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The 27-Ingredient Chili Con Carne Murders [Hardcover]

Nancy Pickard (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1, 1992
When one of her guests dies after eating her twenty-seven ingredient chili con carne, Eugenia Potter makes it her quest to find the person or persons who added a twenty-eighth--and fatal--ingredient to the recipe. 27,000 first printing.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Using notes and recipes of the late Virginia Rich ( The Cooking School Murders), Pickard, author of the Jenny Caine mysteries, serves up a fourth satisfying, chatty tale about master cook and amateur sleuth Eugenia Potter. In her home in New England, the widowed Mrs. Potter receives a call from Ricardo Ortega, manager of her Arizona ranch, who hints at trouble. Alarmed, she flies out to find that Ricardo and his granddaughter have disappeared. As neighboring ranchers and friends conduct a search, Mrs. Potter tries to determine the cause of Ricardo's unease. To feed the volunteers, she cooks up a huge pot of her 27-ingredient chili. Ricardo's body is discovered badly battered after an apparent fall, but Linda remains missing. The savory supper somewhat comforts the searchers, who leave with containers of leftovers. The next morning Mrs. Potter's elderly hired hand and two illegal immigrant boys are found dead, poisoned by the chili. Aiding the forthright sleuth in her ultimately successful pursuit of the killer and the missing girl is a rediscovered former lover. Suspense with dollops of romance and gossip makes this offering irresistible. Mystery Guild main selection.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 296 pages
  • Publisher: Delacorte Press; First Edition edition (December 1, 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385302274
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385302272
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,419,376 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The 28th Ingredient is Missing, June 22, 1998
I ordered this book before I knew that it was a Eugenia Potter mystery, based on the characters created by Virginia Rich. I always considered Rich's mysteries "lightweight." They are lacking in plot and suspense. Ms. Pickard religiously recreates these flaws.

The phrase, "Where's the beef?" for this chili comes to mind. If you want to read a nice romance between Eugenia and a former college sweetheart, then this book is for you. If you want a challenging mystery, look somewhere else. The dead body was found way too late and I guessed who done it way too soon.

With respect to the recipes, Diane Mott Davidson's series of Goldy of Goldilock's catering provides more and better ones, some of which I have tried and liked.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Richly Rewarding Experience, April 3, 1998
By A Customer
Reading Virginia Rich's mysteries always left me hungry, not simply for the food described within the pages, but for another adventure with Eugenia Andrews Potter, the main character of her novels. In quick succession, I read The Cooking School Murders, The Baked Bean Supper Murders, and The Nantucket Diet Murders. With Genia, I went to her childhood home in Iowa, to her cottage in Maine, and to Nantucket for a reunion with old friends.

I wondered where we'd go next and what wrongdoings she would uncover. For years, I anxiously checked the R's in the mystery section of each bookstore I entered, looking for a new release by Rich. NOTHING!

Then I learned that Virginia Rich had died. I mourned the loss of that fine writer, but I was consoled to learn that I wouldn't lose Mrs. Potter, too. Nancy Pickard, another of my favorite authors, was commissioned to write the long-awaited, fourth Eugenia Potter mystery. She was even given access to some of Rich's own material, thereby creating a rather unique collaboration. I bought the book, The 27-Ingredient Chili Con Carne Murders, the day it was released.

The locale of this mystery is Genia's "home on the range" in Arizona. Pickard's own experience as a rancher, as well as her superb writing skills, account for the realism inherent in the book. The plot is more than sufficiently entertaining, and there's even a romantic subplot this time around. Discussions of food abound, as in Rich's previous books, and recipes are again included on the inside covers of the book. The characterization is typical Rich, introducing me to still another circle of Genia's friends.

More than anything, I wanted Pickard's word picture of Mrs. Potter to be consistent with Rich's powerful portrayal of this precursor of Jessica Fletcher. Pickard didn't fail me. Genia is back in all her glory, from her introspective nature and her love of food and cooking to her graciousness and the "ubiquitous yellow pads with which she organized her l! ife."

It's a difficult task for an accomplished writer, accustomed to his or her own voice, to write in the style of another author. Pickard was more than equal to the challenge, and the product is a beautiful tribute to Rich. Many thanks, Nancy!

I have only one problem: I'm hungry again for more of Eugenia Potter. Am I greedy to hope for still another adventure?

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beyond The Grave; Gaining On The Murder Monster, March 24, 2005
Preferring the clarity of focus of a solitary mind, I normally detour around dual authorship fiction. But, in the case of Nancy Pickard's continuing the late Virginia Rich's Eugenia Potter series, I was intrigued by the potence of a fictional character surviving the grave of her creator.

I chose "The 27 Ingredient CHILI CON CARNE MURDERS" as my introduction to this Genia character, because it contained contributions from both authors, with Nancy working from plot notes Virginia left behind. That Chile offering bridged Rich's original three Potter novels, to Pickard's two continuations (two published, as far as I know).

Reading the Chili novel, I could easily see why Eugenia Potter had prevailed in her fictional world, and into our reality. She has embodied the prime ingredients of the endearing and enduring profile of Female Amateur Sleuth, the spunky, curious, "older" (or at least mature) woman seasoned with wisdom, wit, and wherewithal.

Who is Miss. Marple, Jessica Fletcher, Mrs. Pollifax, Chas Wheately, etc.?

It's uncanny that Eugenia is not only a spin-off of Virginia's personal life, but Genia fits-like-a-dove into Nancy's life as well. These two authors didn't know each other prior to each publishing a mystery of her own. Yet both authors were wives of cattle ranchers in the Southwestern US, with each couple owning a cottage in the Northeast. The main path divergence (if I recall my research correctly) is that Nancy is a decade or two younger than Virginia was, and is still enjoying the companionship of her cattle rancher husband; on the other hand, Virginia's husband is the survivor in that marriage. Though ... I might wonder who survived what.

Don't want to get into the story of these two authors, other than to say that the situation is so coincidentally uncanny as to be almost eerie, seeming very much like a pre-destined, meant-to-be deal. Of course, at this point in my life (prior to sprouting wings myself), I have speculations but no clues to the true underpinnings of this awesome parallel.

In any case, I'm thankful to have a continuing line of Potter mysteries to enjoy. (Potter ... is there something about that NAME??)

Chapter One of the Chili book tastefully toyed with a paranormal conundrum, as it opened with Eugenia thoughtfully preparing an Albondigas Soup, talking to herself as she absently handled herbs. I love an author who's able to capture readers with sensual ease, without resorting to surging the heartbeat to the heavens with a sudden, searing shock.

Eugenia's self-dialogue introduces an intuitive intrigue, as she wonders why she's slipped into unlikely behaviors and seemingly inappropriate spice choices, which don't fit her normal routines and present setting. Soliloquies and actions seem to be pivoting on a paranormal precipice of an impending dramatic change. Around this puzzling pique, Eugenia remains generally at one with herself and her morning machinations. With the reader salivating over the soup aroma's aura, the story slithers forward with such a natural flow that the reader is retained throughout the plot, without realizing that the novel has accomplished an absolute kidnap.

How can a book be a cozy, relaxing read, yet prevent the reader from noticing he's holding a book rather than walking through it? The continual "ins" are so seamless, I never noticed (so didn't dread) that awkward few seconds of releasing reality and tuning into a novel, when effort is required to shift gears and re-connected with the characters.

Add to these ever-present, engrossing, easy entries, a mystery which has a full-bodied complexity, a depth and timelessness worthy of the sleuth herself. Opening the book to any page sets off the aura of one of those ancient tomes of true fiction, which transport the old-soul-richness of a born and reborn story-weaver.

According to certain reports, Virginia Rich was the first true culinary author to be inspired to include recipes in a novel. Of course Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe series initiated a sleuth surrounded in gourmet goodies, but, Rich flamed up foodie features by offering The Recipe, sliding the realm of fiction closer to the sensual reality of life.

If this seeming "pre-destiny" continues, crossing borders of authors and sub-genres, we Earth residents may well discover a recipe for ending the mystery of murder.

Wide-Eyed & Hopeful,
Linda G. Shelnutt
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
For the first time in her life, Mrs. Potter welcomed bad news. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
leftover chili, chopped sirloin, ranch manager
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Charlie Watt, Ken Ryerson, Che Thomas, Las Palomas, Wind Valley, Kathy Amory, Lorraine Steinbach, Ricardo Ortega, Walt Amory, Linda Scarritt, Gallway Steinbach, Bandy Esposito, Highlands Ranch, Juanita Ortega, Lew Potter, Rimstone Mountains, Arizona Aerials, Genia Potter, Northcutt's Harbor, Palo Alto, Saguaro Ranch, White Research, Jed White, Sheriff Ben Lightfeather, The Biscuit
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