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Book Reviews of Wed, Read & Dead (Mystery Bookshop, Bk 4)

Wed, Read & Dead (Mystery Bookshop, Bk 4)
Wed Read Dead - Mystery Bookshop, Bk 4
Author: V. M. Burns
ISBN-13: 9781496718297
ISBN-10: 1496718291
Publication Date: 4/30/2019
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 8

3.9 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Kensington
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

dollycas avatar reviewed Wed, Read & Dead (Mystery Bookshop, Bk 4) on + 648 more book reviews
Dollycas's Thoughts

Wedding bells will soon be ringing for Samantha's mom Grace who is set to be married on Christmas Eve to Harold Robertson. With just 3 weeks to make all the arrangements including the dresses for the bride and her daughters who will be her bridesmaids. The family gets together to meet the groom's family and go over details. That is when his sister-in-law reveals her gift of a wedding planner even as she degrades the bride feeling she is not good enough for her brother-in-law. The wedding planner makes her grand entrance. Lydia Lighthouse flaunts all the lavish wedding she has planned. But her ideas fall short of what the couple wants and come with huge price tags. The groom can certainly afford them but when the planner continues with her plan ignoring Grace, her betrothed becomes livid. Later when Lydia is found dead no one is really shocked but when Harold is named the main suspect, Sam, Nana Jo, and the Sleuthing Seniors gather and use all their resources to find the killer.

Sam also opens her home to some special guests and works on her next book which also features a wedding. It takes place in England in 1938 at the home of Lord William March. And it includes a murder too.

What a fabulous book!

The first chapter was so funny. I was laughing out loud. Things get serious after that but Ms. Burns laces her mysteries with humor and I love that.

The characters in this story are so well crafted. From the youngsters to the seniors and everyone in between. There is a real sense of family in this story. A family that is so inclusive of not just blood relatives but the people that have been brought together through life choices and chances. It warms my heart to witness how Sam and Nana Jo open their hearts to others and how it expounds from there. This group of people comes together for all occasions even to solve a murder. Some investigate, some keep the bookstore going so Sam can pursue leads, while others try to get the wedding plans under control.

Two characters that always steal my heart are Sam's toy poodles, Snickers, and Oreo. I too have 2 dogs, not poodles, but border collie mixes, one who happens to be named Oreo. In this story, we learn how much Sam's Oreo enjoyed playing in the snow. His snowful joy mirrored my Oreo perfectly. Snickers doesn't like the snow much at all and that behavior mirrored my other dog Nerabelle too. It was almost as if Ms. Burns had visited us.

The story includes two mysteries and I love that Sam uses her writing to settle her mind to ponder the clues in her real-life mystery. Both are well-plotted with great twists and turns. New readers to this series will have to get used to the switching back and forth from present day to Sam's historical mystery but now look forward to it. In fact, I can't wait for the parallel storyline to start.

Engaging and fun characters, two intriguing mysteries, romance that doesn't go too far, and great dialogue all make this story so entertaining. I love the bookshop setting too!

I have enjoyed every book in this series and in Ms. Burns Dog Club Mysteries too. So much so, the last book in this series, The Novel Art of Murder was the first book this year to have a place on my Best Reads List for 2019. This book will join it as it now is my favorite book in this series. I can't wait for the next one!
VolunteerVal avatar reviewed Wed, Read & Dead (Mystery Bookshop, Bk 4) on + 598 more book reviews
This cozy mystery is a train wreck. The author took the same plot points and wrote them twice - once as the main contemporary storyline and again veiled as a historical mystery the heroine is writing, and neither time are they compelling. Plot details conflict with each other: on some pages, Nana Jo has her own apartment (with a guest room) and on other pages she lives in Samantha's loft above the bookstore. Few of the characters are likeable.
booksinvt avatar reviewed Wed, Read & Dead (Mystery Bookshop, Bk 4) on + 458 more book reviews
Wed, Read & Dead is the fourth installment in the Mystery Bookshop series set in North Harbor, MI and featuring widowed mystery bookstore owner, Samantha Washington. Sam has her hands full helping her mother, Grace plan her upcoming Christmas Eve nuptials to the wealthy, Harold Robertson.

Grace is starting to feel self conscious about meeting Harold's family and when she meets his brother Oscar and his snotty wife Margaret her worst thoughts are realized. Margaret looks down her nose at Grace and her family and to reinforce her feelings that Harold is scraping bottom brings in wedding planner Lydia Lighthouse to take over preparations. But, Lydia is a bully and immediately throws out all previous plans reducing Grace to tears.

It's not long before Lydia is discovered dead and the suspect list is long including Grace, Harold, Lydia's assistants and a host of others. Determined to find a killer so the wedding can go on as planned Sam teams up with Nana Jo and the Senior Sleuths along with her bookstore staff. The discovery of two orphaned foster children touches the entire group and draws everyone together during the holidays.

The author also includes a new mystery for the characters that Sam writes about in her novels. The latest episode in the Brits story line ties in with the wedding theme, a murder and includes a group of orphaned children.

A fast paced plot with well developed returning characters. It's nice to spend a Sunday afternoon with Sam, Nana Jo and the ladies from the senior villa. I don't really enjoy the British angle but do understand the relevance to the series, so I often end up just skipping over those parts.