Pros: Funny mystery with a good plot and interesting
characters
Cons: Timeline not always clear (although always explained
later)
The Bottom Line:
Funny mystery
Despite some timeline issues
I recommend it
Poisonous Cooking Lost at Sea
When an author I like goes out of her way to recommend a
novel, I pay attention. And when she
gets me a free copy to read and honestly review, I bump it to the top of my to
be read pile. That’s how I came to read
the electronic book The Fall Of The Louse of Usher. And I enjoyed it.
Emmy’s cooking is pure poison. Both her sisters Wally and Brook agree on
that. But it’s not because the food will
kill you; it’s because she includes too much rosemary in everything. The only one who seems to enjoy it is Emmy’s
contraband pet peacock.
Emmy is going through a divorce from Bronze medal winner
Flynn Fairbanks. A few days after a
nasty and public fight, Flynn falls off a cruise ship after uttering the words,
“It’s poison.” And sure enough, poison
is found in some soup that Emmy had given him before he left. But she knows she’s innocent. Can the three sisters band together to prove
it?
Let’s get my one complaint out of the way first, shall
we? I am a nitpicker when it comes to
timeline, and this book really messed with that a couple of times. The worst was near the beginning when five
days lapsed between scenes, and we weren’t told that until several pages into
the next scene. I have a feeling it was
a stylistic choice that, at least for me, fell flat.
But it was a minor irritant to an otherwise enjoyable
novel. The plot was very well done with
a new suspect popping up all the time.
Things really take off in the second half where the twists start
coming. I never saw the ending coming,
but it perfectly wrapped up the mystery.
The characters are enjoyable as well. The three sisters are very different and enjoyable
in their own ways. The rest of the cast
is equally memorable, and it’s easy to keep them all separate in your
mind. I’d say the characters were right
on the border between caricature and character, but that works because of the
comic tone of the novel.
I certainly found the book funny. Between some sub-plots and a few comic
happenings connected with the main plot, we get Brook’s observations on the
events. All that adds up to a few laughs
and multiple grins over the course of the book.
I even read a few sentences to my roommates one night, and even out of
context they thought they were good.
Plus, how can you not love something that ridicules
Wikipedia?
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