Please
welcome back Jeanne of the Bookblog of the Bristol Library as she is here with
her latest review….
Treadmill
Books: Witch City Mysteries by Carol J.
Perry
In Caught Dead Handed, Lee Barrett returns to
Salem, the town where she grew up. Now
she’s a young widow in town for a job interview at the local TV station, much
to the delight of her Aunt Ibby, a long time Salem resident who raised Lee
after the deaths of her parents. Lee
realizes very quickly that she’s not going to be hired for the reporter’s
job—that position is going to go to the shiny young man—but another job
opportunity soon appears. Ariel
Constellation, a self-proclaimed psychic who hosts the weekly horror movie, is
found dead (by Lee, of course) and the station manager takes Lee on a trial
basis to fill in.
It isn’t long before Lee has some unnerving
encounters of her own, leading her to believe that Ariel’s killer might strike
again. Aided by reference librarian Aunt
Ibby and O’Ryan, Ariel’s cat who seems to be more than an ordinary tabby, she
sets out to unveil a murderer.
So goes the plot of Caught Dead Handed, the
first in the Witch City Mystery series. I
was drawn in easily because of the likeable characters, especially Lee and Aunt
Ibby. Lee is an independent woman,
capable of making her own decisions, which I like. While she inherited money
from her parents and from her late husband, but doesn’t flaunt her wealth other
than the odd extravagance; and she has a strong work ethic, which means that
even though she doesn’t have to have
a job, she wants to be employed. She’s
attracted to Pete, the local police detective but isn’t rushing into anything,
nor does she pester him to reveal information he shouldn’t. Pete, for his part, doesn’t continually
admonish Lee to be careful or not to meddle.
Same for Aunt Ibby. There’s just
a lot of mutual respect between the characters, trusting each other to behave
like adults.
I also like the way the supernatural elements are
handled. Lee has experienced some things
in the past that are inexplicable by rational standards, but she doesn’t
immediately buy into the idea that, say, Ariel Constellation was anything but
clever at reading people and giving plausible answers. I like the balance between skeptic and
believer, and feel that the author manages it well. I confess I get tired of the lady protesting
too much in some books; if it’s a supernatural mystery, then at some point, a
character needs to buy into the idea and stop whining that it’s
impossible. I don’t mind a little
resistance to the idea, but to have it go on book after book gets tiresome. The supernatural clues that Lee gets are
appropriately vague, giving Lee and the reader hints rather than
solutions. I expect that the
supernatural elements will strength as the series continues.
Of course, one of my favorite parts is O’Ryan, Ariel’s cat who sometimes seems to point out clues. He’s adorable and very cat-like (not all cozy mystery cats are). He has a habit of sitting in front of the door just before someone comes, knowing either from supernatural means or very good hearing. Some of my cats do the same thing. There are occasions when he goes beyond the expected, usually when Lee is in extreme danger but for the most part he seems like my orange cat—well, maybe not as Tommy isn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer. More like Flora whom I suspect of masterminding a good bit of the mischief around the house.
I also enjoy some of the behind the scenes sorts of
things, such as how a TV station works or how to prepare for a job on
camera. Lee has an eye for vintage
furniture and fast cars, and tidbits of information about both are dropped
during various books.
Besides interesting, well developed characters,
Perry gives us a good sense of place.
Some scenes in the series take place in an old fashioned department
store which is being repurposed for a school.
The store layout is described in lovely detail, bringing back memories
of one I remember—not the modern versions, but ones with their own lunch
counters and styling salons, where large signs or cut outs proclaimed that the
store was a purveyor of Buster Brown shoes or Evening in Paris perfume. The
rest of the town also has a presence, depending on the book; I like when
authors use unique settings to good advantage rather than the generic
Everytown, U.S.A.
Finally, Aunt Ibby and Lee love old movies, so
there’s always a sprinkling of nostalgic titles or quotations to make me
smile.
I’m in the middle of Look Both Ways, the
third book in the series, and enjoying it as much as I did the first two. If there’s a weakness in the books, it’s that
Lee doesn’t always make connections that I think are fairly obvious or follow
up on certain clues. I give her a bit of
a pass because most of this arises from the supernatural visions which she
doesn’t trust. Failure to follow up on clues can be a pet peeve, but in this
case Lee is otherwise so likeable and sensible that I find it doesn’t annoy me
too much.
This series is a definite treadmill win! I’ve
already bought copies of the rest of the series including the just-released Grave
Errors. The sixth in the series is scheduled to be out in 2018.
In order:
1. Caught
Dead Handed
2. Tails,
You Lose
3. Look
Both Ways
4. Murder
Go Round
5. Grave
Errors
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