From Diane Moody author of the bestselling Of Windmills and War.
One small town. Three big mysteries.
This trilogy include all three Braxton mysteries;
The Demise (Was he pushed, or did he jump off the Braxton water tower?) The Legacy (Who stole Braxton's most valuable artifact, and why?) The Sibling (Who murdered one of Braxton's favorite sons?)
. . . and how are all three of these mysteries connected?
You'll get over 1,200 pages of twists, and turns, and surprises.
"If you love a good mystery, this trilogy is for you." - OBT Books
Born in Texas and raised in Oklahoma, Diane Hale Moody is a graduate of Oklahoma State University. She lives with her husband Ken in the rolling hills just outside of Nashville. They are the proud parents of two grown and extraordinary children, Hannah and Ben.
Just after moving to Tennessee in 1999, Diane felt the tug of a long-neglected passion to write again. Since then, she's written a column for her local newspaper, feature articles for various magazines and curriculum, and several novels with a dozen more stories eagerly vying for her attention.
When she's not reading or writing, Diane enjoys an eclectic taste in music and movies, great coffee, the company of good friends, and the adoration of a peculiar little pooch named Darby.
Fun read from the beginning the end and beyond! Take a chance and upload-download load it sideways just do it! On to some WWII historical fiction and who knows what after… happy reading.
This is a trilogy of three books each with its own murder mystery and romantic developments yet entwined as a small town community often is. I enjoyed it all even though the third book sometimes got a bit preachy.
Listened on Audible (Included). Whispersynced w/book two & three of series on Kindle.
Enjoyed this series. Good character development. Sometimes the plots required a suspension of belief. Certain characters were never brought to justice (book one). I felt somewhere around the middle of book two that there were some themes similar to Jan Karon’s Mitford series (long sermons from the pastor, bringing people into a real relationship with Christ, etc). Then in book three, I noted three distinct nods to Karon in certain utterances from characters. The audiobook narrator was fantastic. I would love to hear more of her work. All in all, I’m excited to explore more work from this author.
Too campy, childish, and cliche to be an enjoyable read. Maybe a teenage girl would enjoy it, but I found it torturous to read. If I could give it no stars. I would.