It had to happen sooner or later. At the beginning of this story, Sadie Hoffmiller has been so traumatized over the events of her harrowing adventure in Boston (Pumpkin Roll) that she has been dealing with her fears by ordering stuff she doesn’t need from every late-night TV infomercial she sees. I would have though it would be more like Sadie to turn to food when she is troubled. Instead, she has lost her passion for cooking and become thinner. At one point early in the story, she serves brownies made from a (gasp!) mix. Very un-Sadie-like. Her son, daughter, and boyfriend Pete have staged an intervention and sent Sadie off for a few months of R&R in Hawaii where she has been working a low-stress, low-tech job (cleaning condos) on the island of Kaua'i and seeing a psychiatrist. Believe it or not, this next adventure is not one that Sadie blustered or busy-bodied her way into. While walking on the beach, she stumbles upon a drowned body floating in the water, and at first she tries not to get involved. But you know Sadie: If she does not seek out an adventure, one will find her, and this is one of the most convoluted mysteries yet. When the victim’s 11-year-old son finds Sadie, hoping she can provide some answers about his mom, Sadie is hooked. Soon she is snooping around the island in her muumuu, meeting people, asking questions and, employing her latest specialty— picking locks. (Um, Sadie, they put people in jail for picking locks). And just as Sadie was trying to recover from the trauma of her last adventure, the last act of this one throws her into a more distressing situation than ever. In addition to being a murder mystery, this story also comments on the frequent failings and challenges of foster care for teens. The regional Hawaiian ambiance Kilpack includes in the narrative is particularly charming. Recipes include regional specialties such as macadamia nut pancakes with coconut syrup, aloha cookies, green bean and bowtie pasta salad, Kauai pork, and caramel and hot fudge sauce. Did anyone else notice that there was no mention of bananas in the description of the banana splits?