Pleasant, Easy Reading, Like the whole series, a "4"...
Lee Harris (a pseudonym) must like holidays, as all 14 of her Christine Bennett stories center around special days like Thanksgiving or Father's Day or Labor Day, etc. The stories follow a reasonably predictable pattern in which our early-30's leading lady, Chris, who with only a part-time teaching job to drain her resource of time, gets involved in missing persons or murder cases that either due to the passing of time or some other form of dis-interest are getting little or no police attention. Chris is a charming character who is new to much of the secular world having been a nun at St. Stephen's for fifteen years, arriving as a young, orphaned teenager. Her occasional naivete and fresh outlook on life adds different perspective to the stories, yet her own sincerity and persistence is usually what leads her to clue after clue til the mystery is solved. When things get tough, Chris is newly married to a NYC police detective, so he can conveniently get her data, trace phone calls, or call in favors to help our informal sleuth make forward progress.
The story at hand arises from a Christmas celebration at St. Stephen's that goes sour when a beloved former resident priest turns up missing at the last minute. The discovery of some of his clothes and his car soon point to foul play, but we get strung along for most of the book as the plot not only takes a few turns, but involves an older mystery (from seven years prior) that in a burst of tidiness gets cleaned up along with our priest by the final chapter. There are a few somewhat implausible parts of the book, like when Chris starts tailing suspects in her car or the inevitable few things people suddenly remember or find (after nearly a decade) and are nice enough to call Chris; but the writing style and action are generally as relaxed as are we as we read these light but entertaining stories.
The characters' lives evolve a little from book to book, so reading them in order might make sense, though it's certainly not necessary. We are also glad to report that the ex-nun angle leads to no Catholic proselytizing; indeed, Chris's best friend Melanie is Jewish, and so far, our author has even resisted what might be some interesting byplay from that scenario. So -- by the fire or at the beach, tough to go far wrong with a nice clean story with Lee Harris & Christine Bennett.