Reviews

Miss Dimple and the Slightly Bewildered Angel by Mignon F. Ballard

theavidreaderandbibliophile's review

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3.0

Miss Dimple and the Slightly Bewildered Angel by Mignon F. Ballard is a Miss Dimple Mystery. It is October 1944 in Elderberry, Georgia. Miss Dimple Kilpatrick and her fellow teachers live at the rooming house owned by Phoebe Chadwick. Their cook, Odessa Kirby, has to take some time off to help her aunt and the girls are having to fend for themselves (and not doing a good job). Phoebe puts up a notice and the response is Augusta Goodnight. She shows up on their doorstep in a cape of deep emerald and quickly integrates into their lives. The food improves at once much to the relief of the residents of the rooming house. Dimple heads over the library one day to visit her friend, Virginia Balliew, the librarian, and she notices a woman sitting out front. She offers to help her, but the lady refuses. According to Virginia, the woman has been sitting out front all afternoon. They get her to come inside and then take her to the boarding house to assist her. Her name is Dora and she is jittery/afraid. They get Dora a place to stay for the night, but then she disappears. She is found dead in the steeple of the church by the bell ringer. Who would want to kill her and why? They believed that Dora was a stranger to this town. Dimple and the gang want to find out what happened to Dora and set out to investigate. Then other incidents start happening. Someone breaks into the library and tosses the books everywhere. Someone was definitely looking for something. Then the rooming house is broken into. Does this have anything to do with Dora? She was in both places. Dimple and her friends are determined to get answers and clear up this mystery. Join them on the investigation in Miss Dimple and the Slightly Bewildered Angel.

Miss Dimple and the Slightly Bewildered Angel was okay, but not great. The book is lacking something (some oomph, pizzazz). Some books have that special quality (the writing) that grabs you and some do not. The book also needs a little faster pace. The pace is too slow to be enjoyable. I liked the basic idea and characters, but I found the writing lacking. I appreciated the setting of a small town during World War II along with the women still at home. Rationing, victory gardens, saving grease for the butcher, and other war time functions were mentioned that added to the character of the book. I give Miss Dimple and the Slightly Bewildered Angel 3 out of 5 stars (it was okay). Augusta is the angel in the book, but no one comes right out and says anything (it is alluded to). They observe things that they explain away (like how fast things get done by Augusta, the wonderful meals she can cook with so few ingredients, how she showed up just when they needed her). I very much liked the idea and with a little magical writing, this could be a delightful novel (and series). There was a reference in the novel to one of my favorite books (an oldie but a goodie) Mama’s Bank Account.

I received a complimentary copy of the novel in exchange for an honest review. The comments and opinions expressed are my own.

sheltzer's review

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4.0

I enjoy the trips to Elderberry. This time, Augusta Goodnight makes an appearance. I haven't read any of the novels involving Augusta, but I think I will as I enjoyed her slightly batty character.

Miss Dimple needs to track down the murderer of a woman who showed up on the library steps. She was found later that night at the bottom of the steeple steps. The investigation takes her back to the small town in Tennessee where she first began teaching, so the reader is treated to a glimpse into the private Dimple's past.

The ending was a tad abrupt, but I felt like the story was more about Dimple's personal journey than the murder so it was less annoying than it is in other books.

brooke4131's review

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3.0

Miss Dimple and the Slightly Bewildered Angel is fine if you're looking for a realxing historical cozy. The pacing of the novel was a little slow for me, but I did very much enjoy the characters of Miss Dimple and her fellow inhabitants of Phoebe's boarding house in Elderberry, Georgia. I was a little nervous about how the author would handle the appearance of an angel, but I was pleasantly surprised. Augusta Goodnight makes a wonderful addition to the story as the angel and none of her "angel behavior" came off as overly implausible nor did it detract from the story.

transformthemelon's review

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2.0

I was disappointed in this book. I enjoy reading the Miss Dimple series as a quick light hearted read. I typically love how practical and sensible Miss Dimple is but in this story she seemed addle-brained. I disliked Augusta being in the book as it seemed to stop the book from being a Miss Dimple book and became an Augusta Goodnight mystery. The "guardian angel" business takes away from the practical&sensible element. Also, where was Charlie in this book? So strange, it almost felt like a book from a completely different series.

judya's review

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5.0

Again, I started a cozy series in the wrong place, but unlike the last series I began in the middle, the Miss Dimple mysteries are excellent. I would favorably compare Ballard's writing to that of Fannie Flagg. The WWII era is a fertile ground for historical fiction, and the research was spot on, but its use didn't seem contrived. If you like a gentler mystery, Miss Dimple is your teacher of choice.
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