Reviews for Death by chocolate raspberry scone

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A Maine baker goes on the hunt for a doubloon and a body to boot. As tourists flock to the town of Eastport to enjoy the summer’s warm weather, locals Jacobia “Jake” Tiptree and Ellie White feel more pressure than pleasure from the influx. Although tourists keep their bakery, the Chocolate Moose, in business, the crowds and hot weather can be a little too much in a town with limited air conditioning. And while some folks might find peace in Passamaquoddy Bay’s coastal waters, the ocean isn’t always safe. Take Paul Coates, for example, a seasoned fisherman whose boat, the Sally Ann, was found by the Coast Guard with no one aboard. Now Sally, his presumed widow and Ellie’s old friend, has to wait for a body to wash up for a burial. Sally’s already-dim hopes for a happy ending are dashed when a life vest is found on the beach alongside Paul’s boot, a personalized piece of footwear with a secret compartment in the heel. Sally begs Jake and Ellie to find out more because when Paul’s boot was found, the antique gold coin he kept there was missing from its hiding spot. Its disappearance is no doubt a motive for murder, Sally claims. Jake is willing to be convinced, particularly as Lizzie Snow, the new police chief, doesn’t strike her as up to the job. Jake and Ellie’s investigation gets them into some unique scrapes, from a run-in with a real-life sea witch to a surprising number of unchaperoned shark encounters, but it’s when her family is threatened that Jake feels the real seriousness of what’s going on. Grittier than the typical cozy: more shark than scone. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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