A book publisher with a foul reputation meets his maker on Orcas Island, and Kaylee Bleu must sort through an endless stream of suspects to find his killer.
Summer visitors are being drawn to Turtle Cove, Washington, by an art exhibit at an upscale gallery and a writing workshop being hosted by mystery bookstore Between the Lines, and Kaylee Bleu and other local merchants are excited about the boost to their bottom lines. Unfortunately, the pretty picture is threatened by the arrival of Emmet Baron, a mainland publisher of ill repute who is canvassing the town to drum up support for his latest scheme. No one seems to have any love lost for the cad, but that doesn't make it any less horrifying when he is found dead and the police suspect foul play.
The farther Kaylee is pulled into the mystery surrounding Emmet's demise -- and, for that matter, his life -- the closer she comes to painting herself into a precarious corner. Can she draw the correct conclusions about Baron's final moments before she experiences her own brush with death? Or will a murderer deliver her a fatal final stroke?
This clever whodunit from Annie’s Victorian Mansion Flower Shop Mysteries series is a must-read for fans of cozy mysteries, gardening, and female friendships.
The entire story revolves around a possibly extinct plant shown in a painting, and the flowers, people, and paintings. The development of a plot of land may be curtailed because of where the possibly extinct plant may be growing. An entrepreneur named Emmet Baron, disliked by all the residents of Turtle Cove it seems, has threatened the developers with law suits unless they pay his consulting fee. He is also peddling what may be illegal cards depicting copies of the artist’s works. Then he is found dead and possibly murdered behind the Randall Gallery. Although this tale does not appear to have much of a plot, the descriptions of the characters, the town, the paintings and the flowers make the story more interesting.
This came to me via a Friends of the Library book sale, and is not the first in the series. Nevertheless, I didn't feel lost at all. I liked the characters, the setting and the book was well-plotted and paced. I'm going to look for the other books now, and maybe check out others by this -apparently - small publisher.