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Coffeehouse Mystery #14

Once Upon A Grind

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Fresh Pick - Fresh Fiction 
Top Pick - RT Book Reviews A Best Books of the Year Pick -  Kings River Life  Magazine
From the  New York Times  bestselling author of  Billionaire Blend  comes an enchanting new entry in the "satisfyingly rich" Coffeehouse Mystery series.   Includes wicked good recipes.  When coffeehouse manager turned amateur sleuth Clare Cosi serves "magic" beans for a Fairy Tale Fall event, she brews up a vision that leads to a sleeping beauty in Central Park; a big, bad wolf of Wall Street; and an East Side enclave with storybook secrets...
Fairy tale fever has descended on New York City. Broadway fans are flocking to  Red Riding The Musical ; museums are exhibiting art inspired by the Brothers Grimm; and Clare Cosi and her merry band of baristas give their coffee truck a "Jack and the Beanstalk" makeover for a Central Park festival. Clare's coffee hunter ex-husband contributes a bag of African beans with alleged magical properties. His octogenarian mother entertains customers with readings of the grinds, but Clare remains skeptical--until she receives a vision that helps her find a young model's body in the park's woods. The police dismiss "sleeping beauty" as the victim of a drug overdose. Then Clare uncovers evidence that points to a list of suspects--from a New York Giant to quite a few wicked witches--and a cold case murder that reaches back to the Cold War. Now Clare is really in the woods with a dangerous predator on her heels and an investigation that leads from a secret Prince Charming Club right back to her own NYPD detective boyfriend. If she doesn't solve this mystery, those magic beans predict an unhappy ending.

683 pages, Hardcover

First published December 2, 2014

230 people are currently reading
3175 people want to read

About the author

Cleo Coyle

52 books3,554 followers
Don't miss the newest title in Cleo's long-running Coffeehouse Mystery series (with more to come), NO ROAST FOR THE WEARY, a National Mystery Bestseller and triple #1 Amazon Category Bestseller. Join Cleo's Coffee Club for bonus recipes and giveaways: Click Here to Subscribe to Cleo’s Free Newsletter

CLEO COYLE is the New York Times and Publishers Weekly bestselling pseudonym for Alice Alfonsi, writing in collaboration with her husband, Marc Cerasini. With more than 1 million books sold, they have gained an enthusiastic following. Cleo's "relenlessly entertaining" (Criminal Element) novels have been translated into Spanish, Japanese, and Czech. Their books have earned starred reviews from Library Journal and Kirkus, Best of Year selection honors from multiple reviewers, and have been recommended by Booklist as among the best culinary mysteries for core library mystery collections.

When not haunting coffeehouses, hunting ghosts, or wrangling their rescued stray cats, Alice and Marc are New York Times bestselling media tie-in writers who have penned properties for Lucasfilm, NBC, Fox, Disney, Imagine, Toho, and MGM. One of those projects (ghostwritten by Alice Alfonsi) was named by Entertainment Weekly as the best media tie-in book written that year.

CONNECT WITH CLEO at CleoCoyle.com and CoffeehouseMystery.com

*******

CLEO'S TWO BESTSELLING SERIES:

Cleo’s Coffeehouse Mystery series, celebrated for pioneering both the “urban cozy" and “coffee cozy” mystery genres, follows the adventures of amateur sleuth Clare Cosi, a single mom with a complicated love life who manages a Greenwich Village coffeehouse and a crew of quirky baristas who helps her solve perplexing crimes.

Cleo’s Haunted Bookshop Mystery series, hailed as a highly original and "utterly charming" (Mystery Scene) blend of cozy and hardboiled genres, features an earnest young New England widow who catches criminals with the help of a gumshoe ghost, the irrepressible spirit of a tough private detective who’d been gunned down in her bookshop decades before.

*******

LATEST BOOK NEWS:

The newest title in Cleo's long-running Coffeehouse Mystery series is NO ROAST FOR THE WEARY, on sale April 1st and already a national mystery bestseller and triple #1 Amazon category bestseller. Cleo's previous release, BULLETPROOF BARISTA, was a "wildly entertaining" (Criminal Elment) national mystery bestseller; a #1 category best seller for Amazon; and honored with 2 Best of Year list selections by reviewers. It is now availalbe in a new paperback reprint edition along with the previous bestselling book in the series, HONEY ROASTED, "A honey of a tale" (Kirkus Reviews).

Cleo's latest Haunted Bookshop Mystery releases include THE GHOST AND THE STOLEN TEARS, praised by Kirkus as "a gem of a story." And THE GHOST GOES TO THE DOGS, a #1 category best seller for Amazon, which Fresh Fiction called "amazing and unique." Cleo is now writing the next Haunted Bookshop Mystery. Subscribe to Cleo’s Free Newsletter for updates on the pub date!

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 390 reviews
Profile Image for Stacey.
30 reviews
February 1, 2015
Eh. I am a huge fan of the coffeehouse mysteries, but the weird CIA aspect and the hallucinations were a real disappointment.
Profile Image for Lily (Night Owl Book Cafe).
691 reviews495 followers
October 20, 2015


It's a Fairy Tale Week in New York City and Central Park is hosting the festival. To get into the spirits, Clare Cosi has given her coffee truck and its employees a Jack and the Beanstalk appeal. For the most part everything seems great until her boyfriends ex shows up and insists Clare watches the kids, her own ex-husband brings magic beans with supposed magical properties, and his mother wants to give a Clare reading of the grind. Clare doesn't want to believe it, until she has her own vision that leaves her unsettled.

When Mike's kids go missing, it's up to Clare to try to find them. Going by the hunch of her visions, Clare makes her way into the park's woods in hopes of finding Marks kids. Her search not only turns up the kids, but looking for their little dog after had also led her to a pink princess body. Her ex Matt is immediately a suspect when the cop on the job jumps into the conclusion that just because Matt had to play her prince for the day, he must have been the only person who has seen her, and thus the last person in her presence.


Filled with interesting fairy tale visions, magic coffee beans, great characters, and crystal keys, Once Upon a Grind is an excellent read. I am from New York City myself, which is what originally appealed to me about this book. I was so curious, I found myself pleasantly surprised at how well Cleo Coyle handled the New York City culture and blended it seamlessly into a great story.

It made me smile and it made me laugh. Clare is an awesome character. Thought caring, kind, and determined, she is not immune to flaws. Clare has her own internal battle going on about her relationship with Mike and mowing to Washington D.C, which means giving up what she has in NYC, can she do it for the man she loves or does she stand to lose him?

I personally liked the addition of the magic beans into the story. It made it sort of enchanting, and really interesting. I looked forward to the visions because they were so creatively handled. I think Coyle did a remarkable job blending them into the story, where it almost made it sort of believable.

The secondary characters were awesome and really contributed to the whole story. I liked some of the sideline plots that were going on. Like personal issues with Clare's employees, and Clare meets some interesting characters. I think it added to the book and made the background secondary characters come to life. I couldn't help but allow the cast to grow on me. Thus probably why I couldn't stand Mike's ex wife Leila. I found her irresponsible and selfish, but at the same time I understood that she does the things she does because she is so self-centered that she does not know how else to live her life. When the time came to protect her children, she was one wild mother bear and that made me respect her more.

Enough of my rambling, this book was great. I found Once Upon a Grind to be a cozy mystery with a lot of heart. If you love cozy mystery with a bit of fairy tale and magic beans mixed into it, give this one a shot, you might not regret it. Though well over 400 pages, I found that I wasn't bored with the story at all and already missing it.
hug-gifThis review was originally posted on Night Owl Book Café

Profile Image for ♥ Sandi ❣	.
1,637 reviews70 followers
June 10, 2023
2 stars

This is the 14th book, of a so far, 19 book series by the writing team of Alice Alfonsi and her husband Marc Cerasini. I have read all 14 books and this used to be my favorite cozy series. However I think I have been away from it for too long this time. I was happy to reconnect with Clare and Matteo, Madame and Mike Quinn and all the Baristas in the Village Blend Coffeehouse, however I just was not as enthused as I once was for the story.

I felt that this story drug a lot of the time. That it was put together with a wish and a prayer. Where I once found these books to flow well and have a well developed story, I found this one to move deeper and deeper into far reaching areas, with more and more weird content as it went.

I still have two physical books in the series and at some point will read them, Maybe this one book was a fluke or maybe it was me? We will see once I decide to pick up the next book in the series.
Profile Image for Lisa Ks Book Reviews.
842 reviews140 followers
August 31, 2015
I must admit here and now that this is the first book I have read in the Coffeehouse Mystery series. Not for lack of wanting to. I just have a huge TBR (to be read) and I didn’t want to add a series with so many books already in it to catch up on. Oh boy, have I ever been cheating myself out of some wonderful reading time! This book is not as good as my sister has told me the series is, it’s ten times better!

By the end of chapter one of ONCE UPON A GRIND, I knew I was hooked worse than one gets on the wonderful caffeine this series is about. I felt an instant affection right away with the story’s characters. Series lead Clare Cosi is someone I would like to know. And while I don’t normally care for cozies set in big cities, NYC is about as big as they get, this book had a very cozy, small town feel and I greatly enjoyed it.

The fairy tale theme in the story was very well done. Author Cleo Coyle perfectly blended real life and the fairy tale aspects to create a spectacular mystery that left me breathless. I was on the edge of my seat through the twists and turns of this book. And with its brilliant conclusion, I was finally able to take a deep breath. I am now a mega Cleo Coyle fan. Good thing my sister has the whole series!

So, grab a cup of your favorite brew and be prepared to enjoy this awesome book.

Make sure to check out the back of the book for tons of tips and recipes!
Profile Image for Babs.
Author 15 books188 followers
July 7, 2015
I have been reading the Coffeehouse Mystery series for several years now. This is book 14 in the series and still keeps me glued to my seat to see what trouble Clare can get herself into. I enjoy seeing all the characters grow through out each book. There is never a dull moment at the coffee house. With Magic beans and murder you are bound to have a good time with this read.

For the Story Book Kingdom Festival Mike, asks her to look after his two children because his ex-wife, Leila, has been acting flaky. Clare loses track of the children, she drinks her ex-husband Matt's new coffee and has a vision that helps her find them. The children lost their dog and while Clare and Matt look for the dog, they find a young woman who was paired with Matt during the festival unconscious in the woods. Matt becomes the prime suspect and Clare must find a way to prove his innocence.

The author does a wonderful job with the characters especially Leila. You will love to hate her and the tension between her and Clare can get pretty heated at times but very believable. The risk Clare takes are funny at times and can lead her intro more trouble with Matt and Mike.

I am looking forward to the next book in this series. This is one you will never get tired of. Great recipes to boot.
Profile Image for LORI CASWELL.
2,863 reviews327 followers
January 16, 2016


Dollycas’s Thoughts

This was an truly enchanting story and so much fun to read! I stayed up until early in the morning reading telling myself “just one more chapter” again and again. It is stories like this one that give readers like me “book hangovers” but they are so worth it.

Clare and the Village Blend crew are taking part in the Fairy Tale Fall Event in Central Park. The coffee truck has a Jack and A Beanstalk theme complete with magic coffee beans and coffee grind readings. All is going well until Clare’s ex-husband is pulled in to replace a Prince Charming that failed to show up at the festival. He is paired with a beautiful princess for most of the day and then she goes missing. The search is on until they find the “sleepy beauty” in the dense part of woods in the park. Only she is not sleeping, she is dead and Clare’s ex becomes the prime suspect in her demise. The magic coffee beans and the visions they give Clare not only helped find the missing princess but they may help her to find the real killer.

So much happens in this story but it unfolds so naturally it is not overwhelming at all. The clues lead to a secret club and a cold case murder. Clare’s boyfriend, Detective Mike Quinn, is on temporary assignment in Washington D.C. but he is still head of a task force for the New York Police Department so he is up to speed on this case. In fact his ex-wife may even be involved since the princess who died was also working as a mother’s helper for her taking care of his kids. Coyle has woven quite a tangled web in this mystery linking people and events together you would never imagine and Clare is right in the middle of it all.

There are also things going on outside the main mystery. The subplots deal with some Village Blend employee drama and decision Clare is wrestling with. Matt and Clare may not be romantically involved anymore but they do work well together. I really admire the way the authors have thought outside of the box and let their characters evolve in many directions. It keeps this series fresh and each book better than the last.

This is a must read for cozy lovers. Whether you have read all the books in this series or this is your first Cofffeehouse Mystery I just know you will love this story. Just a little warning – this is not a book you can read a few chapters and set it aside. This writing team uses the same technique as suspense/thriller authors like James Patterson. Short chapters that lead right into the next one and the next one and the next one and before you know you are at the end. So don’t start this book if you have to work the next morning. This is the perfect book for a lazy weekend day snuggled up in front of your fireplace in a comfy chair. 10 Starfish!!
1,281 reviews66 followers
January 30, 2015
I've read every book in this series to date, albeit only once so maybe I've forgotten some details. When did Clare become a believing tea leaf reader? She also, if I remember correctly, had visions in this book before she drank coffee from magic beans. Yes, magic beans which accentuate psychic ability, which Clare apparently has. What?!? I read A LOT of paranormal and urban fantasy books so I obviously enjoy elements like this, but not when I'm expecting to read a straight mystery. That was my first impression, however, I was able to go with the flow after my initial disbelief and dislike.

The story itself was quite complicated with Clare's home life in a bit of a turmoil, her baristas having life changes, medieval fun, a speakeasy, Russian emigres and a fairy tale thread as well as the magic beans. On top of this, we see lots of character development on several fronts (yay!).

I agree with another reviewer, there did seem to be an unusual number of editing misses for a book from Penguin, but they didn't bother me.
57 reviews1 follower
January 29, 2015
I happened upon this book by chance in the "lending library" of my apartment building. The concept sounded cute, so I decided to give it a chance. Yes, this is not the first book in the series, so I admit I needed more backstory to make the plot seem less fantastical and by-chance, so I made an effort to ignore those aspects while reading.

The book was cute, but my biggest beef was how poorly edited this book was. It's published by the Berkeley Prime Crime imprint of Penguin, so I know there are editors and editorial assistants and stuff who work there. So I was shocked to see spelling errors, omissions (like in the acrostic poem Esther writes in her apartment), and the incorrect usage of "your" in place of "you're." It really ruined the book for me! I felt like I spent more time trying to spot more errors (which I did) than I did actually reading and enjoying the book.

Oh, also, yes, the plot is way far into left field and super imaginative and THIS STUFF DOES NOT HAPPEN IN REAL LIFE.

I think Cleo Coyle was drinking magic coffee while writing this.
Profile Image for D.A..
Author 11 books3 followers
November 30, 2014
Step into this well-crafted cozy mystery at any book number and I guarantee you will go back to the first one to find out about this wonderful group of people at the Village Blend. While each book can stand on its own, the character development gently occurs over the course of the series. The writing is clean, smooth, and top-notch, and the characters are interesting, fun, and dimensional. Cleo Coyle introduces a new aspect to the central character and keeps it within the boundaries of believability. Scenes with Boris are a hoot, and the visions are so well done that one would assume the author had a few of those magic beans as well. (Madame must never find out about the hen and the scarf thing.) And who knew a papaya and a hot dog were related.

You may want to have your beverage at hand so you do not have to get up during a carefully constructed plot moment. Should you think sleuthing is too easy for the main character, continue reading. There are plenty of “oh no!” moments, plot twists, and re-direction of suspicion to increase your heartbeat. The resolution to the crime is delivered in a surprisingly delightful package.

The best part of this book is a tie between the funny yet very mama-wolf protagonist, the sensory-filled descriptions, and the last line “Don’t miss the next Coffeehouse Mystery coming soon.” Each release is just so delicious, from the liquid-brown eyes of Matteo to the smooth brew of the newest Ethiopian blend. With each tasty mention of a recipe in the story, I crossed my fingers hoping it was included in the back of the book. (It was!) I’m pretty sure Cleo Coyle added a dairy free treat in there just for me. Overall, this book was full of a great mix of ingredients, tantalizing aromas and flavors, and feelings of happily ever after.
Profile Image for Ronna.
514 reviews62 followers
December 20, 2014
The Village Blend Coffeehouse and many many fairy tales are blended together to make a new mystery for Clare Cozi and her Village Coffee House crew. Everyone is dressed up for the Fairy Tale Festival when the Sleeping Beauty goes missing in Central Park, and Clare's ex husband, Matt, is the Prince Charming who has lost his princess.

Jack's beans might have grown a beanstalk to the giant, but Max's supposedly magical African beans made coffee that gives visions. Can these visions actually help Clare solve a mystery of the pink and red princesses? Will Clare decide weather to move to DC with her NYPD boyfriend? Will Boris capture his lady love?

This is definitely a fantastical thinking mystery, where you can let your imagination take flight in the creative adventures the coffeehouse in wonderland. Though I'm not a real fantasy or fairy tale person, I thoroughly enjoyed this story and fitting the puzzle pieces together. As always, the audible of this book added so much to the narrative.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
1,191 reviews
didnt-finish-didnt-start
May 30, 2019
This book is making me quit the series. It (the series) had been pleasantly distracting until now. Too weird. Checking on some of the low reviews the really weird hasn’t even begun. 😑
Profile Image for Jonathan.
588 reviews47 followers
March 30, 2015
I really liked the most recent installment of this series. This book led us through hidden clubs, Cold War debts, and a huge change in Clare's life.

The characters were once again great, and the mystery was, too. I never guessed the killer but when it was revealed the killer fit in nicely. I was a bit upset over the major decision Clare made in her life at the end, I don't want to reveal it because of spoilers, but it may make a huge change in the series with the next book.

Overall an entertaining book with a great cast of characters and an even better plot. I hope the next one continues to be this good!
17 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2018
I do not know why I’ve continued to read this series. The torture stops here. You know it’s bad when you start rooting for the protagonist to die!
These books are inane to the point of brain death. It seems there are two authors, one who is an intelligent researcher with an interesting mind and the other an insipid Stepford wife who believes all the readers are idiots. Save yourself and don’t bother with this ultra contrived “fairytale” farce.
Profile Image for Amy.
1,332 reviews
January 12, 2015
Welcome back to NYC and the Village Blend Coffeehouse! This time the adventure starts in Central Park and keep on going. I love the fairy tale theme and how we get to find out more about Mikes ex wife and children.
My favorite Village Blend friends are back along with some yummy recipes.
Always feel like I am back home when reading this series!
Looking forward to the next book!!
Profile Image for Stacey.
1,090 reviews154 followers
August 14, 2025
I love spending time at The Village Blend. This edition has a fairly tale theme and it's clever how the theme runs through to the end. A murder needs to be solved and the poking around leads to secret clubs and nefarious characters. Meanwhile, the relationship between Claire and Mike heats up with a proposition to move to DC. A nice set up for #15!
Profile Image for Deb Lester.
614 reviews25 followers
December 3, 2014
The Coffehouse Mystery series continues with the latest installment by Cleo Coyle, Once Upon a Grind. Most fairy-tales start with once upon a time and end with happily-ever-after, but this book is about magic beans and murder. Coyle once again impresses with a knack for good storytelling, intelligent characters and the perfect cup of joe. Get your favorite beverage ready, along with a free evening and a cozy blanket, because once you start this book, you won't be able to put it down til the very end!

What I liked:

Two of the biggest names in cozy mysteries in one week. I'm on a roll! I love Cleo Coyle's Coffeehouse Mystery series with a passion. I am a coffee drinker myself and loved the initial theme of the series and all of the interesting situations Coyle puts her heroine, Clare Cosi into. Clare, along with everyone at the Village Blend is an intelligent and resourceful character. Coyle's way with characterization is exceptional, but I think it's the overall dynamic between the characters that has kept this series just as popular today as when it first started.

In the latest addition to the series, Once Upon a Grind, Coyle uses a fairy-tale theme but imbues it with a bit of murder. Being a fan of magic and fairy-tales started young with me and a book of classic tales my sister and I poured over as children. So, I was excited by the theme of this book and was totally caught up from the first chapter. Who would want to kill a princess? Coyle has the pulse of the cozy community and publishing at large. Fairytales are all the rage, but it takes a unique spin to set any book apart from the masses and Coyle does it with style. Her book may have a magical theme but it's still all about the coffee. Loved every word of it!

Clare is once again thrown into a murder investigation when a she participates in a fairy-tale themed festival in Central Park with her coffee truck. I loved the playful spirit of the festival and the reading of the coffee grinds and such. The coffee truck had a Jack and the Beanstalk theme and everything was going great, when one of the princesses is found dead in the woods. I loved the interplay between Clare and Matteo in this installment of the series a lot. Matteo is always getting mixed up in something and this time it's coffee beans with magical properties. They relationship Clare has developed with Matteo, who happens to be her ex-husband throughout the series is one of the best parts. I like them together, but not romantically and it works so well. Coyle gives readers intelligent and likable characters that she has developed throughout 14 books. Simply amazing!

The mystery reaches far and wide from Wall Street to the East Side and even into the past. A murder that took place as far back as the Cold War is involved and this one has lots of twists and turns to keep readers off their game. It still amazes me how cut-throat the coffee business can be and it is so intertwined with just about every other kind of business out there. There were some red herrings in this one and it was not predictable at all. Coyle once again delights readers with her latest book and keeps them coming back for more!

Bottom Line:

There are some big names in cozy mystery genre and Cleo Coyle is one of them. This husband and wife writing team has produced a long lived series that just keeps getting better with every book. Once Upon a Grind is one of my favorites out all fourteen books in the series. I loved the fairy-tale theme and the interactions of all of the regulars at the Village Blend. This is a series you can't afford to miss! From the amazing cover art to the final words of the book to the fantastic and tasty recipes, you'll be hanging on every word!
Profile Image for Avid Series Reader.
1,658 reviews1 follower
July 3, 2022
Once Upon a Grind by Cleo Coyle is the 14th book of the Coffeehouse mystery series set in contemporary Manhattan. It's Fairy-Tale Week at Central Park. The Village Blend staff, dressed in costume, are serving themed coffees. Clare Cosi, coffeehouse manager, is also trying to keep watch on her boyfriend's children (whose mother dumped them in her care without asking). When the kids go missing, Clare hunts for them - and finds a body, "The Pink Princess".

So begins Clare's hunt for the truth. Anna is connected to "The Red Princess"; both are connected to a super-secret club requiring special access cards. Clare learns women enter by a different route than men, and the men are the city's elite. Rooms are designated by their purpose: those who seek marriage vs. those who prefer short-term relationships.

Matteo Allegro, son of The Village Blend owner Madame Allegro, is Clare's ex-husband and coffee bean buyer for The Village Blend, His latest amazing find from his worldwide buying trips is a "magic" coffee bean from Africa. Clare experiences a horrible nightmare when she drinks the coffee, and she vows "never again". However, the nightmare proved prophetic - so when she's deep into investigating, pursued by killers but unable to solve the mystery - she drinks it again.

A side issue causing Clare great emotional stress is her boyfriend Mike Quinn's fervent desire for her to move to Washington D.C. Clare loves Mike, but she loves her life managing The Village Blend too.

Then there's the barista who is so convinced her boyfriend wants to break up, when she finally agrees to see him, she doesn't believe or accept his marriage proposal.

Clare discovers victims are injected with a coma-inducing drug for which there is no antidote.

By far, this is not the best in the series, but likely crafted to support the plot twist at the end.
50 reviews
August 15, 2022
I was appalled to find THREE misbegotten and offensive Holocaust references in this coffee cozy mystery. Why on earth they would be here - diminishing and minimizing the effect of the Holocaust is beyond me. This detracted substantially from the book as I know Holocaust survivors and find this beyond offensive. The first reference, at the end of chapter 24 was that Clare looked "like Eva Braun at a biergarten." I was willing to let that one slide although I found it disconcerting and discordant. But just two pages later, in chapter 25 Clare refers to a "model who looked like she'd stepped out of Auschwitz." NO, she did NOT look like she'd been being starved to death, suffering diarrhea, crippling abdominal cramps and ultimately being murdered in the gas chambers. I refer the author and any interested reader to https://www.auschwitz.org/en/history/... , a link to an article that explains what vicious brutal non-nutrition the victims in Auschwitz had to endure. But this wasn't enough for Coyle - there is yet a THIRD reference to the Holocaust in chapter 63 where a non-helpful bartender is referred to as a "Gestapo bartender."

I know this is not a serious book (the plots are always absurdly non-plausible, but hey, that's the genre) but minimizing and gratuitous references like this do serious disservice to the memory of the Holocaust and the sacred memory of all of the victims of that horrific event. Scholars consider these references to be part of Holocaust denial, as they lead, slowly but surely, to that end.

This is offensive.
Profile Image for Anna Louise Kallas .
432 reviews42 followers
December 18, 2014
This was an truly enchanting story and so much fun to read! I stayed up until early in the morning reading telling myself “just one more chapter” again and again. It is stories like this one that give readers like me “book hangovers” but they are so worth it.

This is a must read for cozy lovers. Whether you have read all the books in this series or this is your first Coffee house Mystery I just know you will love this story. Just a little warning – this is not a book you can read a few chapters and set it aside. Short chapters that lead right into the next one and the next one and the next one and before you know you are at the end. So don’t start this book if you have to work the next morning. This is the perfect book for a lazy weekend day snuggled up in front of your fireplace in a comfy chair.
Profile Image for Leah.
1,976 reviews
January 9, 2020
This one involves Russia, spies, a fairy tale festival, a medieval fair, drugs, coffee, an underground club, and a dog. The story jumps around a bit and takes some interesting turns. The mystery had a surprising ending. There is also a bit of history and romance in this story. I enjoyed the history more than the romance.
141 reviews5 followers
December 5, 2014
Once Upon A Grind A Wicked Good Read!
In the fourteenth book in the Coffeehouse Mystery series, coffeehouse manager, Clare Cosi, and her wonderfully diverse staff of the Village Blend, descend upon New York’s Central Park for a Fairy Tale Week celebration. The coffee truck is decorated, fittingly, (for a roaster and purveyor of fine coffee beans) with a Jack and the Beanstalk theme. Matteo, Clare’s ex-husband and partner, is pulled into duty as Prince Charming. It is a situation ripe for a fairy tale ending.
Unfortunately, Clare’s boyfriend Mike Quinn is out of town. Mike asks Clare to assist in getting his children into the festival. His ex-wife, a wonderful wicked witch, dumps her two charming children on Clare, and runs off to who knows where, within the park. Matteo is escorting the Pink Princess (also the children’s nanny) throughout the festivities, and when she turns up missing, and later is found drugged in the depths of the Park, Matteo is arrested. Clare hastens to clear his name, tend to Mike’s children over their concern for Pink Princess Anya, and keep the wicked ex-wife at bay. Stir in some magic coffee beans, Red in the Hood, Cold War intrigue, knights in silly armor, and marital infidelities, with a well written story, and you have a very compelling read.
Cleo Coyle masterfully presents the fourteenth book in this delightful series. While many authors tend to go a little “stale” after several books in a series, Coyle manages to keep the characters fresh and compelling. If anything, the books seem to get better and better. This book would stand alone, apart from the series, very well, but readers of the Coffeehouse Mystery series will be charmed by this latest visit to the Village Blend.
My personal test of a great book is JOMC (Just One More Chapter). As a reader, you know what I mean: Just One More Chapter, and I will start the laundry; Just One More Chapter, and I will put the book away and start dinner for the family; Just One More Chapter , and I will turn out the light and go to sleep. I was so entranced by this book, I simply could not put it down until I finished it. I am sure other mystery lovers will feel the same. I would be remiss if I did not mention the wonderful recipes that have been included. I suggest you make yourself a cup of the Snow White Chocolate Mocha before curling up in your favorite chair for this wicked good read.
To be completely transparent, I was gifted an advance copy of this book. There was no request for review, but simply a kind gift at a low point in my life. This review is my attempt to provide potential purchasers an honest appraisal of the story.
483 reviews3 followers
October 10, 2017
This is the 14th book in the coffeehouse series, and not one of my favorites. The last couple of books have had multiple segments where a chapter starts, and you're reading about something Clare is doing, just to find out she was dreaming. I don't recall this happening in previous books, so I'm not sure if the author is trying a different style. I'm not a fan of it. Come to find out, this book includes it as well. However, it adds on. Matt has sourced some "magic coffee beans". When Clare drinks the coffee, she has visions of the future and visions of weird characters. It's almost like Alice in Wonderland on LSD. I really liked these books because Clare Cosy was an intelligent character who actually solved the mysteries. In many cozy mystery books, the main character stumbles upon the answers, but Clare actually finds it through sleuthing. I don't really like that she is turning weird. In addition to that, this story also includes Russian spies, the CIA, and a secret dating club. Very weird stuff. The story was okay, but not up to par of the previous books.
Profile Image for Sarah.
633 reviews15 followers
July 23, 2015
Thank goodness I picked this up at the library instead of spending any money on it! Cleo Coyle has finally jumped the shark on this series. Spies, magic coffee beans, waking dreams, reading coffee grounds, civilians allowed in CIA operations, genetic specific remedies... Give me a freakin' break. By the time Clare had her "dream" about the kids in the forest and Matt explained that he deliberately fed his ex wife (not to mention a whole lot of other people) his magic hallucinogenic coffee beans I was shaking my head in amazement at the ridiculousness of the plot and wondering how so many could have given this a 5 star review!

And the three star reviews, "Rather tiresome." or "Did I finish this?" So how the hell does that rate a "liked it" rating?? I can't even give it an "ok" rating, because it just wasn't. It was just all too silly for me.

I don't know if this is just Coyle trying to cash in on the popularity of paranormal anything and everything, but this Coffeehouse Mystery left me with a bad taste in my mouth.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Barb.
249 reviews12 followers
September 6, 2015
It's hard to write a review about Cleo Coyle's most recent book, because it's so damn good! The way the theme (in this case Fairy Tales) is woven into the plot and the very prose is masterful and awe inspiring. The setting of this long running series is the amazing and historical Village Blend Coffeehouse, and all the familiar characters are back in all their individual, sometimes quirky, glory.
In ONCE UPON A GRIND, a fairy tale festival envelopes NYC to honor the opening of a Broadway show based on Little Red Riding Hood. The Village Blend joins the festivities, and when a young woman is drugged into a coma, Clare's ex, Matt, is the obvious suspect. But the plot is richly layered with a multitude of facets dealing with espionage, a dating club, a "wolf" of Wall Street, Eastern European emigrants, Medieval Role Playing... and all the while Clare is trying to make her long distance relationship with Mike work. I can't use enough superlatives to describe this book. Read it!
Profile Image for Andrea Stoeckel.
3,138 reviews132 followers
March 31, 2015
With this, the fouteenth Coffeehouse Mystery, I am finally caught up with Clare, Blanche, Matteo and the "family" that invade the Village Blend in this international intrigue long- running story.

Clare runs into the Fall Farytale Forest Brigade working with and within Manhattan's elite in a "Once Upon a Time" based tale of drugs, the Cold War, and a hot love life of more than one Prince Charming. It all starts with Matt and his coffee beans..... and ends with the closing of a very old international spy case you have to read to believe.

Told in typical Cleo Coyle style, this book is just as wonderful as the other 13, and sets the stage for some changes in the future. A great story, with interesting recipes and Bosnian and Turkish coffee facts that might be very interesting.
Profile Image for Sue Ross.
610 reviews12 followers
December 31, 2014
It’s always good to go back to NYC and visit Village Blend just to see what kind of trouble is brewing. This time there are Russians, the CIA, a lethal drug, blackmail and a framing scheme involved and Matt is the victim of the frame. What nobody knows until a mysterious man enters the picture is just how far back all this goes…decades. I won’t tell you what happens or to whom. All I will say is this is one of the best stories Cleo Coyle and her husband Marc have come up with so far. She had me in tears, laughing, and mourning the losses. This series is one of a few that I can sit and read and not want to put down and I for one can’t wait for the next one to come out. I’m sure you will enjoy it as much as I did.
990 reviews25 followers
January 11, 2015
I can't get enough of this series!
Once again the authors have crafted a clever and very engaging mystery. It's who and why, but with marvelous twists.
They should be getting a call from the NYC Mayor's Office to ask to use these great fundraising ideas.
Are these magical coffee beans? Is that why Clare is having these strange visions? And are they accurate? How is she to interpret them?
As if that weren't enough, there is the question of what to say to her detective about moving.
Wrap that all up with underground fantasy clubs, psycho ex wives, and drugs that induce a (possibly irreversible) coma.
It's quite a ride!
Profile Image for Caitlyn.
313 reviews29 followers
June 12, 2018
This one was pretty good!

Profile Image for Sarah.
364 reviews
December 15, 2014
Such a great read! I really enjoy the Coffeehouse mysteries by husband and wife team Cleo Coyle. I anxiously look forward to each new edition after I click close on their current book. The books, in general, are well-written, have interesting characters, great plots, romance and tightly spun mystery. There isn't much else to want for in terms of the cozy mystery genre.
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