Kathy Hogan Trocheck is the author of critically acclaimed mysteries, including the Callahan Garrity mystery series. A former reporter for the Atlanta Journal Constitution, she is also the author of Little Bitty Lies and the Edgar®- and Macavity-nominated Savannah Blues, under the name Mary Kay Andrews.
I listened to the audio version of the book and really liked (what I assume is called) the Southern drawl. Interesting characters and a well paced story. I am just not 100% convinced by how it works out in the end. I mean the motive is there but the way it unfolds I find a little weak. Nevertheless it was a very good mystery and kept me hooked.
Fun, southern, cozy mystery with a colorful cast of characters.
This audiobook was my companion during the stocking of a new bookshelf. It was an entertaining and light-hearted murder mystery full of southernisms and charm.
Mary Kay Andrews was recommended by a co-worker who shares my love of books and reading, and I'm thrilled to have a new cozy author with lots of books under her belt.
Although it's part of a series, I had no trouble jumping in at book 2.
Decided to read the Callahan Garrity series written by Kathy Hogan Trocheck who now writes under the name Mary Kay Andrews. Love all the Andrews books and loved this Trocheck one. Just ordered two more from amazon Callahan Garrity quits her job as a policeman and opens a cleaning business in Atlanta called House Mouse. The women who work for her are worth the read all by them selves. Callahan aso gets a private detective's license and mixes detecting with cleaning. the plot of this one is very convoluted and suspects pop up left and right but Callahan straightens it all out in the end
So the quick of the series is that Callahan used to be a police officer but now she owns a cleaning service. She and her crew keep stumbling upon strange disappearances and murders and it pulls her back into that investigative lifestyle because Callahan cannot let things go. lol She's a little abrasive, determined, and has a kind heart even if she tries to hide it a little. I'm really enjoying her and the people that surround her.
You can tell these titles are older---they originally came out in the 90s and it shows in a few spots with the investigation/dialogue but it wasn't bad and worked for me overall. So a bit about each of the three I've listened to so far!
This Book:
The cover on this one was just adorable! So Callahan and her ladies kinda find a dead body while cleaning a house. Ergs! The mystery well done and kept me curious and guessing. While Callahan and I didn't agree over a few of her actions I did enjoy the story and spending time with her crazy crew and potential love interest who is just a good guy and kinda yummy. There were some real life issues like eating disorders and cancer scares that add an interesting element to the story and make the characters seem more real.
The Narration:
Hillary Huber was a new to me narrator and I synced up with her narration easier than any other I've tried so far. I finished listening to each of these in about 2 days which is really fast for me when it comes to audiobooks. The narration was just fantastic. Easy to fall in to, excellent distinction between characters, the male voices were nicely done, pacing was great. I have no complaints at all with the narration. I've already put a hold on the rest of the audiobooks at the library :)
To Live and Die in Dixie is the second entry in the Callahan Garrity series. Callahan is a former Atlanta police officer who has opened a house cleaning company, House Mouse, with her mother and a cast of colourful employees.
Callahan is hired by a sleazy man to find missing historical items that were stolen during a break-in when a young woman was killed. He's not too concerned about the murder, but he sure does want the valuables back in his possession. Callahan takes the job so that she can poke around in the murder investigation, eventually joining forces with the victim's sister.
There's a few suspects on Callahan's radar, although I think the narrative was more complicated than it needed to be. I missed the energy and humour of the House Mouse women who were peripheral to this story. Still, an entertaining, light mystery.
This book was okay. Very predictable and it was hard to be interested in until the middle. I feel that the ending made sense but the last chapter of recapping everything felt rushed and unrealistic.
I'm glad I continued on with the Callahan Garrity series as she is growing on me. The story is a murder mystery along with a theft. Callahan is investigating the theft, but also helps the police solve the murder. This was an enjoyable story.
It will come as no surprise that any book about Dixie land is goi g to have at least one amazingly racist character and this book didn’t vary from the formula. My biggest complaint with southern based cozies is that they all seem to go out of their way to include something racist in the story so that they can justify calling someone the N word. It’s tiresome and it’s lazy. The racist man in this book manages to be seen and described as a racist by the MC and by a neighbor who happens to be Jewish and who details an instance where the racist flew a swastika. The racist confirms it when discussing various things to the MC and vehemently verbally attacks his “Jew” neighbor. Yet when talking about the neighbor, he unleashes the N word, more than once, describing people he thinks the neighbor knows- people who aren’t even characters in the book. So why doesn’t he use racial slurs on the person who he actually knows and has beef with? Guess that’s not as fun a word. I’m so sick of the laziness in using slurs against people of color that seems so present in every cozy written by a southerner. It’s boring. It’s predictable and it completely turns me off of these writers and this genre.
Series Rating: (2.9 ⭐️ average) 1. Every Crooked Nanny ★★☆☆☆ 2. To Live & Die in Dixie ★★★☆☆ 3. Homemade Sin ★★★☆☆ 4. Happy Never After ★★☆☆☆ 5. Heart Trouble ★★★☆☆ 6. Strange Brew ★★★☆☆ 7. Midnight Clear ★★★★★ 8. Irish Eyes ★★☆☆☆ Fatal Fruitcake: A Christmas Short Story ★★★★☆ Killer Fudge: Short Story ★★☆☆☆ The Family Jewels: Short Story ★★★☆☆
Callahan Garrity returns in book #2. Former police officer, now running a cleaning service, takes a job to clean up a mansion before a party. She finds more than she bargained for, as it is obvious that the place has been tossed...and then she finds the body. This house has seen a murder before, and the owner got out on a technicality. Did he murder again? But there's more than just the murder, there's a priceless Confederate Madam's diary that was stolen, and Callahan has been hired to find it.
I liked this book and found it hard to put down. There's a lot of side action going on, which creates some tension as well as other mysteries to be solved. There is a lot of stereotyping going on in this book, and certainly one could argue about whether some references and language are politically correct. But the mystery, and sidebar mysteries, were pretty well done.
I’m really enjoying this Mary K Andrews series. There is a little bit of everything in the story line; mystery, suspense, humor and a little romance. I’m looking forward to reading the other books in the series.
3.5 stars. I enjoyed this book, but not quite as much as the first one. I like the reader, but at times I felt like the tone of her voice made Callahan sound a bit stupid and I didn’t feel that way in the first book. Edna is a hoot though.
Great series. The house cleaning business is a great theme for getting into all kinds of intrigue. The characters really draw you in and the ending was quite suspenseful.
Another product of its time. I like Callahan, I like the ease and quirkiness of the story and characters. I like that it’s specific to Atlanta. For all of those reasons I will probably continue with the series.
This one was just hard for me to get into but I did finish it …. I don’t like to give low rating. Just because it isn’t for me doesn’t mean it isn’t a 5 ⭐️ for the next
Former Atlanta police officer Callaghan Garrity runs The House Mouse, a professional maid service, and also dabbles in private investigation. A new client has an emergency need for a thorough cleaning; Elliot Littlefield owns Eagle’s Keep, one of Atlanta’s most elegant old mansions and his housekeeper has quit the day before a major party. The team arrives to complete disarray, and discovers a body in an upstairs bedroom. But this isn’t the first time a young woman has met her death at Eagle’s Keep…
This is a fast-paced, well-plotted cozy mystery. I like Callaghan – she’s intelligent, resourceful, strong, and professional. Some of her crew members are a little too eccentric to be believable, but it’s all in good fun. I did figure out the murderer the minute that character was introduced, but that was okay because I still liked watching how Trochek developed the plot.
I highly do NOT recommend the audio version of this story. Although the gal reading tries to sound southern. She clearly is NOT. I had to yell at her repeatedly while being forced to listen to her butcher "Kennesaw" (there is no "i" in it. .... Chamblee-Dunwoody..... (It's "sham" doesn't rhyme with "char"... And the one that really gave me eye twitches every time she said it, can't reach through the radio and throat punch her.... was "kudzu". It's not "koo".... It's CUD". Geez.... So, Atlanta natives steer clear of the audio. The book is interesting, mentions many local references. Not a great book, maybe they get better as it's a series.
This is a solid series so far. Especially if you like Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone, Marcia Muller's Sharon McCone, or Margaret Maron's Deborah Knott and Sigrid Harald.
I loved the first book in this series (it is from the early 90s bit I just discovered it) but this one featured the murder of a cat, which always puts me off of a book/author. I was going to read the series because I liked the first book so much, but now I have had second thoughts.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
meh. old book from the 90s. getting a feel for Mary Kay Andrews to know what to recommend to library patrons. Just couldn't get into it. I can see the series working for certain patrons. kind of a poor man's Kinsey milhone series by Grafton. Also the whole Southern thing just doesn't work for me
Callahan was a former Atlanta policewoman. She is half owner, with her mother, of a company of house cleaners called House Mouse. She also has a curiosity which could and does kill a cat.
In her personal life, she is in a “not” a relationship with Ray. He wants more than she can share. He gets frustrated and apparently Callahan does not care. That part of the story was not something I admired about her.
During a cleaning assignment in a huge mansion, a dead body is found. The body is a young girl. She was brutally murdered. At the same time some Confederate treasures were stolen from this mansion. One of the treasures is a priceless diary.
The owner of the mansion and the treasures is a real gem. White supremacist as well as someone who was charged in a murder in the past. He is willing to pay Callahan big bucks to get his treasures back, especially the diary. He can get a great deal of money for that diary.
Many of the suspects in this story are less than stellar human beings. A good portion of these people are not people anyone would want to know.
The action is fast. The characters are each interesting. The plot is straight forward and gives the reader the same clues Callahan has.
In short, if the reader is interested in a well written mystery, this is a book for that reader.
Callahan Garrity leaves her house-cleaner smock behind and puts her private detective hat back on.
She's got a big new house to clean, with a big fee attached, and all is fine for about 15 minutes -- that's when one of her House Mouse girls finds a body upstairs. The teen girl had left home and was living in the mansion's carriage house, which doubled as the antique shop run by the homeowner, Elliot Littlefield. Littlefield has been convicted of murder before (he walked on a technicality), but does that mean he killed this girl? Who was the girl's boyfriend, and why was she so reluctant to talk about the guy she thought had gotten her pregnant? And what happened to the Civil War relics, including a priceless diary penned by a Richmond madam, that are missing from the mansion? Callahan and her mother, Edna, are on the case again, and running risks and crossing lines they shouldn't...they might be on a collision course with danger again.
These books are really fun. They're not deep, but they're well written, the characters are fully formed, and the stories tie up neatly (if not always perfectly plausibly) at the end. I'm looking up the next one at my local library right now.
Callahan Garrity has no idea what she's getting into when she agrees to work for infamous antiques dealer Elliot Littlefield. The first day on the job she and her crew discover the bloodied body of a young woman in a bedroom -- and are soon on the trail of a priceless Civil War diary stolen by the killer. As if two crimes aren't enough, deadly serious collectors, right-wing radicals, and impulsive teenagers make the case even more difficult to tidy up ... and more dangerous.
I enjoyed the first in this series so much, I decided to jump on the second while it was still available at my library. This one is just as good as the first. I am so invested in Callahan and her mom Edna. This one takes place shortly after the first and we get a whole new cast of characters that are just as quirky. You are never sure who to pin the murder on and have several theories before it is all said and done. I love that.
Bottom Line: This is a super fun cozy mystery series if you enjoy that kind of thing!