The publisher's summary:
A dead guest. A missing page. And a secret thirty-seven years in the making.
When foliage tour organizer Phillip Swanson is found dead in the Ridgeway Inn's beloved library annex, the town of Ridgeway Springs is ready to call it a tragic heart attack. But former archivist Eloise Stevens knows something doesn't add up. A rare first-edition book appears out of nowhere. A page has been torn from a decades-old guest ledger. And buried in her late father's private records is a notation that suggests Swanson's visit was no coincidence.
Newly returned to Vermont to run her family's historic inn, Eloise never planned to become an amateur sleuth. But as she pieces together old land disputes, forgotten easements, and the quiet connections between longtime residents, she realizes this mystery began long before the autumn leaves turned crimson.
With a retired judge guarding his composure, an antique dealer collecting more than antiques, and a small town where everyone knows everyone else's history, Eloise must untangle the past to protect the inn's future.
Because in Ridgeway Springs, some secrets aren't dead. They're just pending.
There are a few problems with the book. 95% of the writing is narration. More dialogue between the characters would bring both the plot and the characters to life. The characters were flat. We read about their backgrounds but without listening to them talk with the other characters we don't know who they really are. We don't know what makes them tick. In a cozy mystery, especially the first in a series, meeting the characters is important. It’s also important to see how they react to events in the story. I don't believe the author has done a good enough job for readers to want to continue to read the series.
The mystery itself was plotted well and the pace was fast. I liked that the death occurred in the first chapter so the remainder of the book could be about solving the crime. The development of events was written well. The planting of clues and the twists were perfectly timed.
Concerning Eloise's amateur sleuth skills, she is a fantastic researcher. While the police were interviewing all of her customers, Eloise began to read her father’s notebooks and ledgers. She eventually finds a page about Phillip Swanson, the man who was killed in her library in the first chapter. In order to solve the crime Eloise had to run a title examination. It turns out Swanson did not come to Ridgeway Springs as a tourist but as a man who had come to finish something that he had started in 1987. At that time Swanson and two others filed papers questioning an easement to Eloise's property. I was impressed with the author's knowledge of land records. Running a title search on a piece of property is not a skill most legal professionals have. Eloise's knowledge here is amazing.
As I mentioned above, there was too much narration. This is why the story suffers. Rating the book takes some consideration because the mystery itself was plotted well. I am going to rate the book 2.7 stars out of 5 stars.

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