The woes of a sluggish economy hang over Purser's slow, less than engaging 10th English cozy featuring Lois Meade, who owns New Brooms, a cleaning service in the village of Long Farnden (after 2009's Tragedy at Two). Lois's husband, Derek, and the committee he heads decide that the best way to raise money to restore the dilapidated town hall, popularly known as "the Shed," is to sponsor a "soap box grand prix." Meanwhile, Lois has to worry about the disappearance of the cheeky 13-year-old son of a woman she recently hired whose absentee husband, an unemployed gardener, may be causing trouble. When someone attempts to torch the Shed and a shabbily dressed drowned man surfaces in a canal, Insp. Hunter Cowgill once again turns to Lois for help. As soap box race day approaches, the unflappable Lois must use more than a broom to close another messy case. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
From
Lois Meade, the cleaning lady in the village of Long Farnden, often finds herself cleaning more than houses. She moonlights for the local police, picking up clues that might be overlooked. The residents of this sleepy English village are forming a committee to save the Shed, their run-down community hall. Lois’s husband, Derek, serves as chair, presiding over the usual assortment of curmudgeons and eccentrics. There are those who don’t want the Shed saved, however, and it quickly becomes clear they will stop at neither arson nor murder to get their way. A treat for cozy fans. --Barbara Bibel
Description:
From Publishers Weekly
The woes of a sluggish economy hang over Purser's slow, less than engaging 10th English cozy featuring Lois Meade, who owns New Brooms, a cleaning service in the village of Long Farnden (after 2009's Tragedy at Two). Lois's husband, Derek, and the committee he heads decide that the best way to raise money to restore the dilapidated town hall, popularly known as "the Shed," is to sponsor a "soap box grand prix." Meanwhile, Lois has to worry about the disappearance of the cheeky 13-year-old son of a woman she recently hired whose absentee husband, an unemployed gardener, may be causing trouble. When someone attempts to torch the Shed and a shabbily dressed drowned man surfaces in a canal, Insp. Hunter Cowgill once again turns to Lois for help. As soap box race day approaches, the unflappable Lois must use more than a broom to close another messy case. (Dec.)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
From
Lois Meade, the cleaning lady in the village of Long Farnden, often finds herself cleaning more than houses. She moonlights for the local police, picking up clues that might be overlooked. The residents of this sleepy English village are forming a committee to save the Shed, their run-down community hall. Lois’s husband, Derek, serves as chair, presiding over the usual assortment of curmudgeons and eccentrics. There are those who don’t want the Shed saved, however, and it quickly becomes clear they will stop at neither arson nor murder to get their way. A treat for cozy fans. --Barbara Bibel