This delightful cozy mystery was published a few days ago on May 29, 2026. It is the 9th installment of the Provence Cozy Mysteries series by Ana T. Drew. The main character is baker Julie Cavallo. Please note that I received a free copy of this book from Book Sirens in exchange for an honest review.
The publisher's summary:
A beloved Provençal festival.
A murderous conspiracy.
A bullfighter who knows too much.
When two local chefs are killed within a week, shockwaves ripple through the region’s tight-knit culinary world. Suspicion lands squarely on baker Julie Cavallo. As whispers turn to accusations, her eccentric family closes ranks, and her loyal friends rally to her side.
But Julie’s running out of time. Her pastry shop is at risk. Her love life is unraveling. The gendarmes are tracking her every move. Julie can’t afford to wait for the official investigation to uncover the truth. Her instincts go into overdrive. Dots connect. Patterns appear. . .
Can Julie make it through this case, when asking the right questions has already gotten others killed?
The story opened with a bang. Our main character Julie wakes up freezing and soon sees her grandmother’s dog Lady lying near her. Lady is whimpering. She is freezing also. Julie soon realizes that she is locked in a walk in freezer. With her mind moving fast Julie sees a metal grate that she can probably fit through. All she has to do is unscrew the nails. After several nerve-wracking minutes, the grate comes off and Julie squeezes through the space, then grabs Lady. The next thing she knows she is in a hospital.
While scrounging her memory for details on how she ended up in the freezer, Julie remembers chatting with fellow chef and friend Mylene Nivault. She cannot remember anything else. After hospital discharge Julie returns to work at her gluten free pastry shop. Unfortunately, she finds out that she is a suspect in Mylene's murder. Julie didn't even know Mylene was dead, let alone murdered. Capitaine Bauer has focused on her because she is always at the scene of suspicious deaths. The news travels fast in her village, Beldoc, and Julie’s shop is not approved to be a caterer at a local festival. Friends intervene and she is finally approved. Once the bull fest begins, all hell breaks through both before and after the farandole.
So what is the farandole? I asked my french teacher. I thought she said it was a festival. After reading a few more pages I learned that the farandole is a dance. Dancers wear a cultural dress, the l'arlesienne, and the dance music was written by composer Bizet. After listening to the music on YouTube I realized that I have heard it several times in the past.
The story had many twists, much more than I am accustomed to seeing in cozy mysteries. This was a nice surprise. Another surprise was the Provençal setting extensive descriptions. I learned alot more than new insights into the culture but also quite a few new French words. How the police, gendarmerie, investigated crimes and how wine appellation laws mandate which grape varieties can be used, yield limits, and specific aging processes was interesting to say the least.
I loved The Fatal Farandole and am planning on reading the entire series. 5 out of 5 stars.