Thank you to NetGalley and Storm Publishing for providing me with an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review.
It’s time for an honest confession. I clearly wasn’t paying attention to the author name, because I was confident it was written by a favorite author. Despite the fact that Ellie Alexander wasn’t the author I thought she was so her writing was new to me, I really enjoyed this book and will have to start working my way through the many books on her backlist.
I’m always sucked in by stories centered around a bookstore, and this one was no different. It’s also partially why I thought this was written by a different author who is familiar to me and sets her cozies in a bookstore. Lucky for me, both authors are really great storytellers!
Many different characters are introduced in the beginning of the book: Annie, the bookstore owner; Fletcher, her best friend and partner in the private investigator business; four or five employees; and Annie’s boyfriend and another couple they hang out with, along with the people Annie and Fletcher investigate. It’s a lot to process so early in the story, and there were multiple mentions of a friend of Annie’s who was murdered. Since Alexander’s writing is new to me, I didn’t realize that this was a spinoff of a previous cozy series featuring some of the same characters. This series is a standalone from the other series and I was able to understand, follow, and enjoy the story, although I think that it would be a good idea to start with the other series first.
Although the characters were brand new to me, it was really easy to like Annie. She has surrounded herself with wonderful and supportive people: Fletcher, her boyfriend Liam, Priya and Penny, and her former boss and current coworker Hal. She is serious about the private investigation aspect, and earned a degree in criminology. However, she’s been running what sounds like the coolest bookstore.
I was quickly engrossed even though I hadn’t known anything about this cozy world, and Annie and Fletcher have that easy, comfortable relationship that comes with a good friendship, and I loved seeing them interact. Watching Annie and Fletcher investigate was thrilling, and this was the first 2026 book I read that kept me glued to the page and finding more excuses to sit and read than do anything else.
The story was a fast read because of a few different factors. Short and snappy chapters always force me to lie to myself and say ‘just one more chapter’ when I have no intention of stopping until I’m forced to, a busy plot with not one but two investigations plus a busy bookshop, wonderfully well-rounded characters, and a bold choice in villain. It took me a while to figure out who it was, but there are quite a few people who were good candidates.
Looking back, the answer is blatantly obvious, with Alexander dropping clues all along the way that I missed. I like to read cozies and have read quite a few by this point, and one of the main aspects found in the genre is that a murder is investigated by people who aren’t part of law enforcement. But in this book, due to Annie’s criminology background and continued relationship with a former professor Annie and Fletcher were quickly roped into joining forces with law enforcement, which felt a bit less realistic than I would have expected.
Overall, this kicks off a new spinoff series with a bang. Rather than feeling like I missed out on a lot of information by not reading any of the A Secret Bookcase Mysteries series, and left with a desire to jump into that series immediately. It will have to wait, but I will absolutely be reading more of Alexander’s backlist titles. Liam, Annie’s boyfriend, is basically the perfect man. If only he wasn’t fictional! But aside from that, I can’t wait to see more of Annie, Fletcher, Hal, Liam, Priya, and Penny, along with the bookshop, which sounds like the coolest shop ever. I also loved the cozy (seriously, no pun intended this time) setting, with a small northern California town that residents can get around completely by foot. This book was one of the best experiences I’ve ever had with a mistaken identity, and introduced me to a new favorite author.
Bottom line: A wonderful start to a new series, but you might want to start with the Secret Bookcase Mysteries first.