A Fatal Arrangement, by Gayle Roper (Annies Fiction, 2020, 214pp HB, $19.99) Review by Skye Anderson
There are romance novels and then there are steamy romance novels. This is neither.
A Fatal Arrangement is what I call a cozy mystery - it has no graphic violence, and generally no swearing or sex - just a darn good tale.
Cozy mysteries often come in groups (a series). Sometimes they star a dog* or cat, sometimes they center around a bookstore or a yarn shop**, or a bakery with a recipe included, an inn, a geographical location. You name it and I bet there is a mystery series with that theme.
This cozy mystery starts with a death - five years ago - a disappearance, actually. And an empty boat. But, could it be murder? Grandpa's last diary entry seems to say so but who would murder a grandpa?
A Fatal Arrangement stars a let-go botany professor who worked with the police probably at the University of Washington in Seattle (my alma mater), who takes over her grandmother's florist shop on Orcas Island in Puget Sound (Orcas really is an island there). Her first weekend also features a book signing of famous authors who got their start in a writers' course on the island, a last-minute wedding, poisoned flowers (hence, the title), a break-in, a thumb drive (jump drive), another break-in, a dachshund named Bear, another break-in, and hiding things from the police.
Oh, and did I mention the cliffhangers at the end of chapters? And the professor whose heart goes pittypatter when the island's handyman appears (or a member of the city's finest). Our budding florist has a lot to learn about small town friendships and to learn the common names of plants and flowers rather than the scientific ones (Genus species) if she wants to keep her new friends, the owner of the local bookstore and the owner of the bakery next door and. . . .
A Fatal Arrangement will make you want to read more cozy flower mysteries!
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*To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn, but Quinn's are classy tales
**On Skein of Death by Allie Pleiter, a typical cozy mystery