Spunky widow Cealie Gunther flies into Tennessee after receiving frantic messages from her cousin Stevie Midnight that she needs Cealie’s help, or she’ll die. Cealie and Stevie never got along when they were young, but Cealie can’t refuse Stevie’s cry for assistance.
Cealie finds murder has touched her semi-psychic cousin’s life. Resolved to discover the killer, Cealie uncovers secrets about a young mother, Stevie’s hairdresser, and members of her Quitters Group, including a priest and the hookers who pair up with him. Cealie must learn who is murdering people close to her cousin who she’s staying with—or is her strange cousin the killer herself?
“Killer Cousins is great! In the mode of Agatha Christie” Heather Graham, N.Y. Times Bestselling author
“Sexy Cealie is back with new and old friends. It's a keeper!" Lorna Barrett, N.Y. Times bestselling author
“Cealie makes me laugh out loud! I highly recommend this book!” Reviewer Dawn Dawdle
“A fun romp. Highly recommended!” I Love a Mystery Reviews
“Interesting characters and life issues that women of all ages can relate to” Armchair Interviews
“Cousins must try to unite in their struggle against smoking and flab” Publishers Weekly
“A gumbo of wry wit. Rollicking good fun!" Ken Wells, Pulitzer-nominated author
June lives near lazy bayous of south Louisiana surrounded by her wonderful four children and their children, her squeeze Bob, and many friends. She writes the Cealie Gunther mystery series and other books.
Killer Cousins – Review by Martha A. Cheves, Author of Stir, Laugh, Repeat
I’d flown into Gatlinburg, reached my cousin’s house, shoved on the stuck gate of her backyard’s wooden fence, and fallen. “Stevie!” I cried, lying face down in tall grass. “Ste—vie!” Her screen door slammed. “Oh, Cealie, it’s you! You came!” She squatted beside me and I noticed my hand landed in dog doo-doo. I jerked my hand back. I wasn’t wearing my bifocals but could tell the poop was dry. Still – I swiped my fingers through the grass. “You didn’t answer the doorbell,” I said, checking my hand to make sure it was clean, “so I came back here. I tripped over something.” I moved my legs slowly to make sure my stinging knees weren’t broken. So many trees cluttered Stevie’s yard, I figured a thick branch had fallen, and it was the object my shins lay across. “I’ll help you move that thing out of the way.” I pointed back to it. Stevie didn’t speak. I glanced back to see what brought about this bizarre occurrence. She stooped near me but didn’t look at my face. Stevie stared at my feet… I took my time rising. Until I glanced toward where she stared. “It’s a man!” I yelled, scrambling to my feet. “Stevie, there’s a man in your grass.”
Cealie and Stevie are cousins and had grown up close, but in distance only. Their mothers were sisters but their grandmother seemed to favor Cealie over Stevie. This ended up giving Stevie a problem with jealousy, and she made Cealie cry whenever possible. So as Cealie prepared for her trip to Acapulco the call from Stevie begging her to come for a visit was a surprise. She insisted she “needed” her presence and that she, Stevie, was in danger. What caused Stevie to believe she was in danger? Her tarot cards, candles and crystals, of course.
Reading this book and hearing the feelings these two women had for each other brought back memories of some of my own cousins. There always seemed to be one that just stood out in the family as being special, causing others to feel jealous and left out. That’s what appeared to be the problem with the relationship between Stevie and Cealie in Killer Cousins. So, will the death of a member of Stevie’s stop smoking group change things for them? Will it make matters worse when another member of the group ends up dead in a restaurant owned by Cealie’s lover Gil? Or will it bring the two cousins closer together? Why would anyone kill two people who had only one thing in common, which was to quit smoking? And how did they kill them? There are no apparent signs of a struggle on either victim. I’ll give you a clue. I guessed the cause around page 115 for the 1st murder. As to the who the killer might be, there are 321 pages in Killer Cousins, I thought I had the answer on page 300 but I was wrong. The killer was a total surprise for me.
2009 321 pages Gale Cengage ISBN 978-1-59414-730-2
This second episode finds Cealie Gunther, a semi-retired owner of a proofreading service, stopping on her way to Mexico to visit her cousin Stevie. She and Stevie did not get along as children, but when Stevie says she is in danger, Cealie feels she must help out. Walking across Stevie's yard, Cealie trips over a dead man. He was a member of Stevie's stop smoking group, although Stevie claims not to know him. And imagine Cealie's disgust when she learns that Stevie asked for her help because the crystals and Tarot cards say that she's in danger. Meanwhile, Cealie's boyfriend Gil Thurman is opening one of his Cajun restaurants in the area, which again forces Cealie to consider if she wants to keep their relationship going or whether she wants to make her own way in the world. Actually, what she clearly wants is to have it all--one of the reasons this gets only a three star rating; Cealie is an irritating narrator and character, who can't get beyond her hormonal urges.
This book is a Cealie Gunther Mystery. After reading it, I want to join Cealie and her sometime lover, Gil Thurman, in his restaurant Cajun Delights. Well, except maybe when one of the customers dies after tasting her entree!