The Last Drop of Hemlock
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Author: Katherine Schellman
I requested a digital advanced readers copy from NetGalley, St. Martin’s Press and Dreamscape Media and providing my opinion voluntarily and unbiased.
Synopsis: New York, 1924. Vivian Kelly has gotten a job at the Nightingale, a speakeasy known to the young and fun as a place where the rules of society can be tossed aside for a dance and a drink, and things are finally looking up for her and her sister Florence. They might not be living like queens—still living in a dingy, two-room tenement, still scrimping and saving—but they're confident in keeping a roof over their heads and, every once in a while, there is fried ham for breakfast.
Of course, things were even better before Bea's Uncle Pearlie, the doorman for the Nightingale, was poisoned. Bea has been Vivian's best friend since before she can remember, and though Pearlie's death is ruled a suicide, Bea's sure her uncle wouldn't have killed himself. After all, he had the family to care for . . . and there have been rumors of a mysterious letter writer, blackmailing Vivian's poorest neighbors for their most valuable possessions, threatening poison if they don't comply.
With the Nightingale's dangerously lovely owner, Honor, worried for her employees' safety and Bea determined to prove her Uncle was murdered, Vivian once again finds herself digging through a dead man's past in hopes of stopping a killer.
My Thoughts: This was book number two of the Nightingale Mysteries. I did not read the first book and was able to navigate fine in this second book, so it can be read as a standalone. This is a slow burn atmospheric cozy mystery. It was a little too slow for my liking. The author creates a very diversified 1920’s Manhattan with Black, Asian, Bisexuality, and Jewish.
The characters were mysterious, expansive, and creative. The one character that I really did not care for was Viv and Flo’s boss at the sewing shop, she was just so mean and played a bigger part in the book that I wanted to see. The characters from the Nightingale were not blood but were created as family, which is so refreshing to see. It is also not the blood that makes a person family. The author’s attention to detail was so immersive that you felt like you had been dropped in New York in 1920. The pacing and flow of the book was off to me, the beginning was great and the last part of the story was great, but the middle seemed to drag on too much. I hoping some of the parts that fell flat will be resolved in book three.
I was lucky to get the digital arc and audio arc. The narrator did a good job with narration and I have read that this book two was narrated better than book one. Overall, a good mystery and if you love historical cozy mysteries, then I would recommend this one for you.