Death by Drowning, a Josiah Reynolds mystery, Book 2
by Abigail Keam
Again, this book is beautifully edited and proofed -- always major pluses in my book. The plotting of the books is good, although I thought the mystery of this book was rather weak, and was a poor second to the personal drama of the main character. While I certainly assume that the situations and relationships of the main character will be a focal point of the book, I don't expect the main mystery to take such a back seat. In this case, it felt like an afterthought, and I might have been happier if the author had just stuck with what was obviously her main interest, which was Josiah's recovery, and her continued position of danger due to the possible survival of her adversary from the first novel. So much going on, it's easy to lose track of who is who and why or where. While the first novel was busy character and event wise, too, I thought that might be to set the scene for the upcoming series. However, this book was just as crowded with characters, both old and new. The main character isn't exactly loveable. Crabby -- even irascible might be a better description. Fun to read about, but you wouldn't exactly want her living next door.
In this episode, Josiah has survived the event that was the climax of the first novel. She has undergone extensive dental and plastic surgeries, as well as many other surgeries to repair some of the damage done to her at the end of the first novel. Her mysterious daughter has whisked her away to Key West to recuperate and provided her with a staff of bodyguards, physical therapists, and a personal assistant/caretaker to aid her healing, and in learning to speak and walk again. It is tough going for Josiah. She misses Kentucky, she feels (and rightly so) sorry for herself, and she knows that neither she nor her daughter have sufficient funds to cover the mound of medical bills and caretaker bills that are piling up. Her caretaker, Jake, takes charge of her physical therapy, building his own regimen and disallowing her to skip sessions or wheedle her way out of doing the therapy to her fullest ability. Franklin comes to visit her and brings Baby with him, a real lift to her spirits as she didn't realize the dog had survived the attack. With her spirits lifted, she finds a new will to live and recover. Her friend from the Farmers Market, Irene, also comes to visit, insisting that Josiah get a new haircut and beauty makeover, which also increases Josiah's desire to recover enough to resume a semblance of her old life. Irene also brings the new mystery to Josiah. Irene's nephew has died back in Kentucky. He drowned on the river, a river he spent much time on, and Irene believes there is more to the story than him just capsizing his kayak.
Soon after her guests return to Kentucky, Jake takes Josiah home, too. She finds that The Butterfly has been restored and that Matt has done extensive work on the small guest house where he has been living, as well as on the property. Her bees are doing well, and her attorney has restored the barn/stables, as promised, and moved in her thoroughbred horse and its two companion goats. Now, if she can just continue to recover, things will get back to normal -- won't they?
Of course they won't. Again, the mystery that lends its name to the novel, is almost a non-issue with the book. Josiah is much more interested in who destroyed two of her bee hives, what everyone in town is talking about (in relation to her, anyway), what the author she met in the last novel is up to (and how it will affect her), how she will make enough money to keep up the farm and pay her bills, her growing personal interest in her caretaker, and the possible/probable survival of her adversary, O'nan, and what that will mean to her and those she loves in the future.
Again, the book ends with a strong lead into the next book, although not quite the cliffhanger of the first book -- and I hate cliffhangers (this is not tv). Again, if I were reading this as a purchased as a single book, I'd just stop reading the series, satisfied that she would be deviled by this adversary for some time to come. As I already have the next (and a few more) of the books, I'll probably keep reading them. But note to all authors: novels, even series novels, should be stand alone. Trust your writing skill to carry your reader from one episode to the next. If you don't trust your skill to keep readers interested in your work, why should the reader?