Songs of Wine and Murder
β Scribed by Lynn Cahoon
- Book ID
- 111736230
- Publisher
- Lyrical Press
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 6 MB
- Series
- Tourist Trap Mystery #15
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781516111114
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Fans of female sleuth cozies will delight in New York Times bestselling author Lynn Cahoon's latest installment in her long-running Tourist Trap Mystery series.
With the Moonstone Beach Festival coming up, Jill is touching base with her fellow small business owners to make it as successful as possible. It's frustrating when Darla, the owner of South Cove Winery, is late to a big meeting, but they manage to get the discussion rolling about the kite flying event and the big Battle of the Bandsβwhich Darla's musician boyfriend is hoping will be his big break. And Jill, of course, will be there with her food truck, hoping for a financial boost after a slow spring.
But amid the fun in the California sun, someone will soon be planning a funeral instead of a festivalβand Jill and her detective fiancΓ© will have to find out who ruined the Moonstone Beach mood with murder . . .
Praise for Lynn Cahoon and the Tourist Trap Mysteries
"I love the author's style, which was warm and friendly . . . [A] wonderfully appealing series." βDru's Book Musings
"Lynn Cahoon's popular Tourist Trap series is . . . one of my go-to cozy mystery series!" βHope By the Book
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Jackie is surprised to find a body smothered under a pile of stones on the beach. She is curious, but the case has to be passed to her sister Bernie, a high-ranking police officer. After all, whatβs a small-town features writer and domestic witch going to do about the death of a local folk musician?
Back at Two Witches Winery for a short stay, Norrie Ellington is warming to the holiday spirit and the upcoming Hallow Wine Weekend, and she's happy to steer clear of the writer from Wine Enthusiast magazine who's come to do interviews about this year's spectacular Merlot. But then the critic's dead