Mystery Review: “The Restaurant of Lost Recipes”

Hisashi Kashiwai — The Kamogawa Food Detectives

Translated by Jesse Kirkwood

Once upon a time, I wanted to do something nice for my mom-in-law’s birthday. This proved a tad challenging for a woman who’s not a huge reader, hobby enthusiast, or coffee drinker until I recalled a notorious family legend: where she, whilst gabbing away with her relatives, polished off an entire cake by herself — one bite at a time.

The cake in question was a gooey butter cake — a regional favorite, which, at that point in time, hadn’t hit the mainstream (yet). So, finding a recipe online was a non-starter. Even worse, in a fit of downsizing, she tossed out all her handwritten family cookbooks, thinking all the tried-and-true recipes within them were now redundant, thanks to the internets. Which left me up a creek without a paddle because I had no clue what went into this confection besides sugar, butter, eggs, and flour.

Fortunately for me, a few months later, Bake From Scratch magazine ran a feature on regional or lost bakes (I can’t recall which) that included this St. Louis treat. And my mom-in-law was thrilled when we showed up for the next family gathering (Thanksgiving, I believed) with it in tow.

However, if I’d failed to purchase that month’s magazine or the publisher decided against running that feature, I might never have run across the recipe. 

And that’s where The Kamogawa Food Detectives (would in theory) come in. 

If I lived in Japan and faced a similar conundrum of a lost recipe, needed to reconnect with an old memory linked to a specific dish, wanted to recreate my grandmother’s signature ramen or other similar culinary mystery — The Kamogawa Food Detectives would do their level best to figure it out and reproduce it for me.

If you enjoyed watching Netflix’s Midnight Diner or Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories ten-to-one, you’d enjoy reading The Kamogawa Food Detectives as the two share a similar-ish vibe. (BTW: You should try the Midnight Diner if you haven’t already; it’s a fantastic show.)

Though the story does feature food, a lot of magnificent-sounding food, at its heart, The Kamogawa Food Detectives is a mystery. Nagare, a former police detective, follows leads, interviews people, and uses his experiences and intuition to solve each case brought to the agency housed in the back of the family restaurant. Whilst Koishi, Nagare’s daughter, is the people person of the outfit. Conducting the initial interview with the clients, she pulls out as much information as possible about the dish in question, the person responsible for its creation, and the client’s relationship with it/them. 

In some ways, the format of The Kamogawa Food Detectives reminds me of Issac Asimov’s Black Widower short stories in so far as the structure of each case follows a pretty rigid pattern.* Admittedly, this makes the book sound formulaic, which I suppose in a way they are — but in the best possible way as this set pattern compels Kashwai to find unique ways to inject twists, turns, and surprises into the stories — which he does beautifully. Moreover, the precise arrangement of standard story features is comforting rather than feeling derivative.

Though the chapters in the book read more like short stories than a continuous novel, the thread linking each episode together is not only the book’s repeating pattern and delectable dishes of food but also Koishi and Nagare’s lives. With each investigation, you learn just a tad more about them. And it’s these little scraps that kept me from setting aside the book between chapters and reading onwards. It’s also what compelled me to pick up the book and reread it again a few days later, at a far more leisurely pace, savoring each and every word.

I would recommend The Kamogawa Food Detectives to anyone who enjoys reading about food or non-murder mysteries or those who delight in Japan and/or the country’s cuisine and are looking for something cozy/interesting/lovely to read on a cold winter’s night.

*(BTW: The collections of Asmov’s short stories are all out of print but are definitely worth tracking down. Try here. And thank you, Fran, for turning me onto them all those years ago!)

Book Review: Intrigue, Magic & Jam!

The Spellshop — Sarah Beth Durst

Combine D&D, Jane Austen, and jam, and you might just get a sense of this story. Yet, like many things in life, The Spellshop is much more than these roots. It’s about a librarian forced to choose which books she likes the best, then flee from the largest library in the whole of her country after revolutionaries set it ablaze, and, finally, use magic (which is strictly forbidden if you’re not authorized by the government), to keep body & soul together…..and help those who need it.

Not since Brandon Sanderson’s Tess and the Emerald Sea have I enjoyed a book so thoroughly. Reading about a woman who loves books as much as I do and is willing to do what she can to save them was terrific. Moreover, I understood her grief upon realizing the repository of books she called home would never be her home again. Plus, the magic, with its unanticipated side effects, the unexpectedly sentient creatures, and jam-making, made me add The Spellshop to the ‘My Favorite Books’ list. (As I’m a sucker for any book which manages to add cooking and/or baking seamlessly into the narrative, which Durst does in aces without tipping the story into a culinary themed direction.)

The Spellshop is a well written, cozy adjacent, light fantasy novel that contains a bit of mystery, political intrigue, and community. There is a touch of romance, but only just a touch, as extra flavor text. Plus, as a bonus, the book itself is just pretty, which is what prompted my husband to point it out to me in the first place.

I would recommend The Spellshop to anyone looking for a light Sunday afternoon or snowy afternoon in front of the fire book. And I absolutely cannot wait for The Enchanted Greenhouse, set in the same world, coming out this July!!!!!!

Mystery Review: Nonna Maria…

Nonna Maria and the Case of the Stolen Necklace — Lorenzo Carcaterra

In the jumble of life events over the past couple of years, I accidentally lost track of the Nonna Maria series after thoroughly enjoying its ‘first in series’, Nonna Maria and the Case of the Missing Bride. Happily, for whatever mysterious reason known only to my subconscious, Nonna Maria popped back into my head whilst my phone was nearby. One quick interweb search later, I discovered I was not one, but two books behind. 

A state that (obviously) needed rectifying!

One reason why I was so intent on running the Nonna Maria books to ground is I thoroughly enjoy reading how Carcaterra writes Nonna Maria. She is a woman who’s well within the latter stage of life — and knows it. Unlike many who occupy the same space in their own personal timeline, Nonna Maria sees it with a clear eye and, moreover, respects Death’s imminent introduction. (Not unlike the third brother in the fairytale The Tale of the Three Brothers, from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.) Carcaterra translates this knowledge and regard into clear, crisp, and concise prose, which belies the complexity of the mysteries Nonna Maria is asked to solve.

As an avid baker, I also enjoy these mysteries because of the food Nonna Maria prepares. Seriously, I’d love to sit at this Italian grandmother’s table for a meal.

However, to be clear, these books are in no way a culinary mystery.

Nonna Maria is just one of those people who loves feeding people. If you’ve caught a head cold, had a bad breakup, or find yourself exhausted from working one too many late shifts in a row, you can count on Nonna Maria to bring round containers of your favorite recipes of hers. Family, friends, and people she feels are in need all benefit from her and her stove’s skills…..Though, on occasion, when pursuing a case, she’ll whip up a fave when asking for a favor. However, these offerings don’t feel transactional due to the respect she’s earned from those living on the island with her. Whatever the motivation, I find myself getting peckish reading the descriptions of Nonna Maria’s lemon chicken, grilled clams, stuffed peppers, and other amazing sounding dishes. 

In a similar fashion to Miss Marple, Nonna Maria uses her knowledge of local history, decades worth of mentally archived gossip, and friendships within the carabinieri to help solve the crimes brought to her door. Together with her extensive family, numerous friends, and an even larger pool of acquaintances — there’s not much information Nonna Maria can’t eventually unearth when she puts her mind to it. However, unlike many of the Miss Marple mysteries, Nonna Maria does much of her own legwork, which occasionally lands her in the crosshairs of the violent villains she’s pursuing (not that that stops her). 

In any case, I would highly recommend Nonna Maria and the Case of the Stolen Necklace to anyone looking for an excellent and engaging mystery to read during these long winter nights.

I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.

My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2025

Mystery Review: So Much Fun!

Starter Villain — John Scalzi

Recently, I purchased a stack of books for my husband, whose to-be-read pile sank to dangerously low levels. Amongst the new titles purchased to reinvigorate said pile was John Scalzi’s Starter Villian.

He devoured it whole. 

Then he presented it to me, saying: “You’re going to adore this book.” 

And you know what? I did.

The juxtaposition between an average dude named Charlie (aka a former reporter turned substitute teacher) being thrust into the role of “Villian” overnight is outrageously funny, especially when encountering other “Villains” who remind me of those found in cartoons or early seventies James Bond movies — complete with a death ray (of sorts), a volcanic island lair, and a supervillain league. Whilst Scalzi employed these classic tropes in Starter Villian  Charlie’s outsider perspective and twists Scalzi plants in the mystery makes them feel fresh. 

Rather than putting Starter Villian on a shelf in our book room, I’m setting it aside in my to-be-reread pile — because it was that fun to read! Albeit, you do need to suspend some disbelief, as some of the technological marvels seem to-good-to-be-true….but, as I write this….I’m recalling the nest of rabbits researchers genetically modified to glow in the dark and Scotland’s own clone, Dolly the Sheep. So, I suppose the science Scalzi wove into his plot isn’t as far-fetched as I previously thought….Which is only mildly frightening. 

In any case, I would recommend Starter Villian for anyone who enjoys a fun, full-throttle mystery with a fingerprint of science fiction on its fringes.

BTW: Starter Villian is in no way, shape, or form the flipside of the glut of superhero movies that have hit cinemas over the past decade. There are no capes, leaping tall buildings with a single bound, or alien technology at play — just ethically challenged people with a boatload of money to burn.

My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2025

Book Review: Cats, Coffee, and Mystery

When you look at the moon hanging above you in the night sky, what do you see? 

Cheese? A face staring back at you? A timepiece? The home of a rabbit? The smile of The Cheshire Cat? A werewolf’s bane? The root cause of lunacy? The source of oceanic currents and waves? An unwitting participant in the Cold War’s Space Race? 1 of 293 natural satellites orbiting the seven planets in our solar system? (Yes, I’m including Pluto and its moons in this count.)

Or do you see the moon as an integral player within the interconnected celestial bodies visible from our limited vantage point on the earth’s surface, which, through their movements, influences your life?  

Unsurprisingly, it’s this last entry that concerns The Full Moon Coffee Shop. It’s the lens by which the unique proprietors of this roaming establishment interpret the world and the lives of those who find themselves partaking of their unparalleled bill of fare and advice. 

Whilst The Full Moon Coffee Shop isn’t a mystery in the traditional sense — it is mysterious, not because of the lens of understanding used by those working at the cafe (that’s merely the foil by which the plot moves forward), but what connects this particular string of patrons together.

What I love even better about The Full Moon Coffee Shop is that you don’t need to subscribe to its particular worldview to enjoy the book. All you need to do is accept it as their POV, and the rest unfolds beautifully before your eyes. 

Let me tell you, after inhaling all 228 pages (several times), I understand why The Full Moon Coffee Shop was translated into English from its original Japanese. It’s a first-rate read. I would recommend The Full Moon Coffee Shop to anyone needing an engaging, delightful, and/or gentle read right now. 

Book Review: The Bakery Dragon

Okay, so I am not exactly the target audience for this….this picture book. 

There, I said it. I bought myself a picture book. 

But how could I not? 

After seeing the magnificent art Devin Elle Kurtz posted on Tumblr about a little dragon in a bakery, I couldn’t resist. 

And The Bakery Dragon didn’t disappoint.

(I mean, just look at the art on the dust jacket and cover!)

Not only are the drawings wonderfully rendered, but the story itself does an excellent job of showing how to be kind, forgiving, and sharing without becoming a stilted ‘message’ story. (A particular pet peeve of mine in children’s literature from my time as a bookseller.)

In any case, for those of you looking for a superb kid’s book (for ages 4-8, or for those who love a good book regardless of its intended audience) this holiday season, I highly recommend The Bakery Dragon!

Book Review: Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea

Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea — Rebecca Thorne

If one chucked a Harlequin Romance novel, a D&D campaign, tasty pastries, and gallons of tea into a cauldron — you might end up with Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea

Initially, the story is about Reyna, a private royal guard, who’s fed up with serving the world’s worst boss — aka the Queen. The problem is quitting isn’t exactly an option, as she thoroughly enjoys having her head attached to her shoulders.

But sometimes, you just can’t take it anymore. 

Running away into the mountains Renya, with all-powerful mage girlfriend Kianthe by her side (well, actually flying her griffon), the pair open a bookshop/teahouse/bakery in a small mountain hamlet on the cusp of dragon country.

And this is where the mystery starts.

For you see, the dragons are pissed. Someone stole a clutch of their eggs and they want them back….And Kianthe gets tasked/cursed/bespelled (depending on your view) to locate and return them.

I really enjoyed reading this book and cannot wait until the second book in the Tomes & Tea series arrives at my house later today! Perhaps not what people would snobbily call “high fantasy”. Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea is fun, funny, entertaining, and intriguing. Basically, everything I’m looking for in a book, especially during the cozy autumn season.

I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a light fantasy novel with snarky humor, action, magic, and dragons. 

BTW: Whilst the book has a punny title, don’t let that fool you. The Tomes & Tea are the background setting for the main plot, not the plot itself. So they never distract from what our two heroines are trying to accomplish.

My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2024

Mystery Review: Death Comes To Marlow

Death Comes To Marlow — Robert Thorogood

Judith, Suzie, and Becks are back—only this time, they find themselves embroiled in a classic locked room mystery. Unsurprisingly, there’s plenty of suspicious behavior, motives, and suspects to go around, as the murder occurred the day before the wedding of one of Marlow’s great and good. 

I still really love this series. 

The snark, mystery, and humor work so well with the mystery. Plus, the relatableness of the Marlow Murder Club and (honorary member) Detective Tanika makes this a satisfying book to read. The fact it feels like a modern take on the classic Golden Age mystery doesn’t hurt either. 

You don’t necessarily need to read these in order, as they don’t spoil the endings of the previous books in the newer ones. However, if you enjoy watching characters evolve and grow, I recommend starting with book one — The Marlow Murder Club. But if that sort of thing doesn’t worry you, then you’ll be fine so long as you know Death Comes To Marlow isn’t the first in series.

My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2024

Mystery Review: How To Solve Your Own Murder

How To Solve Your Own Murder

by Kristen Perrin

….All signs point toward your murder.” 

Typically, the cryptic words from a fortuneteller at a village fete would rapidly evaporate from the mind, supplanted by the heat of the summer’s day, hanging with your best friends, and the laughter that inevitably follows such an overly dramatic reading. Yet, despite her friend’s teasing, sixteen-year-old Frances Adams can’t shake the feeling there’s something to this prophesy.

A feeling which solidifies into certainty a year later when one of her best friends goes missing. Whereupon a barb of fear plants itself in Frances’ heart. Where it remains there for nearly six decades, breeding fear, paranoia, and a plan — a plan to solve her own murder with a bit of help from her family.

A blend of Agatha Christie’s Murder In Retrospect and Dead Man’s Folly, with elements of a classic English village murder mystery — How To Solve Your Own Murder is a fantastic book. Not only because it flips seamlessly between 1965 and today but because Perrin does an excellent job of creating an atmosphere of distrust and tension amongst the characters, as well as seamlessly planting clues, red herrings, and McGuffins that, when seen in hindsight, feel obvious but seem utterly innocuous while reading. Moreover, the penultimate clue (which I can’t say because I don’t want to spoil the book for you) isn’t one I recall reading before — which is a delight for someone who devours mysteries the way I do!

Seriously, this is a great book I would happily recommend to anyone who enjoys classic-ish style mysteries. It starts off a tad slow, as there are several people to meet and places to see. But soon enough, if you’re like me, you’ll find yourself unable to put it down until the last page is devoured whole.

BTW: How To Solve Your Own Murder is not a Young Adult mystery. Just in case you are wondering.

My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2024

Mystery Review: 2 for 1

Robert Thorogood – The Marlow Murder Club

A couple of months ago, during a visit to my local bookstore, I’d (for once) remembered to bring my reading glasses with me. So, whilst waiting for my husband to finish his perusing, I idly picked up The Marlow Murder Club. Ignoring the back cover blurb, which sometimes can be misleading, I cracked the cover and read the opening paragraph….Then, the following three pages, and in short order, I was hooked on one, Mrs. Judith Potts.

Mrs. Judith Potts is a seventy-seven-year-old woman who lives alone in a large mansion on the banks of the River Thames in a town called Marlow. Happily sipping her whiskey, compiling crossword puzzles, and swimming in the Thames. It’s this last activity that sparked Judith’s newest pursuit – murder investigation, as she nearly witnessed the murder of her neighbor….An event that leads Judith into not only investigating the crime but into forming the unofficial Marlow Murder Club — with her new friends Becks, Rosie, and one frazzled investigating police officer.

And it’s not until I sit here writing this review that I’m struck by Judith’s resemblance to Ms. Marple in both age and her love for gossip and puzzles. While these similarities exist (perhaps to hook Marple lovers like me?) Judith is very much her own sleuth. One I’d recommend to anyone who’s looking for an irreverent, independent woman (of a certain age) who’s determined to solve the puzzles life places before her.

Seriously, this is a great first installment in a series and one I’d happily place on my recommendation shelves if Seattle Mystery was still going strong.

Ann Claire — Last Word To The Wise

What I enjoy about the Christie Bookshop Mysteries is that Ann Claire doesn’t try to recreate one of Agatha Christie’s famous detectives or her writing style. Instead, Claire finds inventive ways of including references to the Grand Dame herself, as well as occasionally mentioning tidbits from her books. 

Such as, in Last Word To The Wise, the college professor who, whilst on a blind date, snubs Agatha Christie to a bonafide lover of her works, Ellie Christie (no relation). 

As you can imagine, the date went downhill from there.

Claire also taps into the dream of living with a beloved cat above a bookshop in a quirky town. (The winter setting in Last Word was especially welcome; the descriptions of snow and ice on a ninety-degree day made me feel at least a tad cooler.) 

In any case, don’t be fooled by this book’s lavender cover or the tiny hearts dotting it. Last Word To The Wise is not an over-the-top, sappy, cozy, but a proper mystery. Grounded in clues with plenty of good humor, red herrings, and books, I cannot wait until the next Christie Bookshop Mystery hits the shelves so I can (metaphorically) gobble it up!

Mystery Review: Two-For-One

Deanna Raybourn — A Grave Robbery

Once upon a time, several decades ago, when I was in the Girl Scouts, we took a trip to Victoria, B.C. One of the attractions (which is sadly now closed) was Madame Tussard’s Wax Museum. At first, I found the exhibits boring, as waxworks of Queen Elizabeth, Elizabeth Taylor, Abraham Lincoln, and celebrities held zero interest to my ten(ish) year-old self.

Then, I stumbled into the Chamber of Horrors. 

Whereupon my eyes met gruesome deaths, like the pit & the pendulum, a body suspended from a giant hook, and an iron maiden (amongst others). I found the exhibits simultaneously fascinating and repelling (which prompted me, upon returning home, to hit our set of encyclopedias for answers and explanations).

Next came the fairy tale section, where the slow rise and fall of Sleeping Beauty’s chest startled and delighted in equal measure….

It’s at this point that Rayborn’s A Grave Robbery begins. 

Only it’s Lord Rosemorran’s daughter who’s fascinated with Tussard’s clockwork beauty, or, more specifically, with the notion of making a bit of pocket money by creating her own Sleeping Beauty and charging an admission fee for her friends to see it. To this end, her father found her an Anatomical Venus and asked Stoker to place a clockwork mechanism within.

The only problem? The body isn’t made of wax.

Whereupon Veronica and Stoker set about trying to identify and find justice for the poor girl lying within the glass coffin.

One part Frankenstein, one part murder mystery, with a dash of macabre — this latest installment of the Veronica Speedwell mystery didn’t disappoint! And, so long as you know this book isn’t the first installment in the series, you can read this installment first — as Raybourn doesn’t spoil the end of any of her other mysteries within A Grave Robbery.

But what’s an Anatomical Venus or Adonis, you ask?

Well….

Do you recall those plastic torsos from your high school biology classes that someone would invariably jostle into, and all their organs would fall out with a clatter onto the floor? Turns out, Anatomical Venuses and Adonises (female and male bodies, respectively) are the precursors to these embarrassment inducing plastic specimens. 

Unlike the basic high school models I used, Anatomical Venuses are highly detailed, anatomically correct, life-sized waxworks that could be “dissected” by removing layers and/or organs to show the human body’s inner workings. 

(Click Here to see one owned by The Met.)

Created by highly skilled artisans, these inanimate women were meant to bridge the divide between medical schools’ need to dissect human cadavers to learn and the belief dissection jeopardized one’s immortal soul. (Hence why, after their execution, murderers’ bodies were often sent to medical schools for dissection — thereby condemning their souls to eternal damnation.) Anatomical Venuses were also meant to instruct the general public on how the body worked at a time when it wasn’t well understood. 

While Raybourn does a great job explaining their historical significance and the flaws they present to modern eyes….I wanted to learn more! So I found:

Joanna Ebenstein’s The Anatomical Venus.

Within the pages, Ebenstein explores the history of the Anatomical Venuses and the odd, uncanny feelings these lifelike women invoke by examining their religious origins, scientific needs, and the art that these hyper-realistic works inspired. With plenty of pictures to demonstrate what she’s speaking of, this book does a great job explaining the complicated and nuanced place these ladies hold in history and their eventual fall from favor.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys learning about an unsettling side of history.