Review: A Carriage of Misjustice (Lindenshaw Mysteries Book 5) by Charlie Cochrane

Rating: 3.5🌈

It’s been a while since I’d read this series, the last book I read being Old Sins. And I think coming back into a series after a long break and diving in at book 5 just highlights the importance of perhaps going back to the beginning and rereading the series again. Particularly with A Carriage of Misjustice because of some of the things I found within the novel ā€˜s narrative , and the issues that it raised in the choices made in the storytelling.

One of the aspects of the Lindenshaw Mysteries series, a cozy mystery in every sense of the trope, is that Cochrane has developed, over 5 books now, a real sense of the small village it’s set in , all the locations and its citizens. She’s crafted with great detail each person and history that the reader feels we know each main character. We’re there as they meet, and fall in love, as their relationship deepens amidst murders and throughout the investigations.

Its been an amazing journey, watching schoolteacher (now assistant headmaster) Adam Matthews and Inspector Robin Bright navigate through the obstacles of romance and their relationship while dealing with their own work dynamics, and then the murder Investigations that overlaps between them. That’s where that wonderful depth of communication and rapport starts to be built, book by book, connecting the reader to us while deepening the connection to each other. Adam, Robin, and, of course, their equally important Newfoundland, Campbell. That’s a huge dog.

What has remained consistent is the evolution of Adam and Robin’s relationship, their warmth and willingness to share their own opinions on matters and perspectives on the cases involved. Whatever issues arise, they face them together. And if, the investigations are lengthy and often the villain pegged a little too easily, the relationships are often the things that make the story.

That’s why I was surprised when, in A Carriage of Misjustice ,Cochrane chose to separate Adam and Robin for the entire story, with the exception of the beginning and end. That immediately removes, as they both remark, the things they (and the reader) miss. The discussions and relationship dynamics between them. All those moments and conversations we’ve come to expect. Replaced by Robin away on a murder investigation, fixing someone else’s problems. And Adam singing in a choir.

Another odd element? The readers are told Adam and Robin got married. A simple ceremony (although it sounds rather fun) but after everything the reader has been through with them, doesn’t feel very satisfying.

The mysteries here weren’t really complicated. Most of the time, it was Robin and Pru guiding a younger squad through an investigation that hadn’t been done properly and now needs another more serious investigation. So it’s police procedural time, with a call here and there home to Adam. For me, without the charm of their own village and their dynamics, my attention wasn’t there.

And that made other aspects stand out in ways they normally don’t. That’s the fact that Charlie Cochrane’s series is most definitely written in what I’ve heard termed ā€œBritish speak ā€œ. And for non-British readers that presents certain linguistic challenges. Ones I noticed because I wasn’t as invested in the storyline.

It’s not just British in tone but in cultural context. If you’re American like me, then things like having an airing cupboard* or ā€œa nickā€ or rozzer, a British slang word for police, just aren’t in our culture or vocabulary. So I admit to floundering a bit in terms of not knowing exactly what Cochrane was talking about or referencing occasionally. Thankfully, research is but a phone away. And it also made me think if American mysteries and novels equally present such a challenge to non-Americans in those terms. All that, still not quite into the novel.

So I do love this series, this isn’t one of the stronger books in the Lindenshaw Mysteries. I’m onto the next and recommend reading them in order. Read this to complete the series. And because they tell us that they got married.

Note:

*I did look into what exactly an airing cupboard was in British houses and was equally astonished to find in that same description that it was compared to American linen closets. Americans would not put warm, semi dry linens or clothes in a linen closet, not unless mold was our goal. Differences indeed.

Lindenshaw Mysteries:

āœ“ The Best Corpse for the Job #1

āœ“ Jury of One #2

āœ“ Two Feet Under #3

āœ“ Old Sins #4

āœ“ A Carriage of Misjustice #5

ā—¦ Lock, Stock and Peril #6

ā—¦ And Nothing But The Truth #7

Buy link

A Carriage of Misjustice (Lindenshaw Mysteries Book 5)

Blurb

Murder doesn’t care if you’re a newlywed.

Detective Chief Inspector Robin Bright and Deputy Headteacher Adam Matthews have just tied the knot, and all they want to do is sink into blissful domesticity. Unfortunately, there’s no chance of that when a chilling murder at a rugby ground takes Robin miles away to help his old boss solve it.

The mystery seems impossible to crack. Everyone with a motive has an alibi, and those without alibis don’t have a motive. Robin’s determined that this won’t be the case he’s unable to unravel. Not when he’s got his old boss to impress and a new team to lick into shape.

Back at home, Adam joins a fundraising choir to keep himself occupied. Surely a case that’s so far away won’t draw him in this time? Fate has other ideas, though, and danger turns up—quite literally—on his doorstep. He’ll need Campbell the Newfoundland for both company and protection this time around.

• Publisher: Riptide Publishing (May 11, 2020)

• Publication date: May 11, 2020

• Language: English

• Print length: 252 pages

Review: Mr. Mustachio Sings Like a Canary (The Mr. Mustachio Murders Book 2) by Dawn McKinnon

Rating: 4.5🌈

Mr. Mustachio Sings Like a Canary is the second in the excellent The Mr. Mustachio Murders by Dawn McKinnon, a cozy murder mystery series with a paranormal twist.

McKinnon’s series picks up shortly after the events of the last book, with Chez Celine’s inhabitants trying to adjust to their losses and adapt to their newcomers.

As Sam valiantly tries to continue to struggle to write his book, another investigation comes his way. And then there’s another.

I love the way McKinnon weaves all the many happenings and storylines into a single narrative. It’s a slow, methodical but absorbing process as Sam, investigates one event after another. He’s often accompanied by Mr Mustachio, or Algernon, or the local Chief of Police (who’s only got himself as staff of one) as he visits people or places of interest to see and talk to.

While the murder(s) and investigations are ongoing, McKinnon is further exploring the mysterious layers that emerge whenever Algernon is around. Especially as they pertain to Sam and Mr Mustachio. No spoilers here but I don’t think many readers will be surprised.

What occurs will definitely make the reader want more background information if possible and definitely a lot more of the series and.

It’s still a very slow burn romance. Character and plot driven, which is wonderful given the great personalities and fabulous location the author has created and is enlarging with each book.

This is so charming and a real engaging cozy murder mystery with a paranormal twist. One I’m highly recommending.

Cover: Cate Ashwood

The Mr. Mustachio Murders:

āœ“ Mr. Mustachio Is Falsely Accused #1

āœ“ Mr. Mustachio Sings Like a Canary #2

ā—¦ Mr. Mustachio Gets Collared #3

Buy Link:

Mr. Mustachio Sings Like a Canary (The Mr. Mustachio Murders)

Blurb:

Sam wasn’t living at Chez Celine long before he was tasked with catching a murderer, but his new case is simpler. Joan Peabody died from natural causes. All he has to do is find her will. But as he tries to figure out what the last surviving member of the town’s founding family did with her will, he begins to wonder whether something got done to her.

For an elderly lady with a heart condition, Joan had a lot of enemies. In fact, it seems like the only people who didn’t want her dead were the niece who expects to inherit her estate and the childhood sweetheart she spurned. And even they have motives.

Meanwhile, someone blew up a mailbox downtown, and there’s a reward for fingering the culprit. Investigating Joan’s death is only earning Sam enemies, one of whom is Algernon after Sam spirits Mr. Mustachio away to the vet. Algernon has secrets he’s not ready to spill, but to find Joan Peabody’s will, catch her killer, and save Mr. Mustachio from an unfortunate medical procedure, he’s going to have to start singing.

Mr. Mustachio Sings Like a Canary is book 2 in the Mr. Mustachio Murders.

Review: Mr Mustachio is Falsely Accused (Mr. Mustachio Murders Book 1) by Dawn McKinnon

Rating: 4.75🌈

I’m utterly charmed by the new murder mystery I just finished. A story along the lines of a cozy mystery with a touch of the mysterious or perhaps mystical, I also found a new wonderful author in Mr Mustachio is Falsely Accused (Mr. Mustachio Murders Book 1) by Dawn McKinnon.

Honestly, it was that cover! Then the description. But first that remarkable cover with the auburn Persian cat with the white mustache looking so smug and intelligent!

Then once I got into it, I was hooked. The prologue belongs to Mr Mustachio’s thoughts as he wanders through his nightly routine of checking in on his renters and those that have come to visit Chez Celine, his mansion that now houses artists and their shops. Turns out the wealthy woman who owned the huge house left everything to him, land, house, and lots of money.

McKinnon does a fascinating job of keeping Mr Mustachio’s thoughts less anthropomorphic, more in the realm of what a cat, an extraordinary one however, might think.

The second and primary POV belongs to ex police officer, Sam Jones, who’s just rented rooms in Chez Celine hoping to start his next career as a mystery writer and part time detective.

Once interviewed, inside Chez Celine and accepted as one of this strange group, the mysteries start piling up on Sam immediately. One happens to be in the form of Algernon, the strangely naive, mysterious, and very lovely man of indeterminate age that’s Mr Mustachio’s guardian. That’s just the beginning.

McKinnon’s narrative weaves a tale of multiple mysteries, several murders, a household of artists of different ages and backgrounds, some very strange and mysterious, the most interesting and unusual are those of Algernon and the cat, Mr Mustachio. Sam Jones is pretty special as the not so hard boiled detective narrator who’s falling for Algernon, the cat and Chez Celine.

I’m so thrilled to have found this new author and series. I immediately have two more books to discover, one that was recently published. Be still my heart.

If you’re a lover of murder mysteries, slow heat romance, cozy mysteries, mysterious characters, or even some strange elements or animals as main characters, well, this book and series has all of the above. And done right.

Plus it’s got those covers! Highly recommended.

Cover: Cate Ashwood

The Mr. Mustachio Murders:

āœ“ Mr. Mustachio Is Falsely Accused #1

ā—¦ Mr. Mustachio Sings Like a Canary #2

ā—¦ Mr. Mustachio Gets Collared #3

Buy Link:

Mr. Mustachio Is Falsely Accused (The Mr. Mustachio Murders)

Blurb:

What happens when a hard-boiled detective finds himself in a cozy mystery?

Sam Jones has left the force. Going forward, the only mysteries he’ll solve will be fictional ones as he pursues his dream of becoming an author. But he’s barely moved into Chez Celine, a former mansion repurposed as an artist collective, before two unfortunate discoveries demand his attention. One is the dead body of his new apartment’s previous occupant, found stuffed in a trunk. The other is an award-winning vase, found shattered on a storeroom floor.

The list of murder suspects is endless. Everyone hated Amelie. But when it comes to the broken vase, the perpetrator seems obvious. It must be Sam’s unlikely landlord—an unusually intelligent cat named Mr. Mustachio.

Sam has never made friends easily, but as he gets to know Mr. Mustachio’s human representative, Algernon, his feelings move beyond friendship. But Algernon seems to know more than an innocent man should. To find the true culprit, and perhaps true love, Sam must prove that both Algernon and Mr. Mustachio have been falsely accused.

Mr. Mustachio is Falsely Accused is book 1 in the Mr. Mustachio Murders.