(First Read) This is a very good episode of a Miss Julia. Really good. Been a lot of fun, I enjoyed it so very much. Yea. When she hears that Miss Mattie Freeman has taken a fall and is in the hospital, she wishes she had spent time getting to know the woman --and not just because she's the last person in town to hear about the accident! When Miss Julia hears that Miss Mattie Freeman has taken a fall and is in the hospital, she wishes she'd spent more time getting to know the woman--and not just because she's last to hear about the accident! So when the tumble proves fatal, the last thing Miss Julia expects is a phone call from Ernest Sitton, Attorney at Law. Suddenly Miss Julia finds herself the executrix of Miss Mattie's estate, and from what Ernest has to say, Miss Mattie's coffers weren't exactly full.
So when the tumble proves fatal, the last thing Julia expects is a phone call from Mr. Ernest Sitton, attorney-at-law; Miss Julia is named executor of Mattie Freeman's last will and testament, and it looks like her last wishes are more generous.
Faced with a house full of clutter and with her good friend Mildred Allen on Bed Rest, Miss Julia enlists an accredited furniture appraiser and Helen Stroud to sort through the mess and find something of value for Miss Mattie's beneficiaries. Thank goodness for Miss Mattie's handsome young neighbor Nate Wheeler who's ever ready.
(Second Read) In this seventeenth installment in the New York Times, bestselling Miss Julia series, Ann B. Ross delivers another hilarious and bighearted novel celebrating the South's favorite Steel Magnolia and the and the unforgettable residents of Abbotsville. Great book. One I truly enjoyed and shared with others.
Cozy fans more interested in character than plot should enjoy Ross's 17th series mystery set in the small North Carolina town of Abbotsville (after 2015's Miss Julia Lays Down the Law). When Mattie Freeman breaks her hip in a fall and goes into the hospital, elderly widow Julia Freeman, who barely knows the woman, is flabbergasted to learn that Mattie, who has no known living relations, has given her power of attorney. And Julia's responsibilities to a relative stranger become even more onerous after Mattie dies of her injuries, having named Julia the executor of her estate. Julia finds that Mattie's bequests exceed the estate's value, and she becomes suspicious when a man calling himself Andrew F. Cobb turns up out of the blue and claims to be Maddie's great-nephew. Ross provides plenty of local color, though some readers may be uncomfortable with the cartoonish portrayal of Julia's servant, Lillian "Yessum, they's a whole box full in the pantry". Highly Recommend.