Back in May 2019, Jeanne of the BPL introduced you to this series with her guest blog post here. She builds on that with her review today of fourth book of this series.
Treadmill
Books: Pies Before Guys by Kirsten Weiss
The number of murders connected to Val Harris’ Pie
Town pie shop is one of the running gags in this fourth entry in the Pie Town series. While Val protests, one of the participants
in a poetry reading held at Pie Town is found, killed by the sword he was using
as a prop during the reading. Good thing
Val’s boyfriend, police detective hunk Gordon, is being pretty calm about the whole
thing—even about Val’s investigations into the death. Is it possible he’s TOO calm about it? Is Val
about to get dumped? Will Charlene, pie
crust maker extraordinaire, get them both hauled off to jail with her Pie Town
UFOs? And by the way, who did murder
the erstwhile poet?
Cozy mysteries these days seem to bank on eccentric
characters, bizarre murders, and recipes (or craft instruction) and the Pie Town books fall right into this
category on all counts. Val is a plucky
heroine with a sense of humor and a great deal of loyalty to her employees and
friends. Otherwise, she certainly
wouldn’t put up with the stubborn Charlene who creates conspiracy theories as
deftly as she turns out pie crusts. How
you view the series may depend on how you feel about Charlene; a friend gave up
after 30 pages because she found the character so annoying. I struggled, but finally decided to see her
as funny. She’s bull-headed but she’s
also a tech savvy senior who knows how to use social media and is a huge Stargate fan. She also has a white cat named Fred who
sleeps a lot, even for a cat. Charlene
claims he has narcolepsy.
I’ve read the previous books in the series and enjoyed
them. I applaud the author for letting
her characters change and grow, and for giving them some depth. Sure, I get irritated with Charlene too, but
in this book in particular Val’s insights made me cut them both some slack. It helps that I now picture Charlene as a
female Wilfred Brimley.
While a little background helps, I think a reader could
come in at any point in the series. I
have to say that Charlene is easier to take after the first book but I’m still
glad I read them all and in order.
The fifth book in the series just came out this
summer, and I’ve made a note to check the local book store for a copy.
The books in order are:
The Quiche and the Dead
Bleeding Tarts
Pie Hard
Pies Before Guys
Gourd to Death
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