Tag: Cozy mysteries

  • 4:50 from Paddington, Part 2: Battle of the Lucys

    4:50 from Paddington, Part 2: Battle of the Lucys

    We’re back with 4:50 from Paddington, and this week I want to take a look at how the BBC and iTV chose to adapt Lucy Eyelesbarrow. As a quick recap: Lucy Eyelesbarrow is one of my favorite Christie characters – a smart, independent woman who knows her strength in the domestic sphere and has the…

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  • 4:50 from Paddington, Part 1: What makes a series stick?

    4:50 from Paddington, Part 1: What makes a series stick?

    We’re past the halfway mark on the Miss Marple series, and I’m so excited for this exploration. 4:50 from Paddington is the epitome of Marple-dom, an encapsulation of so much that I identify with the sleuth. But Christie keeps it fresh with new additions to the formula – most notably Lucy Eyelesbarrow, a smart and…

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  • TCO Reviews: Murder in Postscript by Mary Winters

    TCO Reviews: Murder in Postscript by Mary Winters

    If last week was the week of culinary cozy, then this week is focused on epistolary content. As a long-time fan of advice columns, I was excited to learn about Murder in PostScript, the story of a Victorian agony aunt who stumbles upon a murdered correspondent. When our intrepid heroine – a countess, no less…

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  • TCO Reviews: Mastering the Art of French Murder by Colleen Cambridge

    TCO Reviews: Mastering the Art of French Murder by Colleen Cambridge

    Looks like it’s cooking cozy week here at The Cozy Owlet, and this time we’re exploring a historical cozy set in 1950s Paris. Fun fact – when I first realized I could get access to ARC as a book blogger last year, Mastering the Art of French Murder was one of (if not the) the…

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  • Tita Rosie’s Kitchen: cooking up the ultimate cozy mystery

    Tita Rosie’s Kitchen: cooking up the ultimate cozy mystery

    First Piranesi, now Tita Rosie’s Kitchen – I suppose 2023 will be the year of catching up on the books everyone has been raving about. I picked up Arsenic and Adobo to satisfy the “culinary cozy” entry on my Cruisin’ Thru the Cozies challenge, and ended up reading all three books. And while it’s rare…

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  • TCO Reviews: Final Draft by Shelley Burbank

    TCO Reviews: Final Draft by Shelley Burbank

    For our next March review, I’m excited to share Final Draft by Shelley Burbank! The book follows Olivia Lively, a P.I. in Portland, Maine, as she deals with a criminal ex, overbearing parents, and a plagiarism scandal that threatens one writer’s reputation and another’s future. There’s been so much rain here in the Bay, and…

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  • A Pocket Full of Rye, Part 2: Motivation matters

    A Pocket Full of Rye, Part 2: Motivation matters

    Welcome back to our deep-dive on Agatha Christie’s sixth entry in the Miss Marple series, A Pocket Full of Rye. When we left off last week, we discussed features that make this novel unique: Miss Marple’s social engineering, and an increased emphasis on her drive for Justice. Where we’ve previously been treated to Miss Marple’s…

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  • A Pocket Full of Rye, Part 1: Miss Marple the social engineer

    A Pocket Full of Rye, Part 1: Miss Marple the social engineer

    Next in our Miss Marple series, we’re taking a look at A Pocket Full of Rye. This is the first of what I’d consider the “iconic” Miss Marples. The “first half” of the series tends to feature Miss Marple in settings that are closer to home, investigating murders in the English countryside. Starting with this…

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  • TCO Reviews: Death Comes to the Costa del Sol by M.H. Eccleston

    TCO Reviews: Death Comes to the Costa del Sol by M.H. Eccleston

    When I’ve got the January blues, I find myself longing for sunshine and warm beaches. So when I came across Death Comes to the Costa del Sol by M. H. Eccleston, I was excited to escape endless rain to the seaside resort of Estipona. (Thanks to NetGalley and Aria & Aries for the digital review…

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  • TCO Reviews: Crime and Punctuation by Kaitlyn Dunnett

    TCO Reviews: Crime and Punctuation by Kaitlyn Dunnett

    When it comes to linguistics, I go back and forth between prescriptivist and descriptivist. I know, intellectually, that language flows with the people, and forcing “correct” rules on it ignores how languages evolve to accommodate new needs. Still, there’s part of me that loves the clear meaning that you get with a well-defined, broadly accepted…

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