Helpful Score: 8
Oh my! I think Duffy Brown may be my new favorite mystery writer. This book has it all. A bitter divorce, an aging glorious home, a former gang member attorney and dance instructor auntie. Things really go south when Reagan finds her ex-husband's new main squeeze dead in the trunk of his car. Funny conversations abound throughout. A stray dog steals hearts and the badass attorney may be a little more than he seems. Excellent book! Can't wait for the next one in the series. 4.5 stars
Richard M. (algernon99) - , reviewed Iced Chiffon (Consignment Shop, Bk 1) on + 418 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
I read cozies and especially funny cozies by the hundreds. That's good because I like them, but it can be a problem. Sometimes I just get fed up to here with the brainless things the heroines do to advance the story. That said, I liked this one a lot. Sure, there's brainless stuff Reagan, the slightly ditzy main character, does. In fact, there are quite a few times when she confronts potential killers without thought, without backup, and without a plan. It's just her style. In many books, this bothers me no end. In this one, it just seems natural. It takes a skilled author to pull that off.
The story is lively, quick-moving, amusing, and involves quirky characters that are fun to know. You're going to get an entirely new viewpoint on Savannah, Georgia, society goings-on. All it takes is a willing suspension of disbelief for some mildly unlikely things, and you've got a great reading experience ahead of you.
The story is lively, quick-moving, amusing, and involves quirky characters that are fun to know. You're going to get an entirely new viewpoint on Savannah, Georgia, society goings-on. All it takes is a willing suspension of disbelief for some mildly unlikely things, and you've got a great reading experience ahead of you.
Helpful Score: 3
I have to agree with all the other reviews here. This book was thoroughly enjoyable and laugh out loud funny. If you are a cozy lover, do not miss this first installment of what appears to be a fabulous series in the making!!
Helpful Score: 3
Truly loved this first book in a new series. It has three elements that I love in a good cozy. 1) A sassy and funny main character (someone I could see myself being friends with), 2) it takes place in Savannah, Georgia, and 3) an Auntie who loves her martinis! Can't wait for the second installment in May
Helpful Score: 1
First Line: I poured out the last of the pinot and lifted my glass as I gazed around the dining-room table.
Reagan Summerside should never have signed that pre-nuptial agreement. With the help of a slick lawyer, her ex-husband has taken off with everything that wasn't nailed down, leaving her with lots of bills to pay in an old house she's restoring in the Victorian district of Savannah, Georgia. In order to pay one or two of those bills, Reagan's reduced to selling her designer clothes, which starts her well on the way to opening her very own consignment shop on the first floor of her home.
The Lexus wasn't the only thing her ex took with him: Janelle, the blonde cupcake, went with Hollis straight to his condo. But when Janelle's body is found in the truck of the aforementioned car, Reagan's forced to work overtime on finding the killer. If she doesn't do everything she can to reduce Hollis's lawyer fees, Hollis will sell Cherry House right out from under her to pay that handsome shyster, Walker Boone.
Reagan's got just the sort of contacts to help her, too. Her Aunt KiKi (a former roadie for Cher) lives next-door. KiKi spends a lot of her time giving dance lessons to all sorts of people, so she's right in the thick of all the best gossip. Just in case KiKi misses a morsel or three, Reagan can also rely on AnnieFritz and Elsie Abbott, two retired schoolteachers who hire themselves out on the Q.T. as professional mourners. If that weren't enough, UPS delivery person Chantilly Parker not only helps Reagan with her consignment business by tweeting about it, she also picks up useful information on her rounds in that big brown truck.
If you can't tell by now, I really enjoyed the cast of characters in this book. And although the y'alls are few and far between in Iced Chiffon (which will please some readers I know), Duffy Brown made me smile more than once by her occasional use of Southern colloquialisms. One all by its lonesome is still making me grin because it's one I grew up hearing, and I use it to this day. ("How are you?" "Fine as frog hair!" -- guaranteed to glue a puzzled look on the face of anyone who's not familiar with it.)
I'm undoubtedly dating myself, but the sparks flying between Reagan and the lawyer, Walker Boone, made me think of Maddie and David in "Moonlighting." (Catch some scenes on YouTube or watch it on Netflix.) But even though there is chemistry there, romance never takes center stage over the characters or the mystery. In fact, I was having so much fun keeping tabs on the main characters that I almost forgot to be on the lookout for the killer.
Setting, mystery, characters... and just enough information about running a consignment shop to pique my interest. I'm looking forward to seeing what's in store next for Reagan and all her friends down in Savannah.
Reagan Summerside should never have signed that pre-nuptial agreement. With the help of a slick lawyer, her ex-husband has taken off with everything that wasn't nailed down, leaving her with lots of bills to pay in an old house she's restoring in the Victorian district of Savannah, Georgia. In order to pay one or two of those bills, Reagan's reduced to selling her designer clothes, which starts her well on the way to opening her very own consignment shop on the first floor of her home.
The Lexus wasn't the only thing her ex took with him: Janelle, the blonde cupcake, went with Hollis straight to his condo. But when Janelle's body is found in the truck of the aforementioned car, Reagan's forced to work overtime on finding the killer. If she doesn't do everything she can to reduce Hollis's lawyer fees, Hollis will sell Cherry House right out from under her to pay that handsome shyster, Walker Boone.
Reagan's got just the sort of contacts to help her, too. Her Aunt KiKi (a former roadie for Cher) lives next-door. KiKi spends a lot of her time giving dance lessons to all sorts of people, so she's right in the thick of all the best gossip. Just in case KiKi misses a morsel or three, Reagan can also rely on AnnieFritz and Elsie Abbott, two retired schoolteachers who hire themselves out on the Q.T. as professional mourners. If that weren't enough, UPS delivery person Chantilly Parker not only helps Reagan with her consignment business by tweeting about it, she also picks up useful information on her rounds in that big brown truck.
If you can't tell by now, I really enjoyed the cast of characters in this book. And although the y'alls are few and far between in Iced Chiffon (which will please some readers I know), Duffy Brown made me smile more than once by her occasional use of Southern colloquialisms. One all by its lonesome is still making me grin because it's one I grew up hearing, and I use it to this day. ("How are you?" "Fine as frog hair!" -- guaranteed to glue a puzzled look on the face of anyone who's not familiar with it.)
I'm undoubtedly dating myself, but the sparks flying between Reagan and the lawyer, Walker Boone, made me think of Maddie and David in "Moonlighting." (Catch some scenes on YouTube or watch it on Netflix.) But even though there is chemistry there, romance never takes center stage over the characters or the mystery. In fact, I was having so much fun keeping tabs on the main characters that I almost forgot to be on the lookout for the killer.
Setting, mystery, characters... and just enough information about running a consignment shop to pique my interest. I'm looking forward to seeing what's in store next for Reagan and all her friends down in Savannah.