Friday means Friday’s
Forgotten Books hosted by Patti Abbott. Normally I would not select a book that
was so recently published in print for FFB. But, when Dorothy Francis announced
Wednesday that her book, Daiquiri Dock
Murder: A Key West Mystery was now available as an e-book from Untreed
Reads, (go here for Untreed Reads price, synopsis, and excerpt) I decided to make
it the subject of my FFB review today.….
If it is spring it must be time to go back to Key
West via author Dorothy Francis. This year she takes readers there via her
latest cozy style mystery titled Daiquiri Dock Murder: A Key West Mystery.
Featuring a cast of offbeat characters, plenty of local culture and a mystery
that has more than a few twists the read is a comfortably good one. It also
fits well into line with the style and tone of other books generated by this
author.
Rafa Blue,
who has issues with her mother and sister, is at the Daiquiri Dock Marina as
this novel opens. It is a dark and stormy night thanks to a tropical storm that
has strengthened to a minimal hurricane and is currently pounding through the
Keys. Rafa Blue needs to check the family boat, a cabin cruiser named “The Bail Bond” and make sure it is
safely secured in its slip. While the boat is fine, somebody is in the stormy
sea next to the boat and in trouble.
Rafa flees back to her car and uses
her cellphone to call for help. After calling 911 for help for her friend and
dock master Diego Casterano, Rafa Blue returns to the scene and eventually goes
into the storm tossed waters for him. Unfortunately, there is no help possible
for Diego and the effort puts Rafa into the hospital for a brief time.
Rafa is interesting and has her
fingers in many pies. She dreams of writing novel length fiction, currently
writes a column for the local newspaper about interesting local people, lives
in a hotel and helps out at the Frangipani Room. Not to mention a painful
personal history with her family, a boyfriend that wants marriage, and a few
other odds and ends. Getting considered a suspect in the murder of her friend
Diego means that she has to investigate---something the local police chief
surprisingly seems to encourage.
The latest mystery from author
Dorothy Francis is another solidly good one featuring strong primary and
secondary characters. Several secondary characters in this novel closely
resemble characters from other books. Once again, several of the suspects are
Rafa’s friends and they all work at an open air restaurant deal that opens
around sundown, food is served, and music is played. That background setting is
clearly one the author feels comfortable with as it is used again in this
novel. There is another “Mama G.” who once again is territorial about music and
makes a special kind of food for the patrons. Once again the heroine is
conflicted about the intentions of her boyfriend and her feelings, drives a
Prius, and has extensively read about psychopaths and sociopaths.
The primary mystery is different and
strong in all cozy style aspects. An interesting and complicated case, the
classic assemblage of characters to be questioned by the police, and other
aspects are all done well. The constant
misdirection as various people in Rafa’s life are considered in the role of the
suspected murderer before they either eliminate themselves or are killed
removing them from the suspect list also works well. The end result in Daiquiri
Dock Murder: A Key West Mystery is another steady and good novel by
Dorothy Francis.
Daiquiri Dock Murder: A Key West
Mystery
Dorothy Francis
Five Star (Part of Gale, Cengage
Learning)
April 2012
ISBN# 978-1-4328-2574-4
Hardback
292 Pages
$25.95
Material supplied by the author in
exchange for my objective review.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2012, 2013
3 comments:
Sounds like a good read! I've started to like cozies more lately, because of the quirky characters usually involved.
Morgan Mandel
http://www.morganmandel.com
It is a good one as are her other books.
Kevin, you can always depend on Dorothy to write solid and engaging stories. Key West is always a good place to visit and her excellent writing takes you there.
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