Mike Orenduff
created a lively and unusual character in Hubert Schuze, who loves the pottery
and art of the ancient Native Americans and searched the open land of New
Mexico for it until artifact taking was labelled theft by the Archaeological
Resources Protection Act. He still is not above accepting the occasional pot of
dubious ownership for display and potential sale in his Spirits in Clay shop in
Old Town Albuquerque. Native American pottery doesn’t sound particularly
dangerous, but Hubie manages to fall into a risky predicament fairly often,
spinning his amateur detective adventures into eight books so far.
These
adventures have been recognized by a number of groups as outstanding pieces of
mystery fiction. The first book in the series was named New Mexico Book of the Year. Both the first and second books of the
series won the
Epic Award for best mystery or suspense ebook, and the third book won the Lefty
Award for best humorous mystery of the year at the 2011 Left Coast Crime
conference.
In the fourth book of the series, The Pot
Thief Who Studied Escoffier (Dark Oak Mysteries, 2011), Hubie accepts an
assignment from a new upscale restaurant in Santa Fe with an Austrian theme. He
even agrees to do the work in Santa Fe onsite at the restaurant, where the
staff can give him ideas.
Hubie soon learns that a restaurant is a hotbed
of gossip and competition and personality clashes. No one seems like anyone
else. The staff all take turns concocting a dish for the group’s meals, then
they have to endure the lead chef’s critique. The chef lacks tact and patience,
and each staff member is embarrassed by him. Barry Stiles, the pantry chef,
took the humiliating analysis particularly hard and threatened to have the lead
chef dismissed. When Barry turns up dead in the back of Hubie’s Bronco in a day
or two, Hubie’s thoughts naturally turn to the lead chef. The police instead
are quite interested in Hubie, since it was his vehicle where the victim was
found. No one can vouch for Hubie during the time the murder was thought to be
committed, so Hubie scrambles to extract himself by finding the real killer.
Likable characters, smooth pacing, a plot with
enough red herrings to hold my interest. An especially entertaining touch is
the background on the workings of the kitchen in a fine restaurant. Recommended!
·
Paperback: 220 pages
·
Publisher: Dark Oak Mysteries; First edition (March 2,
2011)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 1610090098
·
ISBN-13: 9781610090094
Aubrey Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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