Thank you to the authors, publishers, and NetGalley for providing this ARC in exchange for an honest review. The recipe review and food pairing found on my Instagram feed are of my own doing.
Night of the Living Bread
Sugar and Spice Mysteries
Mary Lee Ashford
Night of the Living Bread, book four of the Sugar and Spice Mystery series, is a culinary cozy that is crafted to feed your desire for armchair sleuthing and provide great recipes. While Sugar is the main protagonist she would be lost and somewhat hungry without the baking genius of Dixie. These two ladies are a well-balanced set running a successful cookbook publishing business in the small cozy town of St. Ignatius. While Dixie is usually busy in the kitchen, Sugar is busy with the paperwork and legwork for the business and the questioning of suspects. Not that she would dream of getting in the way of Sheriff Terry’s investigation or putting herself in unnecessary danger.
The usually quiet town is hopping with activity. There is the impending film crew of a diner
review show looking to set up shop at The Red Hen, the death of Marla Mercer, and a string
of petty cash thefts. Thank goodness this is a stand-alone story given the number of plot twists.
The appearance of Dino Diner brings back an unpleasant memory from Sugar’s past and how
she ended up leaving the publishing world to join Dixie in St. Ignatius. Not much seems to ruffle
Sugar but Dino’s visit might ruffle feathers including those at The Red Hen. This is a town of
easy-going people and business neighbors who are interesting and even quirky. Sugar’s actual
neighbor, Mrs. Pickett is a most unusual and quite cantankerous character. In fact, it is due to
the surly senior neighbor, that Sugar even gets involved in mystery solving this time. All good
amateur sleuths need to be inquisitive. Mrs. Picket says that Sugar is good at snooping and
that someone needs to clear her niece, Mame, off of the suspect list. There aren’t really a lot
of people to suspect, after all, Marla was a nice lady who worked at the historical society, but
that doesn’t dissuade Sugar from looking. Sugar is as sweet as her name and would help
anyone. It is one of her character traits that is endearing and makes this series a joy to read.
This is a very enjoyable book with an engaging plot and fun characters. I was able to follow the clues but still did not figure out the culprit until the big reveal. My only request for the future installments is related to romance. As with most cozy books, there is a slow burn romance. Actually, both Sugar and Dixie have slow burn romances going, and I do mean sssslllloooowww. Maybe just a little more speed? After finishing the book, I felt the knead (LOL) to make the bread recipe after finishing the book see below.
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