Tuesday, August 13, 2019

The Third Daughter

I received an advanced review copy of this book through the Early Reviewer's Program at Librarything.  Talia Carner's The Third Daughter is a fictionalized account of the hundreds of thousands of Eastern European Jewish girls ensnared into sexual slavery in South America in the 1890s.

The story begins with 14 year old Batya and her family pushing their belongings along a road away from their village in Russia. The village has just been burned down in a pogrom and her father believes they can eventually reach the Pale of Settlement and board a ship to America.  Her mother knows better. They have no money for tickets for the ship.  Upon reaching the Pale the family is offered temporary work at a tavern. They feel lucky. They finally have a roof over their heads and food to eat after weeks of travel.

While at the tavern, a wealthy Jewish man from America, Reb Moskowitz,  passes through on his way to his home village to find a bride. When he sees Batya he falls in love and asks her father to marry her. Batya's father agrees to the marriage because Moskowitz is wealthy and can provide a wonderful life for his daughter. He is thinking, however, that the family can eventually join them in America. Batya does not want to marry him but goes along with the plan. To her surprise when they are about to board the ship for America Moskowitz leaves her with an assistant and stays in Russia. He has still not formally married her but has raped her twice because "he cannot resist such a beautiful bride." Of course, the assistant treats her the same while sailing for America. When the ship docks in Buenos Aires Batya realizes that she is in South America, not the country that she hoped to emigrate to.  She quickly understands that she must live as a prostitute for Reb Moskowitz in order to survive. To resist meant torture and/or death by the powerful pimp association Zwi Migdal whose members included politicians and police officers.

The story was only graphic enough to get the point across to the reader what was happening to Batya and the other girls in her situation. It was not overly graphic sexually. The author added in characters from real life such as Baron Maurice de Hirsch who founded the Jewish Colonization Association in order to repatriate and educate Russian Jews.  The pimp association, Zwi Migdal, actually existed in Buenos Aires. Members of Zwi Migdal would travel to Russia, Ukraine and other Eastern European countries to kidnap girls and force them into prostitution. Most of the girls ended up in Buenos Aires. If they tried to flee they were killed. Even if they stayed the life expectancy was no more than 10 years.  These girls were kidnapped around age 14 and died by age 25. At 25 they were considered too old to prostitute and put out on the streets where they starved to death.

This book tells a not too well known part of Jewish history that occurred in the 1890s to 1910.  It will be published next month on September 5, 2019. I highly recommend it. While it is a horrifying story, because it actually happened to approximately 150,000 - 200,000 girls I feel that we owe it to them to read their story.

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Status of Reading Challenges

Since life is getting in the way of my reading and since we are at the end of July, I thought that I would write a post about where I stand with the nine reading challenges that I signed up for earlier in the year.

For the Read it Again, Sam Challenge 4 books are required to be read.  I have read 2:  Siddartha and Winesburg, Ohio.  The other 2 are just sitting on the bookshelf waiting to be read but I am just not interested in them anymore.  I thought that I would want to reread some of the old classics I had read in high school but they are no longer calling my name.

I have not even begun the Memoir Reading Challenge or the Series Challenge although three graphic novels could have met the requirements for the Series Challenge.  They were all written and drawn by Dan Daughterty and from his Beardo series: Til Debt Do Us Part, Self-Employee of the Month and The Miracle of Creation.  I was expecting to read Laura Joh Rowland's Sano Ichiro Novels for this challenge but haven't started any of them yet. 

I have met the requirements for the Library Love Challenge.  12 books were required and I have read 19:


The Creativity Reading Challenge had no set requirements concerning the number of books to be read.  I have read and reviewed 6 books:  Drawing Comics, Painting Light in Colored Pencil, The Fleece and Fiber Sourcebook, Botanical Portraits with Colored Pencil, Drawing Birds with Colored Pencil, and Treasury of Crazy Quilt Stitches.  I am considering this challenge to be met.

In the My Kind of Mystery Reading Challenge there was no required number of books to read either. However, I have read and reviewed 9 books to date:

Broken Bone China
The Malta Exchange
Harvest of Secrets
A Plain Vanilla Murder
The Satapur Moonstone
The Bengal Identity
A Body in Barcelona
The Persian Always Meows Twice

I have met the requirements of the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge but plan on reading more books for the challenge.  While 10 books were required to be read, I have read and reviewed 13. Many of them overlap with other challenges:

Mememto Mori
The Sisters of Versailles
The Splendor Before the Dark
The Gown
The Rivals of Versailles
The Enemies of Versailles
Murder by Misrule
Tombland
The Island of Sea Women
The Satapur Moonstone
The Queen's Promise

I have been rather slow in meeting the requirements of the 12th Annual Graphic Novel and Manga Challenge.  12 books are required for the level that I signed up for and I have only read 6.  The problem is that my favorite authors put out books every 2 or 3 years and last year was the year that most of them published a book.  The books that I read and reviewed are:

Til Debt Do Us Part
Self Employee of the Month
The Miracle of Creation
Kid Gloves

Finally, for the Christian Reading Challenge 12 books are required to be read.  I knew when I signed up for this challenge that I would not meet it.  However, I thought that I would do better than the three books that I have currently read so far. In fact, there are 4 books that I have already bought that I just don't want to read anymore.  I have read Irresistible, 7 Days that Divide the World and Leading Lives that Matter.  

So, what comes next?  I feel that my interest in reading is waning again as it did about three years ago.  I don't know if it is just because life is getting hard this month and the interest will quickly return or whether I will go back into a lengthy slump.  Only time will tell but in the meantime, I need to return my 5 library books back to the public library because I am not going to read them any time soon.  

The Queen's Promise

This is the first book in the Broken Kingdom Series by Brenda Rickman Vantrease.  It takes place in 1642 England. The book is quite different from Vantrease's earlier books. It is a strictly historical fiction novel while her prior books, i.e., The Illuminator and The Mercy Seller, were historical mysteries.

The book opens with Henrietta, the wife of King Charles, leaving England for Amsterdam with their 10 year old daughter.  The purpose is to marry her off.  However, the real reason is the Queen's unpopularity due to her Catholic faith. Henrietta leaves behind her three youngest children. Shortly after her departure, the Duke of Buckingham is executed for doing the King's bidding in Catholic Ireland. Charles goes on the run to set up an army but has his two youngest children cared for by Buckingham's mistress, Lucy Hay who is also a close friend of the Queen. Hay runs the fanciest salon in London and is a Protestant like the King. She agrees that she will not teach the Catholic mass to the children and is regularly visited by the King's enemies in Parliament and questioned about it.

This was a short book, only 230 pages, but it had a fast pace. I was kept interested enough in the plot to read the book in one sitting. This was a pleasant surprise given my dissatisfaction with some of the books that I have read in the past two months.

While the title is The Queen's Promise, Lucy Hay is the main character in the book. The author has written her to be a sympathetic character even though she cannot be without a lover. It seems strange that a woman who can't stop herself from committing adultery is the sympathetic character but she is. The reader doesn't get to know Queen Henrietta much. Hay's strength is prominent as she tries to protect the children from the warring factions in England who would love to use them as tokens in their war against the king. While the Queen eventually returns to England she must disguise herself. Her character as a queen was not prominent or interesting.

4 out of 5 stars.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

The Satapur Moonstone

This is the second book in the Purveen Mistry Mystery Series by Sujata Massey.  Here Purveen is invited by Sir David Hobson-Jones, councillor to the Governor of India, to travel to the princely kingdom of Satapur to speak with 2 maharanis about the education of their 10 year old heir to the throne. The maharanis are in a state of purdah due to the recent death of their maharaja and cannot see a male attorney. Purveen, being a female attorney, can discuss the issue with them.  The heir's mother wants him to be educated in England while his grandmother wants him to be educated at home.

I enjoyed the book but must admit that it moved a little slower than the first book in the series.  There wasn't a crime to solve as there was in the first book and that plot error affected the pace. This is a historical mystery series, not a historical fiction series. However, there was no mystery here. It still was a lovely book to read. I love reading about other cultures and the author gave the reader her knowledge about travel in 1922 India, especially for women. The differences between the religions that coexist in India were described in detail. The feelings of the Indian people toward their English rulers was also apparent as the Indian characters whispered their thoughts about them to one another.

The moonstone pendant in the title of the book was not mentioned until page 100. It was not mentioned again until page 246 but was only mentioned superficially. Up until that time in the plot there were basically only meals that  Purveen had with the maharanis about the heir's education. Then the 10 year old maharaja disappeared and the remainder of the book was about the disappearance.

When I got this book I  expected to devour it in one sitting. It took me three weeks to read because there wasn't much of a plot to follow.  It was quite disjointed.

The Satapur Moonstone was a good historical fiction novel.  3 out of 5 stars.

Saturday, June 29, 2019

Book of the Month: June

My best book for June, 2019 is Susan Wittig Albert's A Plain Vanilla Murder.  In this cozy mystery a botany professor is killed. He has been working to produce a hybrid vanilla plant, a form of the orchid plant, that was disease resistant. The professor was also involved in smuggling orchid plants into the U. S. and selling them at horticulture shows throughout the country. At times this book seemed like a political mystery, which is quite unusual for the series. Whodunnit? Maybe the ex-wife who has a competing business, the grad student the victim screwed out of a plant patent, any one of a number of young female students he had affairs with, or jealous faculty members. I particularly liked the recipes at the end of the book for vanilla sugar, vanilla paste, vanilla syrup, vanilla butter and vanilla whipped cream. I wrote them down for future reference.

I thought this installment of the China Bayles Mystery series was one of the most intricately plotted books in the series.  It is the 27th book in the series.

Sunday, June 23, 2019

The Persian Always Meows Twice

This is the first book in a new cozy mystery series by Eileen Watkins. I reviewed the 2nd book in the series a few weeks ago and liked it so much I ran out to the library to find the first one. In this series the cat is not the sleuth. Cat groomer Cassie McGlone, owner of Cassie's Comfy Cats is the sleuth.

The story opens with Cassie visiting a client in his home where he has a full grooming station for his Persian cat named Harpo. George DeLeuw is one of her best clients. He is Chadwick's wealthiest resident and pays her well, wanting extra attention for his cat whose long hair gets matted without the attention. When Cassie arrives for one of her regular visits she hears a scream and finds the maid Anita trembling. Anita leads her to DeLeuw's body, lying dead on the floor.  Cassie calls the police and Detective Angela Bonelli arrived on the scene. While several officers processed the scene of the crime Bonelli interviewed them both along with the landscaper Louis who had come inside when he heard Anita scream. Anita and Louis both said they thought DeLeuw was killed by an art thief because his home was filled with expensive artworks. Cassie was grilled on why she moved to Chadwick four months earlier.

Worried about Harpo's care, when Cassie attends the funeral she asks questions of all of the family and business associates of the deceased about whether the cat is named in the will and who is getting possession of the cat. She wants to take care of Harpo herself but all the questions only got her the attention of Detective Bonelli who now thinks that she is a suspect. Every person Cassie spoke to was considered a suspect by the police.

His ex-wife Marjorie sued him for possession of Harpo's brother and then had him put to sleep for spitting up a hairball. Marjorie hates cats and this was just another way to be cruel to him during the divorce. His sister Danielle wanted to get the cat from Cassie and return to the west coast even though she too did not like cats. Danielle had asked her brother for a business loan but he told her no.  Cassie thought that whoever got the cat would get some money in the will for Harpo's care. Then there were the business associates at DeLeuw's old Wall Street firm Redmond & Fowler, where DeLeuw had tried to sell an encryption program created by the son of Cassie's handyman, Dion Janos, but passed it off as his own and used it to hide documentation of the firm's corruption.

De Leuw's attorney agrees, however, that Cassie should board Harpo at her shop until the will is read. Before that happens, there are two attempted break-ins at Cassie's Comfy Cats, an arson at the shop, and an attempted kidnapping of Harpo and attempted murder of  Cassie herself at the shop when the crime is solved. Many twists and turns happen in between these main events.

This was a fabulous read but there were two odd things that stood out in my mind. The author referred to Harpo as a blond Persian. There is no such thing as a blond Persian cat. There are goldens and there are also silvers. How do I know? I helped a breeder of golden and silver Persians when I was a teenager through my thirties and attended cat shows throughout the Midwest with her. To me, a "blond" cat would be more golden in color but the cat on the cover of the book is a silver. The next item that irked me was how Cassie referred to her shop assistant Sarah as "moving much faster that she should be able to for her sixty years." I am sixty! Is the author saying that I should not be able to move? There is a little ageism here.

Aside from these two issues this book was fast paced with an intricate plot. I lost count of how many suspects there were, maybe 8, that had to be worked through with red herring after red herring. The writing was tight as the crime, occurring in the first chapter, was resolved in this little book's 261 pages. Several regular characters were also introduced for future novels so a lot happened here.

5 out of 5 stars.

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

A Plain Vanilla Murder

A Plain Vanilla Murder is Susan Wittig Albert's 27th China Bayles Mystery. Each novel features a different herb and this installment of the series features an orchid plant that grows vanilla pods. If you like to bake then you know that the price of vanilla extract and vanilla beans has skyrocketed. The author has chosen a timely subject to write about in this novel.

The summary from the inside cover blurb:

"China and Ruby Wilcox are presenting their annual Not Just Plain Vanilla Workshop, always a huge hit with customers at Thyme & Seasons Herb Shop. But someone involved with the workshop is driven by a deadly motive, and China soon finds herself teaming up with the very pregnant Pecan Springs police chief Sheila Dawson to solve a vanilla-flavored murder. But the lethal roots of this mystery reach back into the dark tropical jungles of Mexico, where the vanilla vine was first cultivated. At stake: a lucrative plant patent, an orchid that is extinct in the wild, and the life of an innocent girl."

This cozy mystery at times felt like a political mystery. The reader learns how vanilla plants are smuggled into the U.S. and sold at horticulture shows throughout the country. The murder victim had been developing a disease resistant vanilla plant. His secrecy over this activity resulted in him making many enemies at his college. Some of the prime suspects in his murder included jealous colleagues, orchid smugglers, and a disgruntled grad student that the victim was working with.

There were a few anomalies in the book. Police Chief Sheila Dawson has been pregnant in more than one installment of the series. In this book she is 8 months pregnant. How long can she be pregnant? Or should the question be what is the time lapse between murders in Pecan Springs that are written about in separate novels? In order to be able to investigate the next crime in the series Dawson has to have given birth and be back on the job. Also, two new secondary characters were introduced who had nothing to do with the plot. Ruby's daughter Amy Wilcox and her partner Kate Rodriguez were introduced and they are having a baby together with the assistance of a brother-in-law and a test tube. That was all that was said about them.

I thought that the investigation into the murder itself was intricately plotted. The pace was fast. There were as many red herrings and twists and turns as you might find in a standard political mystery but the writing was still done in Ms. Albert's folksy manner.

The author always has recipes at the back of her books. However, in this book the recipes at the back are more basic such as how to make your own vanilla extract, vanilla sugar, vanilla salt, vanilla paste, vanilla powder, vanilla syrup, vanilla butter, vanilla whipped cream, and vanilla vinegar. I am a baker so I had to write down these recipes for my own use. Recipes for dishes that the characters made in the novel are interspersed throughout the novel.

A Plain Vanilla Murder was truly a salute to vanilla. 5 out of 5 stars!

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

A Body in Barcelona

A Body in Barcelona is the 5th Max Camara Novel but the first one that I have read. It is a police detective novel set in Valencia, Spain but is categorized as a political thriller by the publisher.

The murder of a prominent businessman's young son did not occur until 70 pages into the book.  Setting descriptions abounded before the crime occurred. This overwhelmed me because they were about the police divisions in Spain and the Spanish language was used to describe the names of all of the divisions. Throughout the book I kept forgetting who was who. Place names, street names, district names were also all in Spanish. Spanish words were thrown in the book here and there. I don't speak Spanish so it was difficult for me to follow the plot. I tried to find a map to determine where each locale was at but couldn't find the right map. Location seemed important when cities are culturally divided in half, i.e., one part Spanish and one part Morrocan.

There was much writing about the current state of political affairs in Spain and in the EU. Since I am totally unfamiliar with their politics I kept wondering what part of it was true, if any. I didn't know what to believe. In essence, my lack of knowledge about Spain and various EU political departments made it hard to follow the story. The author presumes the reader can follow along. The mystery part of the book did begin moving around page 125 but the above problems handicapped my ability to understand the book. Each time the story started moving for me the author threw in a Spanish word and I could not understand the sentence. It was frustrating.

The author grew up in the UK and lived in Spain for several years so I believe that this book was written for Europeans. Also, I have to wonder if it would have been an easier read if I had begun reading the series with the first book.  I became so frustrated with the book I skipped about 100 pages to get to the end just to find out why the boy was killed. I still don't know due to the Spanish words that were occasionally used.

I don't quite know how to rate the book. It might be a great book for someone who speaks Spanish and is familiar with Spain. For me, it was a 0. Yes, 0 out of 5 stars. My first 0 rated book. 

Saturday, June 8, 2019

Printer's Row Lit Fest 2019

I attended the Printer's Row Lit Fest today despite misgivings about recent  changes in its organization which I detailed in a post 2 days ago.  However, I did see a theme in the fest this year. All of the authors exhibiting their books were from Chicago or nearby suburbs. I would say that they were mainly nationally unknown authors. There were many writer's groups with booths where authors could present their books in two and a half hour shifts. Some of these groups I did not know existed nor did I know that there were so many writer's groups in the Chicagoland area.

Sisters in Crime Chicagoland was one group that I did not know we had here. As you readers are probably aware, this is a group of female mystery writers.  Also, there are two local groups under the
Romance Writers of America. The Chicago Writers Association, She Writes Press, Windy City Historians, Independent Writers of Chicago,
Naperville Writers Group, Illinois Women's Press Association, Chicago Black Authors Network, Bizarro Writers (comics), Society of Midland Authors, University of Chicago Press, University of Illinois Press, Northwestern University Press, Chicago Review Press, the Poetry Foundation of Chicago, and Lawyers for the Creative Arts all had booths with authors selling books. Even the Lawyers for the Creative Arts had books with legal information for writers. A few major booksellers from Chicago reclaimed their booths again such as Haymarket Books.

This book fair was an impressive display of local talent. There is some pride in that. However, there is also sadness that this book fair has lost its national stature. It had been the third top book fair in the U. S. Now it is a local book fair. 

I was there for four hours and had fun talking with the authors. What did I buy?  Check out these books which you can get on Amazon.

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Musings on D-Day 75th Anniversary

After spending the early morning hours watching the ceremonies in Europe commemorating the D-Day Invasion, my mind swept back to memories of my father who served in the Eighth Air Force, known as The Mighty 8th.

He was stationed in England for at least a year and worked under General James Doolittle. He was not a pilot and I don't know exactly what he did.  He never went in to detail. However, online resources say that after General Doolittle took over, the Eighth Air Force bombed Germany from February through May just before the Invasion. They destroyed German air fields, railroads, aircraft factories, oil refineries, production and supply factories.  They also attacked the German front line on D Day.

Below are a few books to read about D-Day. I am putting them on my TBR list.



The Printer's Row Lit Fest is Coming this Weekend

The 2019 Printer's Row Lit Fest will be held this weekend. It has been one of the premier book shows in the U. S. for decades. Since the Chicago Tribune newspaper bought the show 5+ years ago, it has dwindled in size and the map of the show that I saw online this morning  is 1/8 its normal size. The Tribune has made many changes concerning what is allowed in the book fair and booksellers and publishers have been bowing out of the show in response to those changes. It is a shame.

This book fair was something Chicago could be proud of. Now it is so pathetic I may not even attend. For the first time the Mystery Writers of America will not be there so I see no reason to go. Most of the booksellers who have come in the past 20 years that I have been attending are not listed as exhibitors this year. I am shocked.

I noted in a blog post last year that the Tribune did not allow writers who personally published books to sell them. They also did not allow publishers of books of non-traditional political views to be sold. Likewise, the groups selling or giving away the Koran were absent. I found all these changes shocking.  The Printer's Row Book Fair, as it was originally called, was a free speech event. None of the attendees cared what an exhibitor was selling.  Everyone was polite to each other.

Half of the exhibitors shown on the lit fest website are advertisers that have nothing to do with books. I feel very disheartened. While there are some interesting author events, you cannot buy a ticket for them without being a newspaper subscriber. Most of these events are held far away from the lit fest.

The Tribune has ruined this book fair and since the newspaper may go out of business there might be hope of restoring this book fair to its glorious origins.

Saturday, June 1, 2019

Broken Bone China

Broken Bone China is the 20th Indigo Tea Shop Mystery by Laura Childs. The series takes place in Charleston, North Carolina with three main characters. Theodosia Browning is the amateur sleuth of the series. She owns the Indigo Tea Shop. Drayton Conneley is Theo's tea master and together they go on fact finding sleuthing trips. Haley is the third main character. She is the cook and pastry chef for the Indigo Tea Shop. She mainly provides emotional support for the other two because she is busy running the tea shop while Theo and Drayton are running around town.  However, every once in a while Haley has helpful information that will solve the crime.

This story begins with the crime. Theo and Drayton are riding in a hot air balloon with the Top Flight Balloon Club when they spot a drone hovering over each balloon before it rams itself into one balloon, falling to the ground onto Theo's table and crushing her pink bone china cups. The Indigo Tea Shop had been hired to serve tea and pastries to the guests of the Balloon Club. However, after all four people inside the balloon were killed, the police were called and the party was over.

The next day a fellow Charleston business owner, antiques dealer Tod Slawson, arrives at the Indigo Tea Shop to talk about the balloon disaster. He called it a murder as victim Don Kingsley was selling a remnant of the American Revolutionary War, the "don't tread on me" flag. Two of the bidders for the flag were in the balloon with him and also killed. Slawson was bidding on the flag himself but the flag is now missing from Kingsley's home. The following day another Charleston business owner arrived. Angie Congdon asked Theodosia for her help in clearing her fiance's name in this crime. Harold Affolter worked for Kingsley's company and had been a whistleblower at the company. Harold also owned a drone.

Theo begins her investigation by visiting Kingsley's widow, who is happy as can be, and then Kingsley's assistant at the office, who cannot explain why he spent so much time at Kingsley's second home after the murder. However, this was just the beginning of an intricately plotted mystery. Every event and person mentioned was present for a purpose. This is vastly different from the past few books in the series where I think the author got sloppy in her writing due to the need to publish three books a year for three different series that she is currently writing. I am delighted that this series is back on track as I have loved it from the first book.

Even the special occasion tea events at the tea shop advanced the plot. This book had a Nancy Drew Tea and a Beaux Art Tea wherein the reader learned about the Nancy Drew books and beaux art (fine art) as well as the actual teas that were paired with the foods that were served at the events. I always enjoy reading about the tea. Drayton, as tea master for the shop, created teas for these events. This part of the book is fiction as there is no such thing as a tea master but Drayton's job seems believable in the world of cozies.

The setting of historic downtown Charleston is prominent in each book in the series and I feel that it should be considered a character too.  It's history, architecture and wealthy eccentric residents provide an interesting backdrop to these stories. Recipes for sweets made by Haley are given at the end of the book as are some suggestions by the author on how to host several special occasion tea events yourself.

Laura Childs made a great comeback with Broken Bone China. 5 out of 5 stars!!!

The Bengal Identity

The Bengal Identity is the 2nd book in the Cat Groomer Series by Eileen Watkins. It is the first book that I have read in the series though. The main character is Cassie McGlone who owns a cat grooming shop in Chadwick, New Jersey called Cassie's Comfy Cats.  Cassie has a degree in psychology and has had training in animal behavior and grooming. This cat mystery series is different from all others. While a different cat breed will be profiled in each book, the cats do not have special powers that help solve crimes. Cassie is the amateur sleuth of the series, not the cats.

The story opens with a new customer named Rudy Pierson coming in to Cassie's Comfy Cats asking to board his cat for a few days because his house just burned to the ground. Cassie was suspicious about his story because she had not heard about a fire on the news, his behavior was frantic and he said his cat only ate natural food and liked walking outside on a full face leash.  After agreeing to board the cat Cassie and her assistant Sarah noticed the cat Ayesha had matted hair and tried combing it out. That was not working so they gave her a bath, which did not bother her in the least. Brown dye came off of her fur in the bath and Cassie noticed Ayesha had fur that was marked with rosettes. Cassie discussed the unusual fur pattern with her boyfriend Dr. Mark Coccia, Chadwick's local veterinarian. He suspected the cat was a rare Bengal pedigreed cat. They both wondered if Pierson stole the cat since the cat's fur had been dyed to hide its identity and they suspected that he would try to sell it for thousands of dollars.

A few days later Cassie saw an article on the local news showing the dead body of an unidentified person who had died in a car accident. The face belonged to Rudy Pierson. Cassie went to the local police station to report her contact with Pierson.

There were many more twists, turns and red herrings in this adorable, well plotted cozy mystery.  The pace was quick which made the story a fast read. I was captivated by the plot and read the book in one sitting.  It has been some time since I have read a perfectly written mystery, true to the mystery formula. The Bengal Identity was a delightful surprise.

The Cassie and Mark characters have perfect professional backgrounds to work together to solve clues about cat breeds. The author chose their professions well and made this cozy series more believable by the choices she made.  I also think the author came up with a great idea for a cat mystery series. Usually the cat is the sleuth in a cat mystery series which requires a suspension of belief too far for me to travel. By having the cats as the potential victims she has created a way to celebrate the cats but not get too ridiculous. I also enjoyed reading about the Bengal breed. I assume that facts about whatever breed is featured in a story will be a regular feature in each book in the series.

I loved this book and happened to find it at the library by accident. While I was waiting for a librarian to locate a book that I had on hold, this book was staring at me on the closest shelf of books.  I got lucky here.

5 out of 5 stars!