This is my least favorite of the series to this point. Bobbles and Broomsticks is book 8 of the Vampire Knitting Club series. In this book, Alice and Charlie (we got to know them in book 5 when the love potion Lucy made for Alice went awry) get married. As they were heading back down the aisle after being wed, a beam fell, narrowly missing the bride and instead hitting a killing the father of one of the groom's friends. As it turned out, it wasn't a horrible accident. Someone made that beam fall. I really didn't like the themes of betrayal and jealousy in this book. I thought the scene where we find the "bad guy" was really overdone and contrived and I thought that the reasons were over the top.
One thing that I really had a problem with was that this is book 8 and Lucy has had plenty of time to get to know Rafe over the past 8 books and she should know him to be a good man and have some sort of loyalty to him as a friend, if nothing more. Instead, Lucy was being judgmental about Rafe's house manager, speaking on things she doesn’t even understand, and trying to convince him that Rafe is taking advantage of him because he pledged to serve Rafe for life and continue the tradition with his sons, just as he did with his father and grandfathers have all done. The man tried to explain that working for Rafe has been a wonderful thing for his family and Rafe has taken wonderful care of all of them but she keeps telling him he should leave.
I have been binging this series and haven’t been reviewing them in between each book. Some overall observations from the series so far (I have finished through book 8.5 and am partway through book 9) are that the stories are always cute and good for a short escape. I really enjoy the characters and have a vested interest in them. Something I have noticed, though, is that there isn’t continuity between books and the books really could have benefited from a proofreader. For example, in book 1, Lucy is 27 but in book 6, she has her 26th birthday. In one of the books, Rafe is at least 600 years old, but in the next book, he is only 500 years old. Occasionally there is an incorrect name used but I always know what was meant so it doesn’t confuse me or make it so that I can’t continue. Another thing that is missing, at least to the point I am at now, is any real information about the vampires. We don’t get to know anything about their abilities, only that they are vampires who feed via a blood bank. Even with the inconsistencies, I am hooked on the series and enjoy these easy-going, clean, cozy mysteries. It is a nice palette cleanser from the smutty stuff I typically enjoy.
The narrator is the same throughout the series and she does a great job.