Liked it, but...
A cozy mystery with some humor & supernatural elements and a maturing romance that's a touch darker than the previous ones in the series as it touches on slavery, child ghosts, children in danger, and attempting to reconnect as an adult with a father that abandoned you as a child. Ok that list makes this book sound like a downer, which it is not. However, it's not light and fun either.
I liked this book, I'm invested in the characters, but I also had some issues with it (more details below). For example, does the heroine really have to walk into stupid danger without a cellphone or back up & get herself in need of rescue again? I appreciate that the author keeps the mysteries fresh (i.e. it doesn't start with a dead body every time), but I'd appreciate a fresh type of ending too. Again this book ends with the main mystery solved but with more than one ongoing issue and a bit of a cliffhanger. I recommend reading the series in order.
*****Spoiler Alert*****
This Book Includes
Violence. recollections of children trapped together below deck on boats & implied abuse, children in chains, held at knife & gunpoint, fights for weapon, knocked unconscious, magical ghost attack.
Sex. Sex occurs off-page.
Other. Touches on slavery, racism, child abuse, child murder, reconnecting as an adult with a father that abandoned the character as a child.
Things That Bothered Me
Stupid Heroine
I understand that having the bad guys and good guys confront each other makes a good ending, but this ending made the heroine appear criminally stupid. First, they don't tell the cops / FBI what they're going to try even though they've told them everything else. Second, their plan is to call the cops if the spell works except the heroine doesn't bring her phone. Third, when they split up in the dark they don't use the spell from book 2 that would help them find each other in the dark. Fourth, even though the boat is not going anywhere the heroine gets on it instead of first getting back up. Fifth, the heroine gets in a room with one door that can locked from the outside without having thoroughly checked the area for bad guys. Last but not least, let's nor forget that this is the fourth book and hence the fourth tine she's done something stupid and ended up captured.
Whining Clove & Co-dependency
In the previous books the cousins bickering was funny. However, in this book instead of the author saying that Clove's whining annoyed the heroine, we got to hear Clove whining and it annoyed me. This one crossed the line a bit for me from a funny take of dysfunctional family to a semi-serious maybe that character should move out & try therapy view of co-dependency. Perhaps the characters relationships are just evolving and it is part of the set up for the next book., but it just hit a weird in-between note here for me.
Manufactured Fight
The mid-book fight between the main couple felt a bit manufactured to me. It moved their relationship forward when they made up, but at the time I didn't get why either of those characters reacted with anger in that situation.
Balls In the Air
This book ends with a lot of things unresolved besides the dramatic cliffhanger (the dads situation, the boyfriend's family coming to visit, Brian Kelly owning the paper, the fight with Edith, Aunt Tillie's new relationship). A cliffhanger is one thing, but 10,000 loose ends is another.