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.
The Body in the Kitchen Garden
A Hill House Vintage Murder Mystery #2
Paula Sutton
Daphne Brewster and family have settled into country life in the quiet town of Pudding Corner near Pepperbridge. Where village life is quiet and pleasant because the locals are sure to observe that rules are followed. Where everything has its place and everyone must be kept in theirs. This is the second book in the Hill House Vintage Murder Mysteries series. Where the majority of the story is from the point of view of our sleuth, Daphne Brewster whole relocated with her family from the urban sprawl of south London and after helping to solve a murder, she has been more or less accepted as one of the villagers.
Daphne is a strong character, with a kind heart and a desire to defend the excluded, overlooked, and even cranky. Like the concern and care she shows to Patsy Warburton after the unexpected loss of her older sister, Nancy. Patsy swears that Nancy, regardless of her age and saggy stockings, did not fall off of the ladder and die. Patsy believes that it was not an accident that there are foul dealings afoot. Well of course there are, just ask Augusta Papplewick and Marianne Forbes who both want something done about the youths who are congregating on the green, as they must be up to no good, what with the rash of petty thefts and random assaults. Not to mention that there is a disheveled stranger who may or may not be a Fagin-style vagrant and has been seen lurking around town. Daphne doesn’t necessarily go looking for answers but there are things that happen to cause her to ponder and try to make sense of the big and little picture. Inspector Hargreaves would like it if Daphne would stick to her antique furniture shop business and leave the detecting and career-defining moments of glory to himself. I am not sure how she has time to do all that she does, what with helping Helena Carter, fiancĂ© of Lord Hugh Darlington, the prodigal son who has returned from abroad, by remodeling and repurposing antiques in order to try and save the family estate. Did I mention that Daphne makes wonderful baked goods such as Bakewell Slices and is also happily married with three children and an adorable miniature dachshund named Byron.
This is a well throughout stand-alone mystery, but readers be warned, there are spoilers in the second book that retell the solution to the mystery of the first book. As with the last book, I thought that I had it figured out, but I was wrong. It is so much more complicated than I realized and there are some sly red herrings that make one go down a rabbit hole.

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