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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Pleasing Opener for a Cozy Mystery Series,
By "missprentice" (Raleigh, NC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Crewel World (Needlecraft Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
Where does a middle-aged woman go when her high-flying lifestyle has crashed and her marriage is over? In the first book in Monica Ferris' needlecraft mystery series, big-city dweller Betsy Devonshire turns to her sister Margot, a widow with a successful needlecraft shop in Excelsior, Minnesota, a friendly small town which Betsy characterizes as "Mayberry-of-the-North."Working in Margot's shop, Betsy is able to revive her lagging spirits and learn more about the curious world of needlework, a complicated sub-culture with practices, etiquette, and a language all its own. What she doesn't learn until it's too late is that Margot has a dangerous enemy who is willing to kill to achieve an end-and does. Now, as Margot's grieving heir, Betsy reluctantly takes on not only the responsibility of a small business, but the job of finding out who could have murdered her kind-hearted, popular sister. As a cozy mystery fan, I am happily content to wait five chapters for the murder to occur, but other readers may not be so patient. Though admittedly taking her time about it, Ferris establishes strong characterizations in these early chapters and evokes such an appealing ambiance about the real-life town of Excelsior that I hope the Chamber of Commerce takes note. The clues to the perpetrator are subtle, but fairly sprinkled throughout the book and the solution to the mystery, when revealed, is both intriguing and satisfying. Best of all, Betsy Devonshire grows through this poignant and harrowing experience and emerges as a person we like, respect and would want to meet again.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Provides a great break from your own needlework projects.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Crewel World (Needlecraft Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
As as avid quilter/needleworker I enjoyed this book tremendously. It was a cozy, light read that I was able to pick up when I was at a frustration point with my current needlework project. I was fairly sure I recognized the killer before the end of the book but for me it was a toss-up between two characters. I would recommend this book for anyone wanting a cozy mystery to help them through creatively restless hours of their own. I'm already eagerly awaiting the next book and I've added Monica Ferris to my list of what I call my favorite "gentle" murder mystery writers.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not profound but entertaining....,
By A Customer
This review is from: Crewel World (Needlecraft Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
First off, I reserve "5 starts" for books I consider works of art. This book is not a work of art but is engaging, entertaining, diverting - just generally a good read.I was home sick today, sinus infection, too headachy to work on anything intensive, so I took this off the shelf. And I couldn't put it down until I was done. The story describes how Betsy Devonshire, coming off her divorce from "the pig" (a philandering college professor), has chucked it all and headed North to hang out with her sister, Margot, for a while. Margot is a sweet person, beloved of nearly all the townspeople in tiny Excelsior, Minnesota. Margot runs a needlework business - seemingly more for the benefit of her regular customers than for any huge profits. Then, Margot is killed in a burglary. Or so it seems at first. Betsy is unwilling to accept this and tries to "push" the police to investigate, while trying to keep the shop going. One of the things that made this book fun were the secondary characters - Godwin, the talented shop assistant (who happens to be gay); Jill, the cop who has a warm heart under her Norwegian ice-princess exterior; Irene, Margot's rival needlepointer, who is creepy, weird, and may be a murderer...and on and on. Oh yes, there is also Sophie, the store cat. I enjoyed this one and plan to read the rest of the series. Yes, I did guess "who dun it" fairly early on. But that didn't spoil the story for me. The characters are enjoyable. The setting is familiar (I come originally from the Upper Midwest and often get homesick) and is well-described. The needlework angle is a real plus for me (I knit and quilt and have done embroidery and needlepoint in the past). At a few points in the story, there are "expository notes" that are perhaps a bit jarring. And the story is fairly simple. But this novel is "comfort reading" at its best - fun characters, a pleasant setting, the sense that justice is served in the end. I could have done much worse with my afternoon than to read this book.
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