An engaging and believable heroine. (Earlene Fowler)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Entertaining amateur sleuth tale,
This review is from: Death of a Songbird (Birdwatcher's Mysteries) (Paperback)
The good news is that every room in the Elk Park, Colorado Drummond Hotel is filled due to the Migration Alliance hosting a convention here. The bad news is that two maids are ailing with the flu. The ugly news is that for some unexplained reason silent partner Esther Mills canceled the coffee shipment from their distributor, Chipe Coffee Company. The visible partner Lark Drummond cannot learn why her partner committed such a dramatic, seemingly criminal act of leaving the hotel nearing caffeine withdrawal syndrome and hurting their investment in the coffee distributing firm.Lark meets Rachel Stanhope at a nearby restaurant where they observe a nasty public incident involving Esther. Lark and Rachel go birdwatching together, but instead of spotting a rare aviary, Lark observes someone murdering Esther. Proving birds of a feather stick together, Lark and several birdwatchers begin making their own inquiries, but soon uncover a plethora of viable suspects who had the motives to murder Esther. DEATH OF A SONGBIRD is an entertaining amateur sleuth(s) tale that contains a story line that smoothly sings a bird song. The tale is fun because the key character Lark seems so real. Besides the lack of coffee causing many readers to think this is a horror story (required reading at night), Esther comes across as too mean for someone who apparently was held in such high esteem for more than just her business acumen. Still, readers will enjoy observing this book while using field binoculars to locate the first tale in this soaring series, A RANT OF RAVENS. Harriet Klausner
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good reading, enjoyable characters,
By A Customer
This review is from: Death of a Songbird (Birdwatcher's Mysteries) (Paperback)
This is a quick, fun mystery-read -- interesting, informative (talking about coffee production and markets and birding), and relaxing to spend time with. The characters have developed well since the author's first book (Rant of Ravens). For Colorado readers -- or those who just love Colorado and it's mountains -- it's even more fun to read, as the book setting takes place in a town remarkably similar to Evergreen, Colorado.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
NEVADA BARR READERS WILL LOVE DEATH OF A SONGBIRD!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Death of a Songbird (Birdwatcher's Mysteries) (Paperback)
I loved this book! The characters are engaging, the action fast-paced, and Goff's writing is filled with passion for her subject. In addition to this book being a marvelous read, I learned about the frighteningly close ties between coffee growth (shade grown vs. full-sun grown coffee) and the survival of our migratory song birds. I am shocked and dismayed at some of the facts Goff reveals. My 103-yr-old grandmother remembers skies full of birds and their extraordinary melodies, and she asks me where the birds have gone. I never fully appreciated her question until I read this book. An amazing read, a wonderful bite-your-nails conclusion, and an intelligent look at a topic that's important to all of us--or should be. Watch out, Nevada Barr, Goff is on your trail!
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