Stars: 4 out of 5
Pros: Great characters, interesting plot
Cons: Plot a little too obvious; climax rushed
The Bottom Line:
Stronger than last one
I still find characters great
Plot could use small boost
Who Extinguished the Competition?
Death Waxed Over is the third book in the Candlemaking Mysteries
starring Harrison Black, proprietor of the shop At Wick's End.
There's competition moving into Micah's Ridge, North Carolina . Gretel
Barnett has moved into town and is opening Flickering Lights not even two miles
from Harrison 's store. In an effort to
increase traffic, he decides to set up a booth at the annual Founder's Day
festival in nearby New Conover.
On the day of the festival, he is surprised to see Gretel
setting up a table not too far from his own. The two get into a loud argument,
but Harrison tries to think nothing of it.
Until Gretel is shot, however. Naturally, he finds himself the chief suspect,
especially when an eyewitness says she saw him throw away the gun. Too make
matters worse, the witness is the wife of the editor of the local paper, so
naturally the paper proceeds to paint Harrison
in the worst light possible.
With the customers fleeing At Wick's End because of the
notoriety, Harrison reluctantly begins to
investigate. One of the first suspects he turns up is Mrs. Jorgenson. Even
worse, when he tries to talk to his best customer about the case, she gets mad
and storms off. Has he just made a bad situation worse?
As if all this weren't enough, Harrison 's
ex-girlfriend Becka is back in his life, turning to him when someone starts
stalking her. Is there really someone after her? Who? Is this one case too many
for Harrison to solve?
After the disappointing second book in the series, I'm happy
to report the series is back on track. The plot in this novel is strong and
once again has the forefront. The killer is a little obvious with several major
clues pointing to the villain, but the story is strong enough to keep the
reader engaged even once they've figure it out.
As always, Tim Myers provides a quick, easy read. My biggest
complaint is that the book felt like it needed one more edit. A few things fell
through the cracks in the race to resolve things for the climax. The season
also seemed to change from fall to winter over a couple days, but that could
just be me. One more pass through the book would have smoothed out these minor
but annoying problems.
Death Waxed Over is a light, quick reads. Nothing too deep, but
perfect if you want a couple hour's escape.
And if you enjoy this book, here are the rest of the Candlemaking Mysteries in order.
And if you enjoy this book, here are the rest of the Candlemaking Mysteries in order.
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