2014 Guideposts hardcover, Carole Jefferson (Nobody's Safe). Welcome to Silver Peak, a jewel of a town nestled high in the rugged grandeur of the Rocky Mountains. Behind its rustic charm, Silver Peak has a rough-and-tumble past full of mysteries, and Sadie Speers has a knack for uncovering them, using her love of antiques and Colorado history. - Google Books
Sadie’s grandson, Theo, buys an old ledger that seems to hold some answers to an old bank robbery in 1937 in Silver Peak. The bank robbery was never solved leaving the bank’s owner and now his son under a cloud, since the son is now running for Mayor it is really causing problems. The other candidate wants an honest campaign, he is also interested in Sadie. Sadie and her grandson search old papers and hunt down people who were at the bank when it happened. After three incidents the campaign is heating up and Sadie knows she needs to figure out who really robbed the bank so many years ago. Interesting look at history.
Sadie's grandson, Theo finds an old ledger book at a yard sale in Denver. When Sadie and Theo look at it they notice it is a diary belonging to Janie Hale who was a teller at the bank in Silver Peak that was robbed in October of 1937. Sadie and Theo are on the trail to find out what happened. Meanwhile, Sadie's friend Edwin is campaigning for mayor of Silver Peak and his opponent is James Morgan the current president of the bank, whose father was the president of the bank when it was robbed in 1937. Can Sadie figure out who robbed the bank in 1937 with the help of her grandson, Theo. Read the book to find out.
I enjoyed this 3rd installment in the Mysteries of Silver Peak series. An unsolved bank robbery from the 1930's, a mayoral race in present day that ties in to the unsolved robbery, come together to make for an exciting read to see how Sadie solves the case and saves the mayoral race. Fun read!
The third in a series, by yet another different author writing under Carole Jefferson. Light and enjoyable reading. Couldn't put it down as I wanted to know who did it.