Sparks are flyin’ more than ever in this latest Campers & Criminals cozy mystery! Fireworks, unexpected romance, and a murder greet this Fourth of July celebration week! We join Mae, Dottie, and the rest of the laundry club ladies at the amphitheater on the biggest day of the week-long Fourth of July celebration in Normal, Kentucky.
If you haven’t visited Normal yet, each mystery can be read as a standalone. You will get to know a core group of friends and neighbors, spend time at Mae’s Happy Trails Campground, the finest in all of the Daniel National Forest. Tourism is huge there, and every novel includes tourists and sometimes even new residents. If you like camping, Southern folks, quirky characters, and the occasional murder mystery, you won’t want to leave!
The author introduces her characters with great care, and just as in real life, they change and grow with the seasons of their lives. She also has a great eye for detail, and I was impressed all over again with how the sites, scents, and sounds of the campground and forest change throughout the day and night.
The bingo game came to an end with one of the Stitchin’ Posts’ knitting group ladies winning a blanket made by the shop’s owner, Cheryl. Two friends who tend to compete in everything, including their knitting projects, Nancy and Marla, were sitting together. Nancy won the blanket, and Marla took off for a while. Minutes later, just as the fireworks were ready, they could hear Nancy scream. She had gone to find Marla, and just outside the Stitchin’ Post, she found Marla lying on the ground with her knitting needles protruding from her neck.
Sheriff Al Hemmer, Hank, Mae’s husband and forest ranger, Hank, and deputies gathered. It is Hank’s area of responsibility in the national forest, so he would work with Al to solve the crime. With the huge crowd of tourists and residents at the event, there were many people to collect names and contact information from, and determine whose statements they needed. Later on, Al considered Cheryl, owner of the yarn and fabric shop, the prime suspect. Someone had overheard them arguing shortly before she was murdered and had seen Marla point her needles at Cheryl as if threatening her – or trying to make a point. Cheryl said it was one of their usual arguments over how certain stitches were to be completed.
Sheriff Al specifically did not want help from Mae and the laundry club ladies, despite his asking for help in the recent past. It would take more than Al’s say-so to stop Mae and Dottie from asking questions. Solving this murder was like trying to untangle a mess of yarn after a kitten has played with it to find whodunit this time. Then a stranger came into town, a young man trying to find out about someone who recently died in town. In one instance he specified Marla, in another, he did not.
I had a pet suspect by the time whodunit was revealed at the end, yet was still shocked at the full story. I highly recommend this novel, and series, to those who appreciate well-written Southern cozy mysteries with good friends, campground living, and the beauty of the National Forest.
From a thankful heart: I received an uncorrected e-ARC of this novel, and this is my honest review.