For a small, peaceful village, this town sure has a lot of deaths! Since Jayne came to town a month ago, there have been three. Add to that, a couple of deaths that were natural, but broad hints that they are not what they appeared to be, so a couple of more murders waiting in the wings.
This book is as quick a read as the first one was, and again, while the murders at the beginning of the book are resolved, the over-arching mystery has not been, which is not something I enjoy when reading a book.
One of my biggest problems with this book is that one of the main settings is a circus. I hate circuses, so I didn't enjoy all the idyllic walks past all the caged up animals.
All the problems I had with the dog in the first book persist in this one.
I also wonder at the town council who didn't see any need to hire a sheriff. The town had previously had both a sheriff and a deputy, so the idea that the town could just get along indefinitely without any law enforcement except for a couple of visits from out-of-town deputies doesn't make sense. It isn't until there is a murder that they decide to fill the position. When they do, they randomly pick a guy with no interview, and no look to his credentials (or lack thereof). As an added bonus, they bring in the guy's MOTHER as the deputy. What? How does this make sense? He is just as summarily replaced after *gasp* he stinks at the job he wasn't qualified to have in the first place. A new sheriff is picked just as haphazardly, and the new sheriff is sent over to fire the old one and take his place. This turns out not to be necessary because supposedly, word of mouth has reached the old sheriff in the 10 minutes it takes the new sheriff to get to the station, and the old sheriff is calmly waiting at the door to hand over the keys to the building. Ridiculous.
This is followed by the new sheriff stressing that they are sitting "my desk" in "my chair" using "my phone" clipping on "my badge" locking the door to "my building", and bemoaning the fact that they needed to clean out and organize "my desk drawer". Uh, got it. You're the new sheriff. YOU'RE in charge.
Then, there's the whole love interest thing. These two more or less live together, are planning a future together, get all tingly around each other, and when they kiss, ooo...... fire and passion, but NO, main female character keeps saying that she's "just not ready." Uhm, what's it going to take to be ready? If it's not your thoughts, feelings, and emotions, how do you know? I'm guessing there is a specified number of books before she will be "ready". Silly since the author was in such a rush to entangle the strong, independent, female lead with a man, and the "will they / won't they" has no suspense or mystery to it at all.
Again, I like the mystical aspects of this series, but they read as if they were written for young adults who haven't quite developed critical thinking skills to see the problems with the plot.