The real mystery is how the h e c k is this set (and written!) in XXI century.
Are you longing for the good old days when men were men, women were cooking and cleaning, grown up children were still completely dependent on their fathers and grandfathers, and the sole dream of the young man would be to marry a sweet girl next door, which the grandfather forbade? Oh, and did I mention, no phones, and an occasional murder? If this looks like your thing, then you might like the book.
I, personally, didn't. It wasn't bad, but just so ridiculously anachronistic.
The thing I hated most was probably how the main character was written.
She is a twenty-something year old travelling cook with an hourglass-figure (this is repeated almost to the nausea, comparable only to adjective "gaunt" in Ayn Rand) and extraordinary blue eyes.
You know that feeling when someone sees you in a work-related situation and they sort of freeze because they didn't expect to see someone so beautiful? Yep, neither do I. I'm not saying really beautiful people don't experience this, but the way everyone's staring at the main character seems a bit of an overkill in this book.
She is also very smart and has a way with animals, and agile despite her big frame. She is very perfect, get it, reader? P e r f e c t.
Ok, so the travelling cook arrives to work at the farm, where all the residents are men, except one - an 18-year-old daughter. Apparently the daughter used to do all the cooking (unpaid work) and sort of went on strike, so that's why the travelling cook was called in. When the cook arrives, she asks the girl "How many days have the men gone without a cooked meal?" and is flabbergasted at the answer that the girl hasn't cooked for days, and the men even resorted to making some scrambled eggs themselves! Can you imagine! (again, the narrative is set in XXI century. After the year 2000)
When the men arrive and refuse to take the dirty shoes off, the cook mops the floor after them and looks accusingly at the girl that she's not helping.
You get the picture.
I'm not against having characters with different views, but the cook's depicted mindset just clashes so bad with the ongoing descriptions of how perfect she is.
The story itself is decently constructed, but in my opinion the reader is given too many clues and it's relatively easy to work out what happened before the main character does.
Otherwise it is, as advertised, a 'cosy' mystery, if a bit anachronistic for my taste.