I wasn't going to review this one, but decided I really had to do so after all.
First, I had forgotten that Tricia's bookstore had burned up, so thought it was something from offstage after the last book, but no. Here, she's waiting VERY impatiently for the insurance claim to start work on restoring the building. On the other hand, she's loaded; there's discussion of her buying the building from Bob Kelly. Couldn't she have at least started some of the work while the ckaim was pending?
Speaking of Bob ... much is made of this outstanding warrant from his youth (I believe it was for mooning someone). Well, it wasn't a major crime, and more to the point ... he's been in the area for years, if not the entire time, and they're just finding him now? I couldn't suspend enough disbelief there, sorry.
Then there's Christopher ... ummm ... one really has to be rather prudish to be concerned about whether Tricia someone was sleeping with an ex-spouse? The next morning he leaves her place in his pajamas. I seem to recall that he hadn't arrived intending to spend the night, so where did they come from? Was there an incident that destroyed the clothes he wore over there, or did he arrive in them and I missed that? If so, Tricia could've gone to his plathe first couple of books, thece and picked up some.
I understand that we find out more about Tricia's emphasis on food in the next book. But here she came across as her usual judgmental, anorexic self. Another reviewer reminded us that we see everything through her point-of-view, which isn't always that reliable. In the first couple of books the female police chief was very nasty to Tricia (who, of course, commented on how overweight that woman was); gee -- a newly arrived rich girl from New York starts meddling and that woman resented it - go figure! Interestingly, my favorite character Pixie Poe, the former prostitute, ex con, bookstore assistant seems sorry for Tricia, who actually doesn't have much of a life. Then again, she moved to a small town where the locals aren't going to be from her background. Angelica may be even richer, but she's thrown herself into several jobs, making it clear that Stoneham is her home. Bottom line: Tricia needs therapy.
Getting back to the story, I thought the climactic scene was one of the funniest in the series, although that may have been the way Karen White read it. Her voices for Miss Marple the cat, and Pixie Poe, are the highlights of each story for me.
Really 2.5 stars -- the next book set away from Stoneham sounds like an interesting challenge for the author.