Thanks to NetGalley for an advance copy of this combined book.
The first book in this selection was Turkey Day Murder, written in 2008. Lucy is working as a part-time reporter for the local paper. The local Indian band wants to build a casino on some land being used as a turkey farm, and many locals are opposed, as is Curt Nolan, a member of the tribe. When Curt is found dead at the Thanksgiving Day football game, Lucy is upset as she had met him at the local town council meeting. She agrees to take his dog, renamed Kudo. Lucy nearly comes to harm at the turkey farm when cornered by the killer, but Kudo interrupts (along with the local policeman) and she is saved. Months later, at the ground breaking for the casino, Indian remains are unearthed by the excavator, and construction is stopped due to their historical importance. Another fast and fun read.
The second book was Turkey Trot Murder, written in 2017, and it's a very good read. Lucy is training for the Thanksgiving Day run, the Turkey Trot. Only Zoe and Sara are still living at home but both have other plans, so it will be just her and Bill for dinner on the holiday. While running along Blueberry Lake, Lucy see pink on the lake, and finds the body of Alison Franklin, 20 year old daughter of very wealthy Ed Robertson. What had made her venture onto the thin ice of the lake? Then Bill gets a job restoring the old pub on the harbour into a upscale eatery "The Cali Cafe" in fusion style, owned by celebrity chef Ric Rodriguez and his son Matt. Meanwhile, the town is angry about the drug dealers who are killing the kids in the town, and a group called America for Americans, led by Ed Franklin, is demanding that the Rodriguez family leave town, even though their family has been living in the USA before the American revolution. When Lucy sees Hank DeVries, a former boyfriend of Elizabeth, buying drugs at the lake parking lot, she approaches him and suggests he go into rehab. Then there's an explosion at the Cali Cafe and Bill is injured. Lucy is determined to find out who's behind both murders.
I found this book very topical because of the drug abuse and the outpouring of hate for "non-Americans". It's not just a cozy, but a commentary of today's world.