Pros: Light mystery with laugh out loud funny subplots
Cons: None for me
since I enjoyed every page
The Bottom Line:
If you love to laugh
This witchy mystery will
Be perfect for you
Just in time for Halloween, we have the eleventh entry in
Laura Levine's Jaine Austen mysteries.
And if you are looking for a funny mystery set around the holiday, Death of a Neighborhood Witch is the one for you.
For the most part, freelance writer Jaine Austen gets along
well with her neighbors. The exception
to this is the former actress best known as Cryptessa Muldoon, star of the one
season sitcom I Married a Zombie. After
a run in where Cryptessa's pet bird dies, Jaine finds herself on the receiving
end of a lawsuit. Then, on Halloween
night, someone kills Cryptessa, and the police zero in on Jaine as the
killer. After all, the killer was
spotted and he or she was wearing the costume that Jaine was wearing to a
party.
Meanwhile, in Florida, Jaine's father is once again feuding
with Lydia Pinkus. But while it starts
over his fang-tastic Dracula decoration, it soon leads to more. And closer to home, Jaine and her neighbor
Lance are fighting for the attention of their cute new neighbor. Who will he chose to date? And will Jaine be able to clear herself of
murder?
This may be the thirteenth entry in the series, but each
book pretty much stands alone, so you can jump in here without missing
much. In fact, this long time reader was
happy to see more of Jaine's neighborhood, a location we don't normally spend
must time in the series. Like other
locations in her life, Jaine's neighborhood are filled with characters who are
real enough to make us care about the outcome but even if they are partially
caricature designed to create a few more laughs. It's a fine line, and it works here quite
well.
Between the murder and the sub-plots, there is always
something happening here, and I always found the book hard to put down. The murder is a little slow to get going, but
when it does, it includes some fun twists and a whole heard of potential
suspects.
And the sub-plots?
They did their job of making me laugh.
In fact, there was one scene in particular that I laughed harder at than
anything for several entries in this series.
Overall, the humor really worked for me in this book, and even when I
wasn't laughing out loud (in public, mind you), I was smiling and chuckling at
the situations Jaine managed to get herself into.
Once you've sold this mystery, you'll want to back track and check out the rest of the Jaine Austen Mysteries in order.
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