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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
They May be False Profits, But They Are Enjoyable, November 21, 2007
This review is from: Beware False Profits (Ministry is Murder Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
Aggie Sloan-Wilcox and her minister husband Ed are enjoying a weekend away in New York City. But their weekend alone comes to a quick end when they learn that Joe Wagner, a member of their congregation in Ohio, has vanished while in New York on business. Following the few clues they have, they learn the last place he had been seen was a club where he performed as a female impersonator.
They arrive back in Emerald Springs, Ohio, just in time for Mayday!, the annual fundraiser for the local food bank where Joe worked. The fact that he's not there for it means something must have happened to him.
But Joe's disappearance takes a back seat when the mayor's wife dies during the fundraiser. Hazel Kefauvers was a difficult person always sticking her nose into everything. She'd just been made chair of the food bank's board and was making life difficult for everyone. Is that why she died? What part does Joe's disappearance play in the murder? And can Aggie find the missing punch bowl?
As with previous entries in the series, this is a fun cozy mystery. The multiple sub-plots did slow down the story once or twice, but not for very long. The story held plenty of twists before reaching the satisfying climax. The characters are wonderfully real, especially the members of Aggie's family. And Aggie narrates all of this with a nice sense of humor that keeps me coming back for more.
I can't wait to read Aggie's further adventures. If you enjoy a great cozy mystery, don't miss this series.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An intelligent who-dunnit., November 5, 2007
This review is from: Beware False Profits (Ministry is Murder Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
Being the wife of a minister is a full time job in itself. But Aggie Sloan-Wilcox is just as dedicated to the people of Emerald Springs as her husband, Ed, is. That does not mean Aggie thinks well of the ones who are given to hypocrisy, but Aggie manages to either avoid them or deal with them. Privacy for Aggie and Ed is almost nonexistent; even at home where the kids and Junie, Aggie's mother, are under the roof. So Aggie is excited to get some time away from Emerald Springs and be with Ed in New York for awhile. Unfortunately, getting away for awhile is harder than she realizes. They are in New York less than a day before Emerald Springs is calling.
Joe Wagner, the director of Helping Hands food bank, has disappeared. Since Joe disappeared while in New York, Ed and Aggie are appointed the task for searching for him. According to Maura, Joe's wife, Joe traveled to New York once a month for meetings. Seems Maura has no idea that Joe did not really travel to New York for meetings; once a month Joe is on stage as a female impersonator.
The mystery of Joe's disappearance is put on the back burner when the mayor's wife, Hazel Kefauver, falls dead during the food bank's annual fund-raiser. Detective Kirkor Roussos is not surprised to find Aggie on the scene. If someone in the area dies, Aggie is usually there when it happens; or so it seems. The suspect list is long. Mayor Kefauver is due to inherit everything. Everyone knows the couple was not too close and several knew of the mayor multiple affairs. There are rumors of financial fraud and Hazel knew about it. Perhaps Joe arranged her death to cover it up and disappeared to make sure he was not around to blame. Perhaps it was Chad Sutterfield; many know that Chad wants Joe's job and Hazel is too nosy for her own good. It's up to Aggie to find out what is going on, before someone else dies.
**** I must say that I love this mystery series. The character of Aggie may be a minister's wife, but she is definitely not starched under the collar (or as some would say "a bible thumper"). She is very down to earth. As to her thoughts about those around her, I find myself agreeing with her most of the time. Some of the secondary characters have personalities that remind me of real people I know. That tells me this author makes sure that even the characters that are not constantly in the spot light are well developed. Not all authors go to that length in order to make stories more realistic. If you enjoy testing your wits with a good mystery on cold winter nights, pick up this gem. Author Emilie Richards writes intelligent "who-dunnits" with some colorful characters. ****
Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
intelligently constructed cozy, October 29, 2007
This review is from: Beware False Profits (Ministry is Murder Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
Aggie Sloan-Wilcox is the wife of Pastor Ed Wilcox of the Unitarian-Universal Church in Emerald Springs, Ohio; the beautiful serene town offers little peace to the Wilcox. There house is crowded because her mother lives with them until her Victorian house is renovated into a combination home and crafts shop.
Needing some romance in their lives, they go to New York City where they get a call from parishioner Mara Wagner who tells them her spouse Joe never came home from his monthly business trip. A clue leads Aggie and Ed to the Pussycat Club where they learn that Ed's "business" is dressing up in women's garb to perform on stage as a female impersonator. At a fund raiser to benefit a charity that Joe runs, his nemesis Hazel Kefauver keels over and dies. Later they find out she was poisoned; Aggie believes there is a link between the murder and the disappearance. While trying to discover who killed Hazel and where Joe is, Aggie looks for the church's' valuable antique punch bowl that she lost and is trying to learn the identity of the carpenter working at her mom's new home.
Fans of intelligently constructed cozies will thoroughly enjoy BEWARE FALSE PROFITS. The heroine seems so natural as a sleuth that the audience will find her investigations believable and think she would make a good police detective though she is an amateur. Although Aggie is a minister's wife, she defies the stereotypes because of her independence to do what she believes is the right thing even if that means swimming upstream against a current of parishioners, her spouse and a cop. She makes this a fine small town Midwest mystery.
Harriet Klausner
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