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Your Problems Solved: Cold Clues

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When retired librarian Dorothy “Dory” Frame opens a small research business in 1955 San Luis Obispo, she expects routine cases—genealogy puzzles, old records, and forgotten family stories. What she doesn’t expect is murder.

Hired to help a young woman make sense of her late mother’s belongings, Dory uncovers long-buried secrets linking the town’s most powerful citizens to a crime everyone thought was solved. The deeper she digs, the more dangerous her discoveries become—and soon Dory realizes that finding the truth might cost her more than her reputation.

Rich with 1950s California atmosphere, Your Problems Solved—Cold Clues is the first book in the Your Problems Solved cozy mystery series. Perfect for fans of historical cozies, strong heroines, and small-town secrets, this story will transport you back to an era of vintage charm, local gossip, and unexpected danger.

342 pages, Kindle Edition

Published August 25, 2025

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Lennette Horton

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4,869 reviews447 followers
December 15, 2025
Your Problems Solved: Cold Clues hooked me right from the first scene, where retired librarian Dory Frame steps onto her porch and finds a troubled young woman asking for help. That moment kicks off a mystery rooted in a small California town in 1955, full of heat, old secrets, sharp characters, and the quiet grit of a woman who never expected to become a sleuth. The story winds through murder, corruption, community ties, and one woman’s stubborn insistence on truth. It moves with a gentle rhythm that feels like a stroll through a neighborhood, then tightens when things turn dark. I found myself caring far more than I expected to.

As I read, I kept smiling at the voice of Dory. She is steady and thoughtful, yet she surprises you with a streak of bravery that sneaks up on you. The writing made me feel like I was sitting beside her at the kitchen table, sipping iced tea while she sorted through clues and her own memories. Author Lennette Horton paints small-town life with such affection that even the gossip feels warm. There were moments that hit harder, though, like the quiet grief wrapped around Dory’s widowhood or the unease of a veteran struggling with trauma. Those scenes caught in my chest. They added weight to a book that could have stayed light but chose something richer.

I also appreciated the layers tucked inside the plot. What starts as a simple request from a desperate daughter slowly becomes a tangle of civic corruption, hidden relationships, and buried ledgers. Horton balances this with soft humor and everyday detail. One moment I was caught in the tension of a new clue, and the next I was listening to neighbors talk tomatoes and grandbabies. Oddly enough, that blend worked. It grounded the danger in something very real. I felt like I knew these people. I wanted them safe. I wanted justice to land where it should.

By the final pages, I closed the book feeling satisfied. This story would be wonderful for readers who love cozy mysteries with heart, fans of historical settings, and anyone who enjoys a heroine who solves problems with brains, kindness, and a little stubbornness. If you like mysteries that feel authentic rather than flashy, this one is a great pick. I'm looking forward to reading more of Dory’s adventures.
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