As the new year begins I thought we could do with some advice for the year ahead. I posed the question to several characters from mystery series and this is what they said:

 

“Happiness in life is not about getting what you want, it’s about loving what you get.”

~ Zell, eighty-one-year-old amateur sleuth in the Magical Mystery Book Club series by Elizabeth Pantley. CAROUSELS AND CHARACTERS will release January 15th. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DGVX668R

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Advice from Ella Shane's hard-working Irish Aunt Ellen: 

"When in doubt, do something constructive."   

Mentioned in A Fatal Reception, the most recent Ella Shane mystery, recently named to the 2024 Reviewer Favorites list at Aunt Agatha's, available here: A Fatal Reception: An Ella Shane Mystery a book by Kathleen Maple Kalb

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The new year is a chance to refresh and recharge. Like a well-balanced meal, make sure to nourish every part of yourself—your mind, body, and spirit. Cook a meal that brings you joy, share it with those you love, and savor every moment. Food, like a good book, has the power to bring people together and create lasting memories.

Allie Katz from the Literary Dining Mysteries by Daryl Wood Gerber
https://darylwoodgerber.com/

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Advice from Jitty from the Sarah Booth Delaney series by Carolyn Haines --

"Don't come a knockin' if the van is rockin'."

https://carolynhaines.com/

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Until recently, I haven't had many successes in my life, unlike my twin sister, Allie. Oddly, I never give up hope. At New Year's, I like to remind myself, as Scarlett did, "Tomorrow is another day." Anything can happen - in love, at the wine bar I manage, or with solving the occasional homicide that presents itself - and it might be something good.

Cece Barton
DEADLY CRUSH by Edith Maxwell, which released in November, is the second Cece Barton Mystery from Kensington Publishing.

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Advice for 2025 from Jocie Müller, Age 10, from Vintage Kitchen Mysteries by Victoria Hamilton:  

"You can never make too many puns. Did you know that there's this kid in my class who collects candy canes? They're all in mint condition! Do you know what I use to write my puns? A pun-cil! So... make more puns in 2025. It's going to be a particularly punny year."

Watch for Jocie and the whole family in the latest Vintage Kitchen Mystery, 'Cat Got Your Tongs' coming from Victoria Hamilton Mysteries in March, 2025!

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Declan from the "Hammerhead" Jed Mystery series by A. J. Devlin has this to say:

“At least I ain’t afraid o’usin’ me balls!”

This is what Declan says to get Jed to take the case in Bronco Buster — it’s also a pretty spot on take on his outlook on life — “quit being’ a wanker and ‘man up’ might be the take away underneath the Irish slang

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Hello and Happy New Year! My name is Lucy Berberian. I’m taking a break as manager from my family’s Mediterranean restaurant, Kebab Kitchen, to ponder my New Year’s resolution. This year, after a lot of thought, I decided to try something different. Instead of my typical “eat healthier and lose extra pounds” resolution (because working in a restaurant is too tempting), I decided to pick a cause that’s special to me and regularly volunteer to help others. I wish you all a happy and healthy 2025!

The Kebab Kitchen Mysteries by Tina Kashian
http://tinakashian.com/

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"Last year was a bit rough in Watchogue, but tough years always end, and new years always begin, bringing their own share of ups and downs, their own challenges and successes. My advice would be, remember the good times and celebrate your victories, even the small ones."

 --Danika Delaney -
The Coffee & Cream Mystery series by Lena Gregory
http://www.lenagregory.com/

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If I were to recommend the cultivation of any one virtue in the New Year, it would be the practice of mindful listening. I think there's always a temptation to be the speaker, the entertainer, the one soaking up the limelight, but it is in the practice of listening to others that we gain understanding and empathy of our human nature. It's aided me tremendously in my writing, opened the door to many new friendships, and even helped me solve a murder or two along the way.

Jessica Fletcher and Barbara Early
Murder, She Wrote: Snowy with a Chance of Murder by Jessica Fletcher, Barbara Early: 9780593820049 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books

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“Survive everything—and do it with style.”

~ With love from "Madame" of The Coffeehouse Mysteries by Cleo Coyle
New Release Coming April 2025: No Roast for the Weary

To learn more or pre-order: https://cleocoylebooks.com/2024/12/05/21-no-roast-for-the-weary-by-cleo-coyle/

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Pay attention to your dogs and cats. They sense things that we don’t.

From Holly Miller, the protagonist in THE WAGTAIL MURDER CLUB by Krista Davis, coming on February 4th. 

https://www.kristadavis.com/

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My mom Eileen always tells me, “Don’t borrow trouble, Kate.” I have no idea what she means—with our family, trouble is on permanent loan!

—Kate Buckley, THE JIG IS UP by Lisa Q. Mathews
https://www.lisaqmathews.com/

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As for me, I'll encourage you to take time for yourself, enjoy life as best you can, and to paraphrase Declan-use your balls!

Sunday, January 5, 2025

Carousels and Characters - A Review

Review

CAROUSELS AND CHARACTERS by Elizabeth Pantley
The Ninth Magical Mystery Book Club Mystery

Paige Erickson is just getting used to the fact that her best friend, who also happens to be her aunt, is gone. Not gone for good, but gone just the same  After an unexpected visit from her mom, who is her usual unhappy unaccepting self, Paige is more than ready for the Snapdragon Book Club's next adventure. Remembering happier times of her youth Paige picks a mystery set in a theme park. When the gang arrives Forrest is ready for the rides and Zell the food while everyone finds the animal themed park extraordinarily realistic. They soon realize their mission: to discover why things are disappearing-before the characters themselves cease to exist!

CAROUSELS AND CHARACTERS has the book club going to a very special theme park. Although I'm not one for wild rides myself, it was enjoyable seeing the various attractions here, and seeing some characters let their hair down and embrace some thrills. Me, I'll stick to the carousel. The mystery here is unique. There are no dead bodies, but pranks, some more dangerous and upsetting than others, that could lead to the end of the park and the creatures who live there as well. The ninth outing of the Snapdragon Book Club is set at a slower pace with few clues and an almost deus ex machina ending. Despite this, spending time with the gang is always enjoyable.

It's interesting to see the dynamics change with Glo gone and Cosmo now a part of the group. Paige no longer has another stable influence, nor her confidante. There may be an interesting development between her and Atticus. I'm not sure that would a good thing, but it would be nice for her to have someone to talk with about more serious subjects.

A theme park with unusual characters makes CAROUSELS AND CHARACTERS an entertaining adventure.

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading Carousels and Characters by Elizabeth Pantley. This is the ninth book in the Magical Mystery Book Club series and will be released January 15, 2025.

Paige Erickson is just getting used to the fact that her best friend, who also happens to be her aunt, is gone. Not gone for good, but gone just the same  After an unexpected visit from her mom, who is her usual unhappy unaccepting self, Paige is more than ready for the Snapdragon Book Club's next adventure. Remembering happier times of her youth Paige picks a mystery set in a theme park. When the gang arrives Forrest is ready for the rides and Zell the food while everyone finds the animal themed park extraordinarily realistic. They soon realize their mission: to discover why things are disappearing-before the characters themselves cease to exist!

Friday, September 27, 2024

Meditation and Mischief - A Review

 Review


MEDITATION AND MISCHIEF by Elizabeth Pantley
The Eighth Magical Mystery Book Club Mystery
 
It's always exciting when members of the Magical Mystery Book Club choose a new cozy mystery to inhabit. Eschewing flying monkeys and vampires the group chooses to attend a college reunion at a wellness retreat on a tropical island. While there they'll be able to partake in workshops, spa treatments, as well as simply relax on the beach...and solve a murder!  
 
In the eighth Magical Mystery Book Club mystery the friends become alumni of the Lake Minetonka Community College's School of Dramatic Arts, a perfect fit for this outgoing bunch. After a harrowing arrival they wonder when the murder will take place, but are perfectly content to join in all of the leisure activities in the meantime. Once the murder occurs they get some surprising help to weed through suspects and clues to find the killer, all while enjoying themselves.

The more books I read in this series the more I like it. Since the book club only reads cozy mysteries, that genre is explained and the author nails it on the head. While there is a mystery, and oft times a violent murder, the characters and setting are even more vital to the story. Readers care about these characters, even thinking of them as good friends. It's interesting to read about what they're doing...and thinking...even if it's not crucial to the plot. It makes them more real and adds interest and heart to the story. Atticus needs to relax and remember this! The mystery was great with lots of red herrings and a satisfying resolution. Apart from the mystery, the ending had a huge surprise that I never saw coming and I'm not entirely sure how I feel about it. I'm definitely pleased about the second half of the surprise, but am still shocked by the first.

Friendship and laughter are the heart of MEDITATION AND MISCHIEF the mystery that makes enjoying your vacation as important as solving a murder.

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Currently Reading...

I'm currently reading Meditation and Mischief by Elizabeth Pantley. This book is the eighth in the Magical Mystery Book Club series and was released earlier this month.

It's always exciting when members of the Magical Mystery Book Club choose a new cozy mystery to inhabit. Eschewing flying monkeys and vampires the group chooses to attend a college reunion at a wellness retreat on a tropical island. While there they'll be able to partake in workshops, spa treatments, as well as simply relaxing on the beach...and solving a murder!

Monday, August 12, 2024

MAGICAL MYSTERY BOOK CLUB: BOX SET 1-3 - A Review

Review

MAGICAL MYSTERY BOOK CLUB: BOX SET 1-3
By Elizabeth Pantley

This boxed set includes the first three books in the Magical Mystery Book Club series: SHIFTING AND SHENANIGANS, VAMPIRES AND VILLAINS, and COWBOYS AND CHAOS.

The series follows the adventures of Paige and her Aunt Glo as they inherit not only an inn, but it's magical library with the caveat they they continue a book club. Gaining members to the book club, they also gain friends; friends who become family. The eccentric group includes, among others, a feisty octogenarian, a teenager and his new age mom, and a talking cat! This book club is special, not only because of its members, but the fact that they actually go inside the cozy mysteries they choose and remain there until they solve the crime!

The Magical Mystery Book Club series is a totally unique series that turns a cozy mystery on its head and spins it around. If you think cozies are all the same, here's an author that totally breaks the mold, while still honoring the genre. Creative surprises abound while family and friendship remain constant.

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Tea and Conversation - A Group Interview

Sit back, grab a cup of tea and check out the answers to the questions I posed to some wonderful authors. Welcome Jennifer J. Chow, Connie di Marco, Traci Hall, Victoria Hamilton, Rosie Genova, Daryl Wood Gerber, Kathleen Kalb, Terrie Farley Moran, Elizabeth Pantley, and Mindy Quigley.

 

Kathy: Name a book (or a few) that you read growing up that made a lasting impression on you.

Jennifer J. Chow: A Wrinkle in Time for its worldbuilding and deep insights.

Connie di Marco: I’d have to say The Borrowers series. They were just wonderful! I had a collection of Nancy Drew mysteries that were even old at the time I had them, with wonderful illustrations from the 1930s. I wish I had kept them!

Traci Hall: Plague by Graham Masterson

Victoria Hamilton: I first read Jane Eyre as a Reader's digest condensed book and it made such an impression, and from then on I was hooked on classic lit. When I was 20-ish, I read A Pint of Murder by Alisa Craig - aka Charlotte MacLeod - and was hooked on traditional or cozy mysteries.

Daryl Wood Gerber: AND THEN THERE WERE NONE, THE 3 MUSKETEERS, A WRINKLE IN TIME

Rosie Genova: I remember reading "The Treehouse Mystery," by Carol Beach York when I was about eight or nine. It may have been the germ of the idea that I might write one of my own someday.

Kathleen Kalb: DIE FOR LOVE, by Elizabeth Peters.

Terrie Moran: Heidi by Johanna Spyri. I was in elementary school when I read it. At first the fact that Heidi was an orphan being pushed off on her grandfather by an uncaring aunt horrified me and I didn’t want to continue reading, but as I moved further along in the story, I admired Heidi’s resilience at being able to cope with everything life threw her way and to live joyfully. It was a terrific life lesson. 

Elizabeth Pantley: One of the first novels I fell in love with was The Mouse and the Motorcycle by Beverly Cleary. I was fascinated by the concept of a talking animal set in a real-life setting. The combination of a talking mouse and a human boy may have planted the seeds of my love for paranormal cozy mysteries!

Mindy Quigley: Charlotte’s Web. I am still not over that death scene.


Kathy: Name a cozy mystery that you did NOT write, but you wish you would have.

Jennifer J. Chow: A Hannah Swensen book, complete with recipes!

Connie di Marco: Hmmm, does it have to be a cozy? How about the Magpie Murders. I wish I had written that one!

Traci Hall: Paige Shelton Scottish Bookshop mysteries

Victoria Hamilton: ANYTHING by Joan Hess. I love and adore her Maggody series (laugh out loud funny) and her Claire Malloy books. Her death was such a loss to the humorous cozy world!

Daryl Wood Gerber: THE DOMESTIC DIVA RUNS OUT OF THYME.

Rosie Genova: Any of Kate Carlisle's Bibliophile mysteries--I was fascinated by all bookbinding details--almost as fun as the actual mystery plots.

Kathleen Kalb: DEVILS CHEW TOY by Rob Osler.

Terrie Moran: The Inspector and Mrs. Jeffries by Emily Brightwell is the first book of the extremely long running Mrs. Jeffries series. Set in the Victorian era, Mrs. Jeffries is housekeeper for the inept Inspector Witherspoon of Scotland Yard. While the Inspector fumbles around trying to solve a murder, Mrs. Jeffries organizes the household staff to discover the killer. Since I come from long line of women who worked in domestic service, it was easy for me to appreciate how clever Mrs. Jeffries could be. 

Elizabeth Pantley: While I’ve yet to write a book about witches, I love the Starry Hollow Witches series by Annabel Chase. It’s what I’d call “paranormal cozy witches light,” and I’ve enjoyed the nineteen-book series so much I’ve read through it twice! The series is infused with humor, has amazing world-building, and is character-rich.

Mindy Quigley: Ellen Byron‘s Cajun country series. Plantation Shutters is a damn-near perfect cozy.

Kathy: Is there a genre or mystery subgenre that you'd like to write, but know you never will?

Jennifer J. Chow: Epic high fantasy

Connie di Marco: I love espionage novels, such as those by John Le Carré or Alan Furst, but I doubt I have the knowledge or background to write one.

Traci Hall: I have an open mind to genres so never say never.

Victoria Hamilton: You know, my favorite writer of all time is Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone books. I am on my 3rd or 4th time through the series, (I'm on S is for Silence right now) and have read some of them more than that. I don't imagine I'll ever write a private eye book, but I wish I could.

Daryl Wood Gerber: Humorous mysteries, I mean drop-dead funny like Wendall Thomas or Carl Hiassen.

Rosie Genova: I'm a big fan of procedurals, and I'd love to write something like Tana French's Dublin Murder series, but I'm entirely too squeamish. I'll leave it to the experts.

Kathleen Kalb: Thriller, but I'm a wimp.

Terrie Moran: Absolutely. The genre is Nonfiction, specifically American History. As much as I love research, I do not have the Patience or the Fortitude (notice how I worked in the names of the lions that guard the entrance to the New York Public Library) to do the kind of research that nonfiction requires, so I will leave it to Doris Kearns Goodwin. 

Elizabeth Pantley: I think writing romance novels would be fun. I’d enjoy writing about two people who meet and fall in love, and all the adventure and complexity that occurs along the way. I’d be too self-conscious to write the actual “romance” parts though, so I don’t see any of those in my future.

Mindy Quigley: Anything serious. I’ve tried writing serious literature, but the jokes always sneak in.


Kathy: If you were to take a job that any of your characters have, which one would you prefer?

Jennifer J. Chow: Pet groomer

Connie di Marco: Maybe I could be an astrologer, like Julia Bonatti in the Zodiac Mysteries. Or better yet, own an occult bookstore like Julia’s friend Gale.

Traci Hall: As for a job I'd like, well, I'd like to inherit a castle, but in Scotland, and open a B and B, combining all three series I have right now. Scottish Shires series, Irish Castle series, and Salem B and B series.

Victoria Hamilton: LOL... well, Melody Heath, a recurring character in my Vintage Kitchen Mysteries is a romance author morphing into a mystery/thriller author, so, since I've never wanted to be anything but a mystery writer, I suppose it's her! Now, question back... I do have a mystery or two written with Mel Heath as the lead character. Do you think anyone would read them if I published them??

Daryl Wood Gerber: Culinary Book Store Owner

Rosie Genova: My sleuth in the Italian Kitchen Mysteries, Victoria Rienzi, is a mystery author so I'm all Terrie Moran: By the time I finished writing Well Read, Then Dead, the first of the Read’Em and Eat mysteries, I wanted to be Sassy Cabot who ran the bookstore part of the bookstore cafe. I could image spending my life surrounded by books, coordinating book related events and having my meals in the café side of the store (run by my bestie, Bridgy Mayfield) at tables with pictures of authors and snippets of their writing varnished to the table tops. And of course, I would have to solve a murder or two, but hey, it is all in a day’s work. 

Kathleen Kalb: Lawyer, like Grace the Hit Mom.

Terrie Moran: By the time I finished writing Well Read, Then Dead, the first of the Read’Em and Eat mysteries, I wanted to be Sassy Cabot who ran the bookstore part of the bookstore cafe. I could image spending my life surrounded by books, coordinating book related events and having my meals in the café side of the store (run by my bestie, Bridgy Mayfield) at tables with pictures of authors and snippets of their writing varnished to the table tops. And of course, I would have to solve a murder or two, but hey, it is all in a day’s work.

Elizabeth Pantley: One of my characters, Frank, a talking Siamese cat of all things, manages a magical library filled with thousands of cozy mysteries. He leads a book club group as they travel into the books for wild adventures. That sounds like a job worth having!

Mindy Quigley: I’d like to be Butterball the cat. His whole job is to do whatever he wants and eat delicious food and bask in the sun.


Kathy: If you were to collaborate on a mystery with any author, living or dead, who wrote in any genre, who would you pick?

Jennifer J. Chow: Agatha Christie

Connie di Marco: I think I’d pick Sue Grafton. I’ve always enjoyed her characters and her plots.

Traci Hall: Heather Graham or Jenn McKinlay.

Victoria Hamilton: Well, gosh, it would be Sue Grafton, whose death devastated me. But I can't really write in her style, so I would definitely pick Joan Hess.

Daryl Wood Gerber: Kista Davis. We have similar sensibilities; or Sue Grafton for harder edged material.

Rosie Genova: Dorothy Sayers, except I wouldn't think of collaborating with a genius. I'd just sit at her feet and pretend I'm Harriet Vane.

Kathleen Kalb: Elizabeth Peters.

Terrie Moran: Well, since I have already had a wonderful experience writing four books with New York Times bestselling author, Laura Childs, I will move on to my second choice, Edgar Allan Poe. Why Poe, you ask? Easy. I grew up in the Bronx in a fifth floor walk-up and my bedroom window overlooked Poe Park, and the house Poe lived in with his wife (she died in that cottage) and mother in law. During those years he wrote “The Bells” “Annabelle Lee” and “For Annie” a hand written copy of which is now being auctioned for about half a million dollars. His poems led me to write poetry, and later I moved on to writing novels but I still have a copy of a perfect villanelle I wrote in college. My teacher wrote a note on it that said, “Teresa, you have real talent. Keep writing.” Imagine if I could write poems with Edgar! 

Elizabeth Pantley: Rather than just one, I’d love to gather together all the amazing cozy mystery authors I’ve met to create an amazing book filled with unique characters. Can you imagine? If each author wrote their specific character’s part? That would be a fun project.

Mindy Quigley: Jesse Q Sutanto. Her books, crack me up, and based on her social media persona, she seems like she’d be every bit as funny in real life.


Kathy: What's the most outlandish scenario you can think of for a cozy mystery?

Jennifer J. Chow: Death by Rube Goldberg machine...inside a locked room

Connie di Marco: The one that comes to mind, and it’s so unique and amazing, is Donna Andrews’ You’ve Got Murder (Turing Hopper #1). The main character is a computer presence!

Traci Hall: Outer space--I know it's coming but I'm not ready yet.

Victoria Hamilton: Aline Maxwell, who lives in Roswell, NM, runs a little shop selling tourist stuff like alien candles and masks. The townsfolk love her shop and accept her, especially since she has a special way with all the kids and animals she babysits. Even the most irascible become docile and well-behaved in her presence. Unbeknownst to any of them, she is one of the surviving aliens who crashed in New Mexico many years ago. She has come to love earth and earthlings. When one of the townsfolk is murdered and found in Aline's backyard, she must solve the murder before her secret is discovered. Sexy police detective Matt Lincoln is attracted to Aline, but there is something about her that he can't quite figure out. ((Apologies to the TV show Roswell, New Mexico for kinda/sorta ripping off their storyline!! But it would make a cute cozy.))

Daryl Wood Gerber: A running-impaired female protagonist is hobbling after a long distance runner who stole her mother's precious jewels and the thief is her longtime nemesis from high school.

Rosie Genova: I'm picturing a bunch of cats and dogs who are boarded for the night, trying to figure out who offed their mean neighbor (who complained once too often about their yowling and barking). Call it "Murder at the Animal Hospital"!

Kathleen Kalb: Suburban mom who's an assassin...wait -- I, well Nikki Knight,  write that!

Terrie Moran: The protagonist is the reporter for a small town newspaper. When there is a serious crime, she is constantly getting in the way of the town’s only detective. After the detective really pushes her aside at the scene of a purse snatching, she retaliates by talking the Chief of Police (who happens to be her uncle) into ordering the detective to take her on a ride-a-long. The bank is robbed. The robbers take her hostage, He realizes how he feels about her and risks his life to rescue rescues her. Then they go back to fighting. 

Elizabeth Pantley: Hmm. Perhaps a story where the protagonist turns out to be the murderer? I’d never write such a book, but can you imagine?

Mindy Quigley: When I was pitching for the deep dish mystery series, I knew they wanted a cat in the pitch. My husband and I kept concocting more and more over the top cozy mystery scenarios. It’s a Library! But it’s also a donut bakery! And the whole thing is in a castle! But the castle is in the wine country in New York! And it’s a cat sanctuary! And the whole shebang is run by Agatha Christie’s great, great granddaughter!

I’m still waiting for that series to be written.

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I hope you enjoyed our tea and conversation. Be sure to check out their books and come back to Cozy Up With Kathy for more interviews, guest posts, and reviews, not to mention the off giveaway!