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Cooking Up Trouble: An Angie Amalfi Mystery (Angie Amalfi Mysteries)

(Book #3 in the Angie Amalfi Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Chef Angie Amalfi can't wait to take off from the city for a week to help devise a delicious vegetarian menu for a lovely new B&B in scenic northern California. The not-yet-open-for-business Hill... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Enjoyable Escape

Hated to put it down. Had to read the last couple of chapters over 'cus I read through them so fast to find out what was gonna happen next. It's challenging to find a mystery that has a giggle/zinger. This one was "salted & peppered" to my taste.

The Partridge Slurped a Pear; Veggies Beware!

"'I wouldn't feed this swill to my cat!' Martin Bayman announced... The lentil-soybean cutlets were not a hit." - Quote from Joanne Pence's pen poofing life into her newly green world. This 3rd book-in-series started out with a (metaphoric) bang, highlighting the captivating dud of soybean cutlets saute-tested for the menu of an out-of-the-way Inn to die in. I'm hopeless when it comes to taste-bud-uptake-inhibitors (like serotonin-uptake-inhibitors for which Prozac did the Pandora's Box thingy?). If you abbreviate this title, CUT, you get a reference to "cutlets." Is synchronicity cooking here? Yeah, but the cutlet was meatless, until Angie waved her wooden-spoon-wand. Angie's open-minded skepticism of metaphysical gurus was humorously warming, and the setting of the Inn in a Gothically remote, at-risk location was mysteriously inviting. As usual in Pence's repertoire, fictional residents were well-rooted into emotional complexity. I don't know how she does this repeatedly with new and old characters, but many of her plot people have enough comedic appeal to border on being cartoon-ish buffoons, and yet they're fleshed out enough to skip off the pages. As a collective of unique individuals, these guys based in the real world, beyond the edges of phony, overdone, underdone, or irritating. Getting back to the guru thing, Pence gives us a peek into that metaphysical world, from an angle which would be realistic even from a skeptic's perspective. Yet the overview's warm enough and into the gestalt enough that readers should be able to feel the ease with which an intelligent adult could slip whole (bloodless) hog into the ethereal draw of the ozone world of fruits & veggies, a world which attempts to expose the gateway to wherever we all go when our hearts stop for good. Does any one of us not have personal agendas? Of course the game is to work harder to hide them in the sweet worlds in which the thing is to be a selfless, spiritual-sensitive, and to have no agenda (though bannanas are usually allowed). Pence is no fool when it comes to human nature, and each of the new set of characters in this ghost & green setting exposed a different angle on those agendas within a gutsy-fleshy personality mix. We have Greg, I mean Running Spirit, and his confused, waif of a wife, Patsy. We have Moira, a strong "wise" woman who, refreshingly, doesn't try too hard to hide her agenda in a pile of raw sugar. We have Chelsea who grows a few needed backbone links. Then, of course there's Reginald Vane. Now he's a tall, dark, and shy, but not too dim Original, as they say in London-based Historic Romance novels. What I love about these characterizations of boney but off-beat personas is Pence's generous need to hand out realistic redemption on as many pages as possible, after and while spotlighting juicy dark sides with just enough balsamic dimming to prevent the comedy from bubbing the plot out of its heady, roiling stew. Pence is good. And s

Love this series!!

This is the third book in the Angie Amalfi series and I have loved each of them. This is a wonderful cozy series where the combination of mystery and romance is well balanced. The mystery keeps me guessing to the end and the romance is just steamy enough to keep me coming back, but not so much that it overpowers the mystery. A good read which I highly recommend.

Humorous -- ghosts and homicidal vegetarians

Fun read. Good send-up of New Age charlatans. Humor and chills. Enjoyed "ghost" story.
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