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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars cute cozy
Biggie Weatherford is famous in Job's Crossing, Texas because her family founded the town and she is the richest person in it. Her notoriety has spread to East Texas because of her work in the DAR and her knack for solving various homicides. Her twelve-year-old grandson lives with her and adores his grandmother because life with her is anything but dull.

Biggie's...

Published on August 23, 2001 by Harriet Klausner

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Just OK
It's OK but not as good as BIGGIE AND THE MEDDLESOME MAILMAN. The obvious question is why is this a lesser work. Perhaps it is because I read about the murder of the mailman before I read about the quincy ghost and had already met J.R.'s quirky household. Or perhaps it is because the story was moved out of Job's Crossing, Texas, the town I had come to know well in the...
Published on November 6, 2006 by Roger Long


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Just OK, November 6, 2006
By 
It's OK but not as good as BIGGIE AND THE MEDDLESOME MAILMAN. The obvious question is why is this a lesser work. Perhaps it is because I read about the murder of the mailman before I read about the quincy ghost and had already met J.R.'s quirky household. Or perhaps it is because the story was moved out of Job's Crossing, Texas, the town I had come to know well in the previous novel.

However, I think it is something else more than anything. This whole business about secret panels and long-gone tragedies affecting today's actions is a bit much. The reasoning behind the plot is just too intricate, too far-fetched for my taste. I just never quite bought into it as I had in the meddlesome mailman plot.

Biggie's household is still interesting, but I had a hard time following all the other characters in Quincy. They seemed to run together into one glob.

I'll read more in the Biggie series and hope I'll find another as good as the first I read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars cute cozy, August 23, 2001
Biggie Weatherford is famous in Job's Crossing, Texas because her family founded the town and she is the richest person in it. Her notoriety has spread to East Texas because of her work in the DAR and her knack for solving various homicides. Her twelve-year-old grandson lives with her and adores his grandmother because life with her is anything but dull.

Biggie's latest project is starting up a historical society in Job's Crossing. She, her grandson, and a few townsfolk travel to Quincy (near the Louisiana border) because their historical society is giving a four-day workshop on how to preserve the local history. The hotel Biggie and company are staying at is supposedly haunted but it isn't a ghost they see from their windows. It's the body of the waitress who served them the night before, a butcher knife in her chest. When the sheriff is suddenly hospitalized, he asks Biggie to help him in his investigation, a job she eagerly accepts.

This story is written in the first person narrative through the viewpoint of a twelve-year-old boy who has seen more tragedy and evil in his life than most adults ever do. Although BIGGIE AND THE QUINCY GHOST has a dark side to it at times, this cozy is full of homilies and charming stories about small town living both past and present. Nancy Bell knows how to tell a good story with characters that represent the spectrum of the human race.

Harriet Klausner

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun and murder in East Texas, September 25, 2001
J.R. Weatherford and his grandmother Biggie visit Quincy, Texas to learn what it would take to put together a historical society. Quincy (based on Jefferson, Texas) is obsessed with its history including a colorful ghost. Yet the dead woman J.R. discovers in the fountain outside his hotel room is no ghost. With the Sheriff sick, Biggie is called in to investigate.

BIGGIE AND THE QUINCY GHOST is fun. J.R. is the point of view character and author Nancy Bell does a fine job remaining true both to the 12-year-old character telling the story, and to the East Texas setting. Anyone who knows Texans will get a smile (or belly-laugh) from some of the expressions that J.R. uses.

Bell provides the reader with a rich serving of Texas history, Texasisms, and a purely enjoyable mystery.

Although some of the materials may be inappropriate for children, BIGGIE AND THE QUINCY GHOST is easy to read and a lot of fun.

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5.0 out of 5 stars cute cozy, August 23, 2001
Biggie Weatherford is famous in Job's Crossing, Texas because her family founded the town and she is the richest person in it. Her notoriety has spread to East Texas because of her work in the DAR and her knack for solving various homicides. Her twelve-year-old grandson lives with her and adores his grandmother because life with her is anything but dull.

Biggie's latest project is starting up a historical society in Job's Crossing. She, her grandson, and a few townsfolk travel to Quincy (near the Louisiana border) because their historical society is giving a four-day workshop on how to preserve the local history. The hotel Biggie and company are staying at is supposedly haunted but it isn't a ghost they see from their windows. It's the body of the waitress who served them the night before, a butcher knife in her chest. When the sheriff is suddenly hospitalized, he asks Biggie to help him in his investigation, a job she eagerly accepts.

This story is written in the first person narrative through the viewpoint of a twelve-year-old boy who has seen more tragedy and evil in his life than most adults ever do. Although BIGGIE AND THE QUINCY GHOST has a dark side to it at times, this cozy is full of homilies and charming stories about small town living both past and present. Nancy Bell knows how to tell a good story with characters that represent the spectrum of the human race.

Harriet Klausner

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Biggie and the Quincy Ghost
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