Dollycas’s Thoughts
Sissy Yoder is running her Aunt Bethel’s café with a lot of input from her aunt. She knows they have to keep the menu fresh using crops they can purchase locally. In that effort, Sissy takes the woman and her Yorkie, Duke, to check out some tomatoes said to be “To Die For”. Bethel is less enthused. They arrive at Walt Summers’ farmstand, but the man appears to be missing. After a quick search, they find him in the garden shed, and he isn’t going to be selling any tomatoes today or ever. Walt Summers is dead, definitely murdered.
It looks like there are a bushel of suspects, but Deputy Earl Berry gets a surprising confession from someone who wouldn’t hurt a fly. Soon, Sissy and Aunt Bethel are traveling all over to find out why the person confessed and trying to dig up clues to pick the actual killer and haul them to a jail cell.
Sissy is getting comfortable in her little Chicken Coop tiny house in Yoder, Kansas. She is still writing her advice column, pretending to be a seventy-five-year-old woman with no one yet the wiser. Her days are filled with running the café and giving Duke, her Yorkie, as much attention as possible. Bethel surprised me. She gets her cast off in the first chapter and is ready to get back to her life. She seems to start to enjoy riding around in Sissy’s “little car”, a Fiat convertible. Enjoy may be a little strong, but she instigated places to go to and people to see to move their investigation along, and didn’t give Sissy too much flak. We meet more Amish family, friends, and neighbors, too. Lizzy continues to be on bed/couch rest as the birth of her twins draws near. I enjoyed the Friday Family Supper night. There’s an open invitation for one and all to come to Bethel’s home. Sometimes the house is pretty crowded, others only a few relatives make an appearance. It brings people together to catch up with family and catch up on the murder investigation. It also allows Sissy to put more of her family history together.
I found Deputy Earl Berry frustrating. Yoder may be a small town, but accepting a confession without family or representation present was beyond the pale. Of course, it was the easy way out and required no additional effort from him. Thank God for Bethel and her push to get to the truth. The residents of Yoder fear the woman enough to answer her questions or put up with her rath. Sissy is happy to help in any way she can. I honed in on the guilty party early in the story, but it wasn’t easy for Sissy and Bethel. They were spinning their wheels, going nowhere a lot. The reveal was exciting and humorous. The ending made me smile.
A Murder of Aspic Proportions is a lighthearted, funny cozy mystery filled with unique characters, and a lot of talk about crops and fertilizer. It’s a story to pick up, relax, and escape into after a stressful day. Book three, A Murder for the Sages, is screaming even louder from my To-Be-Read shelf, now that I have read this one. I hope to get to it early in the new year.
I voluntarily reviewed an Advance Reader Copy. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. Thank you to Kensington Cozies and NetGalley for providing me with an ARC.