This was the perfect cozy fantasy to curl up with on a cold winter day.
I do agree with some that this seems to lean more YA or middle grade but I think it also worked as an adult novel as there were a lot adults and adult issues in here. However a teenager or middle grade person could probably read as well
I don’t have a nice thing to say about this. It was written in the early 2000s and does not stand up to 2020s standards.
Upholds white colonialism of Africa. Upholds wars in the Middle East and the use of “defense contractors”. The part of this book that takes place in Africa, all Black people described to be either bad people or women who work as sex workers.
The main character is the worst. She’s horrible to her parents.
The author needed to choose a plot and stick with it instead of flipping between the hijacking and the relationship between Lilly/Jess/Peter etc
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
5.0
A contemporary Japanese inspired fantasy that leans on the cozy side. This could possibly be described as a cozy fantasy by some, and I could be convinced to agree.
This book was like a nice bowl of ramen on a rainy day. I just wanted to eat it all up.
Samantha Sotto Yamato created a story centered around choice and regret while artfully creating masterful ‘magical’ (for a lack of a better term at the moment) world.
Thanks to St Martins Press and NetGalley for this ARC!
Marie Benedict stays being one of my favorite historical fiction writers and we’re lucky enough to have another book that stars Agatha Christie in it along with four other Queens of Crime.
Queens of Crime follows mystery authors Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Margery Allingham and Baroness Emma Orczy as they attempt to solve a murder of an Englishwoman killed just across the channel in France in 1930. It’s all Dorthy’s idea and when her husband Mac gets assigned to report on the case in France, she knows they have an in to do their own investigation.
The women deal with period typical misogyny from reporters, police, husbands, sisters, and rich men while piecing together the crime by traveling all around England and going over to France.
There’s secrets of both the main characters and the side characters that brilliantly tie this together.
Why 4 stars instead of 5? I think this one had a very slow start. It’s for sure a slow start with a great finish.
In the end it’s still a great historical fiction with the usual Benedict special - following important women of history and bringing stories to light. Plus it has a locker room mystery spin.