
“Vera’s wandered off again…”
“Steve was killed by a blow to the back of the head, but he was found in a locked room, and the only copies of his keys were locked inside that office with him,” Oliver said. “What we have here is a murder that clearly has magical ties…”
…oh, yeah, Oliver Jalmes is a magical detective, btw…
“…to it, and for the sake of magic’s future, we’ve got to solve it fast.”

“What’d I miss?”

Yeah, I’m open to self-published work now . . . but maybe not this open!
LikeLike
Oh, dude, baby steps — hell, I wouldn’t have jumped in here, it took the combined efforts of Matt Ingwalson, Rob Innes, Robert Trainor, Lee Sheldon, and James Scott Byrnside to get me to even crack the (electronic) cover on this one. Which is interesting, because I wonder if the “cozy witch-mystery” reader is on the lookout for other impossible crime stories…and if so, where do you send them?
LikeLike
I have a copy of this that had been on my Kindle for what seems like forever. I would like to reassure you that coffee and nachos is definitely not a thing here!
LikeLike
Part of my undertaking to read five of these this month is because I don’t need a huge self-publihed TBR alongide all the physical books staring mournfully out of my shelves at me (though, hell, it’s not the removing five books is going to make a huge difference…I’ll just feel a bit better about it), so I understand how you could have this hanging around unread for such a long time. Dunnon whether this review will elevate it or demote it in your intentions, and I shall not ask!
As for coffee ‘n’ nachoes, thanks heavens common sense prevails. Is this a typo? What foodstuff that wold accompany coffe auto-correct to “nachos”? Or vice versa I suppose: you starter for ten is “Drinks you’d have with nachos that your spelling software would correct to “coffee””…
LikeLike
I mean, if they’re in the same vein as cheese or BBQ flavoured Doritos, I’m more than willing to let coffee show its face if it wants.
I don’t hate the sound of this. I think there’s something to be said for trying to intertwine genres like this, even if the eventual outcome isn’t anything spectacular. Done with slightly deeper subplots and characters, anything has potential, right?
LikeLike
Coffee flavoured nachos? You are off in a universe of your own there, my friend.
And, hey, I’m a big fan of the crossover mystery, something I was put onto by John Dickson Carr’s historical period and Randall Garrett’s Too Many Magicians. Everything has potential, yes indeed, and when done well it can be marvellous.
LikeLike
Well, if nothing else, at least you got me to laugh a couple of times during the reading of this review.
Not every book can be a winner, but some books don’t even try to compete in the race, right?
LikeLike
Well, I think Nancy McGovern is comfortable with what she’s trying to write, and I’m not the audience she’s trying to reach. Serisouly, though, she deserves credit for at least putting some thought into her locked room setup — I’ve seen books and stories aimed at the “more serious” (for want of a better way of labelling it) market which haven’t thought it through as fully. And, as I say, I’d read another impossibility it it turned out she’d written one, so it can’t be entirely without merit.
LikeLike
Heh, I didn’t mean it quite as harshly as I now see it looks. 🙂
I just meant that this book probably competes in a completely different race.
LikeLike
Oh, sure, she’s not setting herself up as a rival to Paul Halter — she’s mainly just having a bit of fun, and in doing so has unfortunately caught the attention of a humourless pillock like myself… 🙂
LikeLike
You had me at “the revelation that she is a magical witch whose powers are about to bloom.” And hey, if you weren’t doing coffee and nachos on your recent east coast US trip, then what on earth where you having for breakfast?
LikeLike
I was having waffles and Gatorade and marshmallows, which I was assured is a New England tradition…
LikeLike
I don’t think I’ve ever read a cozy. The idea of being comfortable during a murder mystery doesn’t strike me as enjoyable. However, this author is very popular and prolific, so she must know exactly what her readers want.
On a side note, I ordered Murder on the Way based on your recommendation. Amazon sent me an e-mail letting me know that it’s…on the way. I’d never heard of the author. Looking forward to it.
LikeLike
Yeah, it absolutely takes all sorts — though the notion of being comfortable is an interesting one. You may have just lit the spark of an idea for a post in which I shall return to this very topic…provided I a) remember and b) can fidn the time to write it. Watch this space, but with, like, low expectations.
I’ll be extremely interested in your take on Murder on the Way — hell, I’m extremely interested in anyone’s take on that book — particularly on account of how Goodnight Irene shares its “house party gone flip-its-lid mental” sub-sub-sub-genre. Both have this wild creativity to them, and it’s interesting to me to read something else in GI that explored such a limited space as frenetically and satisfyingly.
I really hope you enjoy it!
LikeLike